Brain fog

Five star doctor:  

I’ve been unable to find studies on the long-term effects of INF/Rib treatment on brain health although its been used for over twenty years .  We found a library book by Dr. Dan Silverman (physician-researcher at UCLA) called “Your Brain After Chemo.”  It’s mainly about cancer patients but Dr. Silverman has responded to HCV patients in the NYT (2009) blog/articles, When Cancer Treatment Affects Memory.  I’ve added underlines.

“Both you and Dennis S (author of comment #4, above) experienced cognitive deterioration after undergoing ribavirin therapy. Just like certain drugs that are commonly used as chemotherapy agents in the treatment of cancer, ribavirin is a “nucleoside analog” — a class of drugs resembling nucleic acids, which interfere with synthesis of DNA or RNA, or both. And just like many chemotherapy agents, ribavirin can cause side effects like gastrointestinal distress, anemia, hair loss, weight loss, fatigue, mutations leading to birth defects and generalized discomfort. Use of the drug in patients undergoing treatment for viral infections has also been associated with depression, insomnia and impairment of memory and concentration.

Though doctors may say to either of you that what you went through “was not chemo,” your brain may feel that’s a “distinction without a difference.” And for doctors to say that “even if it were. you would have recovered by now,” requires them to ignore the many other people who are also 10 years out (or longer) from their last dose of cancer therapies but who continue to have problems with memory, concentration and other cognitive abilities.

The bottom line is this: though it is not uncommon, unfortunately, for the kinds of symptoms you have experienced to be trivialized or brushed aside by some doctors — whether occurring after chemotherapy for cancer, or after ribavirin+interferon therapy for hepatitis C — it doesn’t mean that your symptoms are not entirely real, and it doesn’t mean that they are not related to the therapy you received.

It may mean that you need to talk to a different doctor, one who will take your symptoms seriously and steer you towards therapeutic approaches aimed at achieving your recovery from them. In the meantime, as a head-start in addressing the issue, “how do I get my memory back?” please see my response to Bob H.’s comment (#1), above.”

The New York Times limits non-subscribers to 10 article views per month–which I’ve reached–but here are two more links. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/04/health/04brod.html?em&_r=0

http://consults.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/08/17/a-writer-with-chemo-brain-and-attention-deficit-disorder/

Unfortunately, some SVR and non-responding patients may be misdiagnosed with Alzheimer’s in the future because studies on this subject either don’t exist or aren’t published!  But the good news, is that their are some self-help steps one can take and Dr. Silverman is working on brain scan technologies.

Posted in Guest authors, HCV Health, HCV Risks (documented) | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

FACEWINNER

Shawn finds the good stuff…

579833_537736229604892_1417425673_nand this from Deb Zuckerwise. Phil’s on the Wanted: Dead or Alive posters now.

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THEN YOU MAY BE A VIETNAM VETERAN

com_69_0623_vnIf you always get a lump in your throat when they play the National Anthem, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

If you know the fourth stanza to the National Anthem and like it better than the first  because it better describes America, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

If you go off by yourself and cry about the friends you lost that happened forty years ago when you were young, then you may be a  Vietnam Veteran.

If there’s not enough Valium in the world to help you when you go to The Wall, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

If  the radio frequency you called in air strikes on is indelibly stamped in your mind but you can’t remember your own anniversary, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

If your respect for the Constitution prevents you from caving in the head of some guy who proudly announces “Dude. I fought that war. I went to Canada to avoid the draft”, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

If you avoided killing any of your new friends at San Francisco International Airport in the late sixties or early seventies when you DEROSed, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

If you can still remember the name of your pilot and the day he died, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

If you got the short end of the stick on parades when you got home, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

If you went down to join the VFW when you got out and they told you that you hadn’t served in a “War”, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran

If you were told to change into civvies when you landed at Travis to avoid “problems” while traveling home for leave, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

And if you answered a drunken woman who came up to you at a cocktail party asking “How could you kill all those people?” by saying “I didn’t. The napalm did. And it wasn’t even a close race either, honey!” then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

Then you may be a Veteran© Asknod 4/8/2013

There are 857,000 of us left who got the red clay between our toes. We are disappearing faster than snail darters and northern spotted owls. They get more attention, too. All that tells me is I ought to dress up like an owl with fish skin shoes when I go to the VARO.

The Red Clay Club

The Red Clay Club

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Global liver cancer incidence map

Not everyone who is infected with HCV progresses to liver cancer but the incidence of liver countries is worse in some countries.   (Click map or link, the LIVER tab, zoom (+) and hover your mouse over countries you wish to investigate.  Hold mouse down to move it by dragging.)

