Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Where'd my toes go?

I have to lean over a bit to see my toes now. If I don't lean, all I see is boobs and belly.

I'm waddling quite nicely now. Somewhere between a duck waddle, and a Quasimodo waddle-shuffle, depending on how much/which things hurt.

I've got some lower back pain from my tummy throwing me off-balance, and I have to stand, and rock myself back and forth to fix things. It's amazing how many things are fixed by rocking... Lower back pain, dislocated tailbone, dislocated pelvis, constipation, gas pain, and restless baby... Gently rocking for a few minutes gets everything back to where it should be, and convinces my little monster that my ribcage should not be her hideout.

On another note, I'd like to find the person who smuggled steel-toed boots, a pointy helmet, and a sledgehammer into my womb. Okay, not quite, but it's amazing how strong she is in there.

I'm getting a shiny new car this week, because my current car is crap, and I don't think I'd feel safe having a baby in it.

I think my appointment with the High Risk Pregnancy clinic next week is finally going to get me an OB/GYN. Amazingly, at 6 1/2 months, I still don't have one.

My appointment last week with the Chronic Illness & Pregnancy clinic was interesting. For 2 hours I had a nurse, an intern, and a doctor asking me question upon question, and writing notes.

Weird part, though, is that they knew enough about EDS that they told me, "we're not concerned, because you don't have the vascular type." Which is great, they know that Type IV is the most problematic when it comes to pregnancy complications, and such... But don't sit there and tell me that I'm going to be fine, especially after I've detailed the extreme dislocations, the extreme pain, and the scary-as-hell near-syncope events I had all through my first trimester, coupled with the ever-looming possibility that this pregnancy may end with me in a wheelchair. Telling me that "at least it's not type IV" doesn't earn you any brownie points. It doesn't make me feel better.

Oh well. At least they knew some things.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Tummy Monster is Kicking My Butt

So, I just passed the 6 month milestone in my pregnancy. I also finally got back to my pre-pregnancy weight, after losing 20 pounds in my first trimester.

My pelvis now dislocates in up to 4 places simultaneously.

My intestines seem to be doing their job again, since I started eating a lot more fruit.

The tiny little person I'm growing can stretch to amazing lengths already, poking me in the ribs on both sides, as well as just above both hip bones, at the same time. It really is one of the strangest sensations I've ever experienced.

I am exhausted, all the time. I still can't get much sleep, but I am getting some.

My geneticist has referred me to 2 different high risk pregnancy centres, and I'm still waiting to hear back from them about an appointment.

I saw my chiropractor yesterday, about the 4 wobbly bits in my pelvis, and he adjusted them (which really hurt) and they felt so much better afterward, for about an hour and a half. I had to break out my cane. He also gave me the number for a place in town that sells braces, and told me to see if they have any pelvic braces to help stabilize me.

Also, my husband spoke to my prolotherapy doctor, and he seems to think we'll have to wait 3-6 months after baby is born to start prolotherapy again. I am really distressed by this, as I can barely walk for 10 minutes now, and I seem to be getting worse almost daily. Once I know his reasons for waiting that long, I'm either going to try to convince him he's wrong (if I think he is), or try to convince him to do it a different way, if it's the drugs/breastmilk he's worried about.

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Relaxin... Not Relaxing

My pubic bone is permanently subluxed now. It grinds against itself if I stand/walk more than 10 minutes at a time. My left shoulder hasn't been properly in its socket for over 2 weeks, probably closer to 3.

Baby has also decided that when mom goes to sleep, it must be kickboxing time, as she doesn't sit still for at least half an hour after I've laid down.

I'm still not sleeping nearly enough.

But as far as the pregnancy is going, everything still seems to be going well.

I am excited to meet my little tummy monster, but I don't think I've ever felt this unwell for this long before.

I'm afraid of the next step... Being a mom... But I'm definitely looking forward to not being pregnant.

Can it be April yet?

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Time For Fat Pants

My jeans were starting to get tight around my uterus, so I went out and bought some maternity pants. I'm still barely showing, and I've barely grown any, it's just WHERE I'm growing that's causing discomfort.

I've now dislocated/subluxated my pelvis a total of 5 times (twice yesterday), and my right shoulder made a wet tearing sound when I reached over to my left shoulder to massage it on Monday. My arms feel like they've been used as a tug-of-war rope, and my entire upper body feels bruised.

I've also got some new pain, which I can only describe as slowly stretching tissues, just to the inside of my hip bones. And my abs! Even though they never really did the core-supporting they're supposed to, it feels like I've done about a million sit-ups, and they BURN... Holy crap, ow.

