don't rain on my imaginary parade, fls!
I think you're safe. I don't think you will change your mind just because I point this out.
Linda
don't rain on my imaginary parade, fls!
It was a band and song. It made me chuckle anyway![]()
It's a line from a song called Rip It Up by Orange Juice
I think you're safe. I don't think you will change your mind just because I point this out.(It may even strengthen the 'effect'.)
Linda
So you haven't learned anything yet.
And you are not going to until you try different things besides OJ.
Sometime you have to suffer for your science.
But now the cramps are more frequent? You hadn't mentioned them except at nights before.
But it will take far more variations than just OJ vs. Other Liquids. Add to that Sitting up plus NotSittingUp, Just waiting It Out vs. all of the above, stretchingVsMassageVsNothing and you have Dozens of combinations to be tested.
Easy to say when you're not the one waking up feeling like someone has just hit your leg with a hammer. Keep in mind also, the longer I try to "bear up" under the pain rather than just do something which relieves it, the longer I will be making noises which keep my poor Susan awake. Also, the higher my BP is likely to go - no small thing for someone who had a massive stroke largely due to his BP.
Don't be thinking you are the lone ranger. I've had a myopathy my whole life. It didn't get a proper diagnosis until I was 50 years old. A dozen doctors had misdiagnoses. In the meantime, I've had hypertension since my teens. And diabetes. And clogged arteries. And post exertional cramps my whole life.
Current BP meds: HCTZ, hydralazine, Minoxidil, atenolol, and lisinopril. And still an episode of 249/170 back in December.
Sound familiar?
So, lately, the every-night-so-I-can-count-on-them cramps that started when I cut down on the COQ10, then disappeared when I went back to the larger dose, proves to me that I am short on COQ10.
And my myopathy is supposedly 1:5000, but the genes have been found in 17% of diabetics. So I think the possibility of sub-clinical metabolic myopathy may be more common than people think. I can't wait for pharmocogenetics to become the rule rather than the exception. No more of this "essential hypertension" but maybe "Casebro, your hypertension is caused by the poor expression of the Nitric Oxide gene. A nitro patch should have been prescribed 40 years ago."
No, I didn't think I was alone in this. You (and others in this thread) posted of similar, if not worse, nocturnal cramp conditions than the one I've dealt with for forty years now. But I think I am the only one that others are urging to abandon something which helps in favor of suffering more pain in the interest of... science, I guess.
Any activities which improve circulation (both arterial and venous) can reasonably be proposed to have an effect. There isn't anything in orange juice which can be having an acute effect (beyond some eventual rehydration effects which still aren't going to be immediate).
Linda
I was under the impression that you wanted to figure out what exactly was having the effect of relieving your cramps. In fact, in post 7 you said, "I will try the water next time, as well as the sitting up..."
That was the only reason why I was suggesting not having the OJ. Of course if you want to keep drinking it, do so.
Hmm. Well, you could arrange for someone to do a blind test on you
You give that person (such as someone you live with or who visits you regularly) instructions to fill empty orange juice bottles in your refrigerator with water with orange food coloring and sugar and hand you real orange juice one day and water+food coloring other days
If they ask you how you feel afterwards and take notes, they can determine if it is a placebo or not.
Or you might just be thankful that it, whatever it is, seems to work.![]()
Also, if OJ works magic, so should eating three apricots at once or half a cup of parsnips. According to one source, they have as much potassium as half a cup of orange juice.
If choking down molasses doesn't relieve your cramps as easily as drinking orange juice does, it is safe to assume that it is a placebo.
I finally looked up "myopathy". you (or someone) mentioned it earlier in the thread, and I'm embarrassed to admit that I thought "What does near-sightedness have to do with leg cramps?"
I've never been tested for myopathy. Perhaps I should mention this to my doctor?
Isn't it ironic that the very things that could have helped your cramps were things that you couldn't stand to eat?
If only you had liked bananas in your youth.
Offtopic- has anyone else heard people say that "You are allergic to the things you like most"? A lot of people say things like "When I was a kid, I found out I was allergic to strawberries/chocolate/nuts, which sucked cause I always LOVED it!"
Is that true? Or is that an urban legend?
And if it is true, why would it be true? What's the correlation?