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#1 | ||
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Member
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Went to the neuro this morning. I definately have MS. He is sending somebody to my house within a week to teach me how to give myself the Copaxone injections. He told me that I will probably need somebody to help me because they will make me real sick. My mom will be in Texas, and there isn't anybody else. Could somebody tell me what I can expect? I am very, very sick now WITHOUT the injections...but, I am pretty good at handling it. How bad could the injections make me?
Sally |
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#2 | ||
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Junior Member
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Please click one of the Quick Reply icons in the posts above to activate Quick Reply.
Last edited by 1942Linda; 01-11-2007 at 02:46 PM. Reason: duplicate |
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#3 | ||
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Junior Member
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Copaxone will not make you feel sick - that would be the inteferons like Avonex , Betaseron or Rebif.
I took Copaxone for 7 yrs and other than an occasional sting, it was no big deal. let us know how it goes. in time you will just consider it another part of your day. Linda |
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#4 | ||
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Member
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Thanks, Linda. I have had a few people tell me that there aren't harsh side effects. I wonder what my doc meant??? Maybe it is because I am soooooo sick right now. Anyway, it will only be a few days till the trainer comes to teach me how to handle it, and I will know. Injections are not a fear of mine. Chronic pain all of the time has its ups. It takes a lot to hurt me.
Thanks for your response and pat on the back......sally |
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#5 | |||
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Magnate
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Sally,
Good luck with Copaxone, I hope it helps. You might talk to your neuro about symptom management meds sometimes they can really make a difference in how you feel.
__________________
Dx RRMS 1984 |
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#6 | ||
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In Remembrance
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Perhaps your neuro was referring to a fairly rare but bad reaction that happens immediately upon infection ( or within minutes) which is an anaphalctic (I prob. spelled that wrong) shock like reaction.
I was frightned to death on hearing about this from other Copaxone users before I ever started taking it.. this shock thing delayed my getting on it for years. My girlfriend got very brave and got on it. She started, stayed in touch with me, and was on it for several mos... she recommended it very highly to me. She told me she "thinks" she was able to avoid the ana shock thing by making sure she never injected into a vein... which meant, she didn't use the auto inject, and did her shots slow to insure no blood veins were hit.. blood comming back up out of where the needle is inserted is a good sign you are in a vein. Anyway, with her good experience with Copaxone and detailed exp. on avoiding veins, I started on Copax. myself. My first month was scary, as I was so afraid I would mess up and end up in ana shock (thinking I wouldn't know it if I was in a vein, and go ahead and inject). But that never happened, and years later, still shooting up w/o hitting a vein, I never had that shock thing happen. Copaxone wiped out my nerve pain! No small feat! My numbness, spasticity, spasms disappreated to. That all happed within a couple of months after starting C. The only thing that is unconfortable when on C. is the site reaction. Keep antihistamine and a cortisone cream on hand to put on the site following injections. You will need to rub those on sites that are 5 days old even, as the itch like crazy. After a few mos. the site reaction no longer happen, so it is no longer such an itchy thing/constant using anti itch lotions on the sites. The benefits I have had with C. far exeed the interferons I had been on B$ Copaxone. Also, C. doesn't produce fever, headache and flu like symptoms like the other injectables do. For what it's worth, that is my experience (and I speak for my friend also), I recommend Copaxone highly. |
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