Oh, and now that my pants aren't squishing my uterus, with their too-tightness, I can't feel the the squirmy little monster most of the time now. Except when it's bladder=trampoline time, and I have to pee 5 times in an hour.

I have so much stuff to do before baby comes. I need to go buy a new car, because I barely trust the one I have with 2 full grown adults, let alone a small helpless person. And I need to buy baby stuff. I have NONE. Nothing. At all. I'm totally unprepared.

I got a call from my geneticist's office yesterday, and I've gotten a referral to the High Risk Pregnancy Clinic, as well as the Chronic Illness Obstetrics Centre. So I'll finally be having someone take a look at my lady bits (for the first time in 5 years), because I haven't had a family doctor in so long, and these things seem to get put on the back burner.

Aside from pain, dislocations, cold/flu-like symptoms, and lack of sleep, I seem to be doing alright health-wise. The nausea is gone, to be replaced by near-normal hunger. I still don't eat much, but it's more than I ate before, so that's good. My extreme dizziness, and near-fainting have calmed down a lot.

I just want to meet this tiny little person, already.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

19 Weeks, 1 Day

I had my ultrasound today, and I measured at 19 weeks, 1 day. It's 17 weeks, 2 days since conception, and 18 weeks 5 days from my last menstrual cycle. I figure I'm due the first week-ish of April. I hate how there's no clearly defined, absolute rule for counting dates.

I found out the sex of the baby today, and if you don't want to know, don't read the rest of this paragraph. I'm having a girl! With all the certainty she (the ultrasound technician) could give me, it's going to be a girl. Obviously at this point the accuracy of sexing a baby via ultrasound is not 100%, but she said she's pretty sure it's a girl!

I've had some nausea off and on, and the heartburn/acid reflux issues at night seem to be less bad if I drink milk in the evening (or eat ice cream).

It seems the only cravings I've had are sugar-heavy items. Like gummi bears, and slurpees, and chocolate, and cookies... Not anything specific though, just sweet.

My uterus feels less heavy now, but my pelvis seems to be quite crowded. There's barely room for my bladder, and intestines to be where they're supposed to, which makes the constipation worse, and makes me have to pee... 5 times today, already (make that 6).

I also have the same sneezy, runny nose, feels like a cold, with the flu-like body aches that I've had through the whole pregnancy so far. It's not nice.

I'm sleeping 3-4 hours per night, and not having to get up and pee any more, which is nice.

My left shoulder subluxed, probably a few days ago, and it just won't stay where it should. It's just so loose and floppy right now. Had a new dislocation! Dislocated my pelvis, front and center, with a holy-crap-pulled-muscle feeling more towards the left side. It was one of the ones where when it first goes, you have that terrifying thought that this is it-my life from now on is going to include a wheelchair. But it went back where it should be, and the pain went away after 2 days. It just made it impossible to stand up even close to straight, so I sat until bed time, and slept on my side.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

My 900 Pound Uterus

Seriously, that's what it feels like. It feels like I've got a mercury filled balloon where my uterus should be. A poorly suspended mercury filled balloon. (I was told at my last ultrasound that my uterus was in the proper position... But I was laying down at the time... Next ultrasound, I might ask the tech to check the position while I'm standing to make sure I'm just crazy, and not in imminent risk of prolapsing or something)

Going up and down stairs, it feels like my uterus is SMASHING into all of my inside bits. If I sit down too hard, it feels like my uterus is trying to fall right out of me.

Oh, and my bladder? Is about the size of a walnut now.

And I can't sleep later that 4:00am. Can't. Last night I got about an hour of sleep. Then I had to pee, and once I was done, I couldn't fall back asleep.

I'm really happy about FINALLY GETTING PREGNANT!!! But holy crap, I need some sleep.

You know what would be cool, though? If other people could hear the clickety-clack of my ribs rubbing against each other every time I take a step. Seriously, I can kinda hear it, in a vibration-through-the-skeleton way, but it would be such pretty music if other people could hear it.

Weird thing... My whole pregnancy, until last week, I did not twitch. I think I stopped twitching right after the prolotherapy injections, but I'm not 100% sure. Last week I started twitching again though. It might all be from the joint laxity, and muscle fatigue, as aside from hormones, that's the only thing that's gone through major changes recently.

