Thursday, December 6, 2007

Help! I'm not feeling better

http://www.cnn.com/2007/HEALTH/12/06/ep.symptoms/index.html


Help! I'm not feeling better
Empowered Patient, a regular feature from CNN Medical News correspondent Elizabeth Cohen, helps put you in the driver's seat when it comes to health care.
Dr. Gail Gazelle, a patient advocate, says doctors can be quick to dismiss complex cases as psychological.

ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) -- When teacher Karen Myhre fell to the floor after taking attendance one morning, her third-graders knew exactly what to do: Ring the bell to alert the school office, and run to get the school nurse.  The children were well-trained because Myhre had fainted in class before -- she'd also fainted in the principal's office, at the copier machine, at church, at a pizza restaurant and at home alone with her two small children.

Karen has seen an internist, a neurologist, a neurosurgeon, an anesthesiologist, a cardiologist, a psychiatrist, a psychologist, an electrophysiologist and an integrative medicine specialist, not to mention countless other physicians during three hospital stays, and she's still fainting. "It's extremely frustrating, and it's exhausting," Myhre says.
Myhre's experience is far from unique. Back pain, fainting, muscle aches and dizziness are just some of the problems doctors seem to have a hard time solving.
To help shed light on what to do when it seems no one can help, we put Myhre on the telephone with two physicians, Dr. Michael Victoroff and Dr. Gail Gazelle. Both are patient advocates; people pay them to help navigate medical mazes when they're not getting answers on their own. The following is their edited conversation with CNN medical correspondent Elizabeth Cohen, and a list of tips for what to do if you're in a similar situation.

Myhre: Thank you for trying to help me.

Gazelle: The first thing you should know, Karen, is that you're not alone. You've had to walk through the mud and the mire of the medical system -- neurologist, psychiatrist, anesthesiologist -- this is quite a list here. This scenario is all too common. There are some problems the medical profession is ill-equipped to manage andtreat. Fainting is one of them.

Cohen: Karen, tell us how this all started.

Myhre: It started with a migraine in September last year. I'd never had one before. I went to my internist and he gave me a shot of Demerol [a narcotic pain reliever] and Phenergan [an anti-nausea drug]. Then the next day I went into a cold sweat. I started shaking. I couldn't get words out. I was confused. I could hear people talking and I couldn't respond. I was in a wheelchair, and my hands contracted like a child with cerebral palsy. I was admitted to the hospital. They said it was serotonin syndrome -- a reaction between the Demerol and the Phenergan with the [antidepressant] Zoloft I've been taking for years.

Victoroff: Karen, tell me about the timing of all this. When did you have these symptoms?

Myhre: Almost exactly 24 hours after I got the Demerol and Phenergan shot.

Victoroff: Serotonin syndrome happens while the drugs are actively metabolizing. By 24 hours, I think the Demerol and the Phenergan would have already been metabolized. I don't know. But I'd want to grab a DPharm [doctor of pharmacy] and say, "Listen to this story. Does this sound right?"

Karen continued having migraines for several months. In January 2007, she had debilitating spasms in her neck. A neurosurgeon diagnosed bulging discs, and the pain went away with radiofrequency ablation, a process that destroys the nerves with heat. In May, she had her first fainting episode, quickly followed by several more. Karen went back to her family doctor.

Cohen: What did he say?

Myhre: He said, "Nothing's causing you to faint. You're making yourself faint intentionally. You're making yourself do this." He referred me to a psychologist.

Gazelle: This is what doctors do sometimes. If something doesn't fit into a nice, neat medical box, they say, "It must be psychological."

Victoroff: If your doctor had done even a cursory literature search, he would have seen there are 492 diseases that could cause fainting. How could he tell you you're just crazy? Had he ruled out all 492 other causes?

Later that month, Karen was admitted to a major research university for further testing. They diagnosed orthostatic hypotension -- low blood pressure when standing, and prescribed pindolol and Florinef, which still don't stop the fainting episodes.

Victoroff: Did you ask the doctors in the hospital, "Out of nowhere, I have these migraines and this nerve thing in my neck and the fainting. Could they all be related?"

Myhre: My husband, Jay, asked that -- could one be causing the other? And the neurologist was very quick to say, "No, no, it doesn't work that way." The neurologist had three residents with him, and they all nodded their heads. Jay thought, "Who am I to go up against four neurologists?"

