Member Neuropathy Journey Stories: What's Yours?
This discussion was created as a place for members to share their journey with neuropathy. This will allow members to easily learn from each other what has helped them and hopefully help new members avoid some of the painful and difficult struggles some of us have faced. The following is a suggested outline for sharing your story that would be helpful for other members for comparison to their own neuropathy story.
— When did your neuropathy start? What were the symptoms? When and how was it diagnosed?
— What treatments or medications have you tried?
— What side effects have you had, if any?
Optional:
— What would you tell your best friend if they told you they had neuropathy?
— What activities have you had to give up because of neuropathy? What do you instead?
— How has your life changed socially? at work? at home?
What's your neuropathy story?
Note: If you want to ask a question for another member who has posted their neuropathy story here in this discussion, be sure to add their @membername in your post, for example @johnbishop. Your question may already be discussed in other neuropathy discussions. Be sure to check here first: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/neuropathy/ That way this discussion can be reserved for member neuropathy stories and hopefully make it easier to read and find similar symptoms to your own.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Neuropathy Support Group.
Chris I agree with you absolutely. Connect is a most wonderful tool for those dealing with or simply trying to understand PN. The great thing is that it is so well organized and it is fairly easy to search around for things. OK, so in reading your saga it sounds like (correct me if I missed it) there is no one known precursor to your developing neuropathy? Strange how so many people do not know what caused it for them. I suppose for some it might be hereditary. I am glad you are finding help from THC. Hank
@jesfactsmon You nailed it Hank...I agree that my body has lost track of which way is up and I love how you summed it up. Thanks so much for being genuine. I admire you and your wife's caring ways and tenacity as well. After last year and the beginning of this year...all I could think was there is something bigger. So, for me perhaps Central Sensitization or CRPS comes in to play. I'm spent quite honestly and looking to Mayo for clarity and an overall plan as to how to live best with what I've got.
I was a perfectly healthy girl/woman, although I always considered myself a "delicate flower" (family joke) and just rolled with the little things like mild scoliosis, car sickness, intolerance to cold and wind and light, poor eye sight. Always got headaches easily but tolerable and never sat still for 2 seconds. I was an overachiever and a tad bit of a perfectionist but, it worked. Then I turned 40 and was diagnosed with a hereditary corneal disease. I held on to my eyes deteriorating until 43 then was severely losing visual ability, having extreme light sensitivity and waking up cloudy. Scary stuff. I had no choice but to have double cornea transplants and cataract surgeries over a 4 month span. I'm a die hard and maybe just plain stupid but in my normal fashion, I put things that mattered to me like watching my kids play sports first and second was my job. I preached "Go hard or go home" to my kids so I tried to lead by example and do the same. I banged out those surgeries with one complication and got to those games and work, in sunglasses and hats and sat in dark corners. Turned off overhead lights at work and closed blinds. Blinged out my cataract glasses (always must look cool) and I miserably and never quite comfortably, got the job done. Never did I miss!
And that is when my health/ life took a turn and became one obstacle after another. I just always wanted my kids to be proud of me the way I was of them. They were and still are my main source of motivation. As I go to Mayo Clinic, I hope for clarity of my health conditions, my personal being and the hope for betterment because I want to be a participating grandma one day to the best of my ability! It kills me to know I've lost so much. There is a lot of denial still.
My legs....well, I can walk minimally given the day. My gait and balance are fine, thankfully. However, my legs no longer have strength or endurance to walk repeatedly or stand long. I may wake with my calves blown out for no reason whatsoever. Meaning they are very tender and painful with pressure like someone took a bat to them. I can enduce them by over doing (which means too much normal walking or standing in my house) or have absolutley no control over them. Feels like I've run a marathon when I've barely walked. Presently, I'm sitting with them wrapped in heat and they're achy, tender and painful. Today, I'm done for the day. That's why I'm house bound bc its not worth the price I pay. Wheelchair is a must for distance....hospitals, stores. airports.
I guess Im a great example of what came first the chicken or the egg??? B12 deficiency claims to be the cause of neuropathy but so much before that, it baffles me. Who knows when neuropathy really began setting in???
I'm sad about Linda's chemo and what I call her "souvenir"...left over neuropathy from a cancer treatment. How very wrong in my mind that a cancer survivor is left with such misery. It breaks my heart and makes me mad, honestly. Linda, jump on the courage train with me and many others that are being tested but, refuse to lose. C'mon...go hard or go home! At least we have each other.
Best wishes to you both.
