Psychological effects of living with neuropathy
This is more of a whine than a question. I get so tired, not just physically but psychologically, of living with the neuropathy and the limitations. All of us here are dealing with different combinations of symptoms and to differing degrees. Some know what caused the neuropathy, while others have no idea of the origin. But in the end, we are all in the same boat. My neuropathy appeared after a lumbar laminectomy a year ago. I had such pain in my legs for the year before my surgery that the neuropathy could have been there then and I wouldn't have been able to distinguish the difference. I was SO hoping the laminectomy would fix me... and it DID take away the leg pain that was limiting my walking. I can walk again.... though I'm a bit wobbly... and I do need to take breaks every so often. But I sometimes think the psychological toll is worse than the physical. I'm 72 and have always lived with anxiety and depression issues. How I would love to just find ACCEPTANCE of the fact that this is MY LIFE at this point.... and do what I can and the neuropathy be damned. And I do try to go and do as much as possible. But wherever I go, I take my feet with me.... and thus all the symptoms that remind me that I will never be "normal" again. As they say, "misery loves company," and I wonder how some of you deal with they psychological. Anyone else feeling like this? I see a therapist, but he can't fix my feet. I go to PT, but that seems to have reached it's peak for improvement. I know there are so many people with much worse infirmities out there.... but somehow knowing that doesn't make my situation any better. Thanks for allowing me to vent. Best to all!
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Neuropathy Support Group.
Hi @domiha I had exactly the same experience as you. BTW, in my humble opinion, I doubt that 1 or 2 drinks is the cause of your problem. Otherwise, almost everybody would have PN, and/or alcohol wouldn't have been invented.
I used to drink quite a bit; perhaps 3 drinks a day. When I was diagnosed with small fiber PN, I decided to quit entirely. I was "on the wagon" for 3 months, and the PN continued to get worse.
I decided that my experiment wasn't working, but I cut back to one glass of wine/day, when I resumed drinking because of the PN and other reasons.
My logic(?) was that if it wasn't working after 3 months, alcohol probably wasn't the cause, and anyway I enjoy my wine too much to wait years to find out, which I don't have many of left.
I haven't seen a study which adequately addresses this particular question, other than the standard remark that excess alcohol can be a cause of PN. I've also been given completely different answers by my doctors. My guess is that nobody knows for sure.
If you or anyone else has different information, please post.
Thanks and good luck.
You know what? You make a great point. Not once has a doctor asked how I feel about having and dealing with NP.
This is a profound and sad realization
Hugs 🤗 all around.
Group hug 🤗!!
I am your shadow! I sympathize with you completely and totally agree with your thoughts.
@jeffrapp I had one physical therapist tell me that alcohol was bad for PN because of the sugar, especially in wines or liqueurs. But, then, no doctor has told me to stop eating all sugar. I've not been drinking for the past two months... and I have honestly not noticed any huge difference. I had a glass of red wine with dinner tonight. Just like you, I'm on the downhill slide of my life and I figure I should still enjoy a glass of wine on occasion. I wonder? Are diabetics supposed to avoid alcoholic drinks because of sugar content?
Cheers! 🙂
Mike
Pain, pain, pain. My steroids gotten taken away by a new rheumatologist, and none of my four doctors will prescribe them. Pain and it’s subsequent side effects are wearing me down. So I’m whining this month. But only to myself and this forum!
I read this again recently, and don’t even know who to credit it to, so feel free to borrow!
“I do things at pain levels that others wouldn’t even consider moving at, because if I don’t, I wouldn’t have a life. This doesn’t mean I’m having a ‘good day’. It only means I was able to be stronger than the pain for part of the day.”
Well said- I feel the same as you.
Very hard to deal with,when you’re in pain everyday!
Sometimes I just wish I was pain free for just 1 day!
I feel your pain, I’ve been dealing for 12 yrs now, and I’ve had enough!
I use it on a daily basis. But, doesn’t really help any with pain, only helps me to relax a bit better and lighten up my mood. Tried topical but, it didn’t help at all. Kind of made it more painful because it had a tingling affect.
Thank you for the info!
I think the answer to your question about DM and alcohol is the same as the question about alcohol and PN: nobody really knows, but the recommendation (most likely due to common sense rather than scientific study) is don't drink to excess. It doesn't seem to have a direct relationship to sugar levels. BTW, perhaps a lesson learned. If you want answers to medical questions, ask your doctor, PA or nurse, not your PT.
Here is a link that addresses the question:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6761899/#:~:text=Heavy%20drinking%2C%20particularly%20in%20diabetics,nerve%20damage%2C%20and%20eye%20disease.