Showing posts with label food supplements. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food supplements. Show all posts

Wednesday, 13 April 2011

CoQ10-ergy! Still hoping!



Well, it's been over a week now that I've been trying the CoQ10 and stopped the statins. Time for another quick catch-up!

The pitch has been queered a bit this week as I developed a cold which forced up my blood sugars and left me achey and feverish.

However, the cold has dried up very quickly (by my own horribly low standards of recovery speed!). My throat is  quite sore, still, which is either from the cold, or maybe the typical M.E.-type of razor-bladey throat.

My Mum was over at the weekend as usual to help with domestic stuff. The weather was so beautiful last weekend here in northern England. Warm temperatures up in the 60s, sunshine getting everyone out in the gardens. Mum,  bless her, gave my back lawn its first taste of the lawnmower this season, while I pottered, sitting down on a chair most of the time, to do a spot of pruning. 

I managed well enough, with frequent rests and naps to keep me going, but considering I had a virus this week too, I'm really pleased to have achieved as much as we did.

I've had plenty of "payback" from that activity since then, in the first three days of this week. (The sun's taken its hat back off and the temperature has plummeted!) But on the whole, since stopping the statins and taking the CoQ10, my head has felt "clearer" and I've been able to wake earlier and felt more alert, I think. 

My current dose is about 100mg CoQ10 a day, taken in the morning. This means taking 10 capsules of 10mg, from a bottle of just 100! As you can guess, this is rapidly diminishing the stock of pills. But I have some more on order, the cheapest I could find online from a company doing a BOGOF (buy one get one free) deal. The new tabs will be a higher dose of 100mg each, and I'm getting 30 capsules with 30 extra free for £14.99 from a company called "Simply Supplements" at 


I did some comparison of the prices per mg of more than a dozen brands and this was the cheapest I found online. However, after clicking send, I realised I hadn't compared the unit price of the Holland and Barrett original purchase from a branch in town. This actually proved the cheapest (about 10p per mg compared to 24p per mg). One online pharmacy was actually charging 99p per mg, while most seemed to be about the 50p mark. This is frankly unaffordable longterm, but if I am convinced of their good effects, as I said before, I can just keep them in reserve for days of particular energy need.

The original Enada Nadh has quickly run out, and as it has a very similar function to the related coenzyme, I am persisting with the readily available  CoQ10 alone. Mainly because it is well documented in the M.E. community and also among the statin takers of the world, of whose number I'm a member on both counts!

I've slept quite well, most nights, and the main difference is a clearer (if not totally clear!) head. I still struggle for words and co-ordination when I'm getting tired etc, but onward and upward! I don't think I'm as itchy as I was prior to stopping the Simvastatin. A patch on my left shoulder blade has calmed down a little.

Sadly, the online delivery from Simply Supplements was promised for the following day if ordered before 6.  I ordered on Sunday evening and even allowing for the weekend etc, it's now Wednesday! Still, I'm not quite out of the original stock yet, so if they come soon, I'll be able to go seamlessly onto the 100mg capsules by the end of the week, in the build up to Easter with its extra energy challenges!

As ever, watch this space!


Friday, 1 April 2011

Enada NADH Progress Report Day 2

Well, quick update on the Enada NADH received yesterday.

The tablets are small and very easy indeed to swallow. Mind you, I'm known for being able to swallow the most revolting and/or huge pills without breaking my stride! Diabetes "metformin" tablets are my least favourites and can even make me shudder and wince!


Took two 5 mg Enada tablets (i.e. 10mg) when I got the package from Amazon through the post just before lunch yesterday.
Nothing dramatic through the day, which isn't surprising. Most courses of medicines will need a period of time before they "kick in".


Today, took another 10mg dose before breakfast which consisted of fruit, rasberries to be exact, plus a slice of toast. That's about half a carb of raspberries (about 35g) plus 2 carbs of toast. My morning ratio for my fast acting insulin (Novorapid) is currently 1 +1/2 times each unit of carb, so I took 4 units of Novorapid, plus my usual 6 units of basal insulin (Levemir), which is half my daily dose which I take split in half at 9am and 9pm to help it last through the entire 24 hours.

Hadn't slept well last night, and so woke with "rubbery" limbs, slight headache, cold hands, spells of dizziness as I move about. Nothing unusual, really, and a relatively "good" day, as I am now up and about. 

My BG before lunch was 3.9. Hypo to some, but quite normal for me before a meal. My BG after fasting this morning was 7.4, bang on normal. I get a lot of the "Dawn Phenomenon" coupled with many episodes of the opposite "Somogyi Effect", so I'm always pleased to see a normal reading first thing! I'm sometimes in double figures then, due to the above mentioned ie high after a night hypo ("Somogyi Effect") or high because of the body's adrenal and hormonal responses to the "fight or flight" of early morning ("Dawn Phenomenon"). So far, so good.


Through this morning I've been borderline hypo twice, at about 10.30am and 11.30am. I get very few hypo warnings these days, apart from a kind of "glowing fog cloud" in my field of vision when my blood sugar drops to 1.9-2.2 ish. Yes, alarming to some, normal for me throughout the 27 years I've been diabetic! 


On those occasions I took 3 jelly babies (fast acting sugar, 10g) and a plain rich tea biscuit (not so fast acting 10g) to bring me back into normal range. Before lunch (soup and a slice of bread with a chunk of cheese) I was 4.5. I took 1 tablet more (5g) of the Enada (15mg in all today) to make sure I'm neither under or overdosing myself. The recommendation on the packet says best to take it in the morning, which makes sense as more energy expended during day than at night.


So far: borderline hypo most of the morning, which can happen anyway at times. Any more hypos and I'll have to start wondering if the Enada is a cure for Type 1 diabetes instead! I do wonder if I'll find that with the extra energy the Enada may be encouraging my body to store, I may need less or more insulin (less would seem the case, if any, from this morning, but of course, this is far too early to make any judgments or changes). There's the wise "Three day rule" in insulin therapy, that adjustments should only be made on the evidence of several days, rather than switching amounts around willy nilly.

Activity levels this morning were things like catching up with email and checking in with friends online, cleaning the downstairs loo, making a Mother's Day card for the weekend (already partially made), feeding the birds, pulling the wheelie bin back in (my kind neighbour drags it from the kerbside to my back gate for me), doing a load of washing. Rested in between each of these to some extent. At this moment (early afternoon) I have the vaguest headache still, tingling in my hands, ringing in my ears from time to time and still sore glands/throat. Have to bear in mind that I led my one service per month at the weekend, which usually takes every last ounce of energy and co-ordination I have and can take a very long time to recover from, even on the best of weeks.


I feel no worse or better than normal. My mind was racing in the night, as often happens with illnesses like M.E. that involve disturbed sleep patterns, so I won't read anything into that. I just take a bit of time for quiet prayer and a little gentle jazz till I drift off again! Or just lie quietly and let the world softly turn! I'm just reporting this for the record, if it might help anyone else on their personal journey.


Stick with me.
I'll report back again soon on this one.