Showing posts with label Muscle spasms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Muscle spasms. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Week 19 Recap: The Road Ahead

The week started out with more trembling and fluttering than I care to deal with, particularly because it worsened at night and often lasted till morning. If you’ve been following this blog, then you know that I found a possible connection between these bizarre symptoms and PPI (Prilosec) withdrawal (or any drug withdrawal, for that matter). Once I figured this out, I knew it would pass and determined not to take any more drugs for anything, if it can be helped.

I saw a dermatologist during the week with regard to the rash on my right wrist/forearm which I have had for almost six years now (possible dermatitis herpetiformis), as well as the rash near my left elbow which showed up about a year ago. She did not say what she thought of either rash, other than the one on my right wrist is clearly quite aged. She proceeded to take a biopsy of each, and I left her office with an unexpected six stitches, three in each arm. It will be interesting to see what she finds, if anything.

Toward the end of the week the night-time trembles began to die down in intensity, and other than being extremely busy sewing costumes for an upcoming talent show in which my dancing girls were participating, there were no new symptoms or return of any old symptoms. In spite of the exhaustion that comes from very little sleep and too much to do, it was a good week.

I tried to maintain my “physical therapy” even during this very busy week because it is the one thing I am not yet willing to trade-off for more time. I have to take care of my body, and the physical exercise is probably the biggest and best thing I can do right now. All of my treadmill walks went very well (walking 18.8 miles), and I feel my heart has finally reached a significant point of healing. Though I still get a heart palpitation about once a week or so, I have had none during any treadmill walks, nor have I had any chest pain of any kind.

I was not as successful in maintaining Pilates during the week (only 30 minutes), probably because it is usually the form of exercise I do last (in the evening) and all my evenings were absorbed in sewing and fitting costumes. I did, however, keep up the weight-bearing exercises on the Pilates Reformer (110 minutes)—which I know will continue to benefit my bones.

ODD THINGS THIS WEEK:
  • Stomach ache again followed by same symptoms as usual-- kind of like a huge caffeine buzz-- nervousness and inner trembling.
  • Discovered vertical rows of tiny bumps on my fingernails, most noticeable on my ring fingers. They are not the vertical ridges (which I also have), but tiny oblong bumps. Since they run the entire length of the nail I am guessing they have been there for a while. The dermatologist did not seem to know what they were and was unsuccessful at getting a good photograph of them.
  • During one night, I felt strong muscle tremors in neck-- so much so that it woke me up. I remember making a mental note of it.

From where I stand now, the road ahead appears to be a good one.  I am not even so sure I want to "test" myself with gluten because I am doing so much better now, even though it has been a long time coming.  Yet I know the dreaded "test" must probably be done at some point in the future so I have a certain answer, one way or the other, as to what was/is making me sick, and so I know how to react in the future should I be "contaminated" in any way.

I can only say that prior to last year, I had never been sensitive to any foods, nor any medications whether it be over-the-counter or prescription.  I do know that I suffered a traumatic event when my husband suffered a massive heart attack, and though it was the hardest thing I had ever had to deal with from all aspects of my life up until then, I felt it was behind us.  And then there was the added stress of the "heart attack fallout" -- no money, no way to pay the bills, and watching my credit that I had worked so hard to build take a nosedive.  As if that wasn't enough, dealing with my husband and his erratic mood swings was apparently more than my body could take.  I felt I was on the verge of a major breakdown almost every week... turns out, my body did breakdown-- it just wasn't mental, it was physical.

All these events may have very well served as the catalyst, the trigger that set off the illness that slammed me down late last fall.  Interestingly, celiac can be triggered by just such events.  Though some people will not believe I have celiac, and though I have tried to dismiss it myself, I can't -- no matter how badly I want to -- and so life moves on.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Week 11 Recap: More Questions, but No Answers

Although this past week was better than the one before, it was still full of questions as new symptoms seemed to pop out of nowhere.

