Posted: Wed Oct 17, 2007 6:42 am
<A HREF="http://bbs.stresscenter.com/eve/forums/ ... 8221063632" TARGET=_blank>http://bbs.stresscenter.com/eve/forums/ ... 1063632</A>
For years I was told that I was depressed. I was taking many medications some of which almost killed me. What I actually had was a phaeocromocytoma, that is a tumor on the adrenal gland. The reason I'm telling you folks this is because to most doctors this ailment looks like panic attacks. With a phaeocromocytoma what you get are head aches, severe chest and arm pain, hart pounding,racing hart sweating, heat intolerance, gray pallor, burning skin, high blood pressure with slowing hart rate. The headaches are so bad you will scream your lungs out.
If a doctor has given you a Beta blocker with the results being extraordinary slow hart rate this is a good indication of having a phaeo! If you have taken Cymbalta or Wellbutrin and ended up with a massive panic attack again this is also an indication of a phaeo. Anything that brings your adrenalin up even coffee will make you have what seems to be a panic attack.
Normally doctors will check your Thyroid gland because the Thyroid controls the adrenal glands. Test the thyroid is done by doing blood testing. Testing adrenal glands is done by doing a 24 hour pee test! If you are having panic attacks have your doctor check your adrenalin levels if they are way high you have a problem
I just had this phaeocromocytoma removed and I feel TONS better. No more panic attacks, no more sweating, shaking, burning, hart pounding and the like. Its all gone and I'm back to normal. The change was so overwhelming that right out of the OR I really couldn't define my pain levels to the doctors. I felt better then Ive felt in 15 or so years. The pain of the surgery was so insignificant compared to the pain I had been in is was hard to define the pain from the actual surgery.
Here's the deal its relatively easy for the doctors to say its all in your head. Its sometimes much harder to find the real problem. What I did was to track my symptoms. I got all my Xrays, CatScans, MRI scans and all notes the doctors had made. We put all this info together in one book and we made sure the book was organized and tabbed. We looked for improper drug reactions and symptom patterns. What the doctors were telling me I had only partially fit the symptoms. I had lots of symptoms that they had no real explanation for. Like my massive headaches were called "Exertional Headaches" which is a real meaningless term. A Phaeocromocytoma is a real medical medical term where a Exertional Headache doesn't mean much.
From the beginning I suspected there was a problem with my adrenalin. I often heard doctors say things like "he's loaded up with adrenalin" Another clue was that after these panic attacks I'd be left shaking so hard I couldn't hold a fork. I told one hart doctor that I understood hydraulic systems and that I thought that something was blocked causing blood pressure to rise while slowing the hart down. I was told this was not possible while in reality it was totally possible and again is a noted symptom of a Phaeo!
What was another give away was the fact that one emergency room doctor did suggest I be tested for a Phaeo do to how I reacted to the Beta blocker. Somehow this request was not followed up. Only when I collected all the doctors notes did I understand that I had been Tagged "nut case" Once I started out with new doctors in a totally different medical system did I start to get better answers. They found the Phaeo on the fist visit and confirmed it with an MRI.
Upon further investigation I discover an old MRI I had about 4 years ago. At that time the Phaeo was causing all kinds of muscle cramping and I couldn't urinate. That MRI clearly shows a big Phaeo so clearly it almost impossible to miss. As a matter of fact this Phaeo is so clearly defined I showed it to my surgeon. No one has ever shown me the tumor but even without training its very easy to see. So here you go in my case there were lots of mistakes make, many of which could have very easily killed me. I think getting a second opinion is a really good idea if your medical situation is not improving or is getting worse.
For years I was told that I was depressed. I was taking many medications some of which almost killed me. What I actually had was a phaeocromocytoma, that is a tumor on the adrenal gland. The reason I'm telling you folks this is because to most doctors this ailment looks like panic attacks. With a phaeocromocytoma what you get are head aches, severe chest and arm pain, hart pounding,racing hart sweating, heat intolerance, gray pallor, burning skin, high blood pressure with slowing hart rate. The headaches are so bad you will scream your lungs out.
If a doctor has given you a Beta blocker with the results being extraordinary slow hart rate this is a good indication of having a phaeo! If you have taken Cymbalta or Wellbutrin and ended up with a massive panic attack again this is also an indication of a phaeo. Anything that brings your adrenalin up even coffee will make you have what seems to be a panic attack.
Normally doctors will check your Thyroid gland because the Thyroid controls the adrenal glands. Test the thyroid is done by doing blood testing. Testing adrenal glands is done by doing a 24 hour pee test! If you are having panic attacks have your doctor check your adrenalin levels if they are way high you have a problem
I just had this phaeocromocytoma removed and I feel TONS better. No more panic attacks, no more sweating, shaking, burning, hart pounding and the like. Its all gone and I'm back to normal. The change was so overwhelming that right out of the OR I really couldn't define my pain levels to the doctors. I felt better then Ive felt in 15 or so years. The pain of the surgery was so insignificant compared to the pain I had been in is was hard to define the pain from the actual surgery.
Here's the deal its relatively easy for the doctors to say its all in your head. Its sometimes much harder to find the real problem. What I did was to track my symptoms. I got all my Xrays, CatScans, MRI scans and all notes the doctors had made. We put all this info together in one book and we made sure the book was organized and tabbed. We looked for improper drug reactions and symptom patterns. What the doctors were telling me I had only partially fit the symptoms. I had lots of symptoms that they had no real explanation for. Like my massive headaches were called "Exertional Headaches" which is a real meaningless term. A Phaeocromocytoma is a real medical medical term where a Exertional Headache doesn't mean much.
From the beginning I suspected there was a problem with my adrenalin. I often heard doctors say things like "he's loaded up with adrenalin" Another clue was that after these panic attacks I'd be left shaking so hard I couldn't hold a fork. I told one hart doctor that I understood hydraulic systems and that I thought that something was blocked causing blood pressure to rise while slowing the hart down. I was told this was not possible while in reality it was totally possible and again is a noted symptom of a Phaeo!
What was another give away was the fact that one emergency room doctor did suggest I be tested for a Phaeo do to how I reacted to the Beta blocker. Somehow this request was not followed up. Only when I collected all the doctors notes did I understand that I had been Tagged "nut case" Once I started out with new doctors in a totally different medical system did I start to get better answers. They found the Phaeo on the fist visit and confirmed it with an MRI.
Upon further investigation I discover an old MRI I had about 4 years ago. At that time the Phaeo was causing all kinds of muscle cramping and I couldn't urinate. That MRI clearly shows a big Phaeo so clearly it almost impossible to miss. As a matter of fact this Phaeo is so clearly defined I showed it to my surgeon. No one has ever shown me the tumor but even without training its very easy to see. So here you go in my case there were lots of mistakes make, many of which could have very easily killed me. I think getting a second opinion is a really good idea if your medical situation is not improving or is getting worse.