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-   -   A visit to disability doctor showed no pulse (https://www.neurotalk.org/thoracic-outlet-syndrome/170204-visit-disability-doctor-pulse.html)

brmr19 05-22-2012 04:38 PM

A visit to disability doctor showed no pulse
 
well for the second time I had to visit the pension board doctor. This guy found no pulse on my left side, which was already repair with surgery. He side right side he would lose pulse when he had me turn my head. The last guy lost the right side just by raising the arm. i can tell you that the 2.5 hour drive was not fun at all. My sister drove and we stopped several times just so I could walk around. The trip home was even worse especially since I was with the doctor over an hour and he was moving my arms checking range of motion and strength. What an aggravating day.

nospam 05-22-2012 04:53 PM

I am so glad your sister was able to drive you. I was hoping you would not have to go it alone. My fingers are crossed that you are granted the benefits that are due to you.

Jomar 05-22-2012 04:53 PM

You'll probably be more sore tomorrow...:(

There is also a small percentage of normal folks that will lose the pulse in those same positions, so it isn't a slam dunk as far as dxing.
But if you have many TOS like, or similar sx, and other testing rules out any c spine or other issues, then it sure points to TOS.

Oh if it is similar to WComp, and you do feel much worse tonight/tomorrow, go have the increased pain & sx documented by your own medical team.
Often it all comes down to what is on paper...

ladylaura418 05-22-2012 09:45 PM

As a fellow user who had an irritating day, I'm hoping that tomorrow is brighter for both of us. I'm in a disability battle myself which is so frustrating. Hang in there and take care.

brmr19 05-23-2012 01:18 PM

Jomar, you were right, I woke up pretty sore today. I did see the chiro late this morning and it has helped a bit. My shoulders, upper arms, and chest is the worst, had a lot of spasms last night and this morning, but starting to settle down.

Jomar 05-23-2012 01:24 PM

Looking back -one of my main problems in regards to my wc claim was the delayed pain, I didn't know anything about it at all back then... so i had no idea what to call it, or that I should mention it to my drs...& atty...

brmr19 05-23-2012 02:58 PM

Jomar, i was planning on bringing up the delayed pain to the doctor, but he beat me to it. His comment to me was that he only sees me for a few minutes, but understood that the problems could start after I left his office. We talked about it several times during the 1 hour appt.

finz 05-24-2012 02:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jo*mar (Post 881980)
You'll probably be more sore tomorrow...:(

There is also a small percentage of normal folks that will lose the pulse in those same positions, so it isn't a slam dunk as far as dxing.
But if you have many TOS like, or similar sx, and other testing rules out any c spine or other issues, then it sure points to TOS.

Oh if it is similar to WComp, and you do feel much worse tonight/tomorrow, go have the increased pain & sx documented by your own medical team.
Often it all comes down to what is on paper
...


That's a GREAT point !

Wish I had known that back in the day.

chroma 05-27-2012 08:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jo*mar (Post 881980)
There is also a small percentage of normal folks that will lose the pulse in those same positions, so it isn't a slam dunk as far as dxing.

Given that TOS results from how all your structures come together and that all of those variables can be in degrees (rather than "on" or "off"), I often think that these people have "sub-symptomatic TOS".

It would be interesting to see a study that followed such people as well a control group that didn't lose the pulse during the clinical tests and observe what develops over time.

Jomar 05-27-2012 09:12 PM

Yeah, I figure they just never had anything trigger the TOS or TOS like sx..

In my 20s when helping dh hang sheet rock on the ceiling, I always wondered why I couldn't hold my arms up as long as he could...:rolleyes:
I kept having to change arms or use my head/neck to hold it up so he could nail it.. later we learned the pros use a "deadman" 2x4s to prop the stuff up overhead, boy we were dumb doing it the hard way LOL


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