Still fighting the fog

I’ll tell you right up front that writing this post has been a struggle. I’ve been trying to put it together for weeks but I keep finding myself blocked. Part of the problem is that it’s a long one…it’s been a long time since I’ve written about my treatment and there’s a lot I want to talk about. But the larger problem is my ongoing brain fog.

Sustained expressive thought has been extremely difficult for me for some time now. Interestingly, receptive thinking is not as hard. I can feel a clear difference between the two, although that difference can be tricky to describe. Reading seems like it’s mostly a receptive process, for instance, but it’s really not. Reading requires us to hold a set of themes or concepts in mind over a longer period of time, to engage in the expressive task of assembling meaning from the elements in a text. What I’ve found is that I can do pretty well reading short pieces like magazine articles – even if they’re fairly complex. But finishing a book has felt like an epic, nearly unachievable task.

These difficulties multiply when I try to write something of my own. When I try to imagine the shape of a piece of writing, I struggle with the cognitive work of holding  a series of related concepts in mind at once. In this post, for instance, I want to talk about a series of events (all of which happened several months ago) in my treatment and my day-to-day experience of living with chronic illness. In the first place that requires me to parse my experience during this time, identifying the moments which are most relevant and meaningful. And because I’m wanting not simply to chronicle my experience but to try to make meaning of it, I then need to consider what ideas and themes emerge from my experience, and to let my mind make associations to those themes so that they can guide the shape of an essay that develops.

I used to do all of this without much effort, certainly without having to think much about what I was doing as I was did it. But these days when I try, my mind grinds to a halt. That is literally what it feels like. I stop being able to think.

(What’s strange to me is that I’m pretty certain that by the time you’re actually reading this it’s going to sound pretty natural and effortless. I’ll have eliminated most traces of the struggles I’m describing. Because I’m not going to let myself sound like someone who is cognitively impaired. This creates a certain dissonance between my public persona and my inner experience. People often tell me that I don’t sound like I’m struggling cognitively. It’s good to know, but it’s also frustrating that people have no idea how effortful the act of thinking is for me, how much work it’s taking me not to sound impaired.)

The truth is, I can’t tell you how much time I’ve spent over the past year simply staring blankly into space. Dead time, in which I am aware of all the things I want to be doing without being able to do any of them. As I described in my book The Next Ten Minutes, I’m not a person who tolerates this sort of tedium well. In fact, it’s a sort of torture to me. Which is why I was happy to read Lyme advocate Ashley van Tol describes this aspect of chronic illness in a recent post about her experience with Lyme disease. “Honestly,” she writes, “being sick is really boring. Do you know what it is like to literally be able to do next to nothing day, after day, after day, after day?”

When people discuss chronic illness they usually focus on the pain, the physical limitations, the fear, the expense…all of which are very real issues. But personally, I could find a way to tolerate all of those things if I could just have my mind back.

 The good news is that I’m showing signs of improvement lately. Even cognitively. But the road to this partial improvement has been rough. Symptoms cycles persist and as always, trying to figure out the prognosis of my illness by looking at my symptoms at any given moment is not unlike trying to predict the future by looking at a pile of animal guts. Not (as readers of this blog are well aware), that I’m opposed to animal sacrifice in the service of healing from chronic illness.

Working with transference

In my last update, I talked about the overlapping anxieties I experience around each of my medical appointments. Since that post I’ve realized – again – that there can be good reason for those anxieties. Medical professionals are human, after all. Even the best of them sometimes they have off days. Sometimes they screw up. Sometimes pretty badly.

(That should give you some idea where this post is going.)

Given this fact it’s been helpful to me lately to reflect on the psychological phenomenon of transference, which plays such a powerful role in how we all navigate my medical treatment. It’s a concept which originates with Sigmund Freud, who described how, in the normal course of psychoanalytic treatment, inexplicably positive and negative feelings toward the analyst arise:

 We mean a transference of feelings on to the person of the doctor, since we do not believe that the situation in the treatment could justify the development of such feelings. We suspect, on the contrary, that the whole readiness for these feelings is derived from elsewhere, that they were already prepared in the patient and, upon the opportunity offered by the analytic treatment, are transferred on to the person of the doctor. (Sigmund Freud, Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis,)

 It’s safe to say that the core of most transference reactions comes from the feelings and hopes that linger from unresolved childhood experiences with our own parents. More specifically, as an attachment-focused therapist, I tend to see these transference dynamics as expressions of unmet attachment needs and attachment-related anxieties.

To put it more directly: deep within all of our psyches lies the fantasy of the perfect parent – the person who understands our needs exquisitely and without our having to express them, and who meets those needs unfailingly. Obviously this is not a realistic desire, but it’s a powerful fantasy and if you pay attention you’re likely to find it creeping out in many relationships in your life (not least of all with your actual parents).

Correspondingly, we all harbor within us some ancient and visceral sense (“memory” seems too refined a term for it) of our reaction to the failure of our parents to meet our needs. And that (picture an infant being denied the breast) in its rawest form is rage. The expectation of being disappointed (for we all come to develop such an expectation) also seeps into our everyday relationships. As much as part of us longs for the ideal parent, another part of us is always waiting to be disappointed.

In some of the more dramatic forms of psychopathology (borderline personality disorder, say), the oscillations between these two extremes become violently dysregulated. But in most of us, it’s a low-level force that operates subtly in our relationships, only occasionally getting more dramatically triggered.

It’s most likely to get triggered when our attachment needs get activated (i.e., when our need for either care or for autonomy is at its strongest), as inevitably happens within doctor/patient relationships.

