What has Paul been doing this summer?
2018 thus far
I was expecting this
year to be a whole lot better for me than what has happened. The reason is because of the odd decade phenomenon,
that I have noticed over the years. In
my 30th decade of life I divorced from my first marriage – not a
good thing. In my 50th decade
of life I was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. So, this being an even decade I was not
expecting any big life changing negative events.
But …
In February my neurologist
did not raise my medication for my PD symptoms.
I was expecting to get an increase in my medication since my off-time
was starting to increase and I was having trouble sleeping through the
night. For those of you who do not know
what off-time means it is when my medication wears off between medication
dosages and my PD symptoms begin to show.
When this has happened in the past the neurologist always raised the
dosage.
In April Vicki and I
took the Motorhome down to Orlando to meet with the family to see Universal and
do some Magic Kingdom. We stayed at a Holiday Inn resort. I was having sleeping problems and some off-time but was still functional.
After Orlando, Vicki
and I took off in the Motorhome to west Florida. During that time things got worse. It became harder and harder to fall asleep
because tremors from Parkinson’s was showing up at bed time. I would also wake up early between 4 & 6
am and not being able to go back to sleep.
When the off time became long enough, I would get to the point of not
being able to sit still. So, I would
pace in the motor home. I would
sometimes go outside to walk, but my dystonia (curling of the muscles) in my left
foot would appear, keeping me from walking.
I would get stuck in certain places because I could not move my feet. One morning I had 10,000 steps by 6am. None of this had ever happened before. Both Vicki and I were very confused.
This became bad enough
that Vicki and I decided to head home.
It took a while to get there because I could not travel very long
because of the off time and me not being able to set when that happened.
Trying to figure out what is happening
We sent a message off
to our neurologist trying to explain what was going on, but we had trouble doing
that. We also asked for an increase in
medication to get rid of the off times, but he refused. We followed up asking why but never heard
back.
Finally, I decided to get things under control. The basic problem was I would take my pills
(CL) and it might be hours before it took effect. During that time, my symptoms would get worse
and worse. I had never seen this problem
before. After thinking about this for a
while I remembered a few things my neurologist had told me and had basically
ignored because it had never happened:
· If
you have just taken a pill (CL), wait a ½ hour before eating any protein.
· If
you just a protein the wait 2-3 hours before taking medication.
My pill taking cycle was basically 2 CL every 3.5 hours. This means I have a small window to eat protein
before my next time to take a pill.
I had never had this problem before. I was eating what I wanted when I wanted, ignoring
where I was in the cycle. I might eat a hamburger and fries just before taking
my pills. Based on the above, that would
mean when I took the pills, they would have little or no effect. My off time would then extend for 3.5 more hours
when I would take my next pills. I also
figured out that eating something like a hamburger might take upwards of 5-6
hours to digest. This means if I take a
pill, wait the ½ hour for the pill to take effect, then eat a hamburger, the
next set of pills would be delayed and diminished because the hamburger would
be digesting. This led me to my mantra:
1.
Keep my pill schedule of taking pills every
3.5 hours.
2.
My stomach should be empty when I take pills
3.
I will eat as soon after my pills take effect
as possible. This helps to assure that
the pills will fully take effect and that my stomach will have time to digest the
food before I take my next pills.
a.
If stomach is empty it will be 40 minutes. The 40 minutes comes from the fact that when
I wake up in the morning my stomach is empty and about 40 minutes after I take
my pills off time is over.
b.
If not empty the time will be greater than 40
minutes.
I started to incorporate this into my schedule. In the beginning I cut way back on what I ate
and proceeded to lose about 8 pounds in a month. I then started to experiment with what I ate
to see how much of a delay it caused when I took my next set of pills.
Language to discuss what is happening
I would like to setup a
mathematical like language to discuss what is happening.
pills
|
Carbidopa-Levo(CL). Carbidopa-Levo+Entacapone (CLE)
|
Ax
|
the clock time at which I take my
pills. Ax+1=the time of the
next pill. If I take the pills(CL) at
6 am (A1) and take my next pills at 9:30 am(A2) (CLE)
then the time between pills is A2-A1 = 3.5 hours.
|
Ax+1-Ax
|
3.5 hours:
The time between pills
|
Delx
|
the time it takes for the medication to take
affect after taking Ax.