For example:
Can GERD cause spasms or trembling of the esophagus? If so, I finally realized the connection this past week. While still in bed on Sunday morning, I noticed that when I shifted positions, my esophagus would start trembling and then eventually settle down. It always happened on the same side on which I was laying. I wondered if a little stomach acid wasn’t leaking into my esophagus with the changing of positions. Was the trembling a reaction to that acid? Could this cause any kind of damage to the nerves?

And most importantly:
Why was this still happening on a strict g-free and GERD diet? The reflux was bad enough that I couldn’t eat because my stomach always felt full, and I spent most of the week with a constant knot under my sternum. I wondered if my esophagus wasn’t inflamed because it was so difficult to eat and drink.

I started out the week with my usual “physical therapy” which consisted of two 30-minute treadmill walks, about 20 minutes of Pilates, and about 10 minutes of basic weight-bearing exercises— six days a week….

...well, that was the plan, anyway...

Monday’s exercise was fine— in fact, almost too easy! The previous week I had difficulty keeping my heart rate down, and now all of a sudden, I couldn’t keep my heart rate up! Even the Pilates and weight-bearing exercises seemed suddenly easy. This made me happy because I felt like I finally cleared another hurdle and was getting stronger!

...But it didn’t last…

Tuesday started out fine, but I began to feel double and triple palpitations as opposed to a single random one here and there. Though multiple palpitations had happened in the past, this was the first time it had ever happened more than once in the same day! Additionally, while I was taking one of my kids to the middle school for band, I felt a pain in my upper left chest that rapidly branched out and then dissipated. It was weird.

Weirder still:
By late afternoon, the jaw behind my left ear began aching. During my second treadmill walk my heart rate was not very high but still felt like I couldn’t get enough air. I experienced a lot of congestion in my neck—as though someone’s hands were around my neck. Why were these double and triple palpitations happening and why did it feel like I couldn’t get a good breath? Will more happen like this?

That same night, we had company come for a short visit that and at about 9 o’clock I started to speak and couldn’t without stammering and stuttering. I couldn’t get my lips and tongue to shape the words I wanted to say. I have no idea what could have caused it but it seemed to clear up a little later—probably in less than a minute. Had I not tried to speak I would never have noticed! Trying to ignore the thoughts racing in the back of my head, I ended up taking a ½ clonazepam to settle myself down and go to sleep.

Medicated or not, I barely slept, and that was the story for the next couple of days. I resorted to one treadmill walk and no other exercise during that time because the heart palpitations seemed to occur much more frequently than before. Also, my neck still felt tight during the walks, even though I had slowed them down considerably, and my chest would ache for the rest of the day. The lumps and bumps in my neck seemed to ache (not my throat, just my neck) and felt tender. I went around with two knots all day: one at the base of my throat, and one on the top of my stomach.

I finally had to admit that Tuesday night’s inability to speak sounded suspiciously like a “mini stroke” or TIA (transient ischemic attack). I knew that a TIA could possibly lead to a full-blown stroke and determined I needed to see my doctor. My doctor performed a neurological evaluation and noticed that I have a “bent” carotid artery—the same left carotid artery that had been numb and tender most of the week. He ordered a head/neck MRI for the following week and told me to take an enteric-coated full-strength aspirin (325 mg) every day for now. I knew this was to help thin the blood (avoiding more clots), so as long as it didn’t irritate my stomach (hence the enteric-coating), I was fine with that. And still, on the way home, I experienced another double or triple palpitation, even though I was actually feeling pretty good. Why?

By the weekend, the GERD was not so bad and the constant knot seemed to die down. I slowly reduced the clonazepam throughout the week and hope not to need it again…. but it is there to get me through any more anxious nights.

I have my own theory as to why I might have blood clots floating around, but since I am not a doctor, it is just a lay-person's wild idea.  Back when my heart wasn't doing so well (some kind of myocarditis or cardiomyopathy), my ejection fraction dropped to borderline low (55%).  When the heart does not pump out efficiently (systolic), some of that blood can kind of "back up" so to speak-- and cause some clotting.  With all my aerobic exercise since then, perhaps some of those clots have been breaking loose-- whereever they may be hidden.  But that is just my wild-eyed-theory and probably far from reality.

