Undifferentiated Connective Tissue Disease

Posted by marymaryoregon @marymaryoregon, Apr 11, 2023

Autoimmune diseases are tricksy. Symptoms can come and go unexpectedly, test results aren’t always super helpful, so much about diagnosis relies on an individual’s judgment, and some of them have stupid names like “undifferentiated connective tissue disease” (UCTD).

UCTD doesn’t have an agreed upon criteria for diagnosis, but many providers and researchers use a definition of a positive ANA test for at least 3 years plus at least one symptom of a “defined” connective tissue disease (lupus, RA, Sjögren’s, scleroderma).

Some people with UCTD will eventually have enough symptoms (or positive test results) to change the diagnosis to lupus, RA, Sjögren’s, etc. A few people will stop having symptoms altogether. But the majority of people with UCTD will continue with that diagnosis.

I’d love to hear more about your experiences as I’m at the very beginning of my journey with UCTD. Has anything helped you in your day to day? How do you explain your diagnosis (or maybe/kind-of/might be diagnosis) to your family and friends? Does anyone want to help create some kind of patient support/awareness group or website or have any suggestions for existing groups or websites out there?

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Autoimmune Diseases Support Group.

Here’s my story: for a long long time, I thought I had “allergies” which caused itchy eyes and itchy skin and rare days where I felt like I was fighting off a cold and had no energy. A couple decades go by and I decide I’d like to find out what I’m allergic to because perhaps I could get allergy shots or something that would help symptoms more. Turns out, I don’t have any allergies from the typical skin testing panels. So once I had to throw away “allergies” as the reason for my symptoms, it occurred to me that perhaps it was still my immune system but not because of a specific allergic-type response.

Fast forward about 2 years and I finally did some testing and had a positive ANA test (1:320). Aha! I decided I had Sjögren’s syndrome because of my dry eyes and mouth (I’m a healthcare provider from a family of providers so self-diagnosis is kind of a thing we do). During 2020, my referrals to rheum were rejected (apparently the person helping to prepare the referral simply wrote “fatigue” as the reason) and it made me sit and think deeply about what a “diagnosis” meant to me and what I really wanted from a rheumatologist referral.

At that time, I really only had dryness and periodic fatigue (egads, the fatigue). What I concluded was that I really only wanted a visit with rheumatology to: 1) validate my clinical judgment (was I on the right track with Sjögren’s?) and 2) validate that I had “something” and thus was allowed to have symptoms. Once I came to that understanding I was able to say to myself, “Hey, I’m not a rheumatologist so it’s no big deal if I don’t have the same clinical expertise! Also, how about I give MYSELF permission to feel yucky when I’m feeling yucky? I’ll do that! Permission granted to feel yucky if needed.”

After a completely terrible 2022- I eventually felt the absolute worst I ever have (both physically and mentally). Crushing relapse of depression on top of constant stomachaches on top of major fatigue. I finally started making appointments to be seen and figure out a path forward- got my iron deficiency anemia corrected and my tummy feeling better and all checked out, worked with mental health on adjusting meds and restarting therapy, and got an updated referral to rheum. I don’t know about your community, but you’re probably going to wait 3-6 months here for a routine rheum referral. By the time I was seen, I was already feeling SO MUCH better as my depression started to wane, my iron levels corrected, and my gastritis faded.

I don’t have Sjögren’s (at least for now!), but I did feel very validated that I do have some “autoimmune” thing which we are loosely calling undifferentiated connective tissue disease (UCTD). About a month after my appointment I realized I was really experiencing more joint pain than I used to and asked to start on hydroxychloroquine to see if it might possibly help with that plus with fatigue (maybe?). Still too soon for me to tell as I’m not even a month in yet, but I’m cautiously optimistic.

Things that I struggle with nearly every day:
*Having some ill-defined disease that you (and other people) can’t see completely messes with my head. I continue to ask myself “Am I just making these symptoms up?”
*The not knowing how things will go- I think that’s the case with many chronic illnesses, but it’s such a roller coaster when you can have such big ups and downs symptom-wise. I basically don’t commit to plans anymore because I don’t know if I’ll have enough energy to follow through with those plans.
*Staying out of the sun- I was a vampire before I had a positive ANA because I burn so easily, but I feel like my tolerance for UV exposure is even less and it’s really a pain!
*I feel guilty about complaining because there are so so so many people who have many more symptoms and more severe symptoms than I do.
*I’m struggling with the idea that this is my new reality. Part of my brain still thinks things like “well, when I’m back to normal then I’ll sign up for and train for that triathlon.”
*Aside from social media, I haven’t yet found a patient support or advocacy group for UCTD and I feel too tired much of the time to create one. Or perhaps I just want some better information out there to show up when you Google UCTD.

