Monday, August 7, 2017

Ehlers-Danlos syndrome: A mystery solved

I have always been accident-prone. It wasn’t unusual for me to suddenly lose my balance while walking down an even-paved path as though someone had slid a banana peel in front of me. I’d slam down hard on the ground, skinning knees and elbows. I once fell off a boardwalk on my bike into a swamp, my body casting an impressive outline in the reeds — like a cartoon character who has run through a wall. My body was often a landscape of bruises and scabs, while most of my dishes were doomed to break at some point, causing consternation among my roommates. The dishes were just some of the casualties of my clumsiness, for which I was sometimes scorned and scolded by teachers, parents, and boyfriends.

But I never connected this clumsiness to how my joints and tendons seemed as fragile as the glassware I sometimes shattered: ankles that twisted and sprained at the slightest misstep; wrists wrecked and inflamed for years from the first few attempts at downward dog during an introductory yoga class; a jaw that partially dislocated from the simple act of chewing on a tortilla chip. These incidences became less rare and more routine as time wore on, as well as more severe.

About six years ago, after helping a then-boyfriend move a couch up the three stories to our apartment, I could not get out of bed for a solid week. The discs in my back simply gave out, like a box of jelly donuts someone sat on. I remember my ex telling me even his mother could have accomplished such a simple task without injury, but I could not. This kind of disapproval about my body and its idiosyncrasies now lends itself to automatic distancing on my part. If I meet someone who is critical about my physical shortcomings, I expect to not speak with them again.

Clues to the reason for my clumsiness

In more recent years, my body was besieged by an incessant, widespread, bone-deep aching pain. In particular, my sacrum and hips felt as if they had been infused with bits of broken glass that ground against me as I walked and rubbed my soft tissue raw with too much sitting. Imaging results revealed a large labral tear in my left hip, and a spine riddled with busted disks and cysts swollen with spinal fluid. Physical therapists always asked what accident I’d had or which aggressive sports I partook in to sustain so many injuries, but I could only shrug and say there was no reason I could ascertain, that life was simply taking its toll on me — albeit a heavier one that it seemed to be taking on most others, and at an earlier age than many experience.

The mystery solved

This is why it was enormous validation when I finally visited a geneticist earlier this year, who revealed after a thorough two-hour evaluation that I had Type III of a rare connective tissue disorder known as Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, or EDS. EDS is characterized by hypermobile joints and a deficiency in collagen (connective tissue) that results in pain and repeated injury. Not only does this diagnosis account for my clumsiness and much of the bodily damage I have accrued over the years, it also helps explain some of my migraines and the frequent rashes on my skin, the trouble I have regulating my body temperature, and my bowel and bladder problems.

While I was relieved at the diagnosis, I was also resentful. I have been pestering doctors for the past few years about my chronic and often disabling pain. My geneticist told me that it often takes an average of 10 to 20 years to receive a diagnosis of EDS, with many people not receiving an accurate diagnosis until well into their 40s. As with many medical conditions, EDS disproportionately impacts women. This may account for the delay in getting a proper diagnosis and treatment, as studies have repeatedly shown the medical community is not as educated on — and therefore much more likely to misdiagnose and disregard — health issues that impact women. My geneticist told me many of the women she had diagnosed had at some point attempted suicide to achieve an end to their suffering, both the physical suffering from the disorder and the emotional suffering of having their pain ignored and even questioned for years or decades.

Now that I do finally have a proper diagnosis, I have taken the initiative needed to better manage the disorder and its symptoms, including avoiding certain activities and implementing aids to stabilize and protect my joints.

As EDS is not a widely understood or known disease, my greatest hope is that my experience can offer a guide to other patients who suspect that there is more than meets the eye when it comes to their chronic pain. I also want to spread awareness among the medical community, not only about EDS, but also that just because a diagnosis is not easily apparent, does not mean there isn’t one. Doctors owe their patients their curiosity and support, because the consequences for those patients left behind can be severe.

The post Ehlers-Danlos syndrome: A mystery solved appeared first on Harvard Health Blog.



From: Laura Kiesel http://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/ehlers-danlos-syndrome-mystery-solved-2017080712122

Ohio foster care system flooded with children amid opioid crisis

It is estimated that due in part to the opioid catastrophe, at least 2.5 million children nationwide are being raised by grandparents or other relatives due to addicted parents. But some have no relatives who will take them in, and go directly to foster care. Dean Reynolds reports.

