I got my second set of Killer Death Injections of Doooom this morning.
As before, I pinched myself awfully hard during each one to distract myself from the pain-and-wrongness sensation. (Last time, the welts I made by pinching took four days to fade. Aren't you glad you now know this detail?) Also as before, I have the anaesthetic effect over much of my foot without benefit of actual anaesthesia. Last time, this effect took about a day to fade.
There are dark purplish dots at the entry points where the needle went in. Those haven't faded from last time, so now I look like I have measles or something. If they all stay for seven weeks I won't be able to resist taking a photo of the resultant mess. :-)
If I concentrate really hard I can walk almost-normally with my partially numb feet.
As before, I pinched myself awfully hard during each one to distract myself from the pain-and-wrongness sensation. (Last time, the welts I made by pinching took four days to fade. Aren't you glad you now know this detail?) Also as before, I have the anaesthetic effect over much of my foot without benefit of actual anaesthesia. Last time, this effect took about a day to fade.
There are dark purplish dots at the entry points where the needle went in. Those haven't faded from last time, so now I look like I have measles or something. If they all stay for seven weeks I won't be able to resist taking a photo of the resultant mess. :-)
If I concentrate really hard I can walk almost-normally with my partially numb feet.
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Yeah, definite similarity there.
joint fluid ... worked its way to a subcutaneous storage spot.
Wow. Is that something that would have been safe to simply drain off by drawing it through a needle?
I was told that the cortisone (or cortisone-like) shots I got were limited: I could have only two (some doctors go to three) in my foot-knuckles before doctors would refuse to give me any more. Too many, apparently, and the fat pad on the bottom of the foot would start to deteriorate. Do you have limits like that on your injections, too?
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And yes, they remove excess joint fluid by aspiration. In my case, he (for free, I love my doctor) used cold spray on it, then just slid a needle in -- it wasn't deep, as it was on the back of my hand, not in my wrist -- and withdrew as much as he could, examined it (thicker = more inflammation, mine was thick but not so much he thought cortisone was required), then massaged a bit more out through the hole. It was fairly non-dramatic, but I've got no needle-phobia at all.
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A good doctor is worth his weight in
goldfresh homemade chocolate chip cookies.no subject
Also, my doctor's 6'5", slender, and geeky-looking (me? perv?) and trusts my intuition and body sense. When I say, "Well, I read on alt.support.arthritis that taking grapeseed extract helps with methotrexate side effects, and those folks tend to know the difference between snake oil and good medicine," he accepted that I wasn't being misled my crazy internet talk. He doesn't say, "That can't be RA, the symptoms aren't typical," he says, "You're a puzzle, let's find out how to make you better."
Anyone want a rheumatologist? I'm happy to refer.
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Ah, I didn't realize that. I remember you talking about the hike at Pinnacles but I didn't make the connection as to why that was possible.
Anyone want a rheumatologist? I'm happy to refer.
I have a friend who needs a good rheumatologist, but sadly she is in Ohio. I reeeeeeeally hope she finds a good doc soon.
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and from what little research i've done, i don't think we've really tried all that much. i think they just don't want to bother being creative. :P
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Yes, I was. Even a mediocre rheumatologist would be a step up for you.
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