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Old 07-29-2014, 09:19 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Burnbabyburn View Post
Hi all

Hope everyone is doing as ok as they can be. Someone just sent me this article. I found it interesting. I have mixed thoughts as I have often thought RSD might be an autoimmune disorder, among other things BUT.....

My RSD occurs immediately after surgery, I mean immediately as far as I can tell. Within 24/48 hrs. Also, RSD has never occurred for me after a fall, and I have had many many of them, or a general injury etc. Only surgical intervention or, one time, a flair from an injection.

So, the question is: if you take an autoimmune approach, why would surgery, cutting, invasion bring this out, but other things don't? Many of us get or got RSD from surgery. Do you think the body just can't handle any intrusion? Is it the weakened system they are assuming is the cause? In that case, why wouldn't a fall, or a bad cold, or pneumonia for example have some effect and cause RSD? I am only talking about people who get RSD from surgery and no other cause that they know of.....

Curious as to other people's thoughts. AND for the 1st time in my life, I feel really badly for mice, rather than just being afraid of them...(see article). I hate to think of anything (mice or other) being injected with things that cause RSD like symptoms. Sad. It's for science, and us, medicine, I know but it makes me sad. LOL

http://www.hcplive.com/articles/Comp...used-by-Trauma
Hi B3 great article and I agree with its general premise. Thanks for posting this.

I am like you in that surgery is the only trigger I've experienced that results in RSD. The nervous system goes bonkers as a RESULT of autoimmune dysfunction. The question is: what's causing the dysfunction? That will be different for everyone but there are many many commonalities - we're all human right??

There are a couple reasons I see that surgery would be more of a trigger. 1) the specific nature of that trauma is invasive. Several levels of "cutting" - through skin, capillaries, nerve pathways, etc. 2) surgery is a result of a problem that ALREADY exists at that particular site, or else we would not be having it. 3) immobility of the site after surgery. 4) modern protocols such as icing that retard the healing process rather than assist it. 5) mental states of increased stress prior to and after the surgery. 6) surgical trauma results in mass production of free radicals flowing directly to the site as well as circulating body-wide. If the immune system is already overstressed, these cannot be neutralized.

There are more but those are the basics as I see it.

For those that experience RSD from other triggers, I would say that much depends on the vitality of the immune system as a whole. As we know, RSD "builds on itself" by the compounding nature of its symptoms. As you guys have stated, there are lots of connections between RSD and many other conditions.


And I agree - Torturing other living creatures in an effort to find a cure for ourselves does not help the overall state of the human race
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"Thanks for this!" says:
Burnbabyburn (07-31-2014), eevo61 (07-30-2014), RSD ME (07-29-2014)