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Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy (RSD and CRPS) Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy (Complex Regional Pain Syndromes Type I) and Causalgia (Complex Regional Pain Syndromes Type II)(RSD and CRPS) |
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#1 | ||
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Junior Member
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hello everyone,
I had my first session in PT today and it was a contrast bath. Just saying the words brings tears to my eyes. I have RSD in my right foot. I have a great team of Doctors, been getting nerve blocks, injections in the foot, and now PT but I must say, today was awful. Maybe I am just a baby? I feel so ashamed that I cried like I did but it hurt so badly putting my foot into cold water. My PT therapist kinda looked at me like I had three heads. Is it normal to hurt this bad? It took my breath away, He kept yelling at me to breath but I just couldn't. He gave me 5 seconds to put my whole foot in and I screamed out, I didn't mean to, it just came out. I couldn't keep it in for the full minute. He kept his hand over my knee the second time and held my foot there for the full minute and I wanted to die. I am not on any pain meds, nothing has worked for me. I am now is so much pain after PT. I am at a loss, I have to go back tomorrow and do it again and the thoughts make me sick. He wants me to do this at home and I just don't think I can do it. Do they really help?? The pain is worth it?? I will do anything, even this if it really does help. Please , tell me this is worth it? Am what I am going through normal or is there something else going on? Thank you for you help. stardustkid |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | AintSoBad (11-18-2009) |
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#2 | ||
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Gentle hugs and wish you well... hang in there!! ![]() |
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#3 | ||
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Dear Stardustkid,
Oh, now I am boiling from listening to your treatment at PT today! What the heck is wrong with those people? I cannot believe he held your knee in the water to force you to do it. What an idiot. He is probably used to having people on pain medication and did not realize you are not on any meds. I think you should go in tomorrow and talk to the supervisor of the place and tell them you will not be able to tolerate it at all. Tell them to start out slowly like I did by using a towel which you can do at home and put it under your foot and pull and push it back and forth to move your foot without touching it. I also started with RSD in my right foot so I know your pain and just had to write to you. The PT guys kept telling me to do that water thing and then when my foot was hot they tried cold water and cold foot they tried hot water. It never worked for me and its been almost five years since then. I have full body now since four months after injury but you need to do what is right for you. I know it will hurt and maybe you can take Tylenol or something like that about a half hour before you go but it is the best thing to keep it moving. I know the pain is unbearable but try and push yourself but in your time not by them forcing your knee down. I also believe putting it (or should I say forcing it) in cold water can even make it worse. I know I read it somewhere and will look for it. I think it was on another web site. You need to speak to the boss and the pt person tomorrow before they even touch you. This is your body and not theirs. Give me a bit and I will see if I can find the article for you. If anyone else has it please paste it here. Take care and hang in there, kathy d ![]() Quote:
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#4 | ||
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Dear Stardustkid,
I want you to go to www.rsdhope.org and go about 8 rectangles down and click on Physical Therapy and you will find all kinds of information to copy and give to your PT personnel. Here is what I got for you so far. You will have to teach them about RSD in a kind and gentle way since they are idiots and I cannot believe they did that to you. And from the first article it seems like you are not the only one who cannot handle cold...87% cannot either! I hope this helps you out. You may want to google cold water treatment for RSD or something like that and make sure you take it to your PT tomorrow. Thanks and good luck, kathy d RSD AND ICE - ICE AND RSD / CRPS RSD PUZZLE RSD AND ICE Neurological Associates H. Hooshmand, M. D., P.A. RSD Puzzle #102 Ice Versus Heat In our study of ice versus heat tolerance, 87% of the patients could not tolerate cold. and 13% could not tolerate heat. The infrared thermal imaging showed that the ones who could not tolerate heat (13 %) had advanced stages of sympathetic nerve paralysis rather than nerve irritation (death of the sympathetic nerve fibers rather than hyperactive nerve fibers). The area of permanent sympathetic nerve damage in late stage acted like a leaky radiator, causing leakage of heat through the skin which resulted in warm extremity and secondary intolerance to external heat. Meaning that due to permanent damage to the sympathetic nerve fibers( after repeated ganglion nerve blocks or sympathectomy) the sympathetic nerves could not contain and preserve the heat originating from the deep structures of muscle, bone, etc... This minority of 13% of the patients did not have the hyperactive cold vasoconstriction of the skin seen in earlier stages of RSD. These heat intolerant patients would be classified as erythromelalgia, rather than the 87% RSD patients who have hyperactive sympathetic function with cold extremity and intolerance of cold exposure. On the other hand repetitive application of ice freezes and coagulates the myelin (fatty tissue insulating large nerve fibers) exactly like ice freezes and solidifies melted butter. As the ice freezes the large nerve fibers, causing freeze damage to the myelinated nerves, the patient develops sensory loss and pain due to permanent damage to the large sensory nerve fibers. This aggravates the RSD by adding sensory nerve pain of non-sympathetic origin to the initial thermal sensory pain of sympathetic origin. As a result, Ice provides total anesthesia and relief of pain for several minute the same way as the hand becomes numb being exposed to snowballs in the winter. However, a few hours after the cessation of ice exposure, the pain recurs with vengeance due to reactive enlargement of blood vessels after the constriction of blood vessels due to exposure to ice. This phenomenon causes excellent relief of pain with ice treatment followed by not only aggravation of pain, but damage to the nerve fibers adding sympathetic independent pain (SIP) to the original sympathetic mediated pain (SMP). The end result is aggravation of the RSD and SIP resulting in failure of nerve blocks and then the patient is told, "You do not have RSD anymore because the nerve block did not help you and the phentolamine test proved that you do not have SMP or RSD". In most RSD patients ice makes the condition worse and can cause denial of diagnosis and treatment for the patient. One last comment: this study was on advanced cases of RSD. In early stages of RSD, without exposure to ice, there is far lower percentage of RSD patients who from the beginning suffer from permanent damage to large areas of sympathetic nerve fibers with intolerance of heat and secondary erythromelalgia. It becomes obvious that heat-cold challenge physical therapy is nonsensical because it end result is one temperature extreme neutralizing the other and ice challenge further damaging nerve fibers. Please stay away from any ice exposure, even if you can not tolerate heat. H.Hooshmand, MD. SEE ALSO RSD AND ICE ARTICLES http://www.rsdhope.org/ShowPage.asp?...1&PGCT_ID=3376 11/18/09 __________________________________________________ ________ CRPS /RSD Facts CRPS/RSDS AND ICE - CRPS AND ICE CRPS/RSDS PATIENTS SHOULD NOT BE TREATED WITH ICE. NOT EVER! NOT ICE, NOT HOLD/COLD THERAPY, NOT HOT/COLD CONTRAST THERAPY, NOTHING DEALING WITH ICE AND THE AFFECTED RSD AREA. NEVER. EVER. IT CAN MAKE THE CRPS/RSDS WORSEN AND/OR SPREAD. IT CAN ACCELERATE THE PATIENT THROUGH THE STAGES. THIS IS EXTREMELY IMPORTANT TO KNOW AND TO SHARE WITH YOUR PHYSICAL THERAPIST. Ice will only cause the blood vessels to constrict more, reducing the blood flow to the extremities and increasing the pain. It can damage the nerve's myelin sheath (the protective cover basically for the nerve). Patients can actually have their CRPS/RSDS go into the next stage from repeated application of ice packs. Please let your Physical Therapist know this, for your sake and others. For the medical reasoning behind this, please follow this link for one of the better explanations; ICE AND RSD ARTICLE ICE AND RSD ICE AND RSD NUMBER TWO Most Doctors and Physical therapists have caught up to the current understanding about CRPS/RSD and ice but there still are pockets or resistance. http://www.rsdhope.org/ShowPage.asp?...8&PGCT_ID=1775 11/18/09 Quote:
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#5 | ||
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Junior Member
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I cannot thank you all enough for your support and information. I know the PT was doing what he thought was "right" but lord it felt so wrong! It has left me in such awful pain tonight. I was talking to my husband about going back tomorrow and once again I started crying. This is so unlike me, I can tollerate a lot, but this was just so awful! My husband is trying to understand. I know it can be hard when you don't really understand the feelings associated with it.
Thank you all so very very much, I am off to do a bit of reading. ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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#6 | ||
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Junior Member
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Thank you all so much. I posted an answer but I am not sure where it went! I cannot thank you all enough! I did read the links, I am a bit confused though, does this apply for contrast baths without ice?? The temps were 15 degrees apart. His goal is to reach 20-25 degrees. we started out with the warm water at 85...
Thank you again!! for your support and understanding. I hate that someone else knows what I am going through, but I am also thankful I am not alone. ![]() ![]() |
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#7 | ||
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#8 | ||
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Junior Member
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I have a call into my pain specialist. I will not allow them to do a contrast bath until I hear back from him. My foot is so blue and painful. I didn't sleep at all last night.
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#9 | ||
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In Remembrance
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Sounds like hell too me...
pete |
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#10 | ||
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Senior Member
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I do hope you won't be going back to that boob?...
ICE is a big no-no for RSD. You need a new therapist. For now, hopefully a heating pad and some warm Epsom salt soaks can help relieve your pain. For what its worth, my RSD is likely the result of aggressive PT, combined with the liberal use of icing after a 2nd surgery that should never have happened. Good luck to you - please take care. Sandy |
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