MGUS Symptoms: What symptoms did you experience?
I had extensive bloodwork with a hematologist in December 2023 resulting in dual diagnoses in MyChart of thrombocytopenia and MGUS. Because of timing issues my follow up is scheduled for 2/27/2024. Anyone else plagued with overwhelming fatigue? For example, today I got up around 7:30am. I’ve felt like I need a nap since around 9:30. I’ve done some research about MGUS. Some information has been helpful, I think. Some is contradictory. What should my expectations be from my body?
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@suppiskey2surv shoveling snow. No thank you. 🙂
4 seasons, yeah you get that one. Can’t beat the beach!!
Let’s all keep researching and helping one another. Nice grp. we have.
Stay well everyone.
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1 Reaction@jdm02
For sure!
@pmm I am I the “ugh” phase of exercise too. The physical therapy has helped me as well.
@allstaedt57 - My husband, also, with SM for a couple of years and then full blown MM.. went into chemo...neuropathy hit him so bad he was never able to walk afterwards....now 4 years after he passed way with MM and Pulmonary Hypertension (and yes, in the middle of the Covid mess) I was diagnosed with MGUS. Really caught me off guard. Did this diagnosis for you make you question how a disease like this is unlikely to be in the same family..not blood related? Does this make you question your children, if there are any, having this same diagnosis at some time in their lives?
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5 Reactions@loumartin
I was told by a leading expert in MM / MGUS about 15 years ago at the NIH in Bethesda, MD that MM was NOT hereditary; however since that opinion and after he left the NIH and started practicing at Sloan Kettering in NY, there has been information published that it can be linked to blood disorders.
Personally . . . mind you I am NOT a lab tech, doctor or nurse, I believe if there is a malignancy in anyone's family, it increases your chances to develop that malignancy or another form at some point. That's just my personal opinion but it, I don't think, can or SHOULD be discounted as a factor.
MGUS is another condition that deserves more research and more follow-up, again in my own personal opinion. I believe there are a whole range of symptoms that could be linked to it. Peripheral nephropathy and nerve pain, in particular, as well as bone problems.
I'm on a mission to find someone . . . ANYONE, in the medical profession who will listen to me long enough to collect symptomology and put the pieces together to, at a minimum, agree that MGUS is a very real blood disorder that can cause a wide variety of symptoms and explain them to a patient when they are diagnosed with it.
Your story is one that was most helpful to read. THANK YOU for posting it!
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4 Reactions@pmm
Good morning to my forum friends. A month ago we moved to Texas to be closer to my husband’s family so this necessitated seeing a new hematologist for my IGM MGUS. I was diagnosed in 2021 and had been seen by one in Arkansas since then. I feel SO blessed to have found this new one who is so kind, unhurried, knowledgeable and up to date on research. We discussed the Memorial Sloan Kettering clinical trials headed by Dr Irvi Shah on a Whole Foods plant based diet which encourages eating 30+ whole plant based foods per week which would include vegetables, fruit, nuts, seeds and legumes in their whole unprocessed form (cooked foods are fine) which would mean avoiding granola bars, frozen vegetarian dinners, chips, etc. She asked me what I was doing to look so fit and healthy at 71 (I told you she is a gem!) and I told her that I walk 3-6 miles outside every day and that my goal is 100 miles a month but I don’t always reach it due to weather or appointments etc. (I reached it this month!) I have enjoyed walking my whole life and find it helps my osteoarthritis and more importantly my mood. It gives me a sense of accomplishment and also because I have lived in rural areas the past 30+ years, I get to enjoy the nature and animals I love so much including seeing cattle in pastures, squirrels, rabbits etc. At my last home, the wild rabbits got so used to seeing me walk every day they never moved from the side of the road when I passed by. My new hematologist told me that research has shown that staying active has shown to have the most positive influence in preventing progression of MGUS. So my point here is this- do whatever you can do to move your body. If it is walking, swimming, treadmill, dancing, yoga or whatever, find something you enjoy because you will be more willing to stick with it. Keep a journal when you start and keep noting your progress even if it only progresses in minutes. I promise you it will do wonders for you! My prayers are with each and every one of you and sending you all a hug. A picture from my morning walk last week at sun-up.
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11 Reactions@1oldsoul
Looks like parts of Haskell County, Oklahoma!
Thank you for sharing photo and information.