Mongolia, China, Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, Myanmar (Burma WWII), Korea, all have high rates of liver cancer.  Japan and the Philippines are also high.  I think it’s obvious that many American troops stationed in SE Asia became infected with blood-borne pathogens during their service.  Asian blood donations, massive transfusions,  massive unprotected sex, receipt of unsafe village barbering practices, tattoos, massive unsafe injections and medical procedures, contacts with blood in combat etc…all played important roles in the spread of viruses from Asians to Americans.

liver cancer map

Pulitzer Center maps show very high incidence of liver cancer from hepatitis including Thailand and Vietnam.

The Pulitzer Center created this map with WHO data.

http://globalcancermap.com/

“Almost 85% of liver cancer cases occur in developing nations. In Asian countries such as Mongolia, the burden of disease is blamed on high rates of hepatitis B and C, as well as widespread alcohol use.”

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THIS JUST IN! VETERANS UPSET! NEWS AND FILM AT 6.

If it bleeds it leads, unless you’re a Veteran.

If a young man commits suicide, it’s on the AP newswire in less than five minutes, unless he’s a Veteran.

If a man waits five years for some meaningful recompense for an injury on the job, that is a meaningful story for a Sunday newspaper magazine article, unless he’s a Veteran.

If a man is evicted and loses his home, the local TV station is fond of showing up for some face time, unless he’s a deadbeat Vet looking for a handout.

If a man files a tax return, it is assumed he is filing it legitimately and not fraudulently, unless he’s a Veteran.

If a man is homeless and lives under a bridge, he is considered “economically marginalized”, unless, of course, he’s Veteran. In that case, he more likely than not made a personal decision to pursue this nomadic way of life. Veterans are “earthy”, after all.

I apologize. It isn’t that simple. As I have pointed out more than once, the Veterans Administration has denied (as in nada, no way, dreambucks, wish wampum, do not pass GO) on average, for the last 200 years, compensation to 85% of you. Let’s put that in perspective.

You call GEICO®. After several rings, a live, polite person and you discourse on how your fender is bent. You tell how it happened. You give the name, rank, airspeed and last known heading of vehicle to the adjudicator/adjudicratrix. You meet an estimator/estimatrix and together examine the damage. Several days later (and sometimes less) the adudicator/trix asks a few follow-up  inquiries and then hits Print and says “The check is in the mail”. Total time spent? Over three hours in two days.

You have a problem with your tax return. You call the 800 number and talk to the taxman/woman/tax mistress  and discuss the quandary. He/she answers by the third ring. The Problem is discussed. The Problem is resolved. Information on how to do it is entered (electronically). Forms arrive miraculously. It’s done. The taxman/woman hits print and says “The check’s in the mail, sir.” Time spent? 5 hours over three separate days.

At the VA INsurance COmpany (VAINCO), you cannot simply go into an RO anymore. You may be “economically marginalized” and have body odor issues that might disenfranchise others. Everyone is entitled to their space- well, except you. You’re a Veteran. So you are limited to the Postal service or the new Ebennies site. I neglect the numerous VSOs. I apologize for marginalizing them. Want to call them up and discuss something you don’t understand?  Try it. Please, I insist. Between the hours of 0800 Local to 1630, try calling 1-800-827-1000. Your cel phone battery will go dead before you talk to a warm body. By the end of the day, you will be asked for a callback number for a date sometimes a week in the future. What? A telephone backlog? Try saying that like Tim Allen. Aaauurrgh?

After a suitable period (six months?), you will be informed that VAINCO needs to know if the bumper was bent before you bought the new car. This invisible adjudicator(s) will further ask for proof you indeed own the vehicle. Registrations can be forged and often are. You are required to supply this. Your claim will be held in abeyance until you do. Think cryogenically frozen to 432 degrees below 0 Fahrenheit. Think LOX.

After you respond, you will need a hobby. Eventually, VAINCO will respond to your response with a denial. You file a NOD.

A discussion that your claim for new tires is unsupported by Les Schwab will arrive after nineteen months. You will be required to prove that the claim was for a bent bumper all over again because they lost the paperwork. Meanwhile the claim for the newly broken windshield is construed to be a claim to reopen the claim for  the bent bumper and discarded as a duplicate.

After a year and a half of this, you give up and throw the towel in. You just give up. Piss off. I’m done. Congratulations. Your claim has been resolved to your satisfaction according to VAINCO. Your bumper is still bent. Your windshield is still cracked and you are fit to be tied. 85% of you to be exact. This is the much-vaunted, ecofriendly, environment in which a Veteran may adjudicate his claim free of the strictures of “other, more restrictive” venues-e.g. one that grants the hallowed Benefit of the Doubt.

