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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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New Member
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Hi my name is denise i recently joined in hope of find some help with rsd and some support to help me get though the hell i am in
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"Thanks for this!" says: | AintSoBad (07-12-2013) |
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#2 | ||
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Junior Member
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Denise,
If your Dr. is an M.D. as opposed to a pain specialist, you need to find both a pain clinic and a Pain specialist. Pain that is not something you can see is often difficult to get people to believe. Some think its just drug seeking behavior, while others just don't know how to deal with it. When I first started getting intractable migraines, I would show up at emergency rooms, the local urgency care facilities looking for relief. They would put me in a bright room in a noisey area and make me wait for an hour. When a Dr. finally came in, they didn't want to use any pain medications. Having been through migraine after migraine, I knew what worked and what didn't. None of the Dr.s would listen and I'd wind up be injected with botox related drugs, anything but pain medication. I'd get up and leave, furious that no one would listen or believe me. During one hospital stay during which I almost lost my hand because they kept injecting a drug I knew didn't work and wound up being overly sensitive to, they sent a pain specialist up to do a nerve block known to have a high rate of facial paralysis etc. The pain specialist came up and told me right off that he woudn't have it done to him and recommended I not do it. He became my Dr., and since then my life has changed. i go to this Dr. at a chronic pain clinic, and regardless of the fact that my pain cannot be seen or explained through MRIs and CTscans, he treats me with strong pain medications and has even brought a perscription to the house for me when things were so bad I couldn't get out of bed and couldn't be left alone. Pain clinics are strict. Usually you have to have check ins with blood or urine tests every three to six months to make sure you have not fallen into a drug habit, but they believe their patients, involve them in their treatment and believe in pain that cannot be seen or won't show up on tests. I strongly urge you to find a pain clinic near you. Make an appointment with or without your Dr.s referal. You need relief and a Dr. who is used to various pain conditions. You can start with the phone book, internet or asking around to find one. Don't give up. If you don't, you will only wind up angry and depressed and painful. YOu don't have to live in pain and shouldn't have to. Sam ![]() |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | RSDcandice (10-18-2012) |
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#3 | ||
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New Member
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I am sooo glad you found a great doc to help you. Its hard to find a doctor thats wants to help anymore. They all think it is in you head. I go to the hospital thats right beside my house and they dont help they just say take asprin and put heat on it. I have to have someone take me to another close hospital which is 30 mins from my home when the pain gets sooo miable i cannt take it. I go to a pain clinic now and they arent helping. The pain pills they are giving me isnt helping and the pain is getting unbearable. I call doc i have found on intertnet and in the phone book but they dont take my insureace or arent taking new patients. I am sooo misable i dont know what to do i just want the pain to b bearable.
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#4 | |||
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Senior Member
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Dear Denise -
Hi. By way of "quality control," the easiest way to go board certified in pain management by the American Board of Pain Medicine (ABPM), the group which certifies most of the pain management fellowships in the U.S. What this means is that, in addition to a doctor’s residency, s/he took a separate one-year fellowship in pain medicine, and then sat for and passed an 8 hour written exam. They are serious people. To find ABPM certified specialists in pain medicine in your area, go to its Public Directory. You can search by geographic area, gender and "specialty of origin" - the field in which the doctor completed his or her residency. That said, not all ABPM certified specialists in pain medicine do a lot of work with RSD/CRPS, in fact, most probably treat lower back pain more than anything else. So for what it’s worth, you probably don’t someone who completed a residency in Physical Medicine for CRPS. In fact, for RSD/CRPS a background in neurology is probably favored, with anesthesiology and psychiatry (or in the case of my pain doc, a combination of the two) coming in tied in close second. Alternatively, the American Board of Anesthesiology (ABA) maintains a sub-certification program in pain management that also requires a 12-month fellowship following the completion of a residency, but in its case, a residency only in anesthesiology. While I am not aware of any search engine for doctors who are so-certified, you can determine the board certification status of any anesthesiologist by just by accessing the ABA's homepage. Finally, when you find a doctor, it's important that you do interviewing of your own at the first appointment. In particular, you will want to know whether you will see a physician at all of your scheduled appointments (as opposed to a physician's assistant or nurse practitioner) and, most importantly, inquire as to the physician's long-term protocols for dealing with RSD/CRPS. You are looking for someone who employs multiple therapies simultaneously, such as physical therapy, pain medication, and nerve blocks (injections of local anesthetics, typically close to the spine and performed under fluoroscopy, that are usually most effective if you have had RSD for less than six months), as well as perhaps somewhat more novel therapies, such as "Mirror Therapy and Graded Motor Imagery" and/or extremely low power DC current and/or magnetic stimulation of the brain's motor cortex. BUT, if what your hear instead is a discussion of implantable medical devices, such as spinal cord stimulators (SCS) or pain pumps, I would personally keep looking for another doctor. The bottom line on implantable medical devices being that while they are highly remunerative for the doctor, there is, for instance, little if any peer-reviewed evidence suggesting that SCS is effective in CRPS patients for more than three years: while there is plenty of evidence of too many people developing nasty side-effects along the way. I hope this is useful. Good luck in your search! Mike
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I have learned that to be with those I like is enough. - Walt Whitman |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | LIT LOVE (10-20-2012) |
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#5 | ||
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Guest
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fmicheal
I read a paper a few months back that said 60% of all RSD sufferers who are given SCS's get RSD at the incision sites and pain relief only varies between 15 and 50%. Not somethig I would ever consider although I have read posts by people saying that despite the new RSD they consider themselves to be in less pain than previously |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | AintSoBad (07-12-2013) |
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#6 | |||
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Senior Member
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Quote:
The other thing even the most ardent supporters acknowledge is that SCS doesn't stop the progression of other aspects of the disease, e.g., sympathetic dysfunction in its myriad of forms, something that might be addressed - if you're lucky - with a bona fide treatment.
__________________
I have learned that to be with those I like is enough. - Walt Whitman |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | AintSoBad (07-12-2013) |
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#7 | ||
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Magnate
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#8 | ||
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New Member
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I have family that lives in Butler, PA and I would highly suggest traveling into town. I haven't personally been to any there b/c I live in NC now, but there seem to be some great ones. Good luck! |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | AintSoBad (07-12-2013) |
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