Guest guest Posted May 30, 2004 Report Share Posted May 30, 2004 Hi, I recently joined your list. I have scanned through the archives and I have learned so much by reading your posts. Finally I have found a place where I no longer feel alone in my pain and suffering. So many people have no clue at all the pain people with neuropathy experience on a daily basis. They expect you to just deal with it as if it is nothing more than a paper-cut. Just toss a bandage on it and move on. Recently I was diagnosed with Polyneuropathy, and diabetes (type II). My neurologist suspects that I have Lupus and is sending me to a rheumatologist for more testing. I also have 3 bulging disks (lumbar region), and 1 herniated disk. I have swelling (edema) near my spinal column, and neural canal narrowing. All of this showed up in an MRI that was done. I also have bilateral disk disease. I think they also called it degenerative disk disease. According to the MRI I had fractured four vertebrae before (I have no idea when this happened because my back is always hurting me!) and they look healed. My back really hurts me all the time. If I stand for more than 5 minutes it becomes so stiff that I have to stretch and reach for my toes to ease some of the pain, and so I can continue with whatever I was doing. It usually becomes very tight feeling, and stiff, with lots of lower back pain. I have massive edema in my lower legs and feet. My body is always swollen to a certain degree ¡V even my hands and face at times. In my lower extremities the pain is excruciating! Sometimes it is so bad that any movement makes me want to scream. My skin is extremely sensitive to touch, and it bruises very easily. For some strange reason (cause still unknown) when I sit in office chairs, dining room chairs or regular chairs my edema is worse, and the pain become almost unbearable. It¡¦s difficult to concentrate on anything else because of my pain. It¡¦s always foremost in my mind. I have difficulty walking due to decreased flexibility, aching joints, stiffness and terrible burning pain. I¡¦ve had to stop working because of the pain and recently filed for ssdi. I forgot to mention that the edema in my lower extremities gets better when I am in a recliner. A recliner is about the only thing that I can sit in that doesn¡¦t cause me pain. Anything else causes my legs to swell. Well¡K except being in bed. ƒº The pain and swelling began back in ¡¦96 and progressively worsened over the years. I had very inadequate health care. When I did see my GP he attributed everything to me being massively obese. I went to the local health clinics and was told the same thing: You¡¦re fat. Lose the weight. None bothered to run any tests to see if there was any underlying cause for my symptoms. They merely looked at me and stated the obvious. In ¡¦97 I went to Vocational Rehabilitation for help. They sent me to many different Doctors and none were able to come up with a diagnosis. Personally I think they sent me to the wrong kinds of Doctors. I stopped with VR because I found work and they would not give me the time off for Doctor¡¦s visits. Several years later, after not being able to hold down a job, several evictions, chaos and turmoil I went back to VR in 2001. It has taken them since 2001 to the present time to receive a diagnosis. No wait¡K that isn¡¦t entirely correct. In 2002 I was diagnosed with having GERD and a hiatal hernia. Another Doctor diagnosed me with carpal tunnel syndrome in both hands, and a compressed ulnar nerve in both of my arms. I also had an anal fissure and hemorrhoids. Sounds like fun, huh? <laugh> In 2003 I had surgery on the fissure (what an introduction to surgery! Sheesh!), and my left arm was operated on for the ulnar nerve compression, and left hand for the carpal tunnel. I was supposed to have my right arm done for the ulnar nerve but refused it because the other surgery didn¡¦t correct my problem. It made it much worse! And I have what I refer to as ¡§dead spots¡¨ in my arm. I am unable to feel properly and the arm always aches. In 2003 I went to a foot Doctor who diagnosed me with: plantar fasciitis, Morton¡¦s neuroma, in-grown toenails, heel spurs, toe-nail fungus (yuck), and bio-mechanical problems. What joy! No wonder why I was having a difficult time walking! Sometimes my feet would burn so badly that the fibers in my socks would irritate my feet. No wonder why I often walked around bare-foot. In March of 2004 I finally had foot surgery for the heel spur on my left foot. My Lord talk about some terrible pain! I will never have that surgery again! My right foot is supposed to be operated on but there is no way I will do it. It was far too painful, and it didn¡¦t help that my foot became infected. I am supposed to have my Morton¡¦s neuroma in both feet operated on soon, once the Doctor can get my edema down to a level where he feels comfortable operating, and everything else corrected save for the heel spur on my right foot. In addition to all the above I also suffer