I've got my first hematologist appointment next week, and I intend to ask whether the MGUS may have any impacts on any of the other medical issues I've got going on, or whether any of those issues or their actual/potential treatments might have ramifications for the MGUS.
At this point, I've got a multi-page table tracking my various medical issues: upcoming appointments, notes/questions for the appointments, past appointments, outcomes from past appointments, drugs, side effects of the drugs, actions I've taken to manage the side effects of the drugs, non-traditional stuff I've tried, etc. Really, it's a journal in table format. Because I've given up entirely on being able to hold it all in my head.
The medical community operates in silos -- not their fault, it's just how it is. But the human body/mind is not made up of silos -- it's an integrated whole. Expecting my excellent but overworked PCP to coordinate all that effectively is just absurd. So these days, when I see each physician (let's see -- at the moment, it's seven of them plus, of course, my pharmacist), I try to encourage them to think about the consequences of each diagnosis/treatment on all the other diagnoses/treatments.
I'm 72, I'm living a quite engaged life, and I am not my diagnoses. Since I want to hold onto that as long as possible, doing my best to help my medical providers operate as a team has become one of my priorities. Because it's really hard for them to do that if the patient isn't actively helping.
I recently asked my migraine neurologist to take a quick look at several possible insomnia drugs I planned to discuss with my PCP, and she flagged one that she routinely uses off-label with success as a migraine preventive. You never know what can pop when you try to be somewhat holistic about things.
@projfan you are so organized! I believe you are absolutely right about not relying on the PCP to keep track of things when you have multiple coexisting conditions.
I'm sorry you are traveling down this MGUS path with us although MGUS is benign for many of our members. I hope you will let us know how your visit goes with the hematologist/oncologist.