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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Old 09-01-2007, 12:53 PM #1
suzandy suzandy is offline
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Default Radiation and RSD

I had radiation therapy for Hodgkin's Disease 12 years ago. I was just recently diagnosed with RSd that's effecting my left hip, leg and foot.

Has anyone had any experience with RSD long after radiation therapy? Could radiation have been a contributing factor?
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Old 09-02-2007, 06:25 AM #2
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Hi Suzandy,
Sorry to hear that you are suffering from this horrible monster - I know how you are feeling I have had it for 6 months in my leg and I have had it for about a month in my hand, but Im not sure has to whether I have it in my arm because it does not feel the same has my leg.
I am sorry but I cannot help you on the "Radiation" side of things, but I can give you some advice on what to do.
Next time you go see your Dr / Consultant or Physiotherapists talk to them about your "Radiation" and ask if that could have contributed in RSD. Also have a scroll round on the internet about it. But always remember RSD can set in WITHOUT ANY injury or operaration etc.
Hope thnis helps, sorry I couldnt help with the Radiation bit
Pain free hugs
Alison
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Old 09-02-2007, 01:43 PM #3
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the fact that the initional symptoms occurrred so much later i would guess no. maybe it caused it or maybe your body has a time bomb within for years that you never knew about. for some people the cause is injury while as for others it is just an unexplainable. if you are looking for answers about the why i doont really have any good ones. but i am usually around if you need someone to talk to.
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Old 09-05-2007, 07:28 AM #4
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Suzandy,

I had 38 radiation treatments back in 1992 after breast cancer surgery.

I was injured in 1999 and diagnosed later that same year with RSD, I doubt one has anything to do with the other. I believe the longer we have this darn disease the more straws we grasp at to try and figure out what parcipatated our RSD. If you look on the board I have a question for everyone about having a neuroma and developing RSD. I think we are both searching for the what caused our RSD. If I am wrong just tell me but I don't think I am.
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Old 09-05-2007, 10:07 AM #5
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i have often read that people who have stress in their lives, emotional and/or physical, are more prone to RSD. so it could be all the things you were all living with and not necessarily the radiation that set it off. it would make sese that our nervous system was already taxed and so this just sent it into overdrive, right?
well, for wahtever reason, you and i have this monster and it matters more that you take the best care of yourself now and keep a good spirit and do things you love. joan
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Old 09-05-2007, 12:22 PM #6
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I have to comment on the "stress" thing...

Stress is not an explanation for any physical disease. It's used as such an explanation (incorrectly) by the general population, and therefore I think we should all be very careful about how we use the term.

Does stress put us at a greater risk for RSD? I highly doubt it. I think that it's an unfair generalization, just as some doctors have tried to psychologically profile RSD patients as being "perfectionists" or "type A personalities." None of this is true. We are all just as different in personality as the general population. I guess if they didn't say we were all perfectionists, they'd be saying that we're all lazy. It's just another way of delegitimizing this disease.

The truth of the matter, of course, is that *everybody* has stress. Certainly, some people have more stress than others, and it can contribute, to some degree, to health problems. However, there's no real information that says that stress leads to RSD. There's some research about stress and heart disease, but the idea about stress leading to RSD is purely speculation on the part of a few doctors and patients who attempt to tie together their own experience to explain RSD.

The biggest stress I've had in my life has stemmed directly from RSD. Before I got RSD, I don't believe that I had any more stress than the average 12-year-old.

Joan has a point about stress making people possibly more susceptible to health problems, but please remember that nobody has ever found a direct cause-and-effect relationship, and that generalizations such as that are dangerous, especially when nobody wants a doctor to tell you, "oh, it's just because there's too much stress in your life."

-Betsy
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