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Saturday, September 24, 2011To be fair to previous doctors..
I think that so many doctors got it wrong because I was seeing specialists for each separate issue. They only looked at the issue through their specialist glasses. The lesson I've learned (and the one you should listen to) is that it's important to tell the doctor EVERYTHING that is wrong, even if it's not in their speciality. There are several things I've been diagnosed with via lab work that I don't mention typically because I'm embarrassed to have so many things wrong with me and thought that the specialist wouldn't take me seriously if they saw the list. I FEEL like a hypochondriac even though everything has been proven via blood work or MRIs, etc. The last cardiologist was talking to me about something and I said, maybe I should have told you that I have "x" (an adrenal syndrome.) It's so rare that the endocrinologist tested me for it twice because he couldn't believe it. The cardiologist became angry with me that I hadn't disclosed it and accused me of not knowing what I was talking about. So, before I saw the new cardiologist I sat down and typed out a list of EVERY.SINGLE.THING that I've been diagnosed with, and I think it was easy for him because the puzzle was right there in black and white. So, the lesson for me (and anyone reading this) was to not decide for the doctor what he needs to know based on his specialty. I'm still not sure that anyone except a cardiologist or neurologist would have put the pieces together, but I'm glad that now I know. I'm wondering if growing extra stuff is part of this too. I'll have to ask. It would make sense since the bottom line is that my body doesn't regulate itself. Maybe it doesn't know when to stop generating bone and things like that too. I'm going to make a fine study some day, I'm not sure how much better things will be even though I'll have treatment. The cardiologist was rather grim. The important thing is that they can do something about the fainting, and that's what matters to me most. It doesn't matter to me that I can't be "cured". I never thought I'd be told why I faint, so this is better than I had a week ago. So it's OK that this is grim, because at least I know what it is. To quote Lady Gaga, I was born this way, so have learned to work around it for 50 years. But now when I'm tired, I will stop feeling guilty about it. And that is a good thing. RisibleGirl was blabbing on about her adventures again on 09/24 at 12:08 PM
Permalink Categories: Daily • Dysautonomia • Head Bonking • Health • Go visit Einstein's blog! |
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