At VAINCO, your lay testimony is deemed to be credible until they catch you in a lie. Our fellow member Robert discovered they can formulate a mistruth, embellish it, record it as fact and then use your statement refuting it as evidence that your credibility is in tatters. Ah, the miracle of ex parte justice. How sweet the sound.

Now we have reached a crossroads. Americans are waking up seeing what we’ve known and lived for more decades than we wish to remember. Vets are getting the short end of the punji stick-the end with the brown stuff on it. Nothing like a little war or two for 10 years to manufacture a few Vets, huh? Devotees of the present Administration are actually becoming peeved that progress promised is not occurring. Egads. In fact, it’s worsening.

Blame has been (variously) apportioned to: lack of money, lack of trained personnel, too many Veterans filing, too many Veterans filing for multiple (Sacré Bleu) injuries, Mickey Mantle’s mom and undisclosed others. Everyone but the kitchen sink has been indicted.

Now we arrive at what many view as an equitable solution. Gee. Why not just pay the Veteran like the Infernal Revenue folks. If he cheated, we’ll come down on him like a new suit. We know where he/she is. They get a “PAYCHECK” every month. It’s not like they’re hiding in Bolivia. This sentiment does not sit well with Massah up to the big house on Vermont Ave.  Just as an aside, that must be a rub, what with Bernie Sanders being from up that way and all.  Delicious irony, that.

Getting back to the topic, the idea of just letting the claim be processed and taking the pressure off the DROs, RVSRs and VSRs is admirable. Why so much opposition? Why the foot-dragging? Something is horribly amiss. This is like Kim Jung the One blowing an ass gasket. There’s just no defensible reason for it. VA insists that Life, as we know it, will collapse and dirty, unkempt Veterans will be given untold sums of money to drink and carouse in Orlando. No, wait. Those were  the VA Human Resources retreats. I get them confused. Well, you get the drift. Veterans, most, if not all undeserving, will be given access to hundreds of dollars a month to squander on all manner of depravity. Drugs will probably play a big part of this. ETOH consumption across the country will increase. Veterans will start beating their wives. Encounter groups will have to be formed to deal with the influx of more dysfunctional Veterans.

This is no way to run the VA. For centuries this has been a political plum dumping ground for all but the most incompetent Veterans (the most incompetent Veterans having been swiftly relegated to the State Department). Only since the passage of the VJRA in 1988 has it picked up a caché of respectability. That caché can no longer mask the incompetence and  poor mishandling of our affairs. Simply stuffing it with retired, retread generals can no longer give it that respectability any more. Not since Jesse Brown has the VA truly been led by one of us. The rest have been rank imposters with low handicaps earned on our nickel.

Our President has some tall thinking to do. As the author of the article opines, if he can bail out the fat cats on Wall Street and the hurricane victims in New Jersey, what about a few hundreds of thousands of the great unwashed who served their country? Has the political leadership become so jaded that the hallowed meaning of “For he who shall have borne the battle, his widow and his orphan child” can be construed to mean ” You’ll just have to wait until we get around to it because we simply don’t trust you. You’re Veterans and inherently dishonest.”

I, for one, am proud of being one of the 8% unwashed. It’s a rather exclusive club if you can survive the initiation, the membership dues and resist the siren call to be homeless when you get out. Make sure you count your fingers, toes and legs/arms before you sign off on the form. They may accuse you of cutting them off afterward to  horn in on some of that easy money. Especially if you’re a Veteran.

One of the 85% of the great unwashed scheming to get benefits that are undeserved.

One of the 85% of the great unwashed scheming to get benefits that are undeserved.

Posted in All about Veterans, VA BACKLOG | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

VA OBFUSCATION

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When no less than thirteen former military personnel (of high rank) with intimate knowledge of the system tell you what you need to do to get a program properly implemented, you might want to take notes. When they write out the game plan and hand it to you, there are very few excuses you can summons later such as the dog ate it.

This came out in 2007. Regardless of whose tenure this occurred under, the fact remains that the repair order was posted and no one did anything about it. I find it incongruous that in 2010 the VASEC suddenly had an epiphany and the Eureka lightbulb of comic book fame came on over his head.

One thing I read this morning that made my stomach turn was the the latest VA-approved explanation for the backlog. It seems that Uncle Eric decided to grant service connection for Parkinson’s, IHD and hairy “b” cell leukemia to us AO Vets out of the kindness of his heart. No mention of the Institute of Medicine tasked with identifying these diseases and their correlation to AO. Just the bald assertion that Mr. Shinseki had seen the wisdom of doing it due to his compassionate regard for his fellow Vets. Bleh.

