Sunday, November 2, 2014

Pushing the limit



Once again, I mentally prepared myself to walk before stepping foot out of my car when I arrived at the hospital.  The short distance to the hospital doors seemed like a lifetime away.  What normally would take me about thirty seconds was going to take a lot longer.  I eventually made it into the emergency room and checked in.  The staff asked me what my symptoms were.  I told them I was in intense pain, and they looked at me funny, as if to say, “Sure you are.  You are probably just one of those addicts looking for someone to give you more narcotics.”  I also showed them the strange bumps all over my body.  It looked as if it could be a rash.  
 I had two different looking rashes.  The bumps on my arms appeared in a cluster, one bump in the middle with several bumps around it almost in the shape of a flower one would have drawn in first grade.  They didn't itch or hurt, so I still wasn't sure if it was in fact a rash or what.  The ones on my forehead looked much smaller and could be dismissed as acne. 
I was shown into a room and seen by a doctor immediately.  The doctor, Dr. Stacey, asked me for my medical history, the usual, how long I have been experiencing these symptoms, and other pertinent information such as allergies.  I thought about it hard and started from the most recent thing I could think of.  I went to Dr. Cluck the first week of February because I was having fevers, night sweats, chills, malaise, swollen lymph glands and other typical cold and flu symptoms.  My fevers were so high and after several days of 104 degree temperature, I was afraid it could permanently fry my brain.  He had me do the typical, “Open your mouth and say, ‘Ah’,” bit, and held out the tongue depressor with two reluctant fingers and was cautious to not get too close of a look.  He took one look at me and diagnosed me with strep throat.  He never gave me any kind of test for strep, he frankly just wanted to get me out of there so he wouldn’t catch whatever bug I had.  He prescribed me ten days of penicillin antibiotics.    
I told Dr. Stacey that I had had flu like symptoms for about five days, and tried to allow my body to heal before seeing that doctor.  I had never been to the emergency room before in my life but this was my second visit to the ER that month already, the previous time I came due to blood in my urine.  Other than that I had no medical history of anything.  He thought that perhaps I had waited too long to get treatment for the strep infection and that it could have turned into something much worse, namely, rheumatic fever.  He told me the treatment for rheumatic fever was somewhat controversial because it called for prescribing steroids.  However, he had never seen anyone with anything like what I was experiencing and did not feel comfortable giving me steroids at that point.  They took a bunch of blood for lab tests and said they wouldn’t really know anything until the tests came back.  He instructed me to follow up with his wife, Dr. Barry, who worked in the clinic next door. 
“She’s hard to get an appointment with,” he said, “but tell them I sent you.  You’d be better off going to her over Dr. Cluck.”  (Looking back, the name alone should have tipped me off to find another doctor.)
Luckily, I got in to see Dr. Barry the very next day.  I went over all my symptoms and history again.  She wanted me to follow up with a rheumatologist due to the arthritis and possibility of rheumatic fever.  She went on to say, “In all my 20 years of practice, I have never seen anyone with anything like what you have.  If it is rheumatic fever, I do not know enough about it to feel comfortable treating you for it at this point.  No offense, but this is a total mystery to me, and it makes me that much more interested in your case.” 
“What do I have to do to get into a rheumatologist?  I don’t even know where I’d find one around here.”  I said. 
She told me she knew a good rheumatologist up in Reno, three hours away.  “He is also very hard to get into.  If I give him a call today, you might be able to get in in about three to four months.”
I broke down and began to sob inconsolably.  “I can’t go on living like this for another three or four months.  I am in excruciating pain.  I can hardly move.  I look like a freak with these rashes all over my body and neither of us even knows that I’m not dying.” 
“I will call him today, and there could be a chance there is a cancellation, if he can fit you in, you have to go, no exceptions.”  She assured me he was at the top of his game and would be able to diagnose any rheumatic fever or other “rheuma” problems, as she called it on the doctor’s note.  She prescribed me narcotic pain killers and sent me home.
I took the pain pills religiously every four to six hours.  I even staggered the doses so I wouldn’t feel them wearing off.  When I would roll over in bed in my sleep in the middle of the night, I could tell when the meds were beginning to wear off and I'd take more.  Truthfully, the pain killers just barely took the edge off.  My pain scale went from ten, the worst, down to an eight or seven.  As I laid there in bed, all I could think of was the pain. 
A lot of people have used the phrase that they feel like they’ve been “hit by a train.”  Well, that’s exactly how I felt, except it felt like the train was still crushing me. It was a pain that felt like every bone and joint in my body was shattered. Standing was painful, so I sat to try to relieve the pain, but sitting was painful, so I lied down to try to alleviate it, but nothing worked.  It didn’t matter what I did, the pain was there.  I convinced myself I had to somehow manage to carry on as normally as possible.  I had to brainwash myself the pain was all in my head. 
I was determined to keep living my life.  I was not going to let the pain rule me.  So I went to the gym.  I got on the elliptical and powered through. With every step I told myself, “It’s all in your head. You are tough. You can push through it.  You can un-imagine it.” I took pride in knowing how tough I was, it gave me a rush. It made me feel superior to any other person in that gym. It made me feel superior to my condition as well, I was in control of my body and I would tell it how it was allowed to feel.  I would tell my body if and when it was allowed to feel pain, or be exhausted. Mind over matter; and my mind was powerful enough to beat my body.  Looking back I have no clue how I did this and realize I was going insane.

No comments:

Post a Comment