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Welcome to this website, . I am also a new member and I love it

here..........Lynn

new member message

Hi there, my name is , I'm 53 was diagnosed

with AOSD in April this year after spending three

weeks in hospital while they conducted all sorts of

test before finally a rheumatologist worked out what

the problem was. Symptoms first started in

February and I was admitted to hospital because life

was becoming extremely painful and I could hardly walk

more than 10-20 yards! Apart from other medication

I am currently taking 12.5 mg of Methotrexate weekly

(5gm morning and evening on Thursday and 2.5 on

Friday). I would be particularly interested in

other people's MTX experiences and what kind of

side-effects experienced. Apart from that I'm a

dermatology nursing sister (on sick leave!), live with

my husband and one Norwegian Forest cat, recently we

lost another much loved cat (kidney disease), this I

found difficult to cope with - but I've come to terms

with it now. I feel I'm lucky that the Still's was

diagnosed as early as it was. Best wishes to all

other members.

__________________________________________________________

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  • 5 months later...

-

I was born profoundly deaf. I got CIs at 20 years old. I don't use my

voice. I primarily communicate with ASL. So if you want to learn about

some things from my perspective, I am more than glad to help you.

Best of luck

--

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Hello ,

I'd love to hear your experience/story. I am 24 years old, and was

also born profoundly deaf. I also use sign language as my main mode

of communication. I am seriously considering a CI.

Thanks!

>

> -

>

> I was born profoundly deaf. I got CIs at 20 years old. I don't use my

> voice. I primarily communicate with ASL. So if you want to learn

about

> some things from my perspective, I am more than glad to help you.

>

> Best of luck

> --

>

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Oops...I meant , not ..sorry!

>

> -

>

> I was born profoundly deaf. I got CIs at 20 years old. I don't use my

> voice. I primarily communicate with ASL. So if you want to learn

about

> some things from my perspective, I am more than glad to help you.

>

> Best of luck

> --

>

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-Hi ,

I grew up using hearing aids, but just used them to be aware of

environmental sounds (not speech). These types of aids are different

from those that just amplify sounds, rather they compress sounds into

the frequency range that I have very little residual hearing in. I

can hear a lot with these aids, but would like to be able to hear a

bit more if possible. I'm looking into different aids and CIs to see

what might be the best for me. I am considering a CI because I'd like

to improve my lipreading/speechreading abilities and speech.

I do understand that CIs for someone with a background like mine (born

deaf, sign language user, etc) that I'd receive the least benefit from

a CI compared to others. I still want to find out more information

about other people's experiences with a CI, even though it varies form

one person to another

.

-- In , <nah1248@...> wrote:

>

> Hey -

>

> How come are you considering a CI? I'm just curious because you were

> born profoundly deaf and communicate primarily with sign language.

> --

>

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Hi ,

I hope you're able to gain speech recognition and you probably will.

However, the environmental sounds should be new to you also, not being

compressed, and I should think they would be fascinating.

It was, and is still, a great pleasure for me to hear my car alarm for

lights or keys and to hear birds scolding me and so many more higher

pitched sounds I hadn't heard in a great many years.

I think you're in for a real treat. Some confusion too, most likely,

but hang with it and try for patience.

Virg

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  • 1 year later...

Re: : Welcome to . Visit today!

Hi and thanks for the note, I am in the process of making the decision on CI's.

I am a 64 year old active male, profoundly deaf but scared of giving up the

balance (less than 10%) of my natural hearing. Bluntly, it is a little scary.

But I am so tired of trying to hear, I go home exhausted each day after work.

I have done a little research and just found your group. Thanks for being

there.

Tell me about recovery times, etc. What won't I be able to do with CI's? I

ride a motorcycle, swim etc.

Stupid question? Does anything protrude from my skull?

I have been told by my family physician and my audiologist that I am a prime

candidate for CI. I have a meeting with the specialist (surgeon) in Mid

February.

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Howdy ,

The gains with a CI cab far outweigh the loss of what is left of your

hearing. Yes it is scary but so many of us have ventured into the unknown

and come out with better hearing. Its not a magic pill, it will take work.

Unless you shave your head, no one will see any bump on the skull.

Motorcycle riding is fine, you can put a helmet on with little trouble.

Swimming is fine too...without the processor.

Oh and the stupid questions are the ones not asked.

*---* *---* *---* *---* *---*

Quoting one is plagiarism; quoting many is research.

& Dreamer Doll ke7nwn

E-mail-

rclark0276@...

Home Page-

http://webpages.charter.net/dog_guide/

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I felt the same way you did, . I was very worried about losing my

residual hearing. But the gain from the CI will be so much more than what

you lose, even in the worst case. Recovery time from the surgery is about

1-2 weeks. I have had two CI procedures (bilateral) and each one took about

3 months to get a good level of speech hearing, although I certainly got a

big boost in sound earlier than that. The only limitation would probably

be having an MRI in the future. Other than that, you'd want to be careful

to wear a helmet while biking or motorcycling and not doing anything that

involves banging your head around. Swimming is fine, but you need to take

off your external processor (same as for showering). I have a little bump

on my head where my internal piece is but it's not even noticeable enough

for my hair stylist to notice. You do wear an external processor, which

looks like a hearing aid with a little headpiece attached to it. Good luck

in your research!

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