REPLY

Thank you for your thoughtful post. I can soooooo relate to you! I just slept 10 1/2 hours and still feel tired! I under commit to things and wonder what is really wrong with me. I have elevated RF and IGM but low levels of white blood cells, red blood cells, C3,C4 complement serums, IGA. I have 2 M-spikes one IGM and one IGG but at low levels. I’ve taking medication for hypothyroidism and hydroxychloriquine. One salivary gland is irregular but the size has shrink but to normal. It’s not Sjogren’s because it is only on one side. One ear drain tube is dysfunctional. And my lungs have numerous nodules and “cut glass”……I exercise on a treadmill maxing out the incline setting for 30 minutes and lift weights every other day as well do intermittent fasting so my weight is fine and I eat organic only and vegan cook at home. Anyways, thanks for listening as I tread along and try not to obsess and focus on the present moment 😊

REPLY

@marymaryoregon
There are other discussions within this Autoimmune group. I don’t know about groups on Facebook, but I’m sure they exist. I even found a Fb group for my disease, Clippers—chronic lymphocytic inflammation on my brain.
- Undifferentiated Connective Tissue Disease: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/uctd/

On reading your second posting, i felt like it was me talking. I, too, wonder if I complain too much. Looking at me now, you’d never guess how difficult the last 6 years have been. I’m in remission now. And, NO, I told my brother, the disease isn’t gone, it’s just being managed.
If you’re thinking about finding a support group, this organization can help. Really, it can help with all sorts of things related to rare diseases.
https://rarediseases.org/
Will you continue to let me know how you’re doing?

REPLY
@marymaryoregon

Here’s my story: for a long long time, I thought I had “allergies” which caused itchy eyes and itchy skin and rare days where I felt like I was fighting off a cold and had no energy. A couple decades go by and I decide I’d like to find out what I’m allergic to because perhaps I could get allergy shots or something that would help symptoms more. Turns out, I don’t have any allergies from the typical skin testing panels. So once I had to throw away “allergies” as the reason for my symptoms, it occurred to me that perhaps it was still my immune system but not because of a specific allergic-type response.

Fast forward about 2 years and I finally did some testing and had a positive ANA test (1:320). Aha! I decided I had Sjögren’s syndrome because of my dry eyes and mouth (I’m a healthcare provider from a family of providers so self-diagnosis is kind of a thing we do). During 2020, my referrals to rheum were rejected (apparently the person helping to prepare the referral simply wrote “fatigue” as the reason) and it made me sit and think deeply about what a “diagnosis” meant to me and what I really wanted from a rheumatologist referral.

At that time, I really only had dryness and periodic fatigue (egads, the fatigue). What I concluded was that I really only wanted a visit with rheumatology to: 1) validate my clinical judgment (was I on the right track with Sjögren’s?) and 2) validate that I had “something” and thus was allowed to have symptoms. Once I came to that understanding I was able to say to myself, “Hey, I’m not a rheumatologist so it’s no big deal if I don’t have the same clinical expertise! Also, how about I give MYSELF permission to feel yucky when I’m feeling yucky? I’ll do that! Permission granted to feel yucky if needed.”

After a completely terrible 2022- I eventually felt the absolute worst I ever have (both physically and mentally). Crushing relapse of depression on top of constant stomachaches on top of major fatigue. I finally started making appointments to be seen and figure out a path forward- got my iron deficiency anemia corrected and my tummy feeling better and all checked out, worked with mental health on adjusting meds and restarting therapy, and got an updated referral to rheum. I don’t know about your community, but you’re probably going to wait 3-6 months here for a routine rheum referral. By the time I was seen, I was already feeling SO MUCH better as my depression started to wane, my iron levels corrected, and my gastritis faded.

I don’t have Sjögren’s (at least for now!), but I did feel very validated that I do have some “autoimmune” thing which we are loosely calling undifferentiated connective tissue disease (UCTD). About a month after my appointment I realized I was really experiencing more joint pain than I used to and asked to start on hydroxychloroquine to see if it might possibly help with that plus with fatigue (maybe?). Still too soon for me to tell as I’m not even a month in yet, but I’m cautiously optimistic.

