~ Mark Twain
Yesterday was a day that can’t be explained while making it sound true. You have my solemn oath that everything here is 100% and total truth. I’ll refrain from sarcasm so that there can be no doubt if something is playful or true. It’s all true.
I can’t recall offhand if I’ve mentioned the surgery I’ll be mentioning….
My son has had an interest in medicine since seeing his first episode of House. He became fascinated with research that doctors don’t always have time or funds to work through.
Two examples….
1. We had a beautiful, plucky, über friendly cat named Henry. He was a long haired cat with a tuxedo pattern. Green eyes. Everyone who met him – even people who didn’t typically like cats – loved Henry. He developed what seemed to be seasonal allergies some years ago and could sneeze so hard his snot flew for feet. (Again, 100% true.) As the years passed, his episodes lasted longer, he needed more steroids, his breathing rattled. He was finally diagnosed with pneumonia. My son said, “Nope. That’s not what he has. Something is wrong with the general function of his lungs and I think he’s allergic to mold.” We took Henry to a highly recommended vet a very long drive away. She ran extensive expensive tests. My son told the vet, in his pragmatic style: He has fungal pneumonia. She, like our local vet, dismissed him outright, and sent us home with antibiotics and steroids (and a bill for over $1,000). My son was furious. In July 2018, we had to let Henry go. He could breathe in, but not out. It was killing him and there was no cure by that point. If you research “fungal pneumonia” you’ll find that this is what Henry had, it could have been treated, and he could have lived many more years. We miss Henry every single day, and to think that my son offered up a correct diagnosis, it’s heartbreaking.
2. As my health degraded at an increased rate, my husband and son worried more. So, my son started researching again. It didn’t take him long to say that I had vertebrae disintegrating and pressing on at least one spinal nerve. He told me that, several times, but I was too sick to take in the info. I had an MRI and it showed no pressure on the spinal cord at all. My son mentioned his theory to my neurologist, but the radiologist, neurologist, and neurosurgeon all said: no pressure on spinal cord. When I had surgery on June 5th last year it took a while longer than expected because it took a long time to intubate me, and because the collapsed vertebrae were pressing on the spinal cord.
There have been other smaller examples of his gift, but these are the most impressive.
It should be noted that throughout this time my son was 18-20 and had barely managed to finish high school because of math and science grades.
Given where I am today: much improved, but still battling cognitive issues, fatigue, weakness, and radiating pain, S. (my son), decided it was time to do as full a medical history on me as he could. I gave him full access to my medical records and answered questions as they came up. My husband and I used to IM each other when we had office jobs so I was able to do some digging in that history to help S’s timeline and his pharmaceutical history.
Here are a couple of things I’ve never been told before that he mapped out:
SSRI’s don’t work for me. I need SNRI’s. (When I think of how many SSRI’s I’ve tried and not felt better, I’d really like to have a long conversation with my last psychiatrist, who treated me for roughly a decade. S. called him “Captain Prescription Pad” and never trusted him – even when he was eight or nine years old. I have a different psychiatrist now… one recommended by S.)
Every health issue I can remember got its own page on a legal pad with details. As I mentioned, there was as full a pharmaceutical workup as he could do without my psych records. To call this study thorough, thoughtful, and accurate would be a compliment for a true M.D., but to see it created by S. was – I don’t want to say “surprising” because he’s shown this gift for a long time. Maybe the better words is “impressive.” After a whole lot of work, he found the source of my ME/CFS. My hypothalamus is overactive.
Basically, my unresolved PTSD has caused my hypothalamus to continually flood my nervous system with cortisol and norepinephrine. This is why NSRI’S work for me while SSRI’s don’t. The pressure on the nerves in my spine prior to surgery likely aggravated this further.
If you read medical journals deeply, you’ll see where scientists are finding this link and doing further testing.
I’ve run out of steam now…. It’s been a long day. I’ll finish the story tomorrow.
I’ll say simply, I have hope now.