I’m just so tired. So tired. Bloods look good last we looked. I’m taking all kinds of supplements and am trying ginseng. And I’m on Vit D Rx. I just finished a 3 day course of of Cipro-something for a bladder infection; maybe that?
I even took the kids Rit.
I guess I’m asking if anybody has gone through this and found a magic concoction.
I third the recommendation for a sleep study. I had undiagnosed sleep apnea for years, and before I finally went and got diagnosed, there were days when I could hardly type a sentence without falling asleep at my desk five or six times.
I wasn’t physically tired (muscles not tired or achy or anything like that), just sleepy all the time. It was funny though, one place where I never felt in danger of falling asleep was driving, which looking back seems odd.
Roddy
Chronic fatigue sydrome is your last resort. I know someone who was told first to “walk to work every day”. She ignored the advice and got a fancier doctor to give her the CFS label.
OK just spoke to my pharmacist. He said the antibiotic I just got off of could do this and it should clear up in a day or two.
But I do have sleep problems. Two-three days ago I was WIDE AWAKE all night. (What a waste of time because I was too tired to get up and be productive.) Wide awake as opposed to tossing and turning–
I happened to see my shrink today and made him write me a script for amitryptaline. It’s an antidepressant BUT at a very small dose it’s great for sleep which is also great for pain management. I learned that from a rheumatologist decades ago.
So maybe I’m in the clear.
But in general, I haven’t been taking care of myself since 9-11 but I’m trying to change that. SO Rippy Van Winkie actually went to three docs in the past week or so.
Sleep apnea has been ruled out but not in a study. Then there’s the menopause factor; they say THAT can go on for ten years.
Madame Chronic Tiredness here. What helps me (to a degree anyway):
Get enough sleep. This is actually very difficult. I have a set wake-point at about dawn, after which no sleep will happen again until the next night. Being chronically tired means I am often so tired in the evening that it’s a struggle to remember to start a going-to-bed ritual early enough and to complete it without curling up on the bathroom floor instead. I am extremely easy to wake up, and often I am so startled it takes me a long time to get back to sleep again.
My doctor prescribed trazadone, an anti-depressant which in a very small dose simply keeps me asleep once I’m asleep, nothing more.
I take it faithfully, and it sort of works (if I don’t take it I just lie there with my eyes wide open until I remember I haven’t), but still it is a very rare night when I get eight hours. And sleep lack accumulates – just fifteen minutes to a half hour short every night and eventually it reallly gets to you. Some people catch up by sleeping eleven hours straight. This has never happened to me in my life that I remember, unless I was very ill. I cannot nap either.
It’s the biggest struggle in my life, the struggle to get enough sleep.
There are other reasons to be chronically tired though.
I would have assumed the antibiotic; no matter the kind, it always kicks your ass, as you’ve basically just told your body to put 2000 percent of it’s energy into killing something.
I can sympathize. Like the OP, I am tired almost all the time. It’s a struggle to stay awake during the day. If a bed were nearby, I could fall asleep at just about any time of the day.
I have tried everything to combat it. I eat healthily, run and lift weights during the week, and take vitamins & iron. The only thing that (sort of) seems to help is more sleep at night.
As for the root cause to my fatigue, the only thing I can guess is allergies. My sinuses are clogged 24/7, I have lost my sense of smell, and I always feel pressure behind my eyes. I think it’s also responsible for my tiredness.
I had extreme daytime sleepiness and general fatigue/lethargy as part of my narcolepsy and those have basically disappeared by going to a ketogenic diet (extreme carbohydrate restriction, think vegetables, meats, and fats only).
It has been more effective than expensive stimulants and “wakefulness enhancing agents” have ever been, and I’ve been losing weight and getting the energy to be active as well.
Sometimes it does, sometimes it doesn’t. I know this because my doc just started doing it for routine physicals a couple of years ago, and since then I’m 0 for 2 on having healthy vitamin D levels. He says probably half his patients have come up deficient since he started routine testing.
I’ll always be hanging around this neighborhood, for better or worse (incurable blood disorder - but treatable). My MD said if I worked at it I could be 90% of my self, so I resumed running. Helps a lot.