from debilitating fatigue. I have good days and I have my bad days. I also have days where my thinking is fuzzy and I feel like I am in a fog. Speaking is difficult at times because I get very painful blisters on my tongue and often if feels as if it is swollen and difficult to maneuver. Truly I am not a hypochondriac! I know that I may sound like it and that is what my family used to say but now from all this testing I am finding out how inter-related these symptoms are. I long for a day where I am limber, pain-free, and energetic. I miss being able to do everything I used to. I feel trapped in an old woman¡¦s body. I lost most of my friends through the course of time because I simply could not do the same things I used to, and they moved on. Lack of being able to hold down a job has also curtailed any entertainment. These past 8 years have been brutal for me. I¡¦ve been under chronic stress, and intense pain for too long and it has worn me down. Hopefully the rheumatologist will be able to pin-point exactly what auto-immune disease I have. At least I will know what I am battling then. It¡¦s far easier to see your enemy that to continue battling some unseen and unknown force. If I have Lupus then I will do everything possible to lessen the severity of the disease. I hope and pray that I get on ssdi. I so desperately need it and the healthcare that comes with it. I forgot to mention that the neurologist put me on neurontin 300mg 3 xs¡¦s a day, pentazocine 650mg 4 xs¡¦s per day, vitamins B-6 and B-1, cellebrex 200mg once a day. I¡¦m also on lasix for the edema and a potassium supplement (that I hate taking), protonix for the hernia and GERD, zyrtec (allergies), and glyburide 2 x¡¦s per day for my diabetes, and tetracycline for my rosacea. If it were not for Vocational Rehab and my mother I would not be able to stay on these medications. Combined they are over $700.00 per month. I wish there was help for people who are unable to afford medications. It¡¦s shocking and unbelievable that people who live in one of the richest country are unable to afford healthcare. Well, I hope that I didn¡¦t bore you to tears listening to my woes. Thanks for having me here. Leigh Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2004 Report Share Posted May 30, 2004 Welcome to the Group I'm Cloud , I have Cauda Equina Syndrome - non-operable , Spina bifia Occulat (the two go hand in hand in my case) , Diabeties Type II , diet controlled so far only - knocks on my head (wood). Has that toe nail fungus as well and had a toenail removed last month - what a relief lol still have 4 toes to go to have temp removed. I walk on my inner soles so I wear shoes out quick so most time is barefooting it if I can get buy with it , dr fusses cause I'm diabetic - told'em i'm so graceful that No matter what I do or don't ,something is bound to occr any how. Yesterday I was creeping round walmart and my right leg started shaking and hurting like - bleep bleep bleep - and tried going out from under me. Its still acting up . Nerve damage from the CES , which to those that aren't aware of the CES - its the horse tail nerve sac at the end of the spine , I have a malformed lower spine - birth defect - and end results will be wheelchair - eventually . I creep about with a cane but mostly when I know I'm gonna do alot of walking , at home I don't use it ,figured I have enough furniture to grab if needs to be. I live with Chronic pain, some days are better than others but it can change in a blink . So anytime you feel like venting - just hollar , and I or someone else will be more than happy to be your venting post Cloud Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2004 Report Share Posted May 30, 2004 Leigh- Wow- you have been hit with a ton of bricks. I can remember when my major health issue was a broken foot, which was when they diagnosed me with high blood pressure. I started a class at the local hospital for mindfullness meditation (GREAT CLASS). I was taking it for stress, but a lot of the class were there for pain management - I thought they were a bunch of wimps, cry babies...had no idea what pain was. This was just six years ago. Little did I know that about 6 months after the class I would blow a disc in my back, and learned what pain was (and is). Since then I have had kidney stones, heart arrythmias, ruptured ovarian cysts (saved from the appendicitus which was almost scheduled), carpal tunnel, nerve tumors in my median nerve, endometriosis, ulcers, vertigo, skin cancer, etc, etc. Have had a discektomy, 3 wrist surgeries, ovarian cyst surgery, kidney stone surgery. Highlight was last year when I was told in a one week period (shipped back and forth between Dr's for Vertigo) that I had early cateracts, hearing loss and was in menopause (well, at least that took care of the endometriosis). Still unrelenting back pain, I am scheduled for a fusion in two weeks (spondylothesis, which took almost 3 years to diagnose, finally showed up on MRI last fall). Didn't mean to