Best case: 40 minutes, which is what it takes after 6am pills (CL) and
no food in my stomach.
|
Ax+Delx
|
the clock time my medication has taken
affect and I can now eat. A2-A1
= 3.5 hours or 210 minutes. The best
case is Delx = 40 minutes.
So, if I start eating at A1+Del1, I have 170
minutes to eat and have it digested to minimize the amount downtime around Ax+1.
|
Ex
|
The clock time I actually eat after taking Ax. Ex >= Ax+Delx
|
Cx
|
the time it takes to digest food. Ideally, it would be Ex+Cx<=Ax+1
|
Dx
|
the start of downtime after Ax
takes effect
|
DTx
|
the length of downtime. The longer the downtime the worse the
symptoms.
|
The goal is to eat just
enough food between pills such that Ex+ Cx = Ax+1
and thus Delx+1 is 40 minutes.
On the other side, I need to eat enough food during a day to maintain my
health and weight.
Here is an example day (10/9/2018).
A1
|
6 am CL
|
Del1
|
35 minutes
|
A1+Del1
|
6:35 am – I should be able to eat something without affecting the medication
for A1
|
E1
|
6:40 am – I eat my morning meal. It has
170 minutes to digest.
|
C1
|
It is
hard to gather this information; however, I put it here to make it easier to
understand
|
D1
|
8:40 am
|
Dt1
|
90 minutes
|
A2
|
9:30 am CLE
|
Del2
|
40 minutes.
Ate the right amount of food at
E1(6:40am).
|
A2+Del2
|
10:10 am
|
E2
|
10:10 am – It has 170 minutes to digest before A3
|
D2
|
12:15 pm
|
Dt2
|
105 minutes
|
A3
|
1 pm CL
|
Del3
|
60 minutes – an extra 20 minutes of downtime
|
A3+Del3
|
2 pm
|
E3
|
2:05 pm – 145 minutes to digest before A4
|
D3
|
4 pm
|
Dt3
|
105 minutes
|
A4
|
4:30 pm CLE
|
Del4
|
105 minutes – an extra 85 minutes of
downtime
|
A4+Del4
|
6:15 pm
|
E4
|
6:20 pm – 100 minutes to digest before A5
|
D4
|
7:45 pm
|
Dt4
|
85 minutes
|
An example while on vacation:
If I had a hamburger and fries at 12 pm. This is an hour before my next pill. I took my last pills at 9:30am (A2)
so this meal was D2. A hamburger
has two problems:
1.
It is a lot of protein
2.
it takes a long time to
digest.
After 6 hours I am still digesting it and the
fries, I can tell this because I am not hungry.
This is what I think happened:
1.
E2 = 12pm - I
eat the hamburger and fries.
2.
D2 = 12pm -
The downtime is beginning
3.
C2 = 6 hours -
The time it takes to digest a hamburger and french fries.
4.
A3 = 1pm - take 1pm pills
5.
1:30pm = D2 is
continuing. By now, I cannot sit still
and have to get up and walk around.
6.
A4 = 4:30pm -
take 4:30pm pills. D2 is
still continuing - still walking around.
7.
6pm = D2 is
starting to subside but the medication from A3 does not have a lot affect
because of the protein. But A4
should be taking affect. DT2
= 6 hours
8.
6:30pm - I am starting to
get hungry,
9.
7pm - I eat another meal
that takes several hours to digest. E4 = 7pm
10.
730pm - D4 -
downtime begins as A4 starts wearing off.
11.
8pm - A5 take
pills - DT4 continues - starting to pace again
12.
11pm - A6 take my
nighttime pills. DT4
continues. I attempt to go to sleep. Since, DT4 is continuing I cannot
get my legs to hold still and thus have to get up and pace some more. It may be 12am before I can finally get to
sleep.
Where
I can use some help:
I have decided to try and predict when my medication will be
delayed based on when and what I ate. I
have 5 “independent” variables:
· Time of day
· Fat (grams)
· Net Carbs (grams)
· Fiber (grams)
· Protein (grams)
· Time to next pill
And one dependent variable:
Amount of delay.
I have gathered information for about a month. I tried doing multiple regression, but the
numbers seem to say linear regression the answer. What I would like to know is what should I try
next or did I do the multiple regression right.
Comments
At this point I can only offer my prayers for this situation to improve for you. All my love to you and Vicky. Love uncle BILL
Paul