ChuckM
Active member
I'm currently not an at home tester, rather still on the same regimen that was started post surgery. My doctors never really discussed the potential for at home testing, reporting, insurance covered equipment, etc. So I visit the clinic once a month, insurance covers the cost and have been fairly consistent for several months now. I try to watch my diet, but the funny thing about growing older is that foods you wouldn't touch as a kid become the ones that you seemingly love as an adult and then suddenly it all changes.
However to the point, for you at home testers who either self or in coordination with your doctors adjust your meds after testing, I'm curious as to how fast a change in dosage or diet affects your INR. Say you go out and have broccoli with a meal, its followed by a fruit salad with blueberries, and you didn't have a glass of wine. At what point do you test? How much did that one meal make you swing (or does it even reflect a change with one instance?). Either because of this meal or the fact that you haven't checked in a week, you discover now that you're .5 to 1 point low, you adjust your dosage, say add 2.5mg warfarin, how fast does that dosage change appear to affect your INR? How quickly does it "bounce back" to where you are normally?
As one who tests monthly, I've been in my range without change for months now. Suddenly this week's test, I was nearly 1 point low. I of course don't discover until I go for a monthly check, so I don't know if its one meal, one week of meals or one moth of meals.. she makes one day of change by adding 2.5mg to my normal dosage, and I'm just curious if that one change is enough to bring me back into my usual range. I try to remember its a marathon and not a sprint, that the consistency is what counts, but I'm just curious what ya'll who self test see in terms of change over time.
Chuck
However to the point, for you at home testers who either self or in coordination with your doctors adjust your meds after testing, I'm curious as to how fast a change in dosage or diet affects your INR. Say you go out and have broccoli with a meal, its followed by a fruit salad with blueberries, and you didn't have a glass of wine. At what point do you test? How much did that one meal make you swing (or does it even reflect a change with one instance?). Either because of this meal or the fact that you haven't checked in a week, you discover now that you're .5 to 1 point low, you adjust your dosage, say add 2.5mg warfarin, how fast does that dosage change appear to affect your INR? How quickly does it "bounce back" to where you are normally?
As one who tests monthly, I've been in my range without change for months now. Suddenly this week's test, I was nearly 1 point low. I of course don't discover until I go for a monthly check, so I don't know if its one meal, one week of meals or one moth of meals.. she makes one day of change by adding 2.5mg to my normal dosage, and I'm just curious if that one change is enough to bring me back into my usual range. I try to remember its a marathon and not a sprint, that the consistency is what counts, but I'm just curious what ya'll who self test see in terms of change over time.
Chuck