Hi, Kathy!  My gosh...what you had to go through!!  I  sent an e-mail not
too long ago about depression and TM and that the first neurologist that
treated in ICU and gave me the diagnosis of TM said I was NOT to be off of
antidepressants because depression can be a very big part of living with the
results of the TM.  If you aren't taking anything, I sure would advise you
to talk to your provider about this.  

Also, we have been talking about the 'banding'.  It sure can be painful, can
t it??  The Lyrica really is helpful with that, also.  It doesn't seem to
take the pain away but it sure does make it more livable!  It also seems to 
warm' up the icy cold areas.  It takes about 20 minutes to begin working and
last about 4-5 hours.

Sure was good to hear from you and I think that comes from all of the TMIC
bunch!  What a wonderful group of people we have found and remember, too,
that when you have the down and out times?  We are here for you to share
them with you.  

Jeanne in Dayton, WA where it is snowing great big fat flakes out here in
the mountains! 

 
 
-------Original Message-------
 
From: LadyOwl1961
Date: 3/26/2008 7:41:56 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [TMIC] Back on list
 
Hi my name is Kathy and I was on this list a few years ago. I left and am
now finding my way back 
I will reintroduce you to my story of TM 
Growing up I had always had a pain, burning, weird numbness in my legs, it
was diognosed as my veins expanding when I was in highschool around 1975/76.
In 1979 I gave birth to my first child without a labour pain. Only the
sensation that I had to pee. In 1982 with the birth of my second child same
thing. I was worned when I was pregnant with the second because I never had
pains with the first to get in at the first sign of pressure feeling. First
labour was 47 mins. Second was 23 mins. I was glad I had not felt the pain
but was curious as to why. Ask the doctor and he said some women are just
that way. I continued to have the weird sensations in my legs but it was
livable and only when I was tired or stressed. My mother whom I was very
close to passed in Aug. of 1987 and I started school in Jan. of 1988, along
with being a single mother, the break up of a 3 year relationship I was
stressed to the max and ended up catching a very bad flu. I continued
attending school but my legs were acting up worse and worse. The pins and
needles (like when your leg has gone to sleep and is waking up) actually
started lasting for longer and longer. One day I went to get up and fell so
the teacher himself drove me home right there and then. A week or so after
that I tried to get out of bed one morning and fell, I had no feeling from
the waist down. My father came and carried me down 3 flights of stairs and
to the hospital. The first hospital I went to the doctor told him to take me
to a psch doc as it was all in my head. The second one where my family
doctor worked knew I was not faking it and ordered tests right away. Within
a month I was to have a lumbar puncture and myelogram (sp) and within a few
weeks of that I was sent to a specialist in London Ontario. Point blank I
was told I was in the early stages of MS, Just a note here, my sister had
GBS when I was about 13-14 the specialist I saw all those years ago told me 
my family had a pre-desposition for all this". I still wonder what he meant
by that. I continued to see different doctors because mine was not satisfied
with Early MS and after a MRI of my spine not my head I was told TM in 1995.
This doctor from Toronto, Ontario was a GOD to me. I had an answer that was
not "all in my head" but I went another few years before I finally found
this organization and got answers I felt I needed to help me deal with this
disorder. 
I am one of the lucky ones here. I still walk and have use of my arms. I
have good days when I almost feel "normal" and bad days when it hurts to
wear clothes. I have days when the banding is so tight I wake up choking at
night and days when I feel like I could walk miles. The past 6 months I have
been under allot of stress again and my "residual effects" (as I have been
told they are) have started to really act  up, I was put on Lyrica in Dec.
and it really seems to help my hand and leg pain. My symptoms have not gone
away on this but it sure helps me get thru the day. I came back to the list
to help me deal with the depression I seem to suffer from more these days
than before. 
Kathy
 

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