Jump to content

Newly Diagonised


Recommended Posts

I was recently diagonised with POTS/NMH in September of 2006. I am also currently being treated for Polycythemia Vera and Hemochromatosis. I joined this group to find support and understanding of my condition. Does anyone else have problems with Polycythemia or Hemochromatosis with their POTS/NMH?

I have been searching for years to find the reason for my chronic fatigue. I was treated for years for depression with no results, treated for bipolar disorder with no results, had a partial hystercotomy (spelling?) and had my gallbladder and lump in my breast removed. I have continued to get worse and I finally got some answers from a wonderful cardiologist in VA that my PCP sent me to for tilt table test. I have started on medication and am feeling better, but the chronic fatigue is still there. I sleep 14-16 hours a day some days and then other days are good and I stay awake most of the day. Is this normal with Pots/NMH? My Dr said the fatigue will get better as my treatment progresses. I sure hope so.

I look forward to talking, sharing and reading this post. Would love to hear from everyone. I live in MD outside of the Frederick area. Is there anyone close?

Nolie

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Welcome. I also had chronic fatigue for many years before being diagnosed, and by the mid-90s I think I had tried every major class of anti-depressants on the market at the time. Interestingly, the SSRIs were the only ones that helped at all, and now I know that was probably treating the POTS, not depression.

Good days and bad days are par for the course with these conditions. Sometimes you can tell what sets you off (stress, a cold, overdoing it), and sometimes it just seems completely random, and you can drive yourself nuts trying to make sense of it. You learn to roll with it. (At least, you try. ;) )

Hope you find some help here. And congratulations on finally getting a diagnosis.

spike

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Oh boy, Nolie... no wonder you are so fatigued. To have hemochromatosis, Polycythemia vera, and Pots/NMH must make you completely exhausted. There are alot of people who suffer with very bad fatigue as a symptom of Pots/NMH, and to have your other conditions along side must be very tough.

Hopefully your doctor is right and as you go along with treatment some of the fatigue will lift. You'll likely still have fatigue, but it will hopefully be more managable for you and to a much lesser degree. Hemochromatosis has just been found to run in our family so we are all in the process of getting tested.

You'll find wonderful support here and caring people to help you out! Laura.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Katherine,

Where in MD are you?

Polycythemia is a blood disorder/blood cancer (depending on the dr). This disorder is a mutation of the bone marrow that makes it overproduce certain cells. Mine overproduces red cells. I see a hemotatologist on regular basis and the only treatment at this time is phlebotomies. I have to give blood, about 1 pint, every couple of weeks/months depending on the time it takes my bone marrow to reproduce them. The greatest risk is from blood clot and stroke. This is due to the blood being thick from to many red cells. As long as we keep it in check I can live a regular length of time with it. Sometimes it can go into blast and over produce to rapid or can turn into leukemia or another type of blood cancer that woud require chemo or Bone marrow Transplant. I am no where near that point but it can happen, so it will be a lifelong learning curve.

Hemochromatosis is another disorder of the blood that causes your body to overproduce/store iron that is in your red blood cells. Your major organs store the extra iron and it in turn damages the organs. Most people that are not diagonised or are caught late end up with liver damage, spleen damage, liver cancer, or Hep C. Mine was caught very early, when they found the polycythemia, and the treatment for it is the same. You have the excess red cells removes thru phlebs. They continue to do this weekly until your iron stores are at anemic levels, then they just maintain your low levels to keep the organs safe. You have to watch your diet for iron intake.

I am the second person in my family with Hemochromatosis and the first with Polycythemia. The Factor V Leiden also runs in my family, but I was lucky enough not to get it. I am the baby of 6 kids and 3 of them got the Factor V. I am the first diagonised with POTS, but I truly believe my mother has it. Her cardio is not familar with POTS, so we are getting her PCP to send her to one that is. Hopefully she will find some releif from her symptoms..

I have learned alot from this site as well as a list that my cardio gave me. It's nice to know finally that it's not in my head...I feel redeamed.

My cardio is a member of the Children's Heart Clinic and I see a lot of kids in his office with POTS. He said this can run in famlies. I wonder how often that happens? Now this is one more thing I have to worry about handing down to my kids.

Anyway, thanks for the welcome and I look forward to talking to you again. I hope the information above helps you understand a little more.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...