This whole business of the backlog is becoming more odoriferous by the moment. In the same article we are being prepared for worse. They mention that the backlog is (not might) going to get worse through the year before it gets better and now there is no “timetable” for a true 125 day adjudication. Well, there goes 2015. Can’t say they didn’t tell us ahead of time.

2013-04-08 101751

VA BACKLOG

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ROUND UP THE USUAL SUSPECTS

Your VAOIG at Work

Here’s the latest hot sheet on all those wonderful folks who help Vets. If what we see represents the tip of the iceberg, we can only wonder what isn’t detected and prosecuted.

Jamestown, NY VA Nurse Arrested, Charged With Distributing Oxycodone

Nashville Woman Admits Theft of $360,000 In Federal Grant Funds Intended To Aid Veterans

Tampa Woman Sentenced to More Than 5 Years in Prison for identity theft.

Gosh. I always thought women were more trustworthy than men. It just goes to show you that it’s always sumpthin’, huh?

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Aircraft over Southwest Asia (4/1/13)

Awesome DoD photo by Tech. Sgt. Christina M. Styer, U.S. Air Force

“A U.S. Air Force F-15E Strike Eagle aircraft prepares to receive fuel from a KC-10 Extender aircraft over Southwest Asia  April 1, 2013.  Both aircraft conducted missions in support of Operation Enduring Freedom.”

Beautiful!

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ONLY IN AMERICA

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From the shallow end of the Mekong River, Jimbo brings us this one. We love lawyers when they are our own-bought and paid for. We hate other lawyers when they are employed against us as the VA is wont to do. Here’s a great law dog story guaranteed to warm your heart (unless you’re a rainmaker, of course).

This took place in Charlotte, North Carolina

 A lawyer purchased a box of 24 of very rare and expensive cigars, then insured them against, among other things, fire.

 Within a month, having smoked his entire stockpile of these great cigars, the lawyer filed a claim against the insurance company. In his claim, the lawyer stated the cigars were lost ‘in a series of small fires.

 The insurance company refused to pay, citing the obvious reason, that the man had consumed the cigars in the normal fashion.

 The lawyer sued – and WON! (Stay with me…)

 Delivering the ruling, the judge agreed with the insurance company that the claim was frivolous. The judge stated nevertheless, that the lawyer held a policy from the company, in which it had warranted that the cigars were insurable and also guaranteed that it would insure them against fire, without defining what is considered to be unacceptable ‘fire’ and was obligated to pay the claim.

 Rather than endure lengthy and costly appeal process, the insurance company accepted the ruling and paid $15,000 to the lawyer for his loss of the cigars that perished in the ‘fires’.

 NOW FOR THE BEST PART…

 After the lawyer cashed the check, the insurance company had him arrested on 24 counts of ARSON!!! With his own insurance claim and testimony from the previous case being used against him, the lawyer was convicted of intentionally burning his insured property and was sentenced to 24 months in jail and a $24,000 fine.

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THE TOMATO NURSERY

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If Cupcake finds out I’m doing this in the back laundry room, I’m toast. If the countertop blows up from all the water, well, I may have to find new living arrangements. I guess I can blame VA for it because they won’t give me my ILP greenhouse.

The good news is she wanted me to grow fewer tomatoes this year. It appears I may have  succeeded. Last year we had 144 starts and I caught hell for it. This year it’s a paltry 117. The other good news is Sunnycrest nursery is buying all my extras so this is now a vocational project rather than an avocational one. In fact, we took 21 mammoth jackolantern pumpkin starts down there this morning. I think I’ll have them donate the proceeds to the Peninsula Veterans outfit locally here. I don’t want to embroil myself in a tax issue if my earnings endanger my Social Security payments. Like that’s going to happen.

The kicker is I (Cupcake)  planted chocolate somethingarother tomatoes. They’re reputed to taste “chocolatety”. Likewise the pineapple ones. This is going to be interesting. I’m not going to go out on the little limbs and ask her why we don’t just buy chocolate or pineapples. I would simply get the “look” and a long, drawn out briefing. Somewhere the words “men, neanderthal, box thinking, and the you have the tomato box out” would be inserted. Following that, exhortations to be daring and not so caught up in those “old, tired ways” would follow. It makes me shiver. I’m learning. In order to “accessorize the salad”, you need a palate of different colors. Apparently, tomatoes are the perfect tool for this.  I wonder how many other men on earth know this. In fact, I wonder how many men on earth even give a… I think I’ll just stop there.

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