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Old 04-21-2014, 06:39 PM
hopeful hopeful is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2009
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15 yr Member
hopeful hopeful is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 914
15 yr Member
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Quote:
Originally Posted by evandtwins View Post
I would really appreciate some feedback on whether stress could play such a material role in the profound worsening of my PN over the past 18 months.

In August 2012 I accepted a new job in a new industry (real estate development). Although my feet had started to bother me with standing (such that I saw a podiatrist 2x thinking it might be plantar fascitis [sp?]) prior to that, about three weeks before I took the job, my pain really flared up bad. Fasciculations worse, etc.

I knew by then I was going to get the job most likely, and I was nervous about whether I could do it. Foolishly I took the job anyway rather than listening to my body and accepting my limitations.

So here I am a year and a half later and suffering immensely every day.

My question is: Could the stress of the new job account for a such a dramatic increase in symtoms (given that I had been stable more or less for 18 years)? If so, is it likely that the pain pathway has been "conditioned" such that finding a new, lower stress job would not result in a reduction of pain?

I really need some feedback. The physical and emotional suffering is hard to adequately express with mere words.

Thanks,

Jason
Hi,
I was just thinking the same as Dr. Smith. If it is able to be done take a FML.
A vacation may also be good but I'm not sure that will be long enough to make a decision if the stress from your job makes your PN more.

Stress makes my PN much worse. I do as much as I can to avoid it. Also, I had a job that had me on my feet all day and that became unbearable for me.

Hope you get some relief!
Hopeful
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"Thanks for this!" says:
Dr. Smith (04-21-2014)