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Thread: Epiphany

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2004
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    Chicago
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    Epiphany

    Today I did 91 miles of a century, and forgot to take the usual celebrex I take before any long rides. I was half way to the start point when I realized it, and all I could think was "this is going to hurt." I had no idea.

    I have crohn's arthritis in my hips and knees, which is what the celebrex is for. I only take it when I ride. I've done a dang good job masking any pain by taking it pre-emptively over the past 2 years or so. Today was a wake up call that I simply cannot ride longer distances (over 30 miles) without it. I'm not sure how that makes me feel, considering I'm only 30 years old. Well ok I *can* ride them, but it's pretty miserable. I tried to do the whole mind over matter, positive attitude bit which helped. But by mile 55 my hips were screaming at me.

    At mile 75 it started to rain. Hence the 91 miles of the century. I skipped the 11 mile loop and headed back in. I'll use the rain as an excuse, but I'd made up my mind well before then that there was no way I'd make the full 102 miles with my jacked up joints.

    At mile 82 I was chased by a sharpei. Thankfully I was on a slight downhill, so I was able to motor a bit. But he kept up with me for a while as I yelled NO! at him. I don't think he was doing anything more than chasing me, but that certainly didn't help my situation

    Anyway I'm not sure what the point of this post is other than to b*tch about my dependence on celebrex. I could think of more fun drugs to have a dependence on, for one Thanks for "listening."
    "Only the meek get pinched, the bold survive"

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2002
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    On my bike
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    Have you tried testosterone?

    Seriously, I understand. I have lupus and am allergic to Celebrex. I LOVED Vioxx, but it was taken off the market. If you're like me, the amount of asprin/advil/etc that I would need to take to mask the pain would kill my stomach.

    If you can take Celebrex and it helps, do it! You wouldn't tell somebody with diabetes to not take their insulin & tough it out, right?
    To train a dog, you must be more interesting than dirt.

    Trek Project One
    Trek FX 7.4 Hybrid

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2004
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    Chicago
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    Heh

    I'm just an amateur, so no
    "Only the meek get pinched, the bold survive"

  4. #4
    Join Date
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    If you're like me, the amount of asprin/advil/etc that I would need to take to mask the pain would kill my stomach.
    Yeah, I thought about stopping at a gas station for some tylenol or something. But I figured that wouldn't work too well and just upset the ol' guts.

    If you can take Celebrex and it helps, do it! You wouldn't tell somebody with diabetes to not take their insulin & tough it out, right?
    Good point.
    "Only the meek get pinched, the bold survive"

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
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    Hey, beta, I didn't know there was such a thing as Crohn's arthritis. It makes sense though, as they're both inflamatory processes. I'm with Dogmama on this one. You take an anti-inflamatory to control an inflamation process. Tylenol probably wouldn't have helped much; some Motrin or Advil might have.

    There was a time when I was taking a lot of Motrin for my endometriosis pain. I found that if I took it with TUMS, I had a lot less stomach pain. That might be a gas station emergency measure--some ibuprofen + TUMS if you forgot the Celebrex.

    Funny about being chased by the Shar-Pei. I can just see it! I lived with a Shar-Pei (Sophie) for 5 years. They are tough little beasts. They used to be palace guard dogs in China. Glad you shook him off your tail.
    Run like a dachshund! Ride like a superhero! Swim like a three-legged cat!
    TE Bianchi Girls Rock

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
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    Beta - sometimes it's just better to take the medicine.

    I'm going through a similar but very different issue at the moment. I take Allegra everyday because my skin reacts to everything - both from pressure (carrying plastic bags, picking up my son, etc) and chemical contact (like shampoo/soap). Allegra kills my short-term memory and makes me a bit foggy, so I'm trying to not take it. Today was the first day in a year that I haven't taken it and my hands hurt from picking up things and my knees hurt from kneeling on the carpet with my son. Frustrating. I'm going to see how long I can tough it out. No-one has been able to diagnose what the problem is. I'm going to the doc this week again. I also take Detrol (for complications from having children). I tried stopping that, too - hoping I had gotten past the problem. Nope - back on that this afternoon.

