Friday, May 7, 2010

Case History(?)

I decided it would be a good idea to provide a list of the different complaints I have had throughout the years, that are or could be symptoms associated with fibromyalgia.

Over the years, from childhood to now, I have been involved in a few auto collisions (obviously, not always as the driver). In those, there have been several times where my head, neck and back have been injured. Of course as a child and a youth, I had my share of other bumps and thumps and wounds, but what is pertinent to my case history is that there was at least one trauma in my life that caused a serious injury. I mention this because most people with fibromyalgia have had at least one serious physical trauma to their bodies before the syndrome began to manifest.

As a teen, I became plagued with a chronic fatigue and recurrence of illnesses similar to the flu, in one instance having a flu virus that was serious enough to keep me home from school the entire week. Before I reached my 18th birthday, I was being tested for anemia, which was the only explanation my doctor had for my lack of energy and developing stomach problems. I was diagnosed with a nervous stomach, a precursor to an ulcer, and advised to avoid any food or drink that would trigger a flare up. It took some time for me to realize that coffee was a major trigger, because it took several minutes after consumption to have a flare.

When I hit puberty, I wished I hadn't, because it hit back pretty hard. I would have cramps that would double me over in pain early on, and they never seemed to ease up unless I had a heating pad over my abdomen and was loaded up on aspirin, acetaminophen or ibuprofen. When I started working, there were days when it was so painful I would have to call in sick.

In high school, I developed a strange pain in my jaw that would stop me in my tracks whenever it came on me. The best way I have to describe it is that it feels like someone taking the sharpest needle they can find, and pushing it through the bend in my lower jaw, trying to come up from the lower, outside portion into the center of the top of the bend. I was told when my son was young that it was temporal mandibular joint syndrome (TMJ). I recently had a major flare of attacks that went on for weeks, having several every day that would last for a few minutes at each onset. It also seems to come on me more when I have incidents of jaw popping (the joint popping in and out of place), especially if my muscles are tense and I need to open the jaw a bit wider than the muscles want to let it.

I also had trouble from my youth on, with chronic migraines that seemed to just get worse as I got older. Stress aggravated the frequency and intensity, to the point where I would be praying for mercy if I had got to the point of losing my composure, because if a migraine was setting in, the emotional outburst seemed to multiply the intensity by the largest margin. At one point in my life, I was losing at least three days from work per month, due to the horrific pain.

In addition to losing time from work for the migraines and occasionally due to my cycle, I began having muscle spasms in my back. They started shortly after a fender bender in which I was rear ended. Sometimes my muscles would contract in my sleep, and the intense pain would wake me up writhing. Nothing would help alleviate the pain, no matter how many pain pills I took (even when I got a prescription from the doctor), and no position would grant any kind of relief, until the spasm subsided on its own. My husband wanted me to go to a chiropractor, but I was reluctant to because at the time, chiropractors were not considered the best in the medical field to seek care from. When my insurance decided they were good enough to allow coverage under, I decided it was at least worth a try and ended up consulting with one who happened to attend our church.

The chiropractic care has helped tremendously over the years, and soon after beginning treatment with my first chiropractor, I stopped having the late night spasms. Even so, I continued to have the other problems mentioned above, and have continued to develop even more problems since; numbness and tingling that run down my left arm all the way to my pinkie and ring finger after going through my elbow, more rarely down my right arm, plantar fasciitis (inflammation of the plantar tendon in the foot), "ghost" bruising (you feel like you have a bruise somewhere, or all over, yet there is no discoloration and you don't remember any kind of impact that would cause it), sharp pains and sometimes tingling pain on the outside edges of the feet, knee pain, and ankle pain. My most recent development which, in fact, just started happening yesterday, is a pain in the upper portion of the ear, which feels sort of like the ghost bruising but not quite the same; it's almost like the inside of the curl of the ear at the top was scraped. The plantar problem is about the only thing that has a real explanation for it, so is most likely not part of this syndrome, but I list it in case other sufferers have ever had this problem as well.

If any of this sounds like you, I would recommend you speak with your own doctor about doing the latest evaluation to determine if you may have this syndrome. If this sounds like anyone you know (particularly the pain symptoms), recommend they see a doctor for evaluation. In its own way, knowing what you have, even if nothing can be done for it, is a relief.