![]() |
Diagnosis confimed
I found out today, the neurologist says it is MG. My sfemg was abnormal. She got approval from the government for musk antibody testing and had the blood drawn today, sounds like it will take awhile as it is sent from Ontario to Calgary. I am staying on mestinon. She doesn't think prednisone is suitable for me as I am diabetic and when I have been on it before it has sent my blood sugars wacky. She is contacting my cystic fibrosis clinic and immunologist to talk to them about immunosuppressants??? To find out if they are ok with me starting them, she said there are 2 choices. I just wait now. I didn't get a lot of info from her. Thanks for all the support through this diagnosis process.
Meech. |
Now the fight really begins. Read and study all you can.
Mike |
Yes, I think I will have to do most of my learning by reading. The doc I saw told me MG ONLY really affects people from the neck up?? And so far that's not what I've read or experienced.
|
Quote:
Good luck and get the proper meds. FREDH |
Quote:
Abby |
I'm not even sure yet if I will be MuSK positive. So far just abnormal sfemg. I do know I have had very noticeable weakness in my arms that my original referring neurologist that I see said would be due to MG if it turned out to be what I had. When I asked the new neurologist who diagnosed me, she said probably not?? So now I don't know if I should be looking for another cause for that issue.
|
Quote:
Abby |
That's what I thought, that arm weakness was a symptom and she couldn't have been confused by how I described it... She never even gave me the chance before brushing it off and saying she doesn't like everything being put down to MG. She did say though with the abnormal sfemg that it doesn't matter if my MuSK antibody is negative, that I still have MG, I will just be double negative.
Thanks for your replies. Meech. |
Hi, Meech.
I'm glad you have a diagnosis. Many people struggle trying to get the proper help. MG only affects the head, eh? Super wrong! MuSK MG can significantly affect the chest wall muscles. Do you have a MG expert in your area? Your doctor is right in that not all symptoms should be ascribed to MG. However, they shouldn't be ignored, nor should they be minimized. If there is something else going on, then more investigating needs to be done. If you have breathing issues, you need a pulmonologist. They work in tandem with neurologists for patients during a MG crisis. Neurologists are NOT qualified to assess breathing! It's always a good idea to get a baseline reading so that the neurologist, the pulmonologist, and you know how far your breathing function has gone if you become worse. MG is all about muscle weakness that becomes relatively worse with activity and relatively better with rest. It's all about fatigable muscles. It's fairly easy to determine if a new symptom is due to MG or not. MG can have pain as a secondary symptom, if muscles become weak enough. It's similar to athletes who overuse their muscles and have cramps or spasms. With MG patients, it just happens more quickly. Whomever you have manage your care, just make sure that you can communicate well with them. It's so important that a doctor listen carefully and be responsive, not arrogant and flippant. ;) Annie |
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 08:04 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
vBulletin Optimisation provided by
vB Optimise (Lite) -
vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.