    Sorry to digres. My point is that it's depressing to be dependent on medication. I know this. However, modern medicine can help us - so we might as well accept the help.
    *******************
    Elizabee (age 5) at the doctor's office: "I can smell sickness in here...I smell the germs"

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
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    DRUG CLASS AND MECHANISM: Celecoxib is a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) that is used to treat arthritis, pain, menstrual cramps, and colonic polyps. Prostaglandins are chemicals that are important contributors to the inflammation of arthritis that causes the pain, fever, swelling and tenderness. Celecoxib blocks the enzyme that makes prostaglandins (cyclooxygenase 2), resulting in lower concentrations of prostaglandins. As a consequence, inflammation and its accompanying pain, fever, swelling and tenderness are reduced. Celecoxib differs from other NSAIDs in that it causes less inflammation and ulceration of the stomach and intestine (at least with short-term treatment) and does not interfere with the clotting of blood. NSAIDs have been found to prevent the formation and reduce the size of polyps in patients with the genetic disease, familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP). In FAP, patients develop large numbers of polyps in their colons, and the polyps invariably become malignant. The only cure of FAP requires removal of the entire colon. Celecoxib is approved as an adjunctive (secondary) treatment among patients with FAP. The cramping and pain during menstrual periods is due to prostaglandins, and blocking the production of prostaglandins with celecoxib reduces the cramps and pain.
    ***********
    "...I'm like the cycling version of the guy in Flowers for Algernon." Mike Magnuson

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Apr 2004
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    Chicago
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    Thanks everyone. I've been on daily medication for about 4.5 years now to control the stupid crohn's disease. Though recently I've been cut back a lot to only the injectable med I'm on, every 2 weeks. It's been nice to not pop a mound of pills every day lately, so maybe that's part of my whining

    Celebrex is fantastic, and I really don't like taking drugs (if you can't tell). I'm not supposed to take Advil or other pain killers as generic NSAIDS are harsh on your guts. COX-II's apparently are more specific as to their mechanism, so I don't get the damage. Dogmama - sorry to hear you're allergic. I think they took Bextra off the market too?

    I am very impressed with the 91 miles....
    Thanks Bikingmomof3.

    Nuthatch - I'd never done the Naperville Rotary ride before. I saw it on bike journal. It was pretty nice, except for the rain. I was soaked by the time I finished. Some of us took shelter at a rest stop with a small tent, then decided once the lightning stopped to just go. By the time I got back to the start point, the sun came out. Isn't that always the case? Did you get to do any riding?

    Lise - just one of the fun "extra-intestinal" complications of crohn's. It's a fantastic disease. I had joint pains for a few years before my guts got goofy. I chalked it up to being tall The power of denial is kinda scary sometimes.
    "Only the meek get pinched, the bold survive"

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
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    123
    lol It surely is, at that.

    I rode 10 miles today for the first time and I wasn't in any pain. I'm just proud I got that far.

    So, I'm amazed and delighted for you going 91 miles. Wow, that's far. I can't imagine even doing it without pain. I seriously can't imagine it in the pain you were in. Congrats. It's a major feat and you got bragging rights there.

    Now rest. Let yourself heal.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
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    Flagstaff AZ
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    over 80 miles

    Hi I'm a sufferer of a bad back - crushed vertebra from falling off a horse in my late 20's. I'm not 46. Take heart that you can ride with some pain. I'm never really pain free but I will not let it stop me from riding. At 30 you probably don't want to hear this, but as I get older, I'm happy to do less mileage. 100 miles has always been hard on me and I have never liked doing it. But everyone seems to get it in their mind as riders that you have to do 100 all the time cause that's the magic number! Well, my magic number is 80. I can ride 80 and do okay after that I'm miserable so I don't usually ride over 80. 80's plenty and I don't have to prove anything - i've ridden 100 so I don't have to do it again.

    What I'm trying to say is as we get older we have to adapt our activities to what is good for us and healthy for us and that is OKAY!

    Just keep riding and having fun doing it. Oh, by the way, I eat Advil like candy but so far my stomach is fine I think I'm one of the lucky ones.

