I used to keep a running list of my symptoms and share them with all of my medical providers at each appointment. This was helpful in the beginning because we had no idea what was wrong with me. When I started the quest for a diagnosis it was 2018 (2 years ago) and we were thinking it could be rheumatoid arthritis? An autoimmune disease? All I knew was I had a lot of pain that left me crying at night.
What it turned out to be was:
- Stocking glove pattern neuropathy
- Benign brain tumor
- Metabolic/Mitochondrial Myopathy
I assumed at the time that my problems were mostly neuropathy (that I believed was caused by my Latent TB treatment the year before) and autoimmune. My symptoms were all pointing to RA being the main culprit. But then the sudden muscle weakness hit. From one day to the next I suddenly lost about 80% of my strength.
It took a very long time and many referrals to solve the riddle of my muscle weakness. The current consensus is that my mitochondrial cells (the power cells of the body) don't process energy correctly. I have 3 genetic mutations that have been identified that could be the cause. All of this is pretty new science so everyone is really just doing their "best guess." I've learned to be the expert in me.
Unfortunately either the brain surgery that I had in 2018 or my Mitochondrial Myopathy have cause me to also suffer from Vestibular Migraines. Shockingly these have been more crippling than my myopathy. So if you're keeping track it's:
- Vestibular Migraines
- Metabolic/Mitochondrial Myopathy
- Stocking glove pattern neuropathy
- Osteoarthritis (and possibly RA)
It's been about a year since I posted my symptoms. I also don't really keep track of them anymore. There's a few reasons for this.
1) I'm tired of talking about it, looking at it and only being a "sick person."
2) My symptoms haven't really changed.
3) It's more useful to alert my healthcare team about NEW things if/when they come up.
3) New symptoms can get buried under my massive list of health issues and get overlooked by my doctors.
4) I have a great team who keeps good records of my health diagnosis, visits and concerns so it's a bit redundant at this point.
2) My symptoms haven't really changed.
3) It's more useful to alert my healthcare team about NEW things if/when they come up.
3) New symptoms can get buried under my massive list of health issues and get overlooked by my doctors.
4) I have a great team who keeps good records of my health diagnosis, visits and concerns so it's a bit redundant at this point.
Rather than bringing in a list of symptoms with me now to an appointment, I bring specific concerns and/or questions that I have. I always take notes and I very very rarely go alone. This helps make sure I don't miss anything (as my memory can be a serious issue).
When I look at the list of my past symptoms I still have all of them. However, I also have treatment that helps me manage them. I feel positive that I will soon have treatments in place to help 100% of my symptoms be bearable.
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