Thanks
@Rossy191276 - I appreciate your thoughtful response.
I have communicated with her office given what I learned here to clarify my goals, which are to optimize my mito function, which is very poor, and avoid diseases like Parkinson's and cancer, which my parents have, and which some of my issues make me at risk for.
My doctors have already identified several things that have caused my mito dysfunction, including peroxynitrites, mold, arsenic, iron overload, my chemotherapy drugs and Cipro use.
Whether or not I also have primary mito disease, my goal is to optimize the ones that I have, getting rid of the sloppy senescent ones and damaged ones, and recycle them into happy new ones.
I've tried all the typical mito supplements, which is how I function as well as I do (working part time and being able to carefully exerxise), but I feel like I'm spending a lot of money treading water, which is unsustainable, though reducing the ongoing damage, piece by piece, has made the problem simpler.
It would be lovely to find a mito and metabolism specialist who specializes in secondary mito dysfunction, which affects most people over 40 to some degree.
I've gathered that the mismatch on this thread between expectations abd experience with Dr. Kendall is that she seems to be an excellent geneticist devoted to primary mitochondrial disease, where we are a more complex group of patients that possibly have a genetic component, but may also have many other confounding factors complicating things, so we need a more comprehensive view of how the mito piece fits into our situation, and most importantly, what we can do about it. Her office has been quite helpful and responsive so far.
Does this make sense?