Just the same, I experienced too many mysterious events this week and as usual it can be very frustrating. My hope is that we will have answers this new week with the MRI and a GI consultation on the same day.

Stay tuned…

Monday, March 8, 2010

Week 10 Recap: Gluten Reactions?

People have warned me about reactions to gluten once you have been g-free for any length of time. I have been told that each accidental exposure seems to result in a different or worse reaction than before. If what I experienced last week was a result of an accidental exposure, I think I ran the gamut of every sick feeling I’ve ever had -- and all in less than five days.

The week started out great, well into the 90th-percentile for me. I continued my “physical therapy” with two 30-minute treadmill walks, upped my Pilates time to 30 minutes, and upped my weight-bearing exercises to 15 minutes. My plan was to do continue with a six-day exercise program.

I also decided that I didn’t want to continue using clonazepam to help me sleep anymore. I have never liked the idea of taking drugs that do anything to my brain, and I don't like the idea of having to be “weaned” off of medications, especially ones that might require additional medications to counter the side effects of weaning. Well, the idea was a good one but I ended up taking lorazepam instead (Ativan). It was a tiny dose and I figured it would be a good way to slow down. It worked— I slept through the entire night for the first time I can remember in a long time!

But by Tuesday I started having a lot of what I call “subclavian” pain (just because it is in the general area of the subclavian vein --below my shoulder). It was so pronounced I gave it a 5.5 on the pain scale: moderate pain. It was not the first time I have experienced pain or congestion in that same area, but it seemed pretty strong this time and the pain radiated from the left subclavian area toward my left armpit as well. It lasted off and on all day and I ended up taking lorazepam to help me sleep again.

By Wednesday, I wasn’t feeling very good. I was feeling flu-like and couldn’t seem to keep my heart rate down during my treadmill walks. At the same time I developed a migraine headache on the right side of my head that steadily worsened throughout the day. By bedtime I was feeling weak and shaky and my insides were “trembling” again. I was so uncomfortable I resorted to lorazepam again to help me sleep because it had worked so well the previous two nights. It didn’t occur to me that the lorazepam might contain gluten.

The next day I continued to have trouble keeping my heart rate down during my treadmill walk and ended up reducing the speed and held on to the rails when I felt too winded. I also continued to battle the right-sided migraine as well as left chest pain that radiated upward into that left shoulder/subclavian area. The only good news was that my headache went away when I did my treadmill walks and suspected it was due to the increase in oxygen in my body. I determined not to take any more medications to help me sleep, and took Advil to dull the headache, instead.

As you can imagine, I didn’t sleep that night, and had to put up with internal muscle trembling which seemed to start in my esophagus at bedtime and worked its way all the way through to my intestines by morning. At least the headache went away! That Friday was the day I noticed the involuntary gasps which have happened several times over the past week or two, sometimes during the day, mostly at night, and for no apparent reason. The kind of involuntary gasps you experience while crying. Sometimes just a single one, sometimes 2 or 3 in quick succession; sometimes in the day time, but mostly at night. Chalked it up to just another one of those things, but wondered if it wasn’t somehow connected to everything else I was experiencing that week!!

Throughout most of Friday I was feeling very weak. Once again, I had a hard time keeping my heart rate down during the treadmill walk, sometimes exceeding 95% of my heart rate by several beats. I didn’t feel hungry, but forced myself to eat and ended up with a bad case of reflux all afternoon in spite of the twice daily omeprazole (Prilosec). It felt like the reflux was pressing against my lungs and chest, making my chest feet very full.

To ease the reflux and the bloating I was feeling, I took Mylanta twice that evening, but it didn’t do much good. I hardly slept again that night, and I felt intestinal trembling all night long, clear into dawn again—it was like I had a motor running that I couldn’t turn off.  (If you ever want to know how this trembling feels, stand in the shower and let the spray beat down on your chest.  That is how it feels, but from the inside.)