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Most Exciting Medical News... And I Forgot To Tell You

I sent this letter to Chris Eagle, President and CEO of Alberta Health Services in July:


I suffer from what is generally regarded as a rare genetic disorder; Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome Hypermobility Type (also known as EDS III, or HEDS). I am writing to you today to let you know that it is not nearly as rare as you think. The commonly quoted prevalence of HEDS is 1 in 5000 to 1 in 20,000 people afflicted. Doctors are now trying to make it known that HEDS is clinically indistinguishable from another connective tissue disorder, Benign Joint Hypermobility Syndrome (BJHS). Hypermobility is found, to some degree, in approximately 30% of the population world-wide.

The commonly understood difference between HEDS and BJHS, is that one causes early-onset osteoarthritis, and numerous dislocations, which are painful (HEDS), while the other causes extreme joint flexibility, with little to no ill effects noticed such as in ballerinas, contortionists, circus performers, etc. (BJHS). The more research that is done, however, the more clear it becomes that BJHS and HEDS are opposite ends of the same spectrum, and that they should be treated as the same disorder, as more and more of these people are noticing the extreme pain and co-morbid diseases later on in life, and are having their diagnoses changed.

HEDS causes severe pain. Not directly, but through recurrent dislocations, and subluxations of some or all of our joints. For example; my left hip dislocated, on average, five times every day for over a year, and my left shoulder has only had 2 blissful weeks out of the last 15 years where it hasn’t dislocated at least once per day (and I’m only 25 years old). HEDS also causes recurrent sprains, strains, and other various injuries due to the extreme laxity in our joints, and since we can never seem to catch a break between injuries they can take many months, if not years, to be considered “healed.”

I have had the misfortune of injuring 3 major joints to the point where “normal” people would have surgery to repair them, but since I had been diagnosed with EDS, I was told that surgery is not an option. I am very thankful that the surgeons I saw were aware of the poor wound healing, and the poor outcome of surgery in EDSers, as I have heard of many patients who have had reconstructive surgeries before diagnosis, which have been repeated upwards of 30 (yes, thirty, it’s not a typo) times, as they didn’t work. I have heard several first-hand accounts of patients resorting to complete fusions of wrists, ankles, and shoulders to stop them from dislocating, while also severely limiting their ability to use said joints. The most beneficial surgeries I’ve heard of are tendon and ligament replacements, using cadaver tendons.

Since surgery is only to be considered as a last resort, we have to make do with physiotherapy, bracing, and reduced activity, as the only ways to manage our condition. The problem with that is that since the disorder is classified as “rare” and doctors are taught in medical school that they “will never encounter someone with Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome” (a quote from the very rude gastroenterologist I had the misfortune of seeing ) nobody is properly trained in how to help us. When I sprained my shoulder –while washing dishes- I was referred for physiotherapy. I phoned several physiotherapists in Calgary, to see if any of them had treated anyone with EDS, and I was met with answers that were not the least bit comforting. Most of these professionals deal with very athletic people, as they are usually the ones to sprain their shoulders (quarterbacks, baseball pitchers, and professional swimmers). None of them had ever worked with EDS before, and most were not interested in researching the disorder. If I had gone through with physiotherapy, there is a very good chance that they could have injured me further, by treating me as an otherwise healthy person with an injury.

The main reason I am writing to you today, is that I have found a treatment for HEDS. Through years of internet research, as well as talking to many, many other people with HEDS, I have managed to find Prolotherapy.

“The basic mechanism of Prolotherapy is simple. What most people are surprised to find out is that the body heals by inflammation. In other words, we need inflammation to heal our bodies. It works because it actually stimulates an inflammatory reaction in the body. We inject Prolotherapy solutions into the affected ligaments, tendons, and/or joints, which leads to local inflammation in the injected area. The localized inflammation triggers a wound healing cascade, resulting in the deposition of new collagen, the material that ligaments and tendons are made of. New collagen shrinks as it matures. The shrinking collagen tightens the ligament that was injected and makes it stronger. Prolotherapy has the potential of being 100 percent effective at eliminating pain and sports injuries that are a result of ligament and/or tendon weakness.” (http://www.caringmedical.com/therapies/prolotherapy.asp)

“Traditional Approaches to Treating Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome or Joint Hypermobility Syndrome: Although traditional medicine does not have a treatment for regenerating connective tissue and is therefore unable to heal Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, several options have been suggested, including exercise to improve joint stability and strengthen muscle; self-management to protect joints from injury, reduce pain and conserve energy; and surgery to correct fractures and dislocated joints. The problem with any of these options is that they do little to strengthen the loose joints in the body and, thus, do not alleviate the chronic pain that people with Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome experience.” (http://www.caringmedical.com/condition_details/Ehlers-Danlos_Syndrome.htm)

I want to let you know that this relatively inexpensive treatment could save hundreds of thousands of dollars spent on unnecessary, and usually ineffective surgeries, while also lowering patients dependency on pain medications, and giving them some semblance of normality. I mentioned that I’ve had 2 blissful weeks without dislocating my left shoulder, and it is because of the prolotherapy injections I received. After just one treatment I am already noticing significant pain reduction, and more functionality.

