Jump to content

ramakentesh

Members
  • Posts

    5,180
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by ramakentesh

  1. I was three months gluten free, two months yeast free and one month sugar free. Although sugary foods used to sometimes start a crash, i found no improvement at all in my symptoms - even the weird stomach issues I had when my POTS was really bad.
  2. I try not to make it stop me doing much - but sometimes pots does
  3. i lost a lot of weight when i first got pots - it just dropped off and was mostly muscle mass like when you have an overactive thyroid - so thats what they thought was my problem originally withthe hand tremors as well. i lost over 18kg in two months or something. Ive managed to put weight on - with the odd healthy dosage of guiness when i can handle it.
  4. when i was really bad with pots i would get these periods of months where I would have daily flashing like the aura ofa migraine, but no migraine would ever arrive... Definately pots related according to my doctor.
  5. 'But I've been public speaking for 20 years and it really doesn't faze me psychologically. It's just my body over-reacts to any little adrenalin surge.' I can relate to this - I used to do weekly training sessions at work but once POTS set in I wouldnt be able to stand still and I would get all spaced out and jittery just from the normal nerves of having to talk to a large group of people. When i was really bad i couldnt even watch a scary movie - quite sad really...
  6. I dont think they are a type of seizure. I usually used to get them if i had drank too much alcohol a couple of days before i think. morgan sums it up well
  7. Ive spent so long trying to work out what caused my sudden onset of POTS - i had never been a particularly good long-term stander - when i was younger I would get pale and feel super-tired if i stood for too long but i thought this was normal. When I first moved to this city i developed a whole lot of weird symptoms - weird rashes, itchiness and other strange things. Then one night I woke up with 170 tachy, fighting to stay conscious and having trouble breathing. I got a major run-around and was treated like I was insane until I found a doctor who was open to researching my symtpoms and we came up with POTS. I too have blue eyes, pale skin and a celtic background. I had a cold about four weeks before this onset and I had been exercising very heavily and pushing myself a fair bit. I had also drank two beers that evening From the onset my body cannot handle caffeine - if i even sip the stuff i freak. Now days it ebbs and flows and when i get out of town I always feel better after a couple days only to return and get it worse the longer i was away. One thing that really helped was licorice tea but it gives me migraines - so its a balancing act. The hardest part for me is how hard it makes normal life - its hard to talk to people when your having trouble focusing and you are concentrating so much on trying to stop yourself from collapsing or zoning out that you cant really concentrate on the person your talking to.
  8. 'We're only young- there will be a cure before we hit 30, ' What about by the time i get to 30 - one and a half years - fingers Crossed!!!
  9. thanks for the kind words. I was tested for M Gravis a while back among other things and thankfully I was negative. I have a job here in Melbourne so ill have to stay for a while unfortunately - gives me time to work out what might be triggering it here though I guess. Then i might get a transfer somewhere else. As for now - Im just resting.
  10. i found the article: Chronic fatigue gene signs found Scientists believe they have pinpointed biological markers of chronic fatigue syndrome which could help develop a test and treatment for the condition. CFS, or ME, makes people feel extremely tired, and can cause weakness, headaches, and disrupted sleep. Scientists, now based at St George's Hospital, London, found differences in the way genes are expressed in white blood cells of people with CFS/ME. But others say the New Scientist findings may not explain all cases. It is also due to be published in the Journal of Clinical Pathology. The scientists say their findings fit with the understanding that a virus, such as Epstein-Barr, may trigger CFS/ME, because that illness might alter how genes are expressed. CFS/ME often first appears as a flu-like illness, but does not then go away. 'Hijacked' The researchers compared levels of gene expression in the white blood cells of 25 healthy people and 25 who had CFS using DNA chip technology. They found differences in the behaviour of 35 of the 9,522 genes they analysed. Further genetic testing showed 15 of the genes were up to four times more active in people with CFS, while one gene was less active. Several genes the team pinpointed play important roles in mitochondria, the "powerhouse" of cells. One of the products of these genes is EIF4G1, which is involved in the protein production in mitochondria. EIF4G1 is hijacked by some viruses, so cells may compensate by increasing gene expression. The genetic differences lead to changes in how blood proteins behave which could allow the development of a blood test for CFS, the team say. Other genes are involved in regulating the immune system or playing important roles in nerve cells. The team will now carry out further research on 1,000 CFS patients and healthy people. Not 'made-up' Dr Jonathan Kerr who led the research team, which is currently in the process of moving to St George's, said: "The involvement of such genes does seem to fit with the fact that these patients lack energy and suffer from fatigue." He added the work could also potentially lead to a treatment for the condition. "We have shown that a significant part of the pathogenesis resides in the white blood cells and in their activity "It will open the door to development of pharmacological interventions." Dr Russell Lane, a neurologist at Charing Cross Hospital, in London, said: "This exciting new work shows that some aspects of this complex illness may be understandable in molecular terms, and that CFS is not a 'made-up' illness." Chris Clark, chief executive of Action on ME, told the BBC News website: "The prospect of having a diagnostic test is very encouraging because many people with ME can currently take well over a year to find out what is wrong with them." Dr Neil Abbot of Merge, a charity which funds research into CFS/ME, said: "CFS/ME can have very different effects on patients. "We're not looking at just one condition with a definitive patient group. "So it might be hard to get a gene signature which works for everyone with CFS/ME." But he added: "This research probably won't be the answer for everyone, but it is still very interesting." Story from BBC NEWS: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/health/4702515.stm
