for example, I know I have low-grade fibromyalgia. I know this because my mom has full-blown fibromyalgia and it mirrors hers. But a doctor would probably never diagnose me with it because it's so low grade. There certainly wouldn't be a point to diagnosing it.
There are many many physical disorders that lack understanding and fall under subjective diagnoses. Even ones that are objective, just because you get the diagnosis doesn't mean they can even guess at more than that.
Another personal example, my brother has Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia and walks with a cane. His identical has not shown more than the most basic symptoms until just recently (whereas he's shown symptoms from a very young age, even if we only got a diagnosis in the past few years). Even more curious, there are two forms of HSP that present. The "Secondary" form--which comes with more symptoms and is much more severe--and the "pure" form, which typically ends up only limiting movement and causing pain, but not causing the large host of other problems the secondary form can. What's so curious about this is that my brother very clearly shows the "pure" symptoms...BUT the pure forms of the disorder are almost 100% dominant hereditary...
and no one else in the entire family has it.
The secondary form is recessive, but he doesn't fit the symptom profile.
The doctors are having much fun poking him with sticks, you can bet
So anyway, my point is that a physical disorder can be just as nebulous as a mental disorder to pin down.
There are many many physical disorders that lack understanding and fall under subjective diagnoses. Even ones that are objective, just because you get the diagnosis doesn't mean they can even guess at more than that.
Another personal example, my brother has Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia and walks with a cane. His identical has not shown more than the most basic symptoms until just recently (whereas he's shown symptoms from a very young age, even if we only got a diagnosis in the past few years). Even more curious, there are two forms of HSP that present. The "Secondary" form--which comes with more symptoms and is much more severe--and the "pure" form, which typically ends up only limiting movement and causing pain, but not causing the large host of other problems the secondary form can. What's so curious about this is that my brother very clearly shows the "pure" symptoms...BUT the pure forms of the disorder are almost 100% dominant hereditary...
and no one else in the entire family has it.
The secondary form is recessive, but he doesn't fit the symptom profile.
The doctors are having much fun poking him with sticks, you can bet
So anyway, my point is that a physical disorder can be just as nebulous as a mental disorder to pin down.
Still Empress of the Poofy Purple Pillow Pile Palace!!
Continued Love of my Aussie <3
Continued Love of my Aussie <3
A more serious would-you-rather question.
13/11/2009 01:02:08 AM
- 688 Views
Hmm...
13/11/2009 01:35:48 AM
- 568 Views
May I ask what it is? You don't have to answer, obviously. I get if you'd rather not.
13/11/2009 04:18:21 AM
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well technically, they could both lead to the other
13/11/2009 02:05:57 AM
- 457 Views
As often happens, yeah.
13/11/2009 04:15:57 AM
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there's cloudiness to physical disorders too
13/11/2009 04:25:28 AM
- 544 Views
Hun I live with both
13/11/2009 02:34:46 AM
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Longest, most thoughtful response I've yet made on RAFO is lost in the internet ether. Sorry.
13/11/2009 03:51:42 AM
- 573 Views
What makes you think Nossy didn't have serious problems she needed help with?
13/11/2009 05:21:20 PM
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