As a psychotherapist, I’ve trained myself to be acutely alert to transference (and counter-transference) both within the therapeutic relationship as well as in my everyday interactions. That awareness is what makes it possible for me to stay level-headed when a client refers to me (as one recently did) as a Jedi Master. Because I can know that I am not in fact an all-powerful teacher but rather I’m the beneficiary of that client’s positive transference reaction. It’s also what keeps me from acting irrationally when I project the same sort positive transference onto the people who care for me, by, say, developing  a crush on my yoga teacher.

Because of their role in caring for others, medical professionals can be the targets of some of our fiercest psychological transference reactions – both positive and negative. And all of us who endure chronic illness would be wise to do a little work to understand the nature of our own transference onto our practitioners. Do we head into our doctor appointments filled with the unrealistic hope that we’ll receive a miraculous healing? Or do we brace ourselves, expecting to be ignored, dismissed, abandoned? I guarantee you that both of these fantasies are active in you to some degree, consciously or unconsciously, every time you interact with a medical professional.

It gets trickier when those fantasies find a foothold in the actual behavior of physicians and nurses. Because medical professionals are not pure vessels of therapeutic and diagnostic procedures. They are subject to their own psychological storms. They have the same fantasies and anxieties about care and being cared for that we do. Sometimes they really do perform extraordinary acts of healing. And sometimes they really are assholes. The point is not to ignore the reality of these actual behaviors, but simply to learn to figure out the difference between our fantasies and the reality in front of us.

In my particular case (and without going into a full-blown psychological self-assessment), I’ll summarize my version of this struggle by saying that my childhood experience imprinted upon me a deep fear of expressing a need for care to others, which is reinforced by a stubborn expectation that expressing such a need will lead to my being dismissed, ignored, and shamed. That expectation doesn’t extinguish the need, however. It just drives it underground where it grows more fierce.

As a result, even when I’m at my best I’m always scanning hyper-vigilantly for any sign that the person who is supposed to be caring for me is uncaring, dismissive, scornful or simply inattentive. Some part of me is always ready to slam the door on the relationship at the first glimmer of disappointment.

And I suspect that I’m not alone in this experience.

Agitation

So here are the series of developments which wound up putting  all of this lovely theorizing to a real-world test.

First, there was the process of getting blood drawn for the new tests (for mold and fungal infections) that my doctor had ordered at my last visit. These tests, it turned out, were highly specialized and the doctor wanted them done by a particular lab. After several fruitless visits (fasting, of course) to the lab at my local hospital, and many phone calls, I finally located a doctor’s office here in Missoula who worked with the right lab.

At the same time, I’d been phasing in all of the new medications that had been ordered at that last visit. I phased out Rocephin and Tindamax, and started a new cocktail of Rifampin, Septra, Plaquenil and Lamisil.

A few weeks after I’d phased in all of these new medications, I started to experience a confusing shift in my physiological and psychological state. One night I found myself agitated, unable to sleep. I was up for a lot of the night and I braced myself for a difficult time the next day. But oddly, I didn’t feel tired during the day. Rather, I continued to feel agitated and restless, like my metabolism was revved up.

This was very unusual for me – I usually need lengthy naps in the afternoon – and stranger still was the fact that this state continued over the following days. It wasn’t some momentary anomaly (of which Lyme has created many). It was a distinct shift in state.

The most disturbing aspect of this shift was that it gave rise to an anxiety which was very difficult to regulate. Now, as I’ve described in the past, I’m no stranger to anxiety. I’ve got an anxious temperament and I’ve had doctors try to blame all of my health problems on that anxiety. But, as I’ve also described, I’m on pretty good terms with my anxiety. I’ve worked with it for years and it no longer disrupts my life in any significant way. My anxiety and I understand each other well, and with the help of a great deal of psychotherapy, we’ve learned to coexist.

Which is how I knew that what was happening to me was unusual. This wasn’t the anxiety in myself that I knew so well. As I observed my mind, I saw that the content of my thoughts was no different than usual. I was worried about the same things I always worry about: health, money, relationships. The difference was that I suddenly found myself to be unable to manage that worry. Now it seemed to be driven by a physiological shift that I couldn’t control.

I realized that my mind wasn’t actually anxious, but that my body was mimicking the physiological state of anxiety, which was fooling my mind into behaving anxiously.

Understanding that helped to keep me from getting completely swamped by anxiety. But it still took a lot of energy to keep my head above water.

Then a call from my local doctor confused matters more. I continue to have blood work done every three weeks ago, to check on a number of different baseline levels in order to be certain that none of the meds I’m taking are causing any damage – in particular, liver trouble. Mostly I didn’t hear anything about those tests and I assumed they were all normal. But it turned out that the most recent results showed that one of my thyroid levels had risen distinctly.

What made this particularly strange – aside from the fact that I’d been on a consistent regimen of thyroid medication for years which had kept these levels in a tight range – was that while my subjective experience (agitation, anxiety, a revved-up metabolism) would indicate that I might be hyper thyroid, the test showed that my blood levels were in fact hypothyoid.

Very strange. My doctor didn’t know what to make of it, and she wanted me to talk with my Lyme doctor about it, due to all the possible complications with the medications I was taking.

So I called.

Now I rarely call the doctor in between scheduled appointments. That’s part of my transference reaction toward doctors – anticipating that I won’t be cared for adequately, I try to minimize their perception of me as an overly needy or demanding patient. It’s a bit of subconscious bargaining that corresponds with my attachment history: if you care for me well enough, I promise not to need you too much.

So when I do call, there’s a good reason for it. But this call was, to say the least frustrating. I spoke to an office worker I didn’t know, who in turn communicated my concerns to one of the practitioners, then conveyed their response back to me. (In other words, it was literally a game of telephone.)