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by betagirl
    Lise - just one of the fun "extra-intestinal" complications of crohn's. It's a fantastic disease. I had joint pains for a few years before my guts got goofy. I chalked it up to being tall The power of denial is kinda scary sometimes.
    Yeah, well, it takes time to make sense of things sometimes. I had joint pains when I was 14--it's cuz I was growing to my 5'8". If someone said, "Joint pain" to me, I wouldn't think, "auto-immune intestinal disorder". I salute you for all you've been through with the diagnosis (no doubt some time of mis-diagnoses, too), and treatment. I've had a couple of friends with crohn's, and my cousin was dx'd with it a few years ago. Sucks. You have all my admiration for the riding you do.

    Are you doing the EBC Century on 9/17?
    Run like a dachshund! Ride like a superhero! Swim like a three-legged cat!
    TE Bianchi Girls Rock

  12. #12
    Join Date
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    Chicago
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    Are you doing the EBC Century on 9/17?
    I'm planning on it. I seem to recall you saying you were interested earlier in the season?
    "Only the meek get pinched, the bold survive"

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
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    Quote Originally Posted by betagirl
    I'm planning on it. I seem to recall you saying you were interested earlier in the season?
    I am doing it. It will be the longest I've ever ridden, and I haven't been century training, I've been triathlon training. So I'm nervous about it. Not about finishing; I'm pretty sure I can do that. About keeping up with you! So, I figure, if I can keep up with you, cool! If not, cool! There will be a lot of people riding. My friend Paul is thinking of doing it, too.

    My tri is 8/20. I'm doing a 1/2 marathon Oct 1, so I figure I'll work on adding longer rides to my training. This is when it's good to not be dating!

    This will be the first year in many that my mom's not going to be involved as SAG. My soon-to-be-sister-in-law's parents are having an engagement party for my bro and their daughter, in Lansing, the night before.
    Run like a dachshund! Ride like a superhero! Swim like a three-legged cat!
    TE Bianchi Girls Rock

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
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    DuPage Co IL
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    865
    Quote Originally Posted by betagirl

    Nuthatch - I'd never done the Naperville Rotary ride before. I saw it on bike journal. It was pretty nice, except for the rain. I was soaked by the time I finished. Some of us took shelter at a rest stop with a small tent, then decided once the lightning stopped to just go. By the time I got back to the start point, the sun came out. Isn't that always the case? Did you get to do any riding?
    We heard the thunder at the Newark city park rest stop and the rain started shortly after we left the stop. It rained steadily through the Cross Church rest stop (this was on the way back to the start point), where everyone looked like drowned rats! The rain stopped about 10 miles from the finish.

    So, yes, we rode about 90 miles (because we got lost about a mile from the finish!) It was a good ride with very nice people staffing the stops and for a wonderful cause. My only complaint was the distance between stops for the 85 and 102 mile riders. Twenty-five miles between water/potty stops is just too far for me. I really enjoyed the route they picked - I plan to do it again.

    Hope you'll be able to make the ride next year with all the appropriate pain medication on board!

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    Chicago
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    We heard the thunder at the Newark city park rest stop and the rain started shortly after we left the stop. It rained steadily through the Cross Church rest stop (this was on the way back to the start point), where everyone looked like drowned rats! The rain stopped about 10 miles from the finish.
    It sounds like we were near each other on the route. I stopped at the church to huddle under that little white canopy tent with about 8 other riders. I was wearing my New Belgian Fat Tire jersey. I wonder if you saw me? I saw lightning on the road twice, once was out of nowhere before the rain started. I was on my way back though I don't know which part of the route I was on really. Probably about 25 miles out. I said to the guy next to me "I don't like the looks of that at all." And he was like yeah we're about to get wet. I stopped to ask a woman who was stopped if she was ok about a mile from the church stop and this weird bolt of lightning or spark or whatever came out of the cellular tower in the field next to us. I was like ok, time to roll. I stood at the church for about 15-20 minutes and we decided to roll in the rain after that. I'd say I was at the church around 12:30 or so.

    So, yes, we rode about 90 miles (because we got lost about a mile from the finish!)
    Funny, a guy and I got lost coming down that big hill after one of the rest stops on the way out. There was a left turn you had to take and we both blew right by it. Hence my 91 miles
    "Only the meek get pinched, the bold survive"

 

 

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