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Critterina I use a self-testing method which is a variation on muscle testing. I learned it just as I was collapsing into ME, so there's been plenty of time for me to build trust w/ it. Self-testing guided me through a very scary episode of runaway detox a few months ago. I'll either put one hand in contact w/ my supps, or, more typically, just contact the container and ask body. Caledonia has linked this really simple method, 3 minute vid!
I've often thought to inquire, how's it going w/ the pituitary tumor?
Self-testing
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=Ex59wHLk3Q0
Thanks for that response. Muscle testing has never worked on me, so I would be starting out with low confidence. Three different practitioners have tried it with me, and the last one had a lot of confidence in it and in her ability to use it. Who knows why it doesn't work with me.
Turns out the pituitary tumor is likely a non-player in my adrenal insufficiency. It's too small to cause the pressure that would be needed to have that affect. So we will take another picture in a year (December so I don't have to meet my out-of-pocket) to see whether it's grown. Except for GH, all my other pituitary functions seem to be normal. Low ACTH response, but that's an interesting thing in terms of interpretation.
My serum cortisol tests mornings at the low end of the normal range, but not abnormal (6-7 range). My ACTH response doubles the pre-stim number within an hour, which apparently was the criteria for a normal response and is still used by some doctors (namely, the three endos that I have seen). The Merck Manual, Lancet, and the Annals of Medicine from the College of Physicians all use another criteria: the cortisol level has to get over 20 within a half hour. I fail that test entirely, and moreso now than before. BUT the treatment for failing this is biological doses of hydrocortisone or prednisone or other glucocorticoid, and I AM taking that (6 mg prednisone), in spite of the doctors saying that my results are "normal". And my symptoms have all gone away with that dose.
So, any worry I would have is that in a traumatic event (car accident, etc.) would be that my adrenals could respond sufficiently to keep me alive. Well, I choose not to worry. My time will be up someday, hopefully not too soon. Hopefully not in a car accident where injectable steriods would save me. I carry 50-60 mg in my purse, just in case. If I get in a car accident and I'm conscious, I'll take it. If I'm not conscious, I'll just have to trust God that I won't go before my time.
Crit