          Throughout the call I had the distinct feeling that I wasn’t really making myself understood…that I wasn’t being understood. And that is a significant trigger for me in terms of the transference dynamics that I’ve been describing here. Not being heard puts me in a bind. If I protest too much I worry that I’ll alienate my caregivers and lose the care that I need. If I don’t protest, then the whole interaction becomes a pointless pantomime, in which I’m accepting advice which is not grounded in an accurate understanding of my complaint. I try to thread that needle, but I know that when I’m under stress I err on the side of not advocating for myself enough.

I was looking for something specific in that call. I was seeking to tap into the collective experience of this office in treating tick-borne illness, to be able to put my symptoms into some sort of context. Was this a symptom they saw commonly? Had they seen other patients react to medication like this? Or did it seem to them like an anomaly?

But when I described the agitation that I’d been experiencing they responded that I was experiencing a “flare-up.” Given that what I was describing was a new symptom, this seemed to me an utterly non-sensical term. A flare-up of what?

It felt like a brush off.

That frustrating call – I never felt like they had an accurate grasp of what I was describing – ended with several concrete suggestions. They sold me a supplement with the idiotic name RelaxMax (I’ll save for another day my rant about the conflict of interest involved in doctors’ offices selling supplements to their patients) and asked me to try that for a while. If it didn’t help, they suggested stopping the Rifampin for a few days to see if that was causing the problem.

In spite of my frustration with the call, I was willing to give these suggestions a try. The RelaxMax didn’t affect the agitation in any noticeable way. So I moved on to Plan B and stopped Rifampin. Doing this heightened my Lyme symptoms so much, so abruptly, that I never had time to figure out whether Rifampin was the source of the agitation. After a few days I started it up again, relieved to at least have figure out one thing: Rifampin seems to be a good drug for me right now.

That left me with the agitation, which it seemed to me was something I would just have to live with. At the end of the call to the doctor’s office they told me to call back if these two solutions didn’t help. But given how frustrating that call had been, I wasn’t motivated to go through it all again. I’d just live with it. Which is what I’m continuing to do. Months later, the agitation has calmed down somewhat but not completely. I’m back to my exhausted afternoon naps, but if I’m not careful my ever-day worries can still spin too quickly into panic.

Preparing for the phone consultation

Several weeks after that impromptu call, I had my next regularly-scheduled phone consultation. Ahead of every doctor’s visit and phone follow-up, I prepare a summary of my current condition and symptoms, along with a complete list of the medications and supplements I’m taking. I fax all of this to the doctor’s office a few days before the appointment. (They shouldn’t need a list of medications from me – they should have that – but I send it anyway just to be completely sure that they have the correct information, given how many meds I’m taking and how often they change.) I put a lot of thought and energy into these summaries, in the hope  that they will provide the proper focus for the clinician, that we won’t waste time while he or she gets up to speed about what’s going on with me. We can hit the ground running.

The other reason that I focus so much energy on these summaries is that the appointments themselves always makes me anxious. Why? Once again, it all comes down to transference. I’m acutely aware that for the next fifteen or thirty minutes I’ll be engaged in a relationship in which I am seeking care from another human being. And as a result, all of my attachment anxieties are activated.

I know several things about myself when it comes to medical care. I know that ahead of any interaction with any medical professional I will struggle with fantasies of both perfect care and absolute disappointment. I know that the latter is a stronger fantasy than the former. And knowing this, I do my best to hold both of these notions in check so that I can be as clear-headed and realistic as possible during those interactions, in the hope of being able to accept the care that is actually offered while simultaneously being realistic about the fallibility of my caregivers.

I do my best to stay conscious of all of these dynamics, to remain aware of them without giving in to them. It’s emotionally exhausting, but absolutely necessary if I’m going to express myself clearly and hear clearly what is being said to me during these appointments. (Transference, by the way, is yet another reason why I always record my appointments. What I think was said to me during an appointment, and what I actually hear when I listen back to the recording are sometimes strikingly different.) I think I’ve gotten pretty good at rising above myself, at letting myself be cared for in the face of these unhelpful dynamics.

This month the call was scheduled with the doctor’s assistant, who was the first person who had treated me at the office and with whom I felt I had a decent rapport. There was nothing in particular about her personality, in other words, to trigger my anxiety.

In my summary to her ahead of the call I described my ongoing symptom cycle, which, although possibly incrementally better, was largely unchanged since the previous appointment. I emphasized several issues that I needed to discuss. The first was my elevated TSH level on my last blood tests. Second, I wanted to hear from her about the results of my blood tests for mold. I was mildly annoyed that the office hadn’t communicated the results of those tests, but I set aside that annoyance knowing that I’d have the chance now to discuss them. Finally, I described a brief anomalous period of cognitive clearing which happened shortly after I’d started on Rifampin. For several days my thoughts began to flow again. It was a remarkable experience, which put me in mind of the movie Awakenings. I had ideas about things I wanted to write, and I could see the shape of those projects. I began mapping out ideas in my notebook. It was my brain functioning the way it used to. Then it went away. And losing that clarity was an exquisite sort of torment. It seemed a hopeful sign that it had happened at all, but it was puzzling and maddening that it had proved to be to fleeting. In the end, I simply didn’t know what to make of it.

The Consultation

From the first moments of the call I could feel that something was off. As a therapist, I’ve got a pretty good ability to read another person’s level of emotional regulation…and there was just something out of balance in the assistant’s tone of voice, in the rhythm of her speech.

Sensing this, my anxiety bumped up a notch. As I’ve described, part of me is always on guard against the moment, in which it is revealed that my caregiver is unable to meet my needs. I tried to damp this down. If she’s not at her best, I told myself, I’ll have to work a little harder at this. It’ll be okay.

“So,” she started, “it sounds like the Rifampin did good things for you.”

With that statement, my anxieties began to find some purchase. I’d described the experience starting Rifampin as an anomaly, but she’d taken that as a summary statement. It made me wonder how closely had she actually read what I’d written.

