FAQ/Help |
Calendar |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
![]() |
#1 | ||
|
|||
Member
|
Sorry to hear about all of your problems, but personally I wouldn't assume MS from your list of symptoms. That's just my opinion however and the disease can present in a whole host of ways, nothing is really typical.
That being said however, rather than having difficulty voiding a bladder, it is seen more in pts with ms to have difficulty not voiding their bladders. While stiffness can be a symptom it's 'generally' caused by spastic muscles that 'generally' causes weakness, tremors and uncontrolled movements. Eyelids 'tend' to twitch rather than being unable to open. And while fatigue can be a symptom of MS, it is also present in any number of disorders. So again it's just my opinion, not a doctor and never played one on tv ![]() It would still be treated by a neuro, along with a host of other doctors, and the MDA has a quick search you can access to find an MDA clinic close to you, giving you all the specialists under one roof so to speak. If you're still leaning towards MS, the national MS Society also has a contact number so you can speak with someone who can not only listen to your concerns, but can help find a neuro in your area that specializes in ms. I hope all the best for you. And am fighting my own 10 year+ quest for an answer over my body's personal civil war. It's hard, and frustrating, at times worrisome and heart rending, but keep up the fight! The answer is out there somewhere. (Edit) looking over the variations, I think your dr might have been correct in removing MG from the diagnosis, but you might want to a look at FA and FSH/FSHD sorry I'm not more familiar with the variant forms ![]() Last edited by Starznight; 07-17-2014 at 06:29 PM. Reason: Addition |
||
![]() |
![]() |
"Thanks for this!" says: | SallyC (07-17-2014) |
![]() |
#2 | |||
|
||||
Member
|
Gosh it sounds like you have had a terrible time of it!
![]() Have you had an MRI? That would be the first thing I would be asking for, to see whether you have brain/spinal lesions, as well as a referral to a Neurologist if you don't already have one. I just hope you can get some answers to your questions. ![]()
__________________
Lyn . Multiple Sclerosis Dx 2001 Craniotomy to clip brain aneurysm 2004. ITP 1993. |
|||
![]() |
![]() |
"Thanks for this!" says: | SallyC (07-18-2014) |
![]() |
#3 | ||
|
|||
Member
|
Quote:
My current neurologist isn't quite sure what to do so I'm making an appointment for a second opinion. The last week has been hellish. My legs have pretty much frozen up and collapsed at midpoint in my stride. It started last Friday morning. I went to my GP who didn't know what to do and my neuro didn't return my calls. I even called the doctor I had consulted at Mayo clinic last year and told her whats going on. I got a call back and she informed me that she was revising my dx to Functional Neurological Syndrome (which is the new name for Conversion Disorder in the ICD), and wants me to come for a two week gait training program. I finally forced myself to go swimming tonight and am very sore, but can walk normally now. I hope I don't freeze up again tonight. I don't know if whats going on is rheumatological or neurological, but I'm pretty sure now that I don't need gait training, I need to know why my muscles or joints are freezing up. Plus it was pretty distressing to have a doctor who hasn't seen you in a year tell you that you have Conversion Disorder and that basically nothing is wrong with you, after you've been struggling to walk and stumbling for a week. I'm not sure why my GP or another doctor didn't suggest swimming to loosen up my joints, but someone on another forum told me to try it and it really helped. |
||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#4 | ||
|
|||
Member
|
Quote:
|
||
![]() |
![]() |
"Thanks for this!" says: | Starznight (07-18-2014) |
![]() |
#5 | ||
|
|||
Member
|
Definitely would mention that at your next dr. appt if you haven't already
![]() Slouching is a killer ![]() ![]() |
||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#6 | ||
|
|||
Member
|
Quote:
And just to be clear, I'm not knocking anyone who has conversion disorder. I have enough psych issues that I would never do that and it would actually be a relief to think everything is in my head. I just know that it really doesn't fit in my case. |
||
![]() |
![]() |
"Thanks for this!" says: | SallyC (07-18-2014) |
![]() |
#7 | ||
|
|||
Member
|
Yeah.. I wouldn't think conversion disorder either... It's not the same as being a hypochondriac, which is also a true disorder... And from my understanding it generally picks 1 'area' of attack and wouldn't become progressive in a sense, and after 15 years of looking for an answer you would think a pattern or trigger would stand out.... The legs stiffen up before a test while in college, in large groups of people, moments of heightened emotion, or after eating, smelling or seeing something that might remind you a trauma you didn't know you had...