I spent most of Saturday morning feeling “weird and weak” like I either had low blood-sugar or low blood-pressure. My stomach felt hungry, but my brain didn’t. I weighed myself for the first time in I-don’t-know-how-many months (my only weight came from doctors' offices) and was at 108 lbs. That is probably the lowest I have been in 5 years, since the DH (dermatitis herpetiformis) first showed up. Though 108 is actually a good weight for me (between 105 and 110 is generally when I feel my best-- I am a small person), I am not trying to lose weight. If I was trying to lose weight and felt good, I wouldn’t care, but I don’t feel good, so I’m not sure that it’s such a good thing.

It took another night before all these weird symptoms even began to subside. I decided to skip the sixth day with Pilates and weight training and even came close to giving up the treadmill for that day, but somehow I managed to get it done, and that made me happy. My exercise totals for the week: 18.85 miles on the treadmill, 130 minutes with Pilates and 60 minutes in weight-training.

Overall, it was a rough week and I don’t want a repeat of this week any time soon— in fact, never again would be nice.

I believe I was having a reaction to gluten, though I do not know the source for sure. I know that I am very strict with my diet, and so I suspect it may be the lorazepam which was prescribed for me during one ER visit to help me get over the “hurdles.” Regardless, I won’t be taking it again!

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Hypoglycemia, Celiac, Adrenal Cortical Insufficiency, and Addison’s Disease

I happened to run across a website the other day, that mentioned the “inner trembling” I often feel, particularly late at night when all else is quiet, about 5 or 6 hours after my last meal. The website lists three different types of hypoglycemia (low blood sugar), but the one that caught my eye was regarding Type 2 (Adrenergic Type):

“After ingestion of glucose the blood sugar rises for the first three hours followed by a hypoglycemic rebound at 4 to 6 hours. Symptoms associated with this type of response are tiredness 2 hours after eating, allergic responses or food intolerances, and shakiness before meals. When blood sugar falls rapidly, the early symptoms are those brought on by a compensating secretion of adrenalin; these include sweating, weakness, hunger, racing pulse and an ‘inner trembling’. This response can be due to adrenal cortical insufficiency or thyroid deficiency (www.diagnose-me.com/cond/C18558.html).

Hmmmm….. I knew I didn’t have a thyroid problem because my thyroid test results were normal. However, this led me to think about the kidney problems I’d had over the last few months (the adrenals are on the kidneys) and did a little research on adrenal cortical insufficiency, and I found that adrenal cortical insufficiency can be caused by nutritional deficiencies (think: celiac disease and nutrient malsabsorption):

“People with mild adrenal insufficiency may suffer from the same symptoms as those with Addison's Disease. Symptoms can include headaches, muscular aches and pains, joint pains, confusion, impaired memory, low motivation, and many others. Additionally, such people may suffer from an increased susceptibility to all kinds of infections including those caused by bacteria, viruses, parasites, yeast, and fungi (www.mbschachter.com/adrenal.htm).

This led me to yet another idea: What is Addison’s Disease?

According to the Mayo Clinic:
“Addison's disease is a disorder that results when your body produces insufficient amounts of certain hormones produced by your adrenal glands. In Addison's disease, your adrenal glands produce too little cortisol, and often insufficient levels of aldosterone as well. Also called adrenal insufficiency or hypocortisolism."

This piqued my interest even more because cortisol is the hormone that regulates stress and helps you to sleep. Being a lifelong insomniac, it made me want to know more. Though Addison’s disease can occur at any age, it “is most common in people ages 30 to 50” (Mayo Clinic).