Victoroff: In that situation, you can ask, "Can you help me understand why they're not connected?" Ask them what exactly makes them think that.

Myhre was discharged from the hospital in May, and in June her internist reduced her dose of Florinef, a drug that causes the kidneys to retain sodium and acts as a replacement for cortisone when the body doesn't produce enough on its own. Then, in August he increased the Florinef. In July, he took her off pindolol, a drug used to treat high blood pressure, and started her back up on it three days later. That day, she fainted in church. Her internist told her the problem is "severely dysfunctional coping skills." She fired him, and went to see a physician who specialized in integrative medicine. Myhre says under his care, her fainting episodes have decreased, but she still has them and is still extremely fatigued.

Cohen: So Karen, right now, how many different drugs and supplements are you taking?

Myhre: Florinef, Provigil, Cortef to increase cortisol levels, Yasmin [a birth control pill] to even out hormone levels throughout the month, and Vitamin B12 shots, Vitamin D, potassium, magnesium, and evening primrose oil.

Cohen: How many different doctors prescribed these?

Myhre: Five.


Here are some of the tips the doctors offered Myhre
Cohen: Dr. Victoroff, Dr. Gazelle -- if you were Karen's old college buddy and she called you up asking for advice, what would you tell her to do at this point?

Victoroff: You know how in old mysteries, they would say "cherchez la femme," meaning when you want to find the cause of a problem, look for the woman. In medical mysteries, we say "cherchez la drug." Doctors simply don't always look for drug side effects or interactions. So you should go on the Internet and look yourself. I've been looking them up as we've been talking, and some of them can cause dizziness. Print these out and bring them to your doctor. Ask, "Why am I on this drug and when can I come off it?"

Gazelle: Karen, you mentioned you had a neurologist for your headaches who you really liked. Stick with her as your ally, as the person you can bounce ideas off of. What you need in this situation is a doctor who says "I'm going to stick with you." It's the "helm of the ship" model.

Victoroff: That's right. Regardless of their medical specialty, ask the doctors you think are good -- like the neck guy -- what they think you should do.

Victoroff: You've heard of the fog of war? Well, there's such a thing as the fog of the examining room. Let me tell you about a friend of mine. He's a doctor and a lawyer. Recently he had a health problem and when he went into the examining room he couldn't remember any of his questions. Your IQ goes down 50 points when you walk into that room. So write down your questions beforehand, and bring someone with you.

Gazelle: Keep looking for things that will make you feel better, but you may need to quiet the need to look for an answer. It may be that the medical profession will never find a cause for your problem.

* * *

As Dr. Greensmith points out (see earlier post), fatigue is a symptom of many conditions.  Mere fatigue is not indicative of depression.  Unfortunately, many doctors, upon hearing the word "fatigue", leap to the diagnosis of depression, regardless whether it is appropriate or not.  There are emotional components required to make a depression diagnosis; if the patient doesn't have at least one of those, it is not depression.  Period.  Any doctor who does not know emotional components are required to make the diagnosis is clearly unqualified to make an accurate depression diagnosis. 

Personally, I believe no one except a licensed mental health professional should be allowed to make a mental health diagnosis; psychs don't practice medicine, MDs should not practice psychiatry.

As Dr. Gazelle points out above, doctors are quick to slap a psychological label on complex conditions.  If they were prohibited from making that diagnosis without consulting a specialist, they would be forced to look harder to find a physical cause for the symptoms.  They would have to test for those 492 other causes that can produce fainting, or the zillions of diseases that cause fatigue.

In the past, MS and polio-- diseases now considered to be "real" and with an unequivocally physical origin -- were dismissed as psychological because technology didn't exist to pinpoint that physical cause.  Easier to blame the patient than to say "I don't know".  Technology is now catching up to CFS and fibromyalgia; eventually, the medical profession will have to admit that they were wrong in slapping patients with "it's all in your head" when the problem was never in the patient's head -- it's in the doctor's head in not being able to think outside the box.

Depression does not start with a 105 fever.  It does not cause sore throat, or rash, or swollen glands, or exercise intolerance/post-exertional malaise.  A doctor who knows what objective symptoms to look for would never confuse depression and CFS. 

