Thread: Gradual onset?
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Old 03-31-2007, 12:56 PM
InHisHands InHisHands is offline
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 808
15 yr Member
InHisHands InHisHands is offline
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 808
15 yr Member
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Donna7 View Post
Can RSD/CRPS have a gradual onset?
Yes, I had a gradual onset, and here's another story about that:
One morning in March, at the Nerve Injury Unit that Oaklander runs at Massachusetts General Hospital, I met an R.S.D. patient I will call Elena. She had entered the police academy in her home town, in western Massachusetts, at the age of forty-four, after bringing up several children, and she had been an officer on active duty for five years. During her spare time, she worked out, running and attending kickboxing classes for several hours a day, six times a week. One night in November, 2001, Elena had been patrolling bars in her town with seven other officers when a man with a history of assault-and-battery convictions punched one of her colleagues. Elena tackled the man. Then the other policemen piled on top of her, pinning her right forearm under the weight of their struggling bodies. Eventually, the suspect was subdued and handcuffed. Afterward, Elena recalled, “My arm felt heavy, as though I’d been working out at the gym with weights for hours.” For several months, the discomfort persisted, and she sometimes felt a tingling sensation. In late March, 2002, she awoke from a deep sleep convinced that her house was on fire: her arm was burning. Her hand was hot, puffy, and purplish-red, and the veins had swollen so much that they looked like fingers. “I thought they were going to explode,” Elena said. “I was so scared. It was as if I had the same pain as the night of the injury, and it had come back, only a hundred times worse.” After a few hours, the swelling decreased and the pain began to subside. Her doctor sent her to a hand surgeon, and when she arrived for the appointment her hand was freezing. She told the surgeon that when the hand was hot and swollen the skin was too sensitive to touch. “He just said, ‘R.S.D.,’” Elena said.

(story is from here: http://www.jeromegroopman.com/articl...n-remains.html)

Just my experience: I had an injury that caused the RSD in the autumn of 2005, and I had symptoms here and there, until it was full blown by the autumn of 2006 (and I was finally diagnosed)...

I had pain off and on, then my hand was changing colors/ going COLD, sweating terribly and then I started getting allodynia shortly afterwards. Until it was so full blown this past winter... and then the RSD spread to my other UE, and then I got it in both LEs and back. Swelling comes and goes for me, along with the red/ purple, cold/ hot extremities.


Hope my experience helps you out...

Sorry to hear you might have RSD...

I am sorry you didn't get much of a response last time. Ask any questions you need to! There are many helpful people here, and most of the time someone will have an idea or an answer for you!
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