Help! I am an idiot on my AI med

Anonymous
Help me - I have to take an aromatase inhibitor long term (5-10 years) in order to reduce my breast cancer recurrence.

AIs are given to post-menopausal women to eliminate the estrogen that some (my) tumor feeds on, but the lack of estrogen is giving me serious brain fog. I can't locate words. I feel like I have dementia. I'm dropping details on important personal and work related tasks that are having serious consequences. To compound things, I have ADHD, so it's even worse and my ADHD meds do not seem to have the impact they previously did.

Is there anyone out there who has experienced this side effect of AI medication. Did it subside? Did you get used to it and find work arounds to manage it? I'm on Letrozole - are other AIs less likely to do this?

I may survive breast cancer, but I will be broke and unemployed/unemployable.

Thoughts?

Anonymous
I don't have any experience with that medication. I am mid-40s and in perimenopause and was having terrible brain fog, have trouble with word recall, making dumb mistakes at work. Someone suggested magnesium l-threonate (magtein) and it has really really helped me with brain fog. Maybe take a look at that?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Help me - I have to take an aromatase inhibitor long term (5-10 years) in order to reduce my breast cancer recurrence.

AIs are given to post-menopausal women to eliminate the estrogen that some (my) tumor feeds on, but the lack of estrogen is giving me serious brain fog. I can't locate words. I feel like I have dementia. I'm dropping details on important personal and work related tasks that are having serious consequences. To compound things, I have ADHD, so it's even worse and my ADHD meds do not seem to have the impact they previously did.

Is there anyone out there who has experienced this side effect of AI medication. Did it subside? Did you get used to it and find work arounds to manage it? I'm on Letrozole - are other AIs less likely to do this?

I may survive breast cancer, but I will be broke and unemployed/unemployable.

Thoughts?



Were you already in menopause prior to starting AI?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Help me - I have to take an aromatase inhibitor long term (5-10 years) in order to reduce my breast cancer recurrence.

AIs are given to post-menopausal women to eliminate the estrogen that some (my) tumor feeds on, but the lack of estrogen is giving me serious brain fog. I can't locate words. I feel like I have dementia. I'm dropping details on important personal and work related tasks that are having serious consequences. To compound things, I have ADHD, so it's even worse and my ADHD meds do not seem to have the impact they previously did.

Is there anyone out there who has experienced this side effect of AI medication. Did it subside? Did you get used to it and find work arounds to manage it? I'm on Letrozole - are other AIs less likely to do this?

I may survive breast cancer, but I will be broke and unemployed/unemployable.

Thoughts?



Were you already in menopause prior to starting AI?


Yes, but I don't ever remember having this degree of trouble, and it was mostly during perimenopause. Once I was in full menopause, the memory and word finding difficulty went away pretty much. I've been in menopause for 4 years, and this med shuts the estrogen down even more. I literally can't find common everyday words multiple times a day and have to "talk around them" and people's names -- forget about it!
Anonymous
Talk to your oncologist
Anonymous
How long have you been on Letrazole? I've been on it for 3 years. The first year was definitely the worst but now I barely notice those symptoms. I do have to be careful to eat healthy, and get good sleep (which can sometimes be hard on letrazole/AIs). One night of crappy sleep and I have brain fog, word loss etc

I also take Trazadone which helps with sleep. Talk to your oncologist. Also, some people have worse side effects and do better on different AIs (Anastrozole, etc). It's not uncommon to switch.
Anonymous
Since you were already 4 years post-menopause, it may not be the lack of estrogen so much as just garden variety side effects of the med. I didn’t notice significant brain fog on Letrazole and I was in perimenopause when I started it (then again, maybe you are accustomed to operating at a higher level than I do in general, lol). It might be worth considering a different AI. Definitely talk to your oncologist.
Anonymous
I'm 15:26 PP. I also wanted to add, that if your oncologist isn't receptive to helping you deal with side effects, find another oncologist.

My first oncologist had a terrible bedside manner and was very unsympathetic. I switched and my new onco is fantastic.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'm 15:26 PP. I also wanted to add, that if your oncologist isn't receptive to helping you deal with side effects, find another oncologist.

My first oncologist had a terrible bedside manner and was very unsympathetic. I switched and my new onco is fantastic.


Thank you for this encouragement. I may switch docs. I have not been happy about some interactions with the doc.

How did you find your new oncologist?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Since you were already 4 years post-menopause, it may not be the lack of estrogen so much as just garden variety side effects of the med. I didn’t notice significant brain fog on Letrazole and I was in perimenopause when I started it (then again, maybe you are accustomed to operating at a higher level than I do in general, lol). It might be worth considering a different AI. Definitely talk to your oncologist.


I did talk to the doc, and will try a switch, so hopefully the new medicine won't be as bad.
Anonymous
OP, I’m on the same med and relate to everything you’ve described. You are not alone! It’s so very frustrating. Like one poster said, I feel improvement when I’m eating, sleeping, and exercising optimally, but that's a constant struggle because of a busy life and a lot of fatigue as well that I feel is directly related to the meds.
Anonymous
By any chance have you had COVID recently? Anomic aphasia (trouble finding the right words exactly as you describe) as well as brain fog have been reported as some of the longer-lasting COVID effects. The good news is that they think it only lasts months, and goes away.

Maybe not your case at all but just another possible explanation.
post reply Forum Index » Health and Medicine
Message Quick Reply
Go to: