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Hello
I'm a type 2 diabetic, with sugars very well under control and was just given Metanx today by my podiatrist; does anyone have any input on this? Basically an oral B12 I believe....
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Hi Stari!
It's really good to meet you! Welcome to our forums! You will probably get a better response to your question if you post it on the diabetes forum, since this forum is mainly for introductions.
Wishing you the best... Idealist |
hello stari and welcome to NeuroTalk.
we have a couple of forums tha ti think will really help with your questions. here is link to our diabetic forum: http://neurotalk.psychcentral.com/forumdisplay.php?f=53 and our vitamin and supplement forum. we have many threads started about b12. http://neurotalk.psychcentral.com/forumdisplay.php?f=49 |
Welcome aboard
Stari,
It is great to see you have come in to join the gang. There a number of people here to help and comfort you. Darlene:hug: |
Hi
Hi,
As I'm new here, I guess it would be polite to introduce myself. I'm struggling to come to terms with the diffuse axonal injury I suffered in a car accident. I can't say that I much like the strange new world where I now find myself. I like even less the stranger walking around in my body. In an instant, I went from a happy, athletic, high-functioning person with a power job to someone who can't even correctly address envelopes. I suffer from many of the common deficits: forgetfulness, lack of initiative, anxiety, inability to learn new tasks, aphasia (which, fortunately, my young daughter thinks is hilarious), etc... However, by far the worst result has been the personality changes. Before the accident my motto was "no biggie." Now I can become enraged over the stupidest things. I can't imagine the harm this is doing to my poor family. My situation is complicated because the crash also left me with an incomplete spinal cord injury. As a consequence, I am also battling physical deficits, a bevy of neurological problems and chronic pain. I do belong to a local TBI support group. If nothing else, the meetings are amusing because none of us can remember what was said for more than five minutes and nobody can keep accurate minutes. Round and round we go… It would make a great Monty Python skit. (Hey, if one couldn’t find the humour in these situations, one would go insane.) However as this is a very small area, everybody knows everybody and sometimes that constrains the conversation. I’m hoping that the anonymity of this site facilitates more frank exchanges. To be candid, at present, I am only holding on for my daughter. I have found many of the accounts of adaptation and triumph posted on this forum awe inspiring. I hope, in time, that I too can find some intrinsic value in my new reality. Cheers, Hockey |
Hi Hockey Bless your heart. Brain injury is traumatic. It is life-altering. Soooo sooorrrrry you have to go through this. I have a cousin who had serious brain injury. He's not the same as he was before either. We love him dearly, but he's the one that has the struggles of TBI daily. After six years, I can say he's more like his old self again. He's happy and content now. He had a lot of stuff to work through, as I would imagine so do you. He still can't remember lots of things but he got his sense of humor back. It takes time, lots of time to heal from TBI. So it's good to know you have family that is there for you. Here is the traumatic Brain Injury forum link: http://neurotalk.psychcentral.com/forum92.html see ya around |
Welcome to NT
My mom is a diabetic. It becomes a way of life. I don't know what that med is. I tried to Google it but the pages would not come through. My mom also has a bad foot, so I'm very interested to find out what that med is for. See you around the board. Quote:
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Metanx - from Google
Hi, BW & Stari - excuse typing - bad tremors today. Metanx helps improve circulation by increasing endogenous nitric oxide; improves/restores protective sensation and vibratory sensation in pts. with diabetic peripheral neuropathy; metabolizes homocysteine in pts. w/ chronic lower-extremity ulcerations and restores wound healing processes; helps to improve sensation by increasing blood flow & supporting neurofunction as myelinogenesis; for diabetic patients experiencing numbness, tingling and burning sensations in feet. Hope this helps.:grouphug: billie
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Thanks
Thanks for the welcome. This is a big site and I'm sure it will take me time to be able to naviagate it well. Heck, I get lost going to friends' houses.
Cheers, Hockey |
http://i489.photobucket.com/albums/r...zes/6rh4et.gif
Stari, hello and welcome to NeuroTalk! This is such a nice place with lots of friendly, caring, and very helpful people. :) We're so glad you found us! :D |
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