Rachel
@rwinney Hi, Rachel. My neuro doc did not want to bother me with a small fiber test, because he said the treatment would be the same, whether I had a diagnosis or not. He said some people are not nuts about getting the little samples taken from their skin. It hurts, I guess. I insisted on the test, and my test for small fiber did not come out positive. Only my large fiber did. Who knows. There is no good treatment for this goofy, painful illness, anyway.....Love you, Rachel, and thanks for the sweet compliments to me. Yes, maybe check out CRPS when you go to Mayo. Have you done any mirror imaging techniques? Why I ask, is that they are done successfully, sometimes for CRPS. Always thinking. Sometimes I wish I could just stop already, and just drink a damn beer...… Love, Lori
Dear Rachel, my heart is breaking to hear all you've been through. I have a similiar story in that I have so many afflictions besides neuropathy. Neuropathy tries to destroy my life. The symptoms are so many. I fight for my sanity and crawal out of my skin. Ug. The Gabapentin and Lyrica have horrible side-effects but am now back on Gabapentin. It helps me not jump! Thankfully I'm a woman of faith and my God is so present and gets me through. His peace through Christ. I know this life is only temporary and I will get a new body some day!!! In the midst of all my diseases and unrelenting, often intolerable pain, I have joy and hope and assurance. I find I have to ask close people to adjust their expectation of me. I hate doing that. No one understands this pain. I00% of the time I tell people when they ask how I am, that these are facts not complaints. I will pray for you when my failing memory allows! Many blessings and warm regards, Sunnyflower
@sunnyflower Neuropathy is often an invisible disease. I suppose some people's thoughts aren't very kind when they see me park in a handicap spot, and see me walk into a store with no cane or limping or whatever. They just don't know how much every step hurts, and as a rule, handicap spaces are closest to the door, saving me a few steps. Mental illness is another invisible one, mostly. People like my service dog, and sometimes will ask me what her service is. Usually, telling them that she's a psychiatric service is enough information, but sometimes people have a lot of questions because either they need a dog, or someone in their family needs one. I try to be polite, and hopefully make any interaction a learning experience. I've had only a few negative encounters with people who don't believe me, or don't believe that a psychiatric service dog isn't a real service - it should only be a companion dog or whatever. I carry a card with the ADA information to show if necessary.
Jim
Good evening @jesfactsmon, So.....you know, I am sure, that the greatest precursors for neuropathy are diabetes and chemotherapy. Everything else is labeled "idiopathic" and that is the category where I ended up. Knowing very little about nerves except how much pain their lack of functioning can cause, I started thinking about all of the injuries to my body from the time I was about twelve and had a severe break in my ankle from twirling too fast on roller skates. There have been 13 other surgical repairs to my body from falling off horses, diving too shallow, falling over a sprinkler with a crash, and including the last fall down the mountain which then introduced me to cervical fusions. I just gotta believe that somehow we pay a price with structural injuries. No matter how hard the clinicians try it is just not possible to repair to be just as good as you were before. And then along comes aging, with all the aches and pains.
And there you have it.....lifestyle choices that are riskily undertaken by someone with less skill than what is required to stay all in one piece. That's my story and I have to stick to it to explain all of the neuropathy symptoms that I now tackle with patience and perseverance.
May you be healthy and content.
Chris
Chris @artscaping until I began reading people's stories on Connect I was not that aware of the fact that PN could arise as an aftermath of injury/surgery, but I now know that it clearly can. How unusual for someone other than a combat soldier or a commercial fisherman to have had so many injuries in their life. Sounds like you have paid a price for having had what sounds like an adventurous life. On second thought, remembering back to our experience with Linda's chemo, that felt like an adventure as well, a nightmarish one. Best, Hank
@sunnyflower if you wanted to post a more complete picture of your illness you have an interested audience here on Connect. You mention "so many afflictions" as well as "no one understands this pain". On Connect I think you actually have found a place where many people might be able to understand what you mean. You also mention your memory failing. Many of us have memory issues due to aging but in your case is this another symptom of your illness? Just want you to know that, at least in my short time on Connect, I have found some pretty sympathetic and understanding individuals. My wife has peripheral neuropathy and lives in pretty much constant pain. We have learned a lot of info that has helped her by participating in online forums such as this, but I think Connect is a particularly good one, at least for our purposes. So feel free to unburden yourself if it helps. I am so glad you can find solace in your faith. I too rely on that as my rock, as does my wife. That can hold one together like nothing else. Best, Hank
I'm just learning about the mirror techniques and am ordering the books (volume 1 and 2) that Barry recommends. A work in progress!
Hi Rachel, Basically, it sounds like mirroring must be only when you have 2 appendages, 1 not being in pain. You put the good appendage in a mirror, and stare at it, and say how healthy it is, how wonderful it is, how perfect it is, and the brain thinks it is the "bad" appendage that is good. A brain trick. Smoke and Mirrors. It is done for Phantom pain, as well. Oy, it gets so crazy. Like a magic trick! But whatever works, works. Good luck, Ms. Rachel!!! Lori