[lit-ideas] Re: Kyphoplasty For Julie's Mom

  • From: JimKandJulieB@xxxxxxx
  • To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2005 17:24:31 EST

Do you get Medscape?  Between my daughter's joint pain issues,  arterial 
stenosis, asthma & allergy problems, and my Mother's health issues,  I was 
compelled to subscribe to their newsletter.  Each one contains a "can  you 
diagnose 
this?" article where symptoms and history are presented and the  case is 
described in terms of how the diagnosis was reached.  It's fairly  fascinating 
and 
more than a little scary.  Doctors need to listen to their  patients.  People 
are often far more attuned to what is going on inside  their own bodies than 
physicians give them credit for.  I hope your friend  has a good lawyer and is 
suing someone!
 
Julie Krueger
========Original  Message========     Subj: [lit-ideas] Re: Kyphoplasty For 
Julie's Mom  Date: 2/17/05 3:57:10 P.M. Central Standard Time  From: 
_eyost1132@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx (mailto:eyost1132@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)   To: 
_lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx (mailto:lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)   Sent on:    
Re. the diagnosis I'm encouraging her to  see a new
internist for a definite diagnosis.
_____

Not to scare  you, but simply to relate a tragic event that happened to a 
friend. He  complained of increasing levels of back pain and was shunted 
around the  medical system with inadequate diagnoses. One doctor even 
suggested that he  was faking complaints to get pain medicine. Another 
thought it was a slipped  disc in the neck and he received a clear MRI of 
the neck.

Pain kept  increasing and after screaming on a chiropractor's table, he 
finally went to  the emergency room. Turned out to be lymphoma of the 
spine. They had to  operate immediately, remove vertebrae, put in 
titanium replacement rods.  Nobody was looking for lymphoma because it 
was so rare.

Yet when I  visited him in the Pennsylvania hospital, the head nurse 
privately confirmed  the existence of a cluster of such cases in the 
hospital. (To me that  suggests some local toxicity, like benzene in the 
water supply.)

Now  this man, with whom I had hiked hundreds of miles on the Appalachian 
Trail,  a man who could identify almost every plant or animal in the 
forest, can now  barely hobble six suburban blocks a day and is in 
constant pain from the  effects of spinal compression caused by the 
lymphoma. All this because  diagnoses are more statistical than thorough.

The multiply negative  lesson: Doctors can't see what they're not looking 
for, and don't always  look for what shouldn't be there, especially when 
insurance won't pay for  looking for things that should not be  there.

Eric

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