How do I get my Rheumatologist to listen ?
Hello, I have have had bilateral chronic pain for over 7 years and all the criteria but my Rheumatologist keeps saying I have psoriatic Arthritis.
The first Rheumatologist refused to listen and said I was too young. I am 55 now and symptoms began at 48.
My bloods show I have a seronegative inflammatory disease.
Can anyone help me with this?
What test can I have to confirm ? I have bursitis in both shoulders, Mortons neuromas in my foot and tendinitis in my wrist plus morning stiffness etc.
Thank you
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Polymyalgia Rheumatica (PMR) Support Group.
We are on the same page. A kidney stone is comparable to childbirth -- so they say. I'm familiar with kidney stone pain.
I'm also familiar with the top 20 list of most painful chronic medical conditions.
https://www.news-medical.net/health/Pain-Acute-Pain-Chronic-Pain-20-Most-Painful.aspx
I have personal experience with six of these myself. Yes ... they are all a "10" judging from the patients I've cared for.
I have or have had 10 on this list. No wonder my pain threshold is so high now.
I hear you! Reactive arthritis caused severe back pain but it wasn't my worst pain ever. Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) gave me my perspective on what severe pain was. I called TN "facial electrocution." I couldn't even answer the pain scale question when TN flared. My wife had to explain to the emergency room doctors why I couldn't answer any questions. Trying to speak only increased the voltage applied to my face
I tried to manage TN with prednisone. A neurologist said prednisone wasn't used as a treatment for TN so I decided to treat myself. I called TN my "inflammation alarm."
I felt vindicated when the neurosurgeon said prednisone was probably helping the inflammation and swelling that was happening in an area near my brain stem.
I had a cousin who had tgn. It was horrendous for her.
Validation is always helpful.
PMR is tough too. Clinicians have a tendency to doubt things because nothing is ever confirmed.
The neuropathic scale is more along the lines of what I was thinking. It would take more time than the 1-10 scale so I doubt many would move to adopt it. Thanks for sharing!
This is very helpful to hear from a medical professional perspective. And the difference between "normal and abnormal pain" too. I don't usually mention my pain because it's a "normal" for me. I'm leaving in a few minutes to go to a dance/exercise class even though I'm at a strong 3. It seems easier than explaining to my friend about my pain levels.
@michelle1968 i am curious where do live that you have obtained an appointment with another rheumatologist ?
Interesting new term in this conversation - @seniormed are you a medical professional ?
https://creakyjoints.org/living-with-arthritis/symptoms/what-is-enthesitis/
is it true to say that there is a current push ( by European groups? ) to use ultrasound to diagnose PMR ?
" I don't know what to think about the current state of research into better treatment options for people with PMR."-
- hi @dadcue as you may have already seen , i posted that there is a trial currently enrolling by Novartis at many sites now - for the IL17 pathway in PMR : https://classic.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05767034
AIN457
Cosentyx®
Polymyalgia rheumatica
Immunology
Phase 3
2026
IL17A inhibitor (Anti-interleukin-17 monoclonal antibody)
it's unfortunate that some of these people are so egotistical that they won't listen to reason. I would check your his/her credentials to see if they are DOCTORS. I had a one who was a scientist, not a doctor, and she not only told me she wasn't, but proved it as well. I was being treated by her for supposedly PMR. The medication she gave me did nothing at all. During this useless period of medication, I contracted Lyme Disease. My primary care tested me for the disease, it was unequivical, tested again, it was positive. Treated me with Doxicillin, in three days that pain had gone away, never came back. Still had my supposed PMR. Rheumatologist kept treating me unsuccessfully. A while later, I happened to mention my Lyme disease and she repeatedly insisted I never had Lyme. If it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, it's a duck. Needless to say, I dumped her and fund a rheumatologist who is a DOCTOR. She did a major blood test, confirmed Giant Cell Arteritis, put me on Prednisone and then Actemra. I am now off everything related to the GCA and have only very minor neck pain due to major Arthrites in my neck.