“Well,” I said, “I had a couple of good days there. But I haven’t had any since.”

She tracked through the evolution of my symptoms in more detail. She asked about my sleep. My sleep was okay, I told her, but the agitation that I was feeling during the day was still quite bothersome.

“So your local doctor thinks that it’s about an interaction with the medication?”

“No,” I corrected her, increasingly aggravated at how wrong she was getting things. “That was a concern about the thyroid levels. She also wanted me to talk with you all about that.”

She asked me what specific levels had been tested.

“You should have the results there,” I said. “She faxes them to you.”

I listened as she shuffled papers.

“I don’t see those lab results in your chart here,” she said.

My frustration ratcheted up another notch.

She made a vague comment about the possibility of drug interactions. I grew more direct.

“You need,” I said, “to have those tests results in front of you.”

But she didn’t, and in that moment there was nothing to be done about it. So we moved on.

“You also had mold tests done,” she said.

“Yes,” I said, “and I’m really anxious to hear about those results. You should definitely have those in front of you there.”

More shuffling as she found the papers.

“There are two parts to the testing,” she explained. “The first tests for the presence of mold antibodies. They’re scored on a 0-5 scale and you were reactive to some of them.”

It was hard to focus on the content of her speech because I was so distracted by the process of the conversation. She clearly hadn’t reviewed my chart or my test results before the call. She was figuring things out as she went along.

She moved on to the next part of the test, the Shoemaker Panel, which she described in some detail. Then she said something that rendered all of that explanation irrelevant.

“Unfortunately,” she said, “that part of the test wasn’t run because they didn’t have ripe samples of your blood. So we might have to re-do some of these, she said, to get a more clear picture.”

“Right,” I said. I felt furious at this point, but too off-balance to know what to do with my anger.

She continued. Had this visit been in person she might have seen from the look on my face how distressed I’d become. But over the phone she seemed not to notice.

“So the tests show you are reactive to some of the mold antibodies,” she said. “And fatigue and brain fog are some of the biggest symptoms we see with mold.” She noted that I’d been put on Lamisil, which addresses some of these issues.

“At this point,” she said, “I’d like to put you on a medication called Cholestyramine.”

As she launched into an explanation of what Cholestyramine is and how it’s used as a neuro-toxin binder, I felt my head spinning. I was forced to literally interrupt her, to remind her that she had put me on Cholestyramine at my initial visit, but that the doctor had just taken me off of it at my most recent appointment.

“Whatever you all think I should be on is fine,” I said. “But I just want to make sure that you’re not just moving me back and forth between things without one person knowing what the other is doing.”

She reversed course without acknowledging her error. She moved through a seemingly random set of questions about symptoms and reactions to medications. She asked about oral thrush. She asked about how I’d done when I’d stopped Rocephin. She talked about Bartonella and asked about pain on the bottoms of my feet, night sweats, vivid dreams. She said she wanted to put me on a new supplement, the amusingly-named BLT tincture. She took me off of the anti-fungal (Lamisil) that I’d been taking and she called in a prescription for Sporanox instead.

“Any questions?”

Oh, I had questions. But at this point all I really wanted was to get off of the call.

After I hung up I felt agitated, frustrated and frankly a little scared. The call had been a complete mess. I felt the two sides of my transference competing within one another. Part of me was ready to bolt, to abandon my treatment altogether. Another part of me wanted to minimize my caregiver’s obvious failings. That part of me was ready to bargain. This is lousy care, the logic went, but if I rock the boat I might not get any care at all, so I’d better just go along with it.

As these voices did battle in my head, I did the thing that I know to do when my attachment anxieties get so fiercely activated: I made myself wait. A few hours, I told myself, a few days. Nothing had to get figured out right at this moment. Let it settle out inside me. I’ll give myself time to tease apart old anxieties from the present situation. I didn’t have to do anything right away. I had time to figure it out.

The morning after

The next day, I still felt upset but the intensity had diminished. I went to pick up my new prescription.

My pharmacist, whom I love, leaned over the counter urgently as I approached.

“I didn’t fill your prescription,” she said, “because this drug they want to put you on has a huge interaction with something you’re already taking, your statin.”

She went on to describe the awful things that could have happened if I’d been allowed to take Sporanox and Simvastatin at the same time. Severe kidney damage from the break-down of damaged muscle tissue. Rhabdomyolysis. It’s right there on the drug’s information sheet, plain as day:

Human pharmacokinetic data suggest that SPORANOX® (itraconazole capsules) inhibits the metabolism of atorvastatin, cerivastatin, lovastatin, and simvastatin, which may increase the risk of skeletal muscle toxicity, including rhabdomyolysis. Concomitant administration of SPORANOX® (itraconazole capsules) with HMG CoA-reductase inhibitors, such as lovastatin and simvastatin, is contraindicated.

“I’ve called your doctor,” the pharmacist said, to ask them what they want to do. But I’m certainly not filling this one for you.”

With that, I reached a point of crisis regarding the continuation of my care. I was deeply shaken. This wasn’t just inattentive care, it was dangerous neglect. It confirmed my sense from the day before that the assistant hadn’t done the basic work of reviewing my chart before discussing my care and making treatment recommendations. She’d neglected to do one of the most basic tasks that anyone needs to do when prescribing any medication, which is checking for risky drug interactions.

If my pharmacist hadn’t caught it (and if I didn’t have an exceptional pharmacist it might well have been missed) I would have added another debilitating illness to everything that I’m already struggling with.

I needed to do something. Yet even in the face of this awful error, the idea of changing providers felt overwhelming. I didn’t want to change. I wanted this office to acknowledge it’s errors and make it right. But I needed to figure out whether I could trust these professionals with my care at all. Which meant that I needed to figure out a way to figure that out.

