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Replies to "Hi Becky, Thank you for sharing your post. Like you... I was diagnosed with MGUS/ IGG..."
Mitten1, I was just rereading your post again and judging your condition against me. So I looked at my own diagnosis of Kappa light chain IgM. You and I are in the same type of situation, that being good and bad. IgG is the least likely to progress to cancer, my IgM is the most likely. My Kappa classification is the lesser of the two to be dangerous. Your Lambda is more likely to be aggressive. So your IgG progressing to SMM or MM will need to be watched for a sudden burst of progression. My IgM is progressing to a rare form of NHL and an even rarer form of WM. One that is slowly progressing but also is incurable and less likely to go into remission. I like to use percentages rather than decimal points in watching my numbers. My M spike jumped 25% between May and September in 2021. Then between September and December 2021 , my M Spike jumped another 100%. So between May and December it jumped 125%, now that fact makes an impression on me or you, compared to saying it jumped 3 tenths of a point, right. So look at your results and judge it buy percentages to get the true affect of your progression.
In case you didn’t know this fact, vitamins can thin your blood by weakening the stickiness of platelets. Also, garlic is another danger to platelets. I had to stop using them before my abdominal aneurysm repair to keep me from bleeding to death during a long delicate procedure. Hope things are working out for you. Keep in touch.
Hi Mitten, sorry to hear your diagnosis, my brother died from MM he developed from being exposed to Agent Orange in Vietnam. Because of that, my Oncologist naturally zeroed in on MM when we discovered I had. MGUS. My precancerous cells fooled her and are progressing into a rare form of Non Hodgkin’s Lymphoma called Waldenstrom Macroglobulemia. My platelet count is also low but still in low normal range, so I looked for foods that can increase them. I also looked for foods to avoid that reduces platelets. Because of other blood issues “I’m damned if I do and damned if I don’t” as the saying goes. You see, I tend to throw clots because to many platelets stick together. I’ve thrown clots that have almost killed me in fact. So my options are to either bleed to death from lack of platelets or throw a clot big enough to kill me because they’re to sticky. It’s a delicate balance, my last count was 170,000, low level is 140,000, 50,000 is a disaster waiting to happen. So as the saying goes, “Be carefully what you wish for, you just may get it”!!!