Guest guest Posted March 11, 2003 Report Share Posted March 11, 2003 Dear Ginger, I read your post with interest. My daughter suffers from dysautonomia and has for a number of years. At age 4 she was diagnosed with CFS (Chronic Fatigue Syndrome) and by age 8 fit the criteria for POTS (postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome). The POTS was a huge issue from age 9-12, until we got a dx of a suspected mito disorder. Since Dr. Cohen put her on his cocktail, she is amazingly improved in all ways except her energy and fatigue levels. My question to you is this. My daughter had a positive Sweat test a couple of years ago, which stumped our doctor ( a reknowned specialist in CFS/POTS) He has had a couple of his patients test positive on the sweat test that have no symptoms of Cystic Fibrosis. Just wondering if you had any feelings on this. Thanks for sharing your feelings. I found it validating and informative to see it all in one place like that!! Fondly, Z ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Visit us at www.pediatricnetwork.org for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Fibromyalgia, and Orthostatic Intolerance and dysautonomia and Join us in our Active Forums for information and support when living with these conditions Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 2003 Report Share Posted March 14, 2003 Dear Z., I believe the proper spelling is " acetycholine " . Sorry I got carried away with my " amines " . Thanks- Ginger Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 30, 2003 Report Share Posted April 30, 2003 Need to know peoples experiences with autonomic dysfunction in kids with mito? I'd like to know how they exhibit symptoms and if the come and go or are there all the time. Thanks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 30, 2003 Report Share Posted April 30, 2003 >Need to know peoples experiences with autonomic dysfunction in kids >with mito? I'd like to know how they exhibit symptoms and if the >come and go or are there all the time. One of Emilie's big autonomic things is color change--warm, red arms, hands, legs, or feet...cold, purple arms, hands, legs, or feet. Any combination of these (like one hand red and hot while the other is cold and purple). She sometimes gets very pale in the face or gets red cheeks. Now and then, one or both knees turn red and extremely warm. Other things: tachycardia, low-grade fevers, dilated pupils, and sweaty palms. All these symptoms come and go in Emilie. They tend to be streaky; she'll have red cheeks every day for months, then not again for months, then it starts up again. For a while, her hands turned purple after eating, but we haven't seen that in years. I think the autonomic symptoms cluster when Emilie's mito is more active (we'll notice at the same time that she's very tired, sleepy, and irritabile)...though she can have the autonomic stuff on days when she actually Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 30, 2003 Report Share Posted April 30, 2003 has recently been diagnosed with dysautonomia. She seems to exhibit more symptoms when she is in a crisis situation. She has very weird temps. (100.4 one hour and then while sleeping 1 hr. later 97.6, then 95.4 in the middle of the night). Her pulses are extreme (58-188). Blood pressure too. She has night sweats when she is sick too. Her bowels are VERY slow, so we treat that with miralx and reglan. They say not to worry about it and that it is not harmful. I will never understand how a temp of 93.2 is not harmful to ones body. It is important to monitor temps. when they are sick. Some children are not able to have high temps. ,so Cohen told me that if is acting like she is sick and is running only a 99.0 temp, to treat it like a fever. Now the problem is getting everyone else to understand this.What is a sign of infection?Fever. If she not running a fever then she must not be sick...It's really hard to get Residents and interns in the hospital to get this notion.It is not what they were taught. I sometimes feel like I am beating my head against a wall, and might as well be.Dysautonomia can affect all differnet parts of the body:bowels, bladder, vital signs, in some bone marrow etc.I hope others can help you with this too, I figured out she had this 2 months ago with the help of those on this site, then her doc says, oh yeah, this is common for mito kids. Shouldn't they tell us this before we figure it out??? Dawn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 30, 2003 Report Share Posted April 30, 2003 has recently been diagnosed with dysautonomia. She seems to exhibit more symptoms when she is in a crisis situation. She has very weird temps. (100.4 one hour and then while sleeping 1 hr. later 97.6, then 95.4 in the middle of the night). Her pulses are extreme (58-188). Blood pressure too. She has night sweats when she is sick too. Her bowels are VERY slow, so we treat that with miralx and reglan. They say not to worry about it and that it is not harmful. I will never understand how a temp of 93.2 is not harmful to ones body. It is important to monitor temps. when they are sick. Some children are not able to have high temps. ,so Cohen told me that if is acting like she is sick and is running only a 99.0 temp, to treat it like a fever. Now the problem is getting everyone else to understand this.What is a sign of infection?Fever. If she not running a fever then she must not be sick...It's really hard to get Residents and interns in the hospital to get this notion.It is not what they were taught. I sometimes feel like I am beating my head against a wall, and might as well be.Dysautonomia can affect all differnet parts of the body:bowels, bladder, vital signs, in some bone marrow etc.I hope others can help you with this too, I figured out she had this 2 months ago with the help of those on this site, then her doc says, oh yeah, this is common for mito kids. Shouldn't they tell us this before we figure it out??? Dawn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 30, 2003 Report Share Posted April 30, 2003 >I think the autonomic >symptoms cluster when Emilie's mito is more active (we'll notice at the >same time that she's very tired, sleepy, and irritabile)...though she can >have the autonomic stuff on days when she actually Oops, that should read that Emilie can also have autonomic symptoms on days when she actually feels pretty good. Not sure how I managed to cut the end off. And I meant " irritable " , not " irritabile " ! -- Mom to: Emilie (16), mito--complex IV, cp, ld Kaitlin (16), cp, asthma, a few autonomic symptoms Ian (21) migraines ....and wife to Tim, who has a heart of gold Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 2, 2003 Report Share Posted May 2, 2003 Hello, I am an adult with dx KSS, but the symptoms seem to be very similiar. I notice that my symptoms seem to go in cycles every few months-glad to see someone else sees a similar pattern. I don't see the mito doc for a while, but I think I will be dx with dysautonomia myself. I know that doesn't help, but 's testimony helped me. I hope things get better. God bless, Hazelpone Re: Dysautonomia >Need to know peoples experiences with autonomic dysfunction in kids >with mito? I'd like to know how they exhibit symptoms and if the >come and go or are there all the time.One of Emilie's big autonomic things is color change--warm, red arms, hands, legs, or feet...cold, purple arms, hands, legs, or feet. Any combination of these (like one hand red and hot while the other is cold and purple). She sometimes gets very pale in the face or gets red cheeks. Now and then, one or both knees turn red and extremely warm. Other things: tachycardia, low-grade fevers, dilated pupils, and sweaty palms.All these symptoms come and go in Emilie. They tend to be streaky; she'll have red cheeks every day for months, then not again for months, then it starts up again. For a while, her hands turned purple after eating, but we haven't seen that in years. I think the autonomic symptoms cluster when Emilie's mito is more active (we'll notice at the same time that she's very tired, sleepy, and irritabile)...though she can have the autonomic stuff on days when she actuallyPlease contact mito-owner with any problems or questions. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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