As I described my dilemma to a wise colleague, she gave me some very good advice. Put it in a letter, she said. Lay out what happened. But don’t do all the work for them – ask them to address the issues but don’t tell them exactly how. Give them the chance to rise to the occasion and that will tell you whether they’re able to own up to their mistakes and repair the relationship.

That’s exactly what I did. And through a series of interactions, things have worked out. In fact, they’ve worked out quite well. I feel happy about how I approached the situation and about the letter I wrote, which I ultimately allowed me to navigate between the twin transferential risks that I always carry with me as a result of my attachment history – abandoning all hope of care, and abandoning advocacy for myself.

In my next update I’ll post the text of that letter. I’ll describe the response it generated. And I’ll discuss how I’ve moved forward from this seemingly impossible point.

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Brain Fog

It’s been a long time since I’ve been able to write an update on my treatment for Chronic Lyme Disease. And the reason is simple: brain fog. Over these past few months, since starting treatment with a new doctor, my brain has been so muddy that it’s been hard to think clearly, hard to read and very hard to write. It’s not a new problem, but it’s been distinctly worse lately.

So this might not be the most coherent and finely-honed post I’ve ever written.

As has been the case throughout my illness, I have a hard time knowing what the specific cause of this particular symptom is. Could be that this is simply the continued effects of Lyme. Or – and I prefer to think that this is the reason – it could be that the (many) new drugs that I’m taking are working, they’re killing off the bugs inside me and the deterioration in my cognitive processes is a sort of herxheimer reaction to the die-off.

Either way, it’s bad. As an author and a psychotherapist, I live and work in my mind. When my capacity to think – clearly, quickly, incisively – departs, I’m at a loss. And I don’t feel capable of doing the things that make me feel alive and worthwhile, like I’m contributing something to the world. I’m lost to myself.

The latest victim in this cognitive massacre has been my memory. Although I’ve heard many Lyme patients describe their failing memories, I haven’t experienced it too badly until just recently. The first time I really noticed it was last month I was in New Orleans, where I was doing a presentation on my book at the American Counseling Association annual conference. I went out to dinner with a good friend and as we were talking our dinner arrived. But the problem was, I couldn’t remember having ordered it. Clearly we had, but I had no memory of it.

Since then I’ve had a string of moments like this. Often they come up in conversation with my wife. She’ll start talking about something as if I should understand what she’s talking about, but I quickly realize that I have no idea what she’s referring to. I interrupt her to try to ask for a clarification and she gets this look in her eye and I realize that it’s happened again. She’ll proceed to describe to me the conversation we’d previously had. I don’t remember it.

It’s extremely unnerving.

The cumulative effect of all of these cognitive problems is pernicious. To use an immediate example, I’ve set out to start writing this post innumerable times. I keep giving up. It’s just too hard to think clearly. It’s depressing to watch my thoughts wither away as I try to tease them onward.

I’m motivated to write this now because I’m about to return to my doctor for a three-month follow-up.

We’ll see how this goes.

New Doc

As I described in my previous update, I decided to switch physicians after six months of (mostly alternative) treatment from my local naturopath failed to produce results. She referred me to a Lyme specialist in California who had trained her. And in February, with a mix of anxiety and hope, I flew out for the appointment. I spent an hour and a half with one of the three clinicians in the office (they share the caseload and I’ll be seeing each of them on different visits or phone consultations).

As a clinician myself, I pay a lot of attention to how that initial interview is handled. I’m assessing the clinician’s diagnostic thinking. And I’m also attending to their relational stance toward me as a patient. Am I being seen in a compassionate manner? Am I being listened to, heard and taken seriously? Am I being instructed on what to do or am I being treated as a partner in my treatment?

I was impressed at the tenor and quality of the interview. We discussed the long and confusing course of my symptoms. We looked at the larger trajectory of my life and the underlying issues that could be affecting the success of my treatment (in particular my testicular cancer and ensuing hormonal issues). We looked through my lab results from Igenex and walked through their interpretation. (My naturopath had done this with me previously but this was a more detailed and sophisticated explication – while a bit redundant, it was very important, confirming once again the reality of my diagnosis.)

But at the same time we confirmed the Lyme diagnosis, we did not foreclose the possibility of other co-occurring conditions. That’s good diagnostic practice, and it’s not something that all doctors do well in the rush to pin down an diagnosis and initiate treatment. As I’ve said from the beginning, the art and science of diagnosis are require us to manage our need for closure, to continue throughout the course of treatment to challenge our diagnostic assumptions by periodically introducing and ruling out differential diagnoses.

(That’s why, incidentally, while many people in the Lyme world aren’t happy about this news story about a woman who was inaccurately diagnosed with Lyme Disease, I actually think it’s a very important cautionary tale. It’s tempting, when you live in a world where there the validity of your condition is under constant attack, to reflexively defend anyone who acknowledges the existence of chronic Lyme. But it seems clear to me that accurate diagnosis is just as important as validating the reality of this disease. While Lyme is clearly spreading rapidly and represents a serious public health threat, making the claim that a majority of the population has Lyme isn’t helping matters.)

By the time my appointment was over I felt that I’d been well-heard and respected and I was ready to accept whatever treatment recommendations I was given. I wished that I could have been given a clearer sense of my prognosis and how long the treatment would last. But I knew the basic facts going in. With long-term antibiotic treatment, most people get a significant remission of symptoms. A smaller set of patients improve, but don’t receive a full remission of symptoms. And maybe five percent of people don’t get better at all. The length of treatment is variable. Some people get better after 7-8 months, but a year and a half on antibiotics seems to be common. Some people go significantly longer than that.

So while I wished that I could have come away from the appointment with a more specific set of expectations for my treatment, I understood that no one could really give me an answer to these questions. This lack of knowledge is a frustrating side-effect of the crazy political battle in the medical community around the diagnosis of chronic Lyme. The controversies inhibit effective research, which is essential for developing better understanding of the disease, and better treatments. In battles like these, truth is the first casualty.