They might be small things, but if you've been wracking your brain to figure it out even if not for the past fifteen years, but in more recent years, it's probable something would have 'stuck out'. But improving some with PT, and receiving some benefits from medication, is a bit too much to call a placebo effect, as the mind should have run with it when benefits were seen. My SIL has conversion disorder, hers attacks the digestive tract, it took a few attacks, some almost life-threatening, but after a bit the doctors were able to diagnosis it, she was initially treated with placebos, improved remarkably... Then it was ah-hah, now what happened before each attack? Money issues, money issues, money issues... Her treatment is let my DB handle the finances, stay out of it. She's been fine for three years now, it doesn't make her crazy, or mentally ill, she just physically can't handle the stress when it comes to money, and knows she needs to talk to people when she starts to worry even staying out of the family finances. |
||
![]() |
![]() |
"Thanks for this!" says: |
![]() |
#8 | ||
|
|||
Member
|
Quote:
I'm still really sore, but the swimming last night and large doses of ibuprofen seem to have loosened up my muscles so I can walk normally now. The last week and a half, my hips have tightened up/collapsed halfway through my stride making it hard to even use a walker. The doctor from Mayo told me to do the exercises they taught me, but I found it impossible since my hip mobility was normal in front of me, but nil behind me so I couldn't complete the movements. I even tried doing the things that conversion syndrome Websites suggested, like singing while you walk, which is supposed to change your gait pattern by letting automatic processes take over while you think about something else. The results were that I fell because my automatic processes weren't doing any better than me. Its strange that it took another patient to tell me that if I can't walk, I should swim and then try again. A doctor telling me this a week ago could have saved me a lot of trouble. I actually do believe conversion syndrome is real, I just don't see how it can cause the array of symptoms I have, like the heart issues. And I'm afraid I can't use Mayo now for a couple reasons. Now that they've dx'd me with it, I'm afraid its going to be their go to cause for everything. Also the doctor wants to take me off benzos. The dose I'm on now allowed me to continue working because my muscle tightness/spasms were too painful to sit at my desk. The original dose prevented Myoclonus that came with uncomfortable electric shock sensations. While I don't like the mental fog from the benzos, I don't want to go back to being shocked randomly through my day. I'll talk to the Mayo doctor about this when she calls back Incidentally, when the myoclonus was at its worst, I did develop jerks that didn't shock me and in hindsight I think that these may have been a conversion type reaction to the actual myoclonic jerks. They went away shortly after the shock type jerks were under control. So I'm not completely dismissive of Conversion/FND, but see the overall condition as closer to what happened with my knee. Long time ago, my knee was collapsing on me whenever I took a step. The MRI came out clean. After three weeks, the orthopedic told me there was nothing wrong with my knee, it may be neurological or psychological, but if I really want he's willing to do an exploritory scope. After some thought, I told him to scope it. The result was that I had a three inch tear in a layer that doesn't show on imaging and needed to be sewn up. He said he'd never seen it before, and it looked like that spot had just dried up and ripped. My body obviously has some strange neuro and/or rheumitology processes going on in it and I think the FND dx is her way of justifying not being able to explain what that process is. For my part, I'm going to keep searching for a dx. |
||
![]() |
![]() |
"Thanks for this!" says: | SallyC (07-19-2014) |
![]() |
#9 | |||
|
||||
In Remembrance
|
Bear in mind that doctors only read about symptoms but most don't experience them. ("But it's not supposed to do that!") I hope you get answers as yours is obviously not a textbook case. I've had things prescribed that I didn't react well to and it confused the doctors.
__________________
. Whatever happens around you, don't take it personally. Nothing other people do is because of you. It is because of themselves. -- Miguel Ruiz |
|||
![]() |
![]() |
"Thanks for this!" says: | BackwardPawn (07-19-2014), SallyC (07-19-2014) |
Reply |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
45 years of suffering with Venous TOS | Thoracic Outlet Syndrome | |||
Suffering headaches (mostly monitor related) after nearly 2 years. | Traumatic Brain Injury and Post Concussion Syndrome | |||
New to this but suffering for years | Peripheral Neuropathy | |||
Suffering for years - neck and shoulder pain | Spinal Disorders & Back Pain | |||
Suffering from anxiety and OCD for way too many years now | Anxiety and OCD |