Symptoms include:
  • Muscle weakness and fatigue
  • Weight loss and decreased appetite
  • Darkening of your skin (hyperpigmentation)
  • Low blood pressure, even fainting
  • Salt craving
  • Low blood sugar (hypoglycemia)
  • Nausea, diarrhea or vomiting
  • Muscle or joint pains
  • Irritability
  • Depression 
If you were to go into an Addisonian crisis, you would need immediate medical care because it is a sign of acute adrenal failure. It can be triggered by an infection or illness, or physical stress (Mayo Clinic). You might have:
  • Pain in your lower back, abdomen or legs
  • Severe vomiting and diarrhea, leading to dehydration
  • Low blood pressure
  • Loss of consciousness
  • High potassium (hyperkalemia) (thoughts of my 2nd ER visit when a medical worker popped her head into the treatment room after they did a UA and asked if I was taking a potassium supplement – I was not.)
Have I lost you yet?
Going from Hypoglycemia to Adrenal insufficiency to Addison’s disease?

What is the connection?
Your adrenal glands have two parts: one that produces adrenaline-type hormones and one that produces corticosteroids such as glucocorticoids and mineralcorticoids. Cortisol is one of the glucocorticoids. According to the Mayo Clinic, glucocorticoids “influence your body's ability to convert food fuels into energy, play a role in your immune system's inflammatory response and help your body respond to stress” and the mineralcorticoids “maintain your body's balance of sodium and potassium and water to keep your blood pressure normal.”

What does any of that mean to me? The glucocorticoids play a part in my immune system’s ability to respond (why am I catching every "bug" that walks through the door?) and the mineracorticoids maintain my electrolytes (something I have questioned several times). It may be something, it may be nothing.

What does it have to do with celiac disease? According to the Mayo Clinic: “The failure of your adrenal glands to produce adrenocortical hormones is most commonly the result of the body attacking itself (autoimmune disease). For unknown reasons, your immune system views the adrenal cortex as foreign, something to attack and destroy.”

According to the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, there is an increased rate of Addison’s Disease (AD) in celiac patients (Peter Elfström, Scott M. Montgomery, Olle Kämpe, Anders Ekbom and Jonas F. Ludvigsson. Risk of Primary Adrenal Insufficiency in Patients with Celiac Disease The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism Vol. 92, No. 9 3595-3598, Copyright © 2007 by The Endocrine Society). These authors believe that “there was a statistically significantly positive association between CD and subsequent AD” and they “suggest an increased awareness of AD in individuals with CD.”

What I’ve been talking about so far is primary adrenal insufficiency. I should also mention that there is also a secondary adrenal insufficiency in which your pituitary gland is having problems. In this case, there wouldn't be enough adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), “which stimulates the adrenal cortex to produce its hormones” (Mayo Clinic).

How do we find out one way or the other? There are several tests, including a blood test to measure your sodium, potassium, cortisol and ACTH, and also for antibodies associated with Addison’s disease (AD). Other tests include ACTH stimulation test, and insulin-induced hypoglycemia test (according to the Mayo Clinic, after an injection of insulin, your glucose level should fall and cortisol level should rise). Additionally, a CT scan will reveal any abnormalities on your adrenals.

Treatment for AD would mean “taking hormones to replace the insufficient amounts being made by your adrenal glands, in order to mimic the beneficial effects those naturally made hormones would normally produce” (Mayo Clinic).

Personal conclusion? Perhaps the tremors/trembling I feel inside my body is related to an adrenergic type hypoglycemia which may have been caused by an adrenal insufficiency or even Addison’s disease, which is something that can be found in patients with celiac disease. Perhaps this why I have been getting sick so easily? Regardless, it is another hurdle that I must try to overcome, and something for which I will seek additional answers.

Monday, January 25, 2010

Week 4 Recap: Don't Let This Happen To You!!

DON'T LET THIS HAPPEN TO YOU!!! If you are taking a medication that does not make you feel better, tell your medical provider!! Carefully research the side effects of the medication and see if any of it applies to you, and don't be afraid to tell your medical provider of your suspicions!

