Laura Lynn,
I feel your fatigue and can totally relate.
What kind of work do you do?
A lot of people have to go through a sort of soul searching within their profession and some end up changing their venue of work, because of the symptoms which continue to bring them down.
I know for certain that I would NEVER be able to work a full time job, with kids to boot.
I do home health nursing and am able to do it part time, one patient at a time. There is no noise, distraction, chaos in the background. Yet it still fatigues me!
I have to factor in a nap each and every day, or else, I'll just hit the sack by 6 or 7 pm (the tinnitus is what drags me down).
I also started on a new antidepressant (abilifty-very low dose) to augment the zoloft, which has increased my energy level.
There are some posts on the fatigue and vitamins that people have tried.
Here's a blurb:
"For fatigue there are several nutritional items that can help. B vitamins are very important (I AM NOT A DOCTOR and so take this as information I have acquired and use). I take a B-complex supplement plus B-12 as it is important for energy as well as nerve health and repair. Vitamin C is good for energy, but need to take a fair amount, like several 1000 mg a day. I generally don't get that much in me, but take 1-2 thousand anyway. Have you had your Vitamin D levels checked? That is becoming more and more noted as an important indicator of overall wellbeing as well as many other things. Mine is low; I take a large amount prescribed in a weekly dose by my GP, but it doesn't get "high." "
I'm almost 5 years post op and still getting there.....It just takes time. And brain surgery is considered Traumatic Brain Injury, so give yourself up to 5 years....I'm close to that.... will have to think of those excuse soon
Hang in there,
Maureen