Things that I struggle with nearly every day:
*Having some ill-defined disease that you (and other people) can’t see completely messes with my head. I continue to ask myself “Am I just making these symptoms up?”
*The not knowing how things will go- I think that’s the case with many chronic illnesses, but it’s such a roller coaster when you can have such big ups and downs symptom-wise. I basically don’t commit to plans anymore because I don’t know if I’ll have enough energy to follow through with those plans.
*Staying out of the sun- I was a vampire before I had a positive ANA because I burn so easily, but I feel like my tolerance for UV exposure is even less and it’s really a pain!
*I feel guilty about complaining because there are so so so many people who have many more symptoms and more severe symptoms than I do.
*I’m struggling with the idea that this is my new reality. Part of my brain still thinks things like “well, when I’m back to normal then I’ll sign up for and train for that triathlon.”
*Aside from social media, I haven’t yet found a patient support or advocacy group for UCTD and I feel too tired much of the time to create one. Or perhaps I just want some better information out there to show up when you Google UCTD.

Jump to this post

Epstien Barr possibly?

REPLY
@marymaryoregon

Here’s my story: for a long long time, I thought I had “allergies” which caused itchy eyes and itchy skin and rare days where I felt like I was fighting off a cold and had no energy. A couple decades go by and I decide I’d like to find out what I’m allergic to because perhaps I could get allergy shots or something that would help symptoms more. Turns out, I don’t have any allergies from the typical skin testing panels. So once I had to throw away “allergies” as the reason for my symptoms, it occurred to me that perhaps it was still my immune system but not because of a specific allergic-type response.

Fast forward about 2 years and I finally did some testing and had a positive ANA test (1:320). Aha! I decided I had Sjögren’s syndrome because of my dry eyes and mouth (I’m a healthcare provider from a family of providers so self-diagnosis is kind of a thing we do). During 2020, my referrals to rheum were rejected (apparently the person helping to prepare the referral simply wrote “fatigue” as the reason) and it made me sit and think deeply about what a “diagnosis” meant to me and what I really wanted from a rheumatologist referral.

At that time, I really only had dryness and periodic fatigue (egads, the fatigue). What I concluded was that I really only wanted a visit with rheumatology to: 1) validate my clinical judgment (was I on the right track with Sjögren’s?) and 2) validate that I had “something” and thus was allowed to have symptoms. Once I came to that understanding I was able to say to myself, “Hey, I’m not a rheumatologist so it’s no big deal if I don’t have the same clinical expertise! Also, how about I give MYSELF permission to feel yucky when I’m feeling yucky? I’ll do that! Permission granted to feel yucky if needed.”

After a completely terrible 2022- I eventually felt the absolute worst I ever have (both physically and mentally). Crushing relapse of depression on top of constant stomachaches on top of major fatigue. I finally started making appointments to be seen and figure out a path forward- got my iron deficiency anemia corrected and my tummy feeling better and all checked out, worked with mental health on adjusting meds and restarting therapy, and got an updated referral to rheum. I don’t know about your community, but you’re probably going to wait 3-6 months here for a routine rheum referral. By the time I was seen, I was already feeling SO MUCH better as my depression started to wane, my iron levels corrected, and my gastritis faded.

I don’t have Sjögren’s (at least for now!), but I did feel very validated that I do have some “autoimmune” thing which we are loosely calling undifferentiated connective tissue disease (UCTD). About a month after my appointment I realized I was really experiencing more joint pain than I used to and asked to start on hydroxychloroquine to see if it might possibly help with that plus with fatigue (maybe?). Still too soon for me to tell as I’m not even a month in yet, but I’m cautiously optimistic.

Things that I struggle with nearly every day:
*Having some ill-defined disease that you (and other people) can’t see completely messes with my head. I continue to ask myself “Am I just making these symptoms up?”
*The not knowing how things will go- I think that’s the case with many chronic illnesses, but it’s such a roller coaster when you can have such big ups and downs symptom-wise. I basically don’t commit to plans anymore because I don’t know if I’ll have enough energy to follow through with those plans.
*Staying out of the sun- I was a vampire before I had a positive ANA because I burn so easily, but I feel like my tolerance for UV exposure is even less and it’s really a pain!
*I feel guilty about complaining because there are so so so many people who have many more symptoms and more severe symptoms than I do.
*I’m struggling with the idea that this is my new reality. Part of my brain still thinks things like “well, when I’m back to normal then I’ll sign up for and train for that triathlon.”
*Aside from social media, I haven’t yet found a patient support or advocacy group for UCTD and I feel too tired much of the time to create one. Or perhaps I just want some better information out there to show up when you Google UCTD.

Jump to this post

Epstein Barr?

REPLY

I think it’s very likely that I had one (or more) viral illnesses that induced the immune system changes, but at this point it doesn’t really matter. UV radiation (sunlight), wildfire smoke, viral or bacterial illnesses- any or all of those probably lead to the changes where my immune system thinks it needs to attack my own cells.