go on about me, but I realized what a jerk and unsympathic I was --- fortuneately I was smart and kept my feelings to myself. You might want to consider this mindefullness mediation, it really helps - Don't have my book handy, but it is a famous program out of Mass General - I will get more info if you are interested. Anyway, I am also a newbie - welcome to you ! Kris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2004 Report Share Posted May 30, 2004 Dear Cloud, Thank you for writing. I'm very sorry to hear about all the pain you are in. It really is awful that people have to suffer so much. My foot Doctor mentioned that he might take one of my toe-nails but I am against it. He seems to think that it can't be helped and that it will continue turning sideways on me. It's really weird looking. When my toe-nails first started going " funky " on me I remember thinking to myself, " Oh, no! I have my grandmother's toe-nails and I am only 34! " It was a funny moment. My grandmother was plagued by funky toe-nails that were extremely hard to cut. We used to laugh when I would cut them for her and they would litterally fly across the room. I used to tell her that they were lethal little missiles! Thank you for listening to my rants. It's really wonderful to have found people who understand what I am going through. Hugs to all, Leigh > Welcome to the Group > > I'm Cloud , I have Cauda Equina Syndrome - non-operable , Spina bifia > Occulat (the two go hand in hand in my case) , Diabeties Type II , > diet controlled so far only - knocks on my head (wood). Has that toe > nail fungus as well and had a toenail removed last month - what a > relief lol still have 4 toes to go to have temp removed. I walk on my > inner soles so I wear shoes out quick so most time is barefooting it > if I can get buy with it , dr fusses cause I'm diabetic - told'em i'm > so graceful that No matter what I do or don't ,something is bound to > occr any how. > > Yesterday I was creeping round walmart and my right leg started > shaking and hurting like - bleep bleep bleep - and tried going out > from under me. Its still acting up . Nerve damage from the CES , which > to those that aren't aware of the CES - its the horse tail nerve sac > at the end of the spine , I have a malformed lower spine - birth > defect - and end results will be wheelchair - eventually . I creep > about with a cane but mostly when I know I'm gonna do alot of walking > , at home I don't use it ,figured I have enough furniture to grab if > needs to be. > > I live with Chronic pain, some days are better than others but it can > change in a blink . So anytime you feel like venting - just hollar , > and I or someone else will be more than happy to be your venting post > > Cloud Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 31, 2004 Report Share Posted May 31, 2004 Hi Kris! Thanks for the welcome. Right back atcha. Whew! You sure have been through a lot as well. Having all these problems sure makes a person humble. I will have to check into the meditation class. It sounds interesting. Sorry to hear that you have had to go through so darn much. Here's hoping that you have many pain free days! Leigh > Leigh- > > Wow- you have been hit with a ton of bricks. I can remember when my > major health issue was a broken foot, which was when they diagnosed > me with high blood pressure. I started a class at the local hospital > for mindfullness meditation (GREAT CLASS). I was taking it for > stress, but a lot of the class were there for pain management - I > thought they were a bunch of wimps, cry babies...had no idea what > pain was. This was just six years ago. Little did I know that about > 6 months after the class I would blow a disc in my back, and learned > what pain was (and is). Since then I have had kidney stones, heart > arrythmias, ruptured ovarian cysts (saved from the appendicitus which > was almost scheduled), carpal tunnel, nerve tumors in my median > nerve, endometriosis, ulcers, vertigo, skin cancer, etc, etc. Have > had a discektomy, 3 wrist surgeries, ovarian cyst surgery, kidney > stone surgery. Highlight was last year when I was told in a one week > period (shipped back and forth between Dr's for Vertigo) that I had > early cateracts, hearing loss and was in menopause (well, at least > that took care of the endometriosis). Still unrelenting back pain, I > am scheduled for a fusion in two weeks (spondylothesis, which took > almost 3 years to diagnose, finally showed up on MRI last fall). > Didn't mean to go on about me, but I realized what a jerk and > unsympathic I was --- fortuneately I was smart and kept my feelings > to myself. You might want to consider this mindefullness mediation, > it really helps - Don't have my book handy, but it is a famous > program out of Mass General - I will get more info if you are > interested. > > Anyway, I am also a newbie - welcome to you ! > > Kris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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