  11. Having just returned from two months of 100% normal health overseas and finally the feeling that I might have moved the POTS thing behind me (background - symptoms started abruptly in 2003 - progressed until June 2004 and gradually improved until xmas 2004 where I have been fine - finally diagnosed Jan 2005 no treatment required due to improvement - bad reaction to all treatments offered - TTT demonstrated the highest nor adrenaline levels recorded in that testing centre - shucks ) I have suddenly crashed SUPER bad - my vision is all weird again all the time, Im tired, dreadfully dizzy, foggy headed and trembly - its just so frustrating that just whenn you start to think this is behind you it whams you in the head again! My eye lids are starting to dropp like they did when i was really bad again - im starting to worry that this is gonna put me back where i started. Ive had some bad relapses but most last two to four day and im fine - its now ten days since this started (two days after returning from overseas so you can understand why i think its something environmental that triggers it here! My last crash was the year before a day after returning from a three week holiday in NEw zealand where i felt almost recovered). My only hope is licorice tea which will result in its usual 5 day period of migraines - but it will get rid of this terrible brain fog - brain constricted feeling. My doc says that this can be caused by reduced blood flow - but that they recently found that the arteries in the brain are constricting - like the body is trying to reduce blood flow to the brain for some reason. Im so over POTS...
  12. thats interesting - i guess now that they consider CFS as primarily an autonomic nervous system problem as well then this could be great news. My doctor was telling me about a study that was actually thinking that there was possibily a chemical that was interferring with our autonomic nervous system that might be the cause - in particular the noradrenalin uptaker thingie
  13. yeah i get those looks from my family sometimes as well. For me its got to be something environmental that is atleast causing a relapse of my POTS. Myabe its a cat or the heavy chlorinated water in Melbourne - I cant seem to fiund the exact trigger but last year wehen i got a shower filter i improved quite a lot.
  14. I get this sort of inability to focus - weird depth perception
  15. according to my doctor people with POTS suffer a particular type of migraine activity that actually constricts the arteries in the brain causing symtpoms similar to those experienced during the onest of a normal migraine without the headache.
  16. Thats me to a tea when im bad - betablockers can be a god send when your like that but can make the spaced out dizziness worse
  17. wow I am in this boat right now. I went overseas last year and felt 100% better after a day. I had to work overseas for two months this year and I felt 100% better except for one day when i had a bad flu. I get home and its the same every time - within a couple of days im dizzy and groggy again and lose all my energy. Its quite frustrating. The noyl things i can think of that could be causing it are pollen in the air, the cat i live with or the water here in Melbourne. Its really weird. I might try some antihistamines and see if that makes me feel better?
  18. oh yeah - that one can do it for me too - especially in the morning
  19. With me it can change - I can drink coffee one day no problem, the next day one sip and my head is spinning. For me the things I avoid if im feeling sensitive are Cheese, Milk, coffee and seaweed - how weird is that? But when i go away from my home city i feel better and can eat all of the above no problem - i return and im sick again and cant touch any of these...
  20. According to my dcotor POTS causes constriction of the arteries in the brain and the eyes - causing bizarre vision changes similar to those one would expect before a migraine. I used to have blurred vision, as well as sort of weird peripheral vision. it all began when i got pots and its how i can tell im coming down again.
  21. its so weird - I was eating all the things over seas that usually send me off here in Melbourne without a problem - maybe something is causing the underlying thing and its making me allergice or have a reaction to more stuff. Ill have to work it out i guess. Starting with moving away from my sister's cat
  22. Yeha I originally thought that - but the first time i went to a colder climate and the second time I went to a humid and very warm climate - both times I had defininate improvement within 48 Hours and similarly when i return I go straight into a pot hole within the same time frame.
  23. Ive just realised the most bizarre thing. When i first went to university I moved to the city of Melbourne Australia and during that time I first got POTS. It started with weird symptoms before its onest such as dry eyes, dry skin, itchiness and other weird things. I started getting all the classic POTS symptoms and I was eventually diagnosed early last year. Since then my symptoms wax and wane - and IM ok as long as I avoid cheese. Ive just been overseas for three months on a highly stressful work assignment, but during that time my symptoms went away completely. In three months I only had one bad day. This is the same as the year before when I went away on a two week holiday - total loss of symptoms. This is even when I eat foods that would normally kick off an episode and which I cannot handle while in Melbourne. I arrive back in melbourne and have time off so there is no stress in my life. But as with the holiday last year my symptoms return within days - and quite badly - the groggy headedness, weird vision, body tremors, all the usual POTS symptoms. Im now convinced that something in Melbourne is causing my pots symptoms to worsen. It has to be some sort of allergy - what else could it be? The only things I can account for are that when Im in melbourne I always live with a cat - overseas and on holiday I never do, or maybe its the water or pollen in Melbourne? Is there a long term low dose antihistamine that might help?
  24. mine isnt uncontrolabble. - the longer i stand the more irritable i get so i try not to go close shopping with my girlfriend to often - she usually takes a long time to decide.
  25. My doctor goes the opposite way - he thinks that POTS patients have bodies that are heavily under stress from a constant surge in autonomic nerve activity from hyper adrenal responses to orthostatic stress. We exhibit symptoms similar to patients that are under real external stress because they and POTS patients both have high levels of adrenaline and noradrenaline in their systems. This ofcourse, leads to anxiety and panic - when i was really bad, and my symptoms were at their worst and my noradrenaline levels were described as highly excessive from orthostatic stress, i couldnt handle any stress without shaking, and was VERY jumpy about things - easily panicked. This was quite normal and from a physical manifestation of pots rather than a psychological disturbance. I get moody much more often since pots and occasionaly depression - my doctor says that you would expect this from the excessive nervous system overactivity as you would similarly from a thyroid overactivity.
×
×
  • Create New...