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/videos/ohio-foster-care-system-flooded-with-children-amid-opioid-crisis/

Ohio foster care system flooded with children of drug addicts

"We think about 50 percent of the kids who are in foster care in Ohio are there because one or both parents are in fact drug addicts," says the state's attorney general

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/ohio-foster-care-system-flooded-with-children-opioid-epidemic/

DC runner overcomes cerebral palsy to race

One of the best-known runners in the nation's capital isn't so famous for speed or distance. As Weija Jiang reports, this athlete is known because doctors once thought she would never run at all.

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/videos/dc-runner-overcomes-cerebral-palsy-to-race/

'Loneliness Epidemic' Named a Public Health Threat

Social isolation tied to increased risk for premature death, research suggests



From: http://www.webmd.com/healthy-aging/news/20170807/loneliness-epidemic-named-a-public-health-threat?src=RSS_PUBLIC

Angioplasty Outcomes Almost Equal Among Hospitals

'Safety-net' facilities do as well as other hospitals with the artery procedure, researchers find



From: http://www.webmd.com/heart-disease/news/20170807/angioplasty-outcomes-almost-equal-among-hospitals?src=RSS_PUBLIC

ADA recognizes Dr. Lawrence Tabak

ADA President Gary L. Roberts presents Dr. Lawrence Tabak, former director, National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, with a presidential citation.

From: http://www.ada.org/en/publications/ada-news/2017-archive/august/ada-recognizes-dr-lawrence-tabak

Best and worst states for health care

New analysis sheds light on how health care varies depending on where you live. See how your state stacks up

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/best-and-worst-states-for-health-care/

Teen Hospitalized After Sea Bug Attack

Sea "lice" attack boy while swimming.



From: http://www.webmd.com/skin-problems-and-treatments/news/20170807/teen-hospitalized-after-sea-bug-attack?src=RSS_PUBLIC

'Heart Harm' In Middle Age Can Lead To Dementia

Of greatest importance are diabetes, blood pressure and smoking, researchers say



From: http://www.webmd.com/hypertension-high-blood-pressure/news/20170807/heart-harm-in-middle-age-can-lead-to-dementia?src=RSS_PUBLIC

Diabetics Learn to Wear Monitor From Instagram

2 out of 3 use a device that continuously tracks blood sugar on 'unapproved' body part, study finds



From: http://www.webmd.com/diabetes/news/20170807/diabetics-learn-to-wear-monitor-from-instagram?src=RSS_PUBLIC

Infectious Diseases A-Z: Decline in measles vaccine would triple cases



From: Mayo Clinic https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DvymF8w22iM

Mayo Clinic Minute: The ABCDE melanoma check



From: Mayo Clinic https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ayyBMp_2PC0

NY doctor told to stop marketing 3-person IVF

The procedure is not approved in the U.S., and Congress has barred the FDA from even reviewing proposals to conduct such experiments

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/new-york-doctor-told-to-stop-marketing-3-person-ivf-technique/

Ehlers-Danlos syndrome: A mystery solved

I have always been accident-prone. It wasn’t unusual for me to suddenly lose my balance while walking down an even-paved path as though someone had slid a banana peel in front of me. I’d slam down hard on the ground, skinning knees and elbows. I once fell off a boardwalk on my bike into a swamp, my body casting an impressive outline in the reeds — like a cartoon character who has run through a wall. My body was often a landscape of bruises and scabs, while most of my dishes were doomed to break at some point, causing consternation among my roommates. The dishes were just some of the casualties of my clumsiness, for which I was sometimes scorned and scolded by teachers, parents, and boyfriends.

But I never connected this clumsiness to how my joints and tendons seemed as fragile as the glassware I sometimes shattered: ankles that twisted and sprained at the slightest misstep; wrists wrecked and inflamed for years from the first few attempts at downward dog during an introductory yoga class; a jaw that partially dislocated from the simple act of chewing on a tortilla chip. These incidences became less rare and more routine as time wore on, as well as more severe.

About six years ago, after helping a then-boyfriend move a couch up the three stories to our apartment, I could not get out of bed for a solid week. The discs in my back simply gave out, like a box of jelly donuts someone sat on. I remember my ex telling me even his mother could have accomplished such a simple task without injury, but I could not. This kind of disapproval about my body and its idiosyncrasies now lends itself to automatic distancing on my part. If I meet someone who is critical about my physical shortcomings, I expect to not speak with them again.