REPLY
@cherylmcg

Thank you for your thoughtful post. I can soooooo relate to you! I just slept 10 1/2 hours and still feel tired! I under commit to things and wonder what is really wrong with me. I have elevated RF and IGM but low levels of white blood cells, red blood cells, C3,C4 complement serums, IGA. I have 2 M-spikes one IGM and one IGG but at low levels. I’ve taking medication for hypothyroidism and hydroxychloriquine. One salivary gland is irregular but the size has shrink but to normal. It’s not Sjogren’s because it is only on one side. One ear drain tube is dysfunctional. And my lungs have numerous nodules and “cut glass”……I exercise on a treadmill maxing out the incline setting for 30 minutes and lift weights every other day as well do intermittent fasting so my weight is fine and I eat organic only and vegan cook at home. Anyways, thanks for listening as I tread along and try not to obsess and focus on the present moment 😊

Jump to this post

@cherylmcg - what’s really wrong is that your immune system (this super complex and totally not fully understood thing) is dysregulated. And mine too!

It’s so much more complex than, say, hypothyroidism. Thyroid hormones low = add thyroid hormone = person usually feels much better.

If your immune system has developed antibodies that attack your body instead of not your own cells? There’s no straightforward treatment for that. Hydroxychloroquine is a good start as it has multiple actions that regulate immune function. You can’t just turn off the immune system - that could be way worse! Maybe my system actually is too slow clearing naturally dead cells and that’s what revs it up to attack mode? Maybe someone else’s system is revved too high to start with and starts increasing the rate of cell death? Those are both totally made up examples, but my point remains that: 1) you totally have a real thing 2) that real thing is super complex because it relates to the immune system and 3) it’s hard to know how to feel better while you are living it.

Major major kudos from me on exercising and eating well!! My puppy doggy is pretty successfully getting me moving most days, my diet of overly processed foods needs a ton of work though. Baby steps!

REPLY
@marymaryoregon

@cherylmcg - what’s really wrong is that your immune system (this super complex and totally not fully understood thing) is dysregulated. And mine too!

It’s so much more complex than, say, hypothyroidism. Thyroid hormones low = add thyroid hormone = person usually feels much better.

If your immune system has developed antibodies that attack your body instead of not your own cells? There’s no straightforward treatment for that. Hydroxychloroquine is a good start as it has multiple actions that regulate immune function. You can’t just turn off the immune system - that could be way worse! Maybe my system actually is too slow clearing naturally dead cells and that’s what revs it up to attack mode? Maybe someone else’s system is revved too high to start with and starts increasing the rate of cell death? Those are both totally made up examples, but my point remains that: 1) you totally have a real thing 2) that real thing is super complex because it relates to the immune system and 3) it’s hard to know how to feel better while you are living it.

Major major kudos from me on exercising and eating well!! My puppy doggy is pretty successfully getting me moving most days, my diet of overly processed foods needs a ton of work though. Baby steps!

Jump to this post

@cherylmcg and @marymaryoregon. You are so right in thinking the immune system has somehow gotten off track. I provided the links to 2 articles that may help explain it better.
https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/wellness-and-prevention/autoimmune-disease-why-is-my-immune-system-attacking-itself

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1299128/
Did you learn anything new? Or did the articles clarify your thinking?

REPLY
@cherylmcg

Thank you for your thoughtful post. I can soooooo relate to you! I just slept 10 1/2 hours and still feel tired! I under commit to things and wonder what is really wrong with me. I have elevated RF and IGM but low levels of white blood cells, red blood cells, C3,C4 complement serums, IGA. I have 2 M-spikes one IGM and one IGG but at low levels. I’ve taking medication for hypothyroidism and hydroxychloriquine. One salivary gland is irregular but the size has shrink but to normal. It’s not Sjogren’s because it is only on one side. One ear drain tube is dysfunctional. And my lungs have numerous nodules and “cut glass”……I exercise on a treadmill maxing out the incline setting for 30 minutes and lift weights every other day as well do intermittent fasting so my weight is fine and I eat organic only and vegan cook at home. Anyways, thanks for listening as I tread along and try not to obsess and focus on the present moment 😊

Jump to this post

What do you mean one ear drain tube is abnormal? Is that a thing with this? My right ear always feels clogged and it’s like muted. I’ve had it checked but there’s nothing there!

REPLY

It’s called dysfunctional Eustachian tube. I had ear infections and my ear drum burst several times which resulted in scar tissue in the left ear. I bought an ear popper on Amazon and used it when it would flare up. Yes, it does feel stuffy, achy, and I used to get sharp pain. It’s much better now. I’m not sure if the hydroxychloriquine is helping?

REPLY
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