Here is my story:

Still feeling as if I'd had some kind of mild virus for a very long time, and still maintaining a seemingly perpetual fever, I went to the local clinic and asked to be tested for an infection. While I was getting ready to go, my heart suddenly began pounding and racing! I checked my carotid pulse and it was 126 beats per minute (bpm). That was something strange! I had been sitting down!

The heart pounding happened again while I was sitting in the treatment room at the clinic. My heart felt like it was pounding so fast I thought I might pass out! Luckily, the PA came in, and had me lay down for an EKG-- which of course-- showed nothing. By the time they had the electrodes on, my heart was fine.

My urinalysis showed a very small amount of bacterial growth, and as a result, I was put on Ciprofloxin, and Phenergan for the nausea. I was not happy about going on the Cipro because it made me feel so depressed the last time. I hated the way it made me feel, and staying on the Cipro seemed to be worse this time around. I was continually teary-eyed and fearing the worst. I stopped taking the Phenergan after the first day because I couldn't function in such a fuzzy-headed mode.

On a positive note, I decided to take my health into my own hands again, and cleared off the clothes that had been hanging on my treadmill and walked very, very slowly (1.5 mph) for 4 minutes. That was about all I could do because it took so much effort to do the smallest things. Over the rest of the week I was able to increase both the time spent walking, and the speed.

In the meantime, my kidney infection symptoms seemed to clear up, and the flushing and tingling subsided. Yet, everything I did seemed to require monumental strength and stamina which I just didn't have. I felt shakey and nervous and my hands and arms were sluggish in doing what I asked. My heart felt so weak! It felt as if my heart had a virus of some kind.

After a handful of days on Cipro, I still wasn't feeling any better. Why did I still feel like I had the flu? Why did I feel so weak? Why was I still feverish? On top of that,
staying on the Cipro began to make my heart hurt. My digestive system was peaceful, but the rest of me still felt like I was battling something else.

We called the clinic and explained that I thought the Cipro might be making me feel worse. After being sick for so many weeks, I had reached my tether. I was an emotional wreck, in constant tears, and my heart was palpitating more and more. I felt so frustrated that it never occurred to me that these might be side effects of the Cipro!

The clinic told me to stop the Cipro, and instead decided I was depressed and put me on Celexa, an anti-depressant. I stated that I didn't want to be on any mood-altering drugs, and here they wanted me on it for a minimum of six months for clinical depression!

The pharmacist suggested I start with half of a Celexa and I am glad I followed that advice!! I had gone downstairs to start the washer, went back upstairs, and suddenly became extremely groggy and dizzy. I thought I would lay down, when a sudden sensation of intense heat shot straight up through the left side of my chest straight up into the left side of my neck and straight up into my left jaw. My heart was pounding, I was feeling dizzy and very flushed; my arms and legs were trembling. I kept trying to breathe through it, but my mouth dried up completely and my throat hurt because it, too, was dry. I also developed very bad stomach cramps.

After spending about 10 minutes trying to breathe through it, I asked one of my kids if she could send her dad into the room, and he saw immediately that something wasn't right. He called the clinic and told them he thought I might be having an allergic reaction to the celexa. She told him that if it didn't improve to go the ER.... which is exactly where I ended up. I couldn't even walk very well because my legs were so wobbly!

Once at the ER, the doctor did a full exam on me (for the first time anyone had done since getting sick last October), and ran another panel of blood tests, including one for celiac antibodies which came back normal-- indicating again that there was no celiac disease (Don't be fooled by this. More about this later!)


Once off the Cipro, it didn't take much longer for me to make the connection between the side effects (www.rxlist.com/cipro-drug.htm#) and the weapiness and depression. I realized that the clinic was giving me a medication for a side effect! They were treating a side effect with another pill!! I am so grateful for the bad reaction to the Celexa.

As I said in the beginning: DON'T LET THIS HAPPEN TO YOU!!!  Happily, I never went back to Celexa. The whole week was insane. All I wanted to know was if I could eat gluten or not!

