Sorry that I didn’t update sooner. My keyboard died and I needed to get a new one:)
First world problems. I know.
Anyway 2 weeks on Yorvipath. I’ve gone for blood work twice. They have both been good. Corrected calcium levels were in the mid 9’s. For those not versed in calcium levels, anything under 8.5 is low. But I have to say it is more than just calcium numbers. I feel like my body is working again. Probably because Yorvipath is actually replacing the hormone my body is missing.
I am still in the beginning stage. I am adjusting dosages while lowering daily pill intact. Exciting stuff is that I am no longer taking any calcitrol and still in the 9’s!!!!! I am lowering my dosage of calcium supplements. The goal is to stop them too. I am down to 2 doses a day. More blood work to follow. More adjustments to follow, but it is already worth it.
Right now the biggest side effect I have is bruising from blood work and redness around injection sites. You inject in either belly or thighs and rotate sites. I have also had some leg pain, but not sure if that is from just all I’ve been recently doing. Monitoring.
So now……
WHAT HAVE I BEEN DOING?
Well the first week, I admit, I took it very easy. I did not work out. I also had a busy week with school, so I didn’t have a lot of extra time anyway. Then after a week an half, I started at it.
One night I wanted to just run. So I did!

I felt winded. I felt like I pushed myself, but what I didn’t feel was the Hypopara symptoms.
Then I went for a 4 mile walk/run with a friend. I followed that with going and getting ten forty bags of mulch and doing some gardening. IN THE HEAT! I hydrated. I took breaks. I did all the things anyone would do and I felt like I could do it!

Then the next day I went for a three mile run on my own. I tested out a running vest. I ran pretty much the whole thing except for walking to drink as still figuring out the vest thing. No symptoms.


Then I did some more gardening and mulching.
Then the next morning I did more.
All the while not feeling ANY symptoms of low calcium.
So here is to new beginning!






