Thursday, June 13, 2013

“Low-D” update

I have been taking a daily supplement of vitamin D for the last couple of weeks, and there are early indications that this 5000 IU daily supplement is helping a number of issues that I had earlier attributed to NA.

The biggest thing is the reduction of nerve/muscle fatigue.  During my regular physical therapy sessions, I had been asked to exercise using an arm exercise style “bike”.   This is on a machine that has an arm crank that you turn using different settings to achieve goals of reconditioning your upper arms and shoulders.  While initially doing this exercise prior to my taking the D3, I had trouble turning this for more than a couple of minutes with very little to no resistance.  As the Borg would have said, “Resistance was futile.”  A couple of times I had to stop before reaching the preset goal of only ten minutes, and it felt extremely hard to go past 5 minutes.

Now since taking D3, the last few times I have had no sensation of fatigue in the early going, and this is with the settings now on what they call “constant work.”  This setting really is weird in that if you maintain a certain speed you do not really feel the resistance. If you go too slowly, the resistance sets in.  But the key is that you have to go faster. Before the addition of vitamin D supplement, when I finished the 10 minutes, I could usually end up around 1.0-1.1 miles on a good day and usually in the .9-1.0 mile range, with no resistance set.  Since the addition of vitamin D, I have been regularly hitting 1.3-1.4 with a high of 1.5 miles using resistance setting as constant work.  And at the end of 10 minutes, I now feel as if I could go on for a longer time.  It is true that I feel like my muscles are getting tired during this, but I can tell that they recover while still exercising and the strength is not negatively impacted.  This has made a real difference in my physical therapy.

My therapists had been concentrating on having me do stretching exercises and including the exercise bike if my arms would tolerate it.  Now my therapy is being geared to a more active use of my arms.  Instead of passive stretching, I am actively using my arms within my achievable range of motion with a ling term goal of increasing strength.  This is closer to what my arms would be doing in the real world.

A few days ago, I also tried to do a pushup.  I was not successful.  My shoulder still has too much pain with certain actions.  But my left leg feels stronger at my hip, and my right leg just above my ankle is much stronger when driving around town.  That had been getting worse and I had been getting a bit more worried that my ongoing weakness would impact my ability to do necessary driving; like to doctors for me and my significant other, grocery shopping, etc.


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