← Return to Costochondritis, asthma, allergies, joint pain. What is this?
DiscussionCostochondritis, asthma, allergies, joint pain. What is this?
Asthma & Allergy | Last Active: Oct 15, 2025 | Replies (14)Comment receiving replies
Replies to "@barry98888 I was wondering if your symptoms come and go at all? I had asthma as..."
Connect

@winston137
Hi Winston, A lot has changed since I posted here and I now have a complete explanation for the causes of my issues. It basically comes down to the fact that I was overdosed with psychiatric medications twelve years ago and the treating physicians decided to cover up what they did to me in order to avoid liability. I turned out to have a no function CYP2C19 gene variant which means that my body has much more difficulty breaking down medications like the psychiatric drugs. The overdoses caused a range of health issues. So antidepressant overdose induced a series of strokes which the physicians just decided to ignore, even the severe one's. At the moment I believe that the shoulder issues were likely due to shoulder subluxation, a mild form of joint dislocation which isn't as painful as a full dislocation but induces the limited range of motion and difficulty moving the arms. I was found to have bursitis in both shoulders in 2015 and it's likely that this would have resulted from the subluxation.
Benzodiazepine overdose resulted in all of the symptoms of benzodiazepine withdrawal and subsequent efforts to treat the results of the earlier treatments led to kindling of the withdrawal so that it wound up being much worse. From what I have been able to put together benzodiazepine withdrawal involves fluctuations in histamine and oestrogen levels in the body and, since there's not much information about fluctuating oestrogen levels in men, I have been forced to do my investigations by looking at women's menstrual cycles to try to understand what happens in benzodiazepine withdrawal. Still, the histamine issues are a bit like MCAS (mast cell activation syndrome) with extreme allergic reactions. At the time of the peak of my withdrawal I had believed, not knowing about the withdrawal, that the asthma symptoms must have been due to someone planting a Japanese cedar in my neighbourhood however it was actually just my bodies extreme reactions to normal allergens. Every reaction was turned up to it's maximum setting.
Assuming that I'm right about the oestrogen issues then these were the cause of my own electric shock sensations and pins and needles throughout the peak of my withdrawal. I blame the oestrogen for the waves of severity which people going through benzodiazepine withdrawal experience and yes, the symptoms waxed and waned over and over again throughout the peak of my withdrawal.
I don't know whether any of this relates to the medications which your doctors had you taking but hope that it provides you with some idea of what may have happened to you.