After we finished talking, the doctor got out a sheet of paper and started writing. Fifteen different medications and supplements.  It was going to be a big shift in my life, and a big expense. She walked through each of the drugs and supplements, explaining what they did and what they were for. There were two antibiotics – one taken orally, the other of which I’d be giving myself as an intramuscular injection. An anti-protozoa medication called Alinia. Cholestryamine – a cholesterol medication which would be used as a “neuro-toxin binder.” Urosodial to prevent one of the other medications from causing gall stones. High doses of magnesium to combat my joint symptoms. Self-administered injections of B-12. And others.

I would have been anxious about remembering all of that information, but I did something at that appointment that  was extremely helpful to me and that I would recommend that everyone do at any meaningful medical appointment: I brought a hand-held audio recorder to document the conversation. Stressful medical appointments like this put so much demand on the patient to retain information accurately. That’s why I usually try to have another person with me at important appointments. In this case I was on my own. But my recorder served me well. On the flight back home I listened back to the entire interview, making notes and clarifying points that had been confusing to me. It’s a technique that I highly recommend for others going through intensive and complex treatment of this sort.

After the interview was over I met with a nurse in another room and he taught me how to give myself the Rocephin injections that I would be doing four times a week. He mixed the powdered medicine with Lydocaine, filled the syringe and showed me how to administer it to myself (more on all of this in a moment). I was relieved that it didn’t seem to hurt too badly. But then, in the car driving back to my motel, the pain kicked in. This was going to be hard.

New Meds

When I got back home the first thing I did was to start working with my local pharmacist figuring out how to fill all of my prescriptions. She took a look at the list and let out a little gasp. “This is going to cost you,” she said. One drug in particular – Alinia – was through the roof, about $1800 for a month’s supply. The total for everything (after the paltry help that my insurance kicked in) was around $2500 for a month’s worth of medication. I spent several days getting all of the meds. Some of them I couldn’t get through my usual pharmacy. The B-12 injections I had to order from a compounding pharmacy in New York.

As I assembled the new meds, I sat down to map out my daily schedule. “The Grid” is what we used to call this when we did it for our children when we were young, when their schedules became too complex for us to hold in mind. I did it for myself because, especially with my cognitive struggles, I really didn’t trust myself to remember when I was supposed to administer which of my drugs. The med-map looked like this: I took a large fistful of pills and supplements first thing when I woke up. Then two or three hours after that, I took my first packet of Cholestyramine, which has to be taken apart from other medications because it “binds” whatever’s in your gut in order to clear it out of you. Three or four hours after that I took a few additional supplements, along with a massive dose of probiotics (both capsules and liquid). Probiotics are essential when you’re on heavy and sustained antibiotic treatment, because they replace the “good” bacteria in your gut that’s getting killed off by the antibiotics, and in theory stave off candida overgrowth that can result from this. But although I need to get a lot of them into my system, I can’t take them at the same time as the antibiotics or the Cholestyramine…so there are a just a few windows during the day when I try to get as many of them down as I can. Three or four hours later, I take my second dose of Cholestyramine. Then, before bed, I take another large handful of drugs and supplements, and another megadose of probiotics.

In addition, I give myself injections of B-12 three times a week – Monday, Wednesday and Friday. And four days out of the week I give myself an intramuscular injection or the antibiotic Rocephin.

And of course I continue to take the medication I was on before this – thyroid meds, a statin, topical testosterone.

Keeping track of it all is exhausting. I have my grid, of course. And a collection of very large weekly pill boxes. But if I’m going to be away from the house for more than a few hours I have to think carefully about what I need with me. And travelling requires a serious mental effort in order to insure that I have with me what I need.

Injections

Over the past year, I’ve gotten used to giving myself small injections. For months last year I made up daily syringes of Human Growth Hormone. But those injections (like the B-12 shots that I’m now giving myself as well) are child’s play next to the intra-muscular Rocephin shots I have to give myself now. They’re like flu shot writ large. The needle – an inch and a half long) has to get down into the muscle, and the medicine as its injected (and afterwards) really hurts. There are ways to damp down the pain a little, but there’s no escaping it altogether.

The injection schedule is four days on, three days off. I’ve chosen to administer them on Thursday through Sunday, so that I’m dealing with them on days when I’m teaching or seeing clients. The process: 1) assemble the syringe by screwing the needle on 2) take a bottle of Lydocaine and draw up 4.2 ccs into the syringe 3) put the needle into the Rocephin container, inject the lydocaine and then shake up the container for 4-5 minutes until it’s completely dissolved 4) pull down my pants and swab the upper part of one of my butt cheeks with an alcohol wipe, then take a deep breath, push the needle into my butt, then slowly push the plunger until all the medicine is in. (If you’re interested, here’s a Youtube video demonstrating how to administer an IM injection, which was very helpful to me when I first started the shots.)

Psychologically, the hardest part of this process is actually inserting the needle. Frankly, I don’t quite know how I do it. At some point you simply have to will your hand to push the needle in. It happens, somehow, every time, but it seems almost like it happens by magic. When I observe my mind as I do this what I notice is that rather than making a conscious choice to push the needle in, my mind actually seems to turn off for a split second and my hand moves forward automatically. It’s a very strange experience.

It actually helps somewhat that a lot of my body is partially numb due to the Lyme. I often don’t fully feel the needle going in. But injecting the medication does hurt. And it keeps hurting. I give myself the injection before bed so that I can sleep through the worst part of the discomfort. But even so, I’m usually walking around with a sore butt these days.