In my case, every doctor since 1988 except one has concurred with the CFS diagnosis.  That one chose to ignore every bit of evidence that he was wrong: two specialists who knew how to diagnose CFS and two specialists who knew how to diagnose depression.  When given, in writing, the advice of CFIDS.org on what tests would be abnormal, he refused to order those tests.  The question must be asked, "what would it have hurt?"  For a few bucks, he could have humored the patient; if the test came back negative, it would have proved that I didn't have CFS.  He didn't want to take the risk of being proved wrong.

Such closed-mindedness has no place in the medical profession.  Doctors should be curious and eager to get to the bottom of a mystery, not quick to dismiss a patient's symptoms as psychological because a simple solution doesn't work.

A specialist is a specialist BECAUSE he knows more than the average doctor about certain diseases.  If the PCP does not agree with the specialist's opinion, he should send the patient to another specialist for a second opinion.  If two specialists agree on the diagnosis, the PCP should consult with them to understand why that is the diagnosis and not the one he prefers.  He might learn something.

If treatment isn't working, then Dr. Groopman suggests re-examining the diagnosis.  Don't blame the patient.  Don't continue the same treatment that's been proven useless. 

The patient deserves a doctor whose primary concern is getting her well,not one whose primary concern is protecting his own ego.  Any doctor who selfishly puts himself ahead of the patient's well-being doesn't deserve to be your doctor.  He does deserve to be reported to his supervisors as someone whose prejudices are putting the medical group at risk for a major malpractice lawsuit.

 

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thank you for posting this timely info to inform the ignorant  care givers and "professionals" about this health challenge!
    Bless your pea pickin' heart !

tschuckman@aol.com
Union Grove, WI  53182

Anonymous said...

Thanks, Tom!

It gets disheartening how MANY doctors jump to unsupportable psych diagnoses because they're too uninformed or too lazy to do a bunch more tests to delve deeper into the physical reasons for the symptoms.  

As my own situation shows, a doctor who gets the diagnosis wrong and therefore gets the treatment wrong can have lifelong consequences.

Dr. Bell calls it Game Show Medicine -- as if the goal was to be the first person to give an answer, rather than taking the extra time to get the RIGHT answer.  The medical group that I had all the problems with, every one of them was more interested in the quick-and-easy answer, e.g., one tried to tell me that I was having an allergic reaction 2 hours BEFORE I ate the offending food!  That must be some really powerful allergy.  But it was faster than asking questions to get to the real answer.  My current doctor did ask the questions, and solved the problem with a $3 bottle of Tums.  Meanwhile, I suffered with it for years because they "knew" the answer and didn't need to look further.

Anonymous said...

Hopefully this gets to Karen Myhre mentioned in the article.

She should be checked for a Channolopathy by her Neurologist.  The kinds of problems she is having can happen with different types of Ion Channel Disorders.  

The medications that are listed in the article that help her symptoms affect Ion Channels significantly (Yasmin, potassium, magnesium).  

Provigil is a Cataplexy drug.  I don't know why any patient would be given this med unless Narcolepsy/Cataplexy were proven or at least strongly suspected.  Provigil has some nasty side effects.  

Some of the other meds are specifically for Addison's disease.  Hopefully the doctor checked for this condition and found some indication of it before using these drugs.

Anyways, as someone with 3 separate rare conditions, I know how painful getting proper treatment from doctors is.  Each person needs to be their own agressive advocate, because if it was up to insurance companies we would all be labelled crazy since Mental Health care is rarely covered under medical plans.

Anonymous said...

Sorry, Beck, I don't have contact information for the woman in the article.  CNN or Elizabeth Cohen (who wrote the article) might be able to help you get in touch with her.

It's been documented (with the government's own memos/correspondence) that the reason for re-naming Myalgic Encephalomyelitis to "Chronic Fatigue Syndrome" was to get that presumption of psychological basis in order to save SSDI and private disability insurance companies a ton of money.  (Many policies say they only have to pay for 2 years for mental illness.)  Their plan certainly worked -- one of my doctors, and one of my SSDI judges, were convinced CFS was just another name for depression.  I was told that I could return to work if I just got counseling!!  My late best friend was a pretty good counselor, but talking to her for hours on end didn't get me back to work; I still had serious symptoms, even WHILE talking to her.

And you can certainly see from other comments in this blog that laypeople have the same erroneous notion that I just need my head examined.