I'm having multiple odd episodes that are keeping me undiagnosed. Help
Hello,
I posted before in another group in its entirety but I think it's too broad and there could be a multitude of theories and explanations. So I'm going to break my story down into my most bothersome episodic symptoms. To start, everything on the surface looks like panic disorder or anxiety. However, my different episodes seem to be helping each other keep me feeling frantic more days than not so on the surface it looks like anxiety. I've had lots of lab work testing including thyroid, Lyme, sleep apnea home test, brain MRI, spine MRI, abdominal ct scan, and way too many doctor visits with no answer, but they do agree on one thing. The symptoms are weird and seem to be more than just anxiety. There are little bits here and there but unfortunately not enough to go on.
Keep in mind these episodes aren't all going on at the same time but they're not giving me any recovery time and feel like i'm sinking further down the hole. It's like fighting 5 bullies one at a time and losing. Just as you feel like you can get up another bully hops in.
Episode 1: After waking up with head pressure, teeth chattering, shivering, lower back pain, and sweating. Oral temperature is ALWAYS between 93.8 F and 94.8 during these episodes. Also, every day is constant cold hands and feet that never happened until all of these episodes started.
Episode 2: Brain fog, head pressure that feels like you're being pushed down when standing (like when you've had one too many drinks), usually later in the day when that feeling wears off, I'll have adrenaline body tingling, uncontrollable thoughts of self-harm and head chatter. (Not dwelling on things or worried about things, it's just the mind doing what it does and I have no control.) Also, my eye will twitch like crazy before and during these.
Episode 3: When standing for a long period of time, like cooking or washing dishes, and sweating starts to happen my heart rate increases and get extremely dizzy and feels like I'm being physically pulled down.
Episode 4: An overly excited feeling, almost like needing to yell or run to get adrenaline out, Heart rate is low.
Episode 5. Sharp colon pain, yellow stools (frequently), stools that look sickly or unhealthy, and constipation more often than not. I had a colonoscopy recently and I was told everything looks good.
I've tried SSRI's and benzodiazepines and they don't stop these episodes from occurring. I've tried strict diets and those don't help.
If you have any thought about even one of these episodes please don't be shy to comment. Thank you so much for taking the time to read.
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Jennifer, I have studied the literature on the anticoagulants and remain committed to Warfarin (Coumadin). When I started on it, it was the only anticoagulant that had a ready antidote. That became crucial to me after a friend and neighbor on Warfarin died when the ER to which he was taken by public ambulance had no Warfarin antidote on hand, so they called for a helicopter to take him to another hospital. He died enroute from a brain bleed. I sang at his funeral.
There are now two anticoagulants for which antidotes are on hand in ERs that care about the quality of their life-and-death services -- for Warfarin and Pradaxa. No antidote for Eliquis has yet been approved by the FDA.
@johnwes5819, @jenniferhunter Oh my goodness. That happened to me after being prescribed a high dose D3 regimen. Kidney stones. At the ER they thought it couldn’t be a kidney stone because I was female. Thanks for connecting the dots for me. Be safe and protected today. Chris
@predictable @artscaping This has been an interesting discussion and we've learned a lot by sharing experiences. I'll ask some questions of my mom's doctors about Eloquis. I wasn't aware that having an antidote for a blood thinner could be an issue. Thank you.
I didn't have all of those just some and I have Guillian Barre Syndrome and I am almost sure they done know why or how its starts, but it has some of those symptoms.. Sorry I don't have more positive words.
Thought I'd share another "episode" that may or may not be helpful. Another part of having chills and shakes. Usually is accompanied by diarrhea, frequent clear urination. I'll drink the normal amount I always drink to stay hydrated but it's nothing over the top. But lots of clear urination is usually following the chills, shakes, and diarrhea.
In regards to your cold hands and feet, have you been checked for Reynauld’s syndrome? I have it and it causeas my hands and feet to be very sensitive to cold.
It’s just something to think about...
@johnwes5819 Again, the one thing that all those symptoms could be explained by - that I know of , at least - is dysautonomia,..and there are many , many types and causes of dysautonomia. It's often missed by physicians because it's not something that shows up on"regular" tests and blood work. Diagnosis relies on carefully listening to symptoms, tilt table tests, etc... If this has been ruled out, I might suggest one more opinion from a dysautonomia specialist.
Symptoms of dysautomia include these more common ones ( in any combination - some or all ):
• dizziness
• frequent urination
• feeling lightheaded
• body temperature regulation problems ( chills, cold hands, feeling feverish for no reason)
• fainting
• fast, slow, or irregular heartbeat
• chest pain
• gastrointestinal system problems – diarrhea or constipation or alternating
• nausea
• visual field disturbances
• weakness
• fatigue
• breathing difficulties
• tremors
• disrupted sleep
• hypersensitive to noise and light
• anxiety and/or depression; other mental health symptoms
Hi johnwes5819. Have you had a colonoscopy performed? If yes, did they do a biopsy of your colon? I had extreme explosive diarrhea, yellow/white diarrhea, diarrhea with undigested food in the matter, sticky bowel movements, hair loss, brain fog, fatigue and heart problems. Luckily, the gastroenterologist perfomed a biopsy. I was diagnosed with Microscopic Colitis. First thing they want to do is put you on horrible medication that does not work!!! The GI specialists treat MC like a gnat bite. NO medication works for MC - only DIET. If you suspect MC, don't get bamboozled into the drug run around. Only DIET works. I don't care for gastroenterologists. Most are useless. MC is a disease that goes undiagnosed. I was thinking of helping a GI/Researcher gain awareness of MC. He wants me to help him because he has MC, but I can't help because much of the time I am wearing diapers and have embarrassing accidents.My Gut has to heal and that's through diet, not drugs.
@jo81 No I haven't. Sorry to hear that. How does one get checked for it? Is there a test or lab that can be done?
@slynnb It makes sense considering It seems my autonomic system is on the fritz. That would explain a lot. Of course on the dysautonomia informational site, when I search for a doctor in Indiana, there are none. Not one dysautonomia specialist in the entire state. What a joke. haha