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#1 | ||
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Newly Joined
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Ok, I've had Chronic Fatigue Syndrome for a couple of decades but most recently have had some pain on the bottoms of the feet and odd sensations up my left side and occasional pin prick type pains elsewhere on my skin. I had blood tests in Feb and had Hemoglobin A1C of 5.7 and mean plasma glucose of 126. I've seen the neuro today complaining of the above symptoms and he said he couldn't say I had peripheral neuropathy but I could get an EMG if I want.
I'm also seeing a naturopathic Dr (ND) who has said he thinks I have a lot of inflammation and a revved up immune system. About a month ago he began treating me nutritionally and with some supplements etc. Opinions on if I should get the EMG? I hear it can be very painful etc. or should I give the ND ( Naturopathic Dr) a chance first? Thanks for any advice!! Burk |
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#2 | ||
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Elder
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I would give your current situation a chance to work first. I have heard different things about the emg. My house mate didn't think it hurt at all! But I also went with a friend, and I heard him yell. In my own situation, I declined the invitation. I have PN. I have been taking suppliments and B12 shots for a year. Several different things I am doing. Lidocane patches, Bio freeze, some medications. My doctor does believe me about the pain, and never insisted that I do that test. I wish you all the best. ginnie
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#3 | ||
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Grand Magnate
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An EMG/NCV test can be painful for some and not for others. It also can depend on who is administering the test. I know it was very painful for me and I will not have another one. In saying that, another one might not be that painful because the person doing it might be better than the previous one.
I have no idea why your doctor suggested one. Hope you find an answer. |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | ginnie (08-17-2013) |
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#4 | |||
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Member
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FWIW, when I had one 2 months ago, I remember the first jolt being quite a shock (ahem), and the doc then "calibrated" the device so that he still could get meaningful readings without me trying to levitate to the ceiling. It was pretty much painless after that, only slightly uncomfortable.
I obviously don't know for sure if it was the calibration that did the trick. That said, EMG's seem to be hit & miss, and certainly not the be-all diagnostics device for PN. |
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#5 | ||
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Magnate
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--if you are experiencing neuropathy as a result of impaired glucose tolerance, which is certainly possible (I've posted before a lot of links about neuropathic symptoms occurring well before people are diagnosed with frank diabetes), it would likely effect the small, unmyelinated fibers first, and these are not measurable by standard EMG/nerve conduction studies, which only measure gross abnormalities of larger, myelinated nerves.
There is other testing that might be brought to bear, including quantitative sensory testing, which is designed to ascertain the responsivity of the small fibers that subsume temperature sensation, and skin biopsy to determine density and condition of intraepidermal small fibers. |
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#6 | ||
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Senior Member
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Hi Glenn,
Could you elaborate on "quantitative sensory testing"? What is it? How is it done? Thanks, |
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