While the pain is definitely unpleasant, the harder part of doing these injections is emotional. They get me quite depressed. Each of them makes me feel acutely just how sick I am, cuts through the layers of denial I use to move forward in my day-to-day life. Each of them makes me wonder whether I’m going to be doing this for years, or whether I’m ever going to get better. I recognize that these thoughts aren’t helpful and I’m working actively to change how I think about my treatment. But it’s hard.

Progress report

So, is it working?

It’s been three months on the new regime, and I don’t have a clear answer to that question. The reason it’s difficult has to do with the cyclical nature of Lyme symptoms as they relate to the cyclical cycle of herxheimer reactions. My Lyme symptoms seem to be continuing in two-week cycles: two bad weeks followed by two not-so-bad weeks. As I’ve described in the past, figuring out the difference between a bad Lyme episode and a herxheimer reaction has been exceedingly difficult for me. Determining the larger symptomatic trend within these overlapping cycles feels nearly impossible. It’s essentially a statistical question. Given a set of health information (specific symptoms, their frequency and their severity) as it evolves over time, it’s theoretically possible to use mathematical formulas to determine whether or not there’s a meaningful pattern, a trend within that information. Taking the data available at a single point means little or nothing. That’s like trying to assess the magnitude of climate change by looking at the weather report for a single day. But if you’ve gathered enough information over enough time, it ought to be possible to answer a simple question: am I getting better, getting worse, or staying the same?

Of course, even if I had all the information necessary to answer that question, the data itself would be subjective. There’s no objective scale with which to measure my energy levels, my mental clarity, the intensity of my pain. As you can tell, I don’t particularly trust my own capacity to report accurately about my own symptoms, my own progress or lack of it.

Still I try. I do this by focusing on the times when I feel somewhat better. I ask myself whether this “better” is a better better than the last one.

On the whole, I think that things have been getting slightly, incrementally better. But I’m not really sure. Which is why one of my hopes for this upcoming doctor’s visit is that I can get a more objective assessment about all of this.

So what seems better?

  • I haven’t had any episodes of abdominal pain, for maybe two months
  • Joints: although I still have joint issues (see below), the problems with my hands (trigger finger in the morning) are significantly better
  • Energy: when I’m in the better part of my cycle, my energy seems better than it used to be.

And what are my continuing symptoms?

  • Brain fog – waxes and wanes, but still pretty bad, most of the time.
  • Memory –much worse.
  • Fatigue – waxes and wanes in 2-week cycles. When it’s bad I need a lot of sleep, but no matter how much I sleep I still feel tired.
  • Joints – although this is somewhat better (see above) it’s definitely still an issue. My right knee has been hurting pretty consistently for a few months now. Shoulders and elbows sometimes hurt, sometimes don’t. Lately in the mornings the joints in my feet hurt. The issues migrate.
  • Muscle pain – this hasn’t been my most prominent issue lately, but I still feel it intermittently. It tends to be mostly in my upper body, especially my arms.
  • Nerve pain/zaps – been getting lots of these, especially in my feet and toes lately.
  • Fasciculations – these have remained pretty constant. As they have been for the past 2-3 years, they can happen anywhere in my body, although they tend to hang out in one or two areas (my butt, my wrists, around my knees) for a couple of days at a time. They’re not painful but they drive me crazy.
  • Stiff neck  – this has been constant and unchanged for nearly two years now.
  • Numbness/tingling – I still have lots of this. Some spots on my limbs seem like they’re permanently anesthetized; numbness in my hands and feet comes and goes.
  • Buzzing – I still get a lot of that odd buzzing sensation beneath the surface of my skin. It happens all over my body.

Side Effects

I’ve had two phone follow-ups since my initial visit to the new doctor. After the firstcall we left everything as it was. But at the second one we made a few changes, most importantly changing Alinia for Tindimax. The first few weeks on this new medication were particularly hard, definitely the closest thing to a clearly-identifiable herxheimer reaction that I’ve ever had – I was wiped out, in pain and just felt generally sicker. As that reaction eased off, I noticed a bad taste in my mouth. A terrible taste. Like…I don’t know how else to describe it…burnt flesh. My tongue was coated with an unpleasant velvety material, and was discolored. And my teeth seemed to be growing discolored as well.

It was a classic reaction to antibiotics, one had had thus far managed to avoid – a candida overgrowth. I thought I’d been doing a pretty good job balancing out the inevitable effects of taking heavy doses of antibiotics. I was taking huge (and expensive) daily doses of probiotics. I tend to eat a pretty healthy diet most of the time. I eat very little sugar, which yeast feeds on. But I do eat wheat. I’d been relieved through all of this that, unlike so many people with Lyme, I’ve never developed a gluten intolerance. But wheat converts to sugar and feeds yeast, so now I’ve cut it out. I’d been limiting my alcohol intake, but I cut it back to zero. I switched toothpaste and mouthwash brands and got even more aggressive than usual about my oral hygiene. And, after talking with the doctor I started taking Nystatin as yet one more weapon in the fight against candida.

Though I’m well aware that this is a common risk of antibiotic treatment, still it’s been a distressing, and depressing, two-week battle. It’s hard to convey just how globally your experience can be influenced by a bad taste in your mouth. It’s not something that slips out of your consciousness. Psychologically, it keeps interrupting your experience much in the way that pain does.

The distress is magnified by my awareness that my treatment itself is making me sicker. And the depression is heightened by the losses. Throughout the course of this illness I’ve had so many things that give me pleasure and satisfaction stripped away. I find myself clinging to the things that I still have. A glass of good wine is a small comfort. And so is bowl of well-prepared pasta. I’m so reluctant to let these things go. I know but sometimes I feel like throwing a tantrum, throwing myself on the ground and pounding my fists on the floor.

But I’ve done it. A significant change in diet, medication and oral hygiene has mostly beaten back the candida.

Now we’ll see if I can keep it up.