By degrees, my days began to improve. I wasn't 100% yet, but felt I was up to about 80%, which was wonderful considering how I had been feeling before. During the week, I eventually worked my way up to 8 minutes on the treadmill, three times a day, keeping it at a fairly slow walk.

Unbeknownst to me at the time, my husband had talked to someone at the hospital and told them he wanted me to see someone who was "smarter than my wife." An appointment was made for me to see a specialist in Internal Medicine, which thrilled me to no end. I believed I would finally find some answers!

More to come...

Monday, January 4, 2010

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and Celiac Disease

I found an article on http://www.celiac.com/ regarding chronic fatigue syndrome and CD. I Googled this because I was wondering if there may be a connection to my own problems of severe fatigue and general malaise.

The article is called "Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (myalgic encephalomyelitis or ME, PVS, post viral fatigue syndrome or PVFS)" and discusses the connection between chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and CD. A British study determined that:

"Mysterious symptoms, including muscle weakness, wasting, and poor coordination and balance may be due to an undiagnosed allergy to wheat, barley, oats or rye, according to new research which may have implications for some people with ME...A study of 53 patients with these and other unexplained neurological symptoms, found that nearly three-fifths of them had antibodies to gluten in their blood...none of the patients in the Sheffield group had been diagnosed with celiac disease but when samples of tissue were removed from their gut, more than a third showed evidence of the disease or inflammation of the middle and lower gut."

So what are the symptoms of chronic fatigue syndrome? According to the Mayo Clinic, the following symptoms are characteristic of CFS: Chronic fatigue syndrome has eight official symptoms, plus the central symptom that gives the condition its name:

  • Fatigue
  • Loss of memory or concentration
  • Sore throat
  • Painful and mildly enlarged lymph nodes in your neck or armpits
  • Unexplained muscle pain
  • Pain that moves from one joint to another without swelling or redness
  • Headache of a new type, pattern or severity
  • Unrefreshing sleep
  • Extreme exhaustion lasting more than 24 hours after physical or mental exercise

Additional signs and symptoms:

  • Abdominal pain
  • Allergies or sensitivities to foods, alcohol, odors, chemicals, medications or noise
  • Bloating
  • Chest pain
  • Chronic cough
  • Diarrhea
  • Dizziness, balance problems or fainting
  • Dry mouth
  • Earache
  • Irregular heartbeat
  • Jaw pain
  • Morning stiffness
  • Nausea
  • Chills and night sweats
  • Psychological problems, such as depression, irritability, anxiety disorders and panic attacks
  • Shortness of breath
  • Tingling sensations
  • Visual disturbances, such as blurring, sensitivity to light, eye pain and dry eyes
  • Weight loss or gain

    "If you have chronic fatigue syndrome, your symptoms may peak and become stable early on, and then come and go over time. Some people go on to recover completely, while others grow progressively worse (Mayoclinic.com)."

Wow!! Any of those symptoms sound familiar? I realize that I have every one of those symptoms, and also realize that it is most likely related to CD. I found yet another article on the connection between CFS and CD on BNet entitled "Chronic fatigue syndrome: oxidative stress and dietary modifications - Brief Article" by Alan C. Logan and Cathy Wong (Alternative Medicine Review, Oct. 2001):

"Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is an illness characterized by persistent and relapsing fatigue, often accompanied by numerous symptoms involving various body systems. ...recent evidence suggests celiac disease can present with neurological symptoms in the absence of gastrointestinal symptoms; therefore, celiac disease should be included in the differential diagnosis of CFS.

"The prevalence of CD may be higher among CFS patients than in the general population."

This article states that in fact, CD mimics CFS and that all patients suspected to have CFS should also be tested for CD. While I was blaming age and hormones (or lack thereof) on my increasing forgetfulness, inability to concentrate, tremors or trembling and muscle spasms, tingling and numbness -- these neurological problems may indeed be part of CFS, and brought on by a clinically-silent case of CD before the digestive problems appeared.

