Feet:
Called the NY doctor to plan trip.
He said he wanted me there for two weeks.
I said AAAAACK!
He said oh okaaaayy, get these three tests done locally, and then we'll make plan B.
So I have an appointment with my GP on Monday, and I have a prescription mailed from New York for these tests. I am scared to think what they will all cost.
Other, also mostly feet:
I switched gynecologists because mine closed his practice.
My new doc wanted a glucose tolerance test, with several other tests thrown in.
She also wants me tested for Lyme Disease, which I will go do as soon as either of my arms heals up. Lyme can attack joints and show nothing on an MRI. Lyme is also one of those lifelong diseases: once you've got it, you're forever waiting for the next flareup. Lyme is best treated immediately. Me, if I do have it I've had it for seventeen years. Not much hope there. I'm torn between hoping I don't have it, because goodness knows I don't need another lifelong health problem, and hoping I do, because if my foot problems are Lyme then what I have is something doctors have heard of. That alone would have immense value.
She also gave me injectable B-vitamin supplements. I am getting better about needles, really I am. I didn't get woozy at all during the glucose tolerance test. I even know how to do subcutaneous injections. I've done them for years on my cat. I know how to prepare the syringe. I have alcohol swabs. So I sat there looking at the needle in one hand and the fold of my own skin in the other... and stayed that way for about twenty minutes before I gave up. It's just not going to happen. I think I will ask a diabetic coworker and see if she's willing to be on the other end of the syringe for my first one. :-( [edit: She was. It went fine. I am so grateful!]
Called the NY doctor to plan trip.
He said he wanted me there for two weeks.
I said AAAAACK!
He said oh okaaaayy, get these three tests done locally, and then we'll make plan B.
So I have an appointment with my GP on Monday, and I have a prescription mailed from New York for these tests. I am scared to think what they will all cost.
Other, also mostly feet:
I switched gynecologists because mine closed his practice.
My new doc wanted a glucose tolerance test, with several other tests thrown in.
She also wants me tested for Lyme Disease, which I will go do as soon as either of my arms heals up. Lyme can attack joints and show nothing on an MRI. Lyme is also one of those lifelong diseases: once you've got it, you're forever waiting for the next flareup. Lyme is best treated immediately. Me, if I do have it I've had it for seventeen years. Not much hope there. I'm torn between hoping I don't have it, because goodness knows I don't need another lifelong health problem, and hoping I do, because if my foot problems are Lyme then what I have is something doctors have heard of. That alone would have immense value.
She also gave me injectable B-vitamin supplements. I am getting better about needles, really I am. I didn't get woozy at all during the glucose tolerance test. I even know how to do subcutaneous injections. I've done them for years on my cat. I know how to prepare the syringe. I have alcohol swabs. So I sat there looking at the needle in one hand and the fold of my own skin in the other... and stayed that way for about twenty minutes before I gave up. It's just not going to happen. I think I will ask a diabetic coworker and see if she's willing to be on the other end of the syringe for my first one. :-( [edit: She was. It went fine. I am so grateful!]
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On the positive side, this is handy-dandy desensitization practice. Gee, thank you, Fates, for handing me an opportunity for growth. :-)
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I couldn't use the stomach as an injection space because of well YEAH Chickie was in the way! *laughs*
I was given the choice of thighs or arms. It took me a long time that weekend to get used to giving myself injections, but they wouldn't let me go home until I'd done it.
In the end, the way I found easiest to do it was this (because I could look away and pretend it was someone else's hand).
Sit back in a chair, and press your left shoulder to the chair. Roll slightly further left, using the chair and motion to "pinch" the skin appropriately. Position needle. Promptly look to the right so you can't see what's happening. Push plunger.
It sounds bizarre, but not having to watch? Really really really helped.
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Weren't you supposed to pull back a little and make sure there was no blood? I was taught I had to do that for all sub-cu injections, to make sure they're really sub-cu and not intravenous by mistake. Maybe for some things it isn't so critical. That would be nice.
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Oh, there are also pens and various devices which allow for injections without seeing needles. I couldn't use on when diabetic because I had to use a mix of two insulins, but it might be something else to look into.
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I have no idea of whether I could get this stuff into some kind of a pen. I don't know how those work. After my coworker "shot" me, I know that I can barely feel it AT ALL, so next time it won't be nearly so hard. THANK GOODNESS!!
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I now have a lovely splotch of fuchsia on the back of my arm. It didn't occur to me that that stuff is bright red!
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Pretend you're a cat; the injection will be easier. :)
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I'm sure I'll get used to it. By the time I run out of this stuff, I'll be an old pro at it. Right now, though... :-(
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This offer only good for five more weeks.
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Honestly, the sensation was so minimal that now I think I'll probably be good to go on my own... but if not, Rob is going to get awfully tired of me pestering him for my morning B sting.
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I recommend getting a Lyme test from more than one lab, and try Igenix because they test on bands outside of the CDC reference bands. Know that Lyme tests are not very accurate and Lyme is generally a clinically diagnosed condition. Also know that while doctors have heard of it, a lot of them are skeptical about it being a chronic, long-term condition. This was made worse by the IDSA getting power in stating guidelines for Lyme treatment for the CDC, but they have been under investigation and have a lot to answer for (see yesterday's postings on the IDSA on
I sincerely hope you do not have this disease. I didn't need it either. But if you do, there is a path to follow that will help and potentially you can get symptom improvement.
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This disease is a truly sucky one. I wish you didn't have it. :-(
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I have TMJ (well-managed now, thank goodness) - when I first developed the migraines that go with it so often (at 16) the doctors all said it was a psychosomatic response to having my wisdom teeth removed.
Ten years later I was given a physical reason.
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I hope that some answer comes back in the blood, or from the dude in NYC. I'm keeping all my fingers crossed for you!!
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No kidding! Some days I envy people with really nasty diagnoses, simply because they HAVE diagnoses. This is partially silly, of course, but partially very real and sane.
Thanks for the finger-crossing. I'll take all the help I can get! :-)
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If I don't have to watch, maybe I could...
I'll cross my fingers that you'll be doing yourself really soon!
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But mostly I made J administer the shots instead of doing them myself because there was always a moment of standing there with the syringe pointed at my belly going....NO!..before I could actually do it.
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That's exactly it! I sat there, needle hovering, and just couldn't make myself do it. When my coworker finally came along and agreed to stick me, I felt nearly nothing. It's really not about the pain. There's just something about sticking a needle into myself.
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It took me 45 minutes of holding the needle just above the skin of my belly the first time I had to administer a subq injection. My brain kept saying "you have to have the injection". My instincts kept saying "you're not sticking a sharp metal object into your body". Now, it's not a problem. Some people like quick flick injections. I prefer the slow insertion.
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45 minutes, eh? Wow, you're braver -- or more determined -- than I am. I got a coworker to stick me. :-)
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Not necessarily more brave. Just that I had to learn to do it. I've been giving myself injections for over three years now on a mostly weekly basis, though the latest drug is every other week.
Good luck figuring things out!
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*Best wishes for you & your feet!*
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On a longer baseline, staring at a needle for twenty minutes without passing out, all by itself, is progress for you, isn't it? :-)
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How the heck did I work myself up into this kind of... "phobia" isn't quite the right word... ? What made me that way? It sure is a long road to STOP being that way!