Clues to the reason for my clumsiness

In more recent years, my body was besieged by an incessant, widespread, bone-deep aching pain. In particular, my sacrum and hips felt as if they had been infused with bits of broken glass that ground against me as I walked and rubbed my soft tissue raw with too much sitting. Imaging results revealed a large labral tear in my left hip, and a spine riddled with busted disks and cysts swollen with spinal fluid. Physical therapists always asked what accident I’d had or which aggressive sports I partook in to sustain so many injuries, but I could only shrug and say there was no reason I could ascertain, that life was simply taking its toll on me — albeit a heavier one that it seemed to be taking on most others, and at an earlier age than many experience.

The mystery solved

This is why it was enormous validation when I finally visited a geneticist earlier this year, who revealed after a thorough two-hour evaluation that I had Type III of a rare connective tissue disorder known as Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, or EDS. EDS is characterized by hypermobile joints and a deficiency in collagen (connective tissue) that results in pain and repeated injury. Not only does this diagnosis account for my clumsiness and much of the bodily damage I have accrued over the years, it also helps explain some of my migraines and the frequent rashes on my skin, the trouble I have regulating my body temperature, and my bowel and bladder problems.

While I was relieved at the diagnosis, I was also resentful. I have been pestering doctors for the past few years about my chronic and often disabling pain. My geneticist told me that it often takes an average of 10 to 20 years to receive a diagnosis of EDS, with many people not receiving an accurate diagnosis until well into their 40s. As with many medical conditions, EDS disproportionately impacts women. This may account for the delay in getting a proper diagnosis and treatment, as studies have repeatedly shown the medical community is not as educated on — and therefore much more likely to misdiagnose and disregard — health issues that impact women. My geneticist told me many of the women she had diagnosed had at some point attempted suicide to achieve an end to their suffering, both the physical suffering from the disorder and the emotional suffering of having their pain ignored and even questioned for years or decades.

Now that I do finally have a proper diagnosis, I have taken the initiative needed to better manage the disorder and its symptoms, including avoiding certain activities and implementing aids to stabilize and protect my joints.

As EDS is not a widely understood or known disease, my greatest hope is that my experience can offer a guide to other patients who suspect that there is more than meets the eye when it comes to their chronic pain. I also want to spread awareness among the medical community, not only about EDS, but also that just because a diagnosis is not easily apparent, does not mean there isn’t one. Doctors owe their patients their curiosity and support, because the consequences for those patients left behind can be severe.

The post Ehlers-Danlos syndrome: A mystery solved appeared first on Harvard Health Blog.



From: Laura Kiesel http://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/ehlers-danlos-syndrome-mystery-solved-2017080712122

Andrea Wahner Hendrickson



From: Mayo Clinic https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b4TH3cTZ4nI

ADA officer candidate campaign statements

Candidates seeking national ADA-elected offices prepared platform statements and profiles for the ADA News.

From: http://www.ada.org/en/publications/ada-news/2017-archive/august/ada-officer-candidate-campaign-statements

What chewed up an Australian teen's feet in the shallows?

Sam Kanizay stood in the cool water to relax his tired legs, but emerged with hundreds of holes in his feet

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/australia-teen-sam-kanizay-attacked-sea-lice-brighton-beach-melbourne/

Nutrition plans based on DNA tests raise questions

A new type of health test uses DNA to give nutritional advice. People are spending hundreds of dollars to map out their genetic profile with a saliva test. There are several tests on the market, but critics say it is difficult to know how accurate they are. Michelle Miller spoke to a woman who says the test helped end years of stomach pain.

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/videos/nutrition-plans-based-on-dna-tests-raise-questions/

Questions over DNA tests sold for nutritional advice

Critics question the accuracy of metabolic tests that make dietary recommendations based on patient's genetic profile

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/questions-over-dna-tests-sold-for-nutritional-advice/

Decline in Kids' Ear Infections Linked to Vaccine

The shots are effective in killing the main bacterial cause, but other germs are growing, researchers find



From: http://www.webmd.com/cold-and-flu/ear-infection/news/20170807/decline-in-kids-ear-infections-linked-to-vaccine?src=RSS_PUBLIC