Parsonage turner syndrome *
I was diagnosed with parsonage turner last November after 2 months of agony, while I am able to function now, I'm still experiencing severe weakness, numbness, pain, this is unusual im told, but having it as a woman is unusual also. Does anyone have any experience with this?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Brain & Nervous System Support Group.
Hi @adriennes, I noticed you also have a post for parsonage turner syndrome under the Brain & Nervous System Group and have not found anyone else that shares the same symptoms with PTS. I'm hoping someone will jump in but until they do I thought I would suggest searching in Google Scholar to see if you can find some information that may help. I use it a lot for medical information searches. I did a search for "parsonage turner syndrome" and sorted it by clicking the 2017 link in the left to show the newest links/articles. Here is the list of links:
https://scholar.google.com/scholar?as_ylo=2017&q=parsonage+turner+syndrome+treatment&hl=en&as_sdt=1,24&as_vis=1
Hoping you find some answers soon.
John
I am in week 9. I am only not in pain when heavily medicated. The pain has been the same throughout.
I have never done this before but I hope for other suffers they are not alone.
I just don5 understand why I am not better yet. The weakness and muscle wastage I cam cope with
Hi, @painful -- welcome to Mayo Clinic Connect. Glad you found us. In addition to the members here on this thread, also wanted you to meet @andylevine and @confused1955, who've also talked about Parsonage Turner Syndrome, as well as @rosemarya and @sandytoes.
You mentioned being in week 9. Is this the amount of time since your diagnosis?
Has the pain been continuous for 9 weeks? Have you been to a neurologists?
Yes and yes
6 weeks from diagnosis
The pain has been continuous. The pain killers work for 6 hours. I had an MRI and a visit to the Neorlogistat Wellingtons
. They want me back in three month. I am under the care of Andrew Wallace of the Fotrtius clinic in London
He operated on the same shoulder last Feb. Until I went to see him that is what I thought I had. He is top of his field.
He diagnosed me very quickly.
He looks at 2,000 shoulders a year and would see two at most in a year.
For what it is worth, my parsonage Turner was apparently directly related to something called a thymoma, a very rare form of cancer. It is quite treatable when caught early. You may want to mention that they should image your thymus. The oncologist at Penn see these two conditions so rarely there is no medical information available and so there are no studies endorsing any form of correlation here. But thymoma is typically related to an autoimmune condition, and parsonage Turner is just such a condition. The chances may be small, but it was what was causing my condition. Once the tumor was removed the pain was gone.
@andylevine, Thank you for your response to @painful.
And - I think your responses are worth a lot! When dealing with a rare condition, it is always comforting to hear from someone who has experience with the same thing.
Rosemary
Thanks very much. It's two years tobthebweek when I was going in for shoulder surgery to take care of this pain and Penn discovered instead that I needed a new aortic valve and had a thymoma. Big change of plans there!