“ I want to shout from the rooftops "Ehlers-Danlos sufferers! Get Prolotherapy!" Sure, it's unpleasant, and sure, it's lots of needles, and sure, your doctor may not think it's even worth sending you for a consult, because they have no idea what our lives are like. BUT... WHAT WE HAVE IS A CONNECTIVE TISSUE DISORDER, WHICH CAUSES OUR CONNECTIVE TISSUES TO STRETCH, AND BECOME LAX. PROLOTHERAPY CAUSES THE TISSUES TO TIGHTEN, AND BECOME STRONGER. Surgeries cause scar tissue, prolotherapy doesn't. Steroid injections may temporarily block pain, but they also cause joint degradation; prolotherapy causes some short-term pain, but actually causes tissues to grow better, stronger, and thicker, alleviating the pain. Physical therapy may strengthen muscles, and allow some people relief, but many physical therapists do not know enough about us not to hurt us in the process. Prolotherapy gives you your tendons and ligaments back, which in turn allows your muscles to do their own job, instead of doing double-duty, and being tense all the time.

“More people need to know about this. More people need to be made aware. This is THE TREATMENT. This is our hope. This is the light in the darkness we've been searching for.” (http://b-u-b-b-l-e-girl.blogspot.ca/)

It is at this point that I plead with you. PLEASE raise awareness about this disorder among doctors. All doctors, in every field should get a crash course in EDS, the signs to watch for, the simple Beighton score/Brighton criteria. Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome comes with many co-morbid conditions (approximately 75% have some form of dysautonomia), most of which have treatments. If we were properly diagnosed, we would have access to these treatments.

Please, also, help displace the misinformation running rampant through the healthcare system. This is a degenerative disorder, and it does get progressively worse throughout a patient’s life.



I received a reply from Alberta Health Services.

Here are some excerpts:

“It is clear from reading your letter that you have thought about this matter a great deal and you are well informed on these subjects to a far greater extent than most people, including physicians.”

“Knowledge of hypermobility-specific measures, such as the Brighton Criteria is not common-place in primary care, but would be part of the knowledge-base in rheumatology. Patients with issues of Hypermobility may often present to their family physicians. Often because of the musculoskeletal symptoms, Rheumatologists may be consulted for more advanced forms of the disorder.”

“You have raised concerns about the general level of knowledge about Hypermobility syndromes and the amount of physician education in this area. While Alberta Health Services is not directly responsible for undergraduate or postgraduate medical education, we commit to you to pass on your concerns to those post-secondary institutions responsible for providing undergraduate medical education and post-graduate medical education in programs such as rheumatology and physical medicine.”

“One particular part of your communication relates to the use of prolotherapy. I have consulted with two physicians in Alberta who are knowledgeable of prolotherapy, and one Rheumatologist – a sports medicine specialist with known national expertise in this subject. As you know, prolotherapy is not widely practiced, and it has particular usage, these days, in sports-related injuries, and is often used in the treatment of elite athletes. From what we understand, investigation of prolotherapy in broader musculoskeletal disorders perhaps requires more attention.”

“This raises the question as to whether or not we should ask the Province to look more carefully at the broad field of prolotherapy and musculoskeletal disorders. We will do this as a consequence of the points you have raised and refer your letter to the Alberta Advisory Committee on Health Technologies. This may or may not lead to a provincial-level review of prolotherapy and possible recommendations as to where prolotherapy might fit in the treatment of musculoskeletal disorders. Of course, during this review, any sound evidence that is out there that points to the use of prolotherapy in Hypermobility syndromes will be given prime consideration.”

“In summary, I thank you for your letter and for raising a number of points for us to consider. I will ensure to follow-up with the University of Calgary and the University of Alberta’s undergraduate and post-graduate medical education departments, and I will send a letter to the Alberta Advisory Committee on Health Technologies and raise the issue of the role of prolotherapy in musculoskeletal treatments. As and when appropriate, should I receive further information that bears on the contents and the issues in your letter, I will contact you again. In the meantime, thank-you for being an inquiring and thoughtful patient that helps us examine our processes and our approaches to care with the overall intent of making it better for those who suffer the affliction of disorders such as Ehlers-Danlos, or other variants of hypermobility.”