So it appears that I have diagnosed myself with chronic fatigue syndrome, and that it is yet another manifestion of celiac disease. Next question: Why can't I shake myself of CFS with a gluten-free diet? And has my diet truly been gluten-free?

Week 2: G-Free Recap

Getting through the holidays completely gluten-free while still trying to figure out how to live g-free has proven very difficult. Though I am eating g-free to the best of my abilities, somehow something is still creeping into my diet that is not allowing me to return to that wonderful feeling those first five days I went completely g-free. I seem to have a chronic stomach-ache, a general feeling of malaise, and extreme fatigue.

I am sure that my fatigue is due in part to the fact that I wake up every night for hours before finally falling asleep shortly before dawn, only to get up an hour or so later. Yet I remember when I first went g-free, I had an amazing energy level for which even a sleepless night seemed of little consequence-- I still felt energetic!

Over the New Year's Eve weekend, the only foods I ate that I did not know for certain contained gluten were Tostitos chips and Sour Cream & Onion chips-- but I did read the ingredients and couldn't find anything off-limits to a g-free diet. Additionally, I grabbed a few Hershey's Kisses from time to time (which are supposed to be g-free). Those are the only foods I've eaten differently than the first five days I went g-free and felt great.

So this third week I will eliminate chocolate, and of course have not eaten chips since New Year's and won't again without knowing for certain that they are g-free. On top of that, I hope to find some answers to a couple of blood draws: my cholesterol (which was done three weeks ago) and hopefully the results to the tTG test which would indicate the presence of celiac disease. If I don't receive any news by Wednesday I will go ahead and call the clinic.

In the meantime, I deal with what feels like chronic fatigue syndrome on a daily basis. I wonder if this is yet another aspect of CD? And why is it taking so long for me to recover from a gluten diet?

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Muscle Spasms and Celiac Disease

I have always been a very pale, colorless person. It's why I wear so much makeup! Without my makeup, I am all one color, with the exception of my eye color.
According to the Celiac Sprue Association, pallor is one of the many symptoms of Celiac Disease. Here is a list of symptoms that they say the doctor will look for:
  • emaciation
  • pallor (due to anemia)
  • hypotension (low blood pressure)
  • edema (due to low levels of protein, [albumin] in the blood)
  • dermatitis herpetiformis (skin lesions)
  • easy bruising (lack of vitamin K)
  • bone or skin and mucosa membrane changes due to vitamin deficiencies
  • protruding or distended abdomen (intestine dysmotility)
  • loss of various sensations in extremities including vibration, position and light touch (vitamin deficiency)
  • signs of severe vitamin/mineral deficiencies which may include:
    -diminished deep tendon reflexes
  • muscle spasms (magnesium and/or calcium deficiency)
  • bone tenderness and bone pain (due to osteomalacia)
I find this an interesting list because the reasons behind the symptom are also listed. For example, I have always had fairly low blood pressure, and that is on the list as "hypotension." Besides the strange rashes, I also bruise quite easily ("lack of vitamin K"), and the muscle spasms are also present ("Magnesium and/or calcium deficiency").

One of the symptoms that has been bothering me more and more are the muscle spasms at night. Prior to the worst of my illness (prior to going to the ER) I had been having weird spasms and tremors when I went to bed at night. Most of the time I felt it in my neck, especially while laying on my left side. For the past couple of months, the tremors/spasms have increased to the point of lasting longer than a minute or so. They will also tend to travel around, sometimes in my lower abdomen, sometimes in my chest, sometimes in my neck, regardless of my position while lying down.

Last night, I was almost asleep when I noticed the spasms again, but this time it lasted much longer and seemed to encompass my whole esophagus (chest area) and up and down my throat and neck. It just kept going and going. But I was so very sleepy, I don't remember if I fell asleep or how long it continued.

Tomorrow I have an appointment at the clinic, in which I will discuss my 'findings' over the past several days, and discuss these spasms and tremors.

Can a person with CD take vitamin supplements, or is it fruitless since the intestines are not absorbing nutrients anyway??