As I write, I’m sitting at the airport, waiting for my flight to California. There are other things I’d hope to talk about in this post, in particular I wanted to write about the struggle I experience to let myself be sick. As I observe myself as I go through this treatment, I’m amazed at the ebb and flow between denial and acceptance of my condition. It’s a fascinating process and I think that understanding it better will help me a great deal to be able to work more productively with the ways in which my mind is making sense of my illness.

If the brain fog doesn’t make it impossible, I’ll try to write more about that soon.

 

Read the next post in the Life with Lyme series here.

 

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Preparing for change

It’s been over half a year since I was diagnosed with Lyme disease. Since that diagnosis, as those who have been following this blog will be aware, I’ve been working with a local naturopath trying to beat back the illness. In this post I’ll be describing how those efforts have been going and how I have come to the decision to make a significant change in my treatment.

First, a quick review.

I started my treatment back in June, even before I’d formally diagnosed. My doctor prescribed 30 days’ worth of Doxycycline presumptively, while we waited for my Western Blot results to come back from the lab.

That, incidentally, is what the CDC says is required to treat Lyme. According to those standards, I should be cured. But obviously that didn’t happen. Those antibiotics, as a friend with Lyme puts it, might as well have been Tic Tacs for all the effect they had on me.

Although antibiotics are the front-line treatment for Lyme – whether it’s caught early or has become chronic – they also come with risks. Using them, you become vulnerable to opportunistic infections. They can weaken your own immune system’s ability to fight illness. And of course there’s the collective problem that the more they are prescribed, the more opportunity organisms have to develop immunity to them, creating a societal vulnerability to emerging illnesses.

My naturopath isn’t entirely opposed to using antibiotics to treat Lyme, but she definitely prefers treatments that bypass those risks. So that’s where we started. In addition to some herbal treatments (like Allicin) she gave me several IV hydrogen peroxide infusions. I hadn’t heard of this form of treatment before – and apparently there is some degree of controversy surrounding it. The way she explained it to me, hydrogen peroxide introduces and oxidative agent into your blood stream that borellia doesn’t recognize as an antagonist, so it’s able to kill the bug before it has a chance to try to defend itself.

I was willing to give it a try. I had several peroxide IVs back in September. They didn’t seem to affect me at all. You might say that I was getting my Tic Tacs intravenously.

So we moved on. First I briefly returned to antibiotics (Amoxicillin this time) which we abandoned after several weeks in favor of the Chinese herbal treatment known as the Zhang protocol. This sounded okay to me, in part because Chinese herbal treatments had helped me in the past, and also because these herbs had been used for centuries in China to treat Syphilis, which like Lyme is a spirochetal disease.

After a month or so on these herbs, it seemed like they might be having an effect: I got a little worse. I wasn’t sure whether it was a response to the treatment or just a normal part of my symptom cycle, but my naturopath was hopeful that I was experiencing a herxheimer reaction – a temporary worsening of symptoms which occurs because of the die-off of the bug. We agreed to give the protocol time to work – three or four months we said, then we’d re-evaluate. During that time I had a few more peroxide IVs as well, in the hope that the combined effect would help me turn the corner on this disease.

Turning Point

In my primordial, Norman Rockwell version of medical care, I’m not the person who has to tell my doctor that his or her treatment isn’t working. In my mind – I know this is a fantasy, but bear with me because it’s a fantasy that gets a lot of us all into a lot of trouble – in my mind my doctor is all-knowing and benevolent. His diagnosis (in this fantasy he’s invariably male) is accurate and his treatment is appropriate. Even if the diagnosis is bleak, even if the treatment isn’t helping, I can relax into his care, knowing that my needs are being met as well as humanly possible. I can let go and feel held and cared for.

In this fantasy, medical care feels a lot like love.

(When I put that fantasy into words, I immediately feel sorry for doctors. All that unmet need being projected upon them, all the time. It’s no wonder that so many of them grow calloused, dismissive and minimizing.)

Up against that fantasy is the reality is that unless I am a fierce advocate for my own diagnosis and treatment, nothing will happen at all. This is true of medical care in general, and it’s especially important with diagnoses of a complex and chronic illness like Lyme, which is controversial to start with and for which treatments vary greatly in their effectiveness.

As a Lyme patient, I find that there is nothing relaxing about my relationship with my medical caregivers. No matter how concerned and caring my doctor seems, I know in my gut that it’s up to me take responsibility for guiding my treatment. I’m constantly monitoring and assessing my symptoms, trying to make the decisions for myself that I wish someone else could make for me. Which is how I knew that it was ultimately up to me to answer the current pressing question: is this treatment working, or not?

An aside about attachment

Perhaps as you read that last passage you recognized that what I’m really talking above is attachment security in adult relationships. As a psychotherapist my theoretical focus is grounded in attachment theory, which is a rich framework for understanding the way in which we come to be able (or unable) to form trusting and flexible relationships with other human beings.

The hallmark of a healthy attachment is a balance between intimacy and autonomy in our relationships, which includes the ability to move fluidly between those two poles. Ideally this is a capacity we gain in infancy from secure parents.

But if our parents struggle on one or the other sides of this equation, we will too. If they struggle with intimacy, we’ll find ourselves anxious when we get too emotionally close to others; If they struggle with autonomy, we’ll wind up anxious about our capacity to live independently without another person to prop us up.

And whatever style we wind up with, our particular attachment-related anxieties will always get activated whenever we find ourselves in care-giving or care-receiving situations. As we are every time we step into a doctor’s office.

This is a larger subject than I can go into here (although I’m tempted to write an entire post on it in the future). For the moment I simply want to point out that the way I approach relationships with medical professionals is informed by my underlying anxieties about relationships in general. In my case, the reflexive assumption (which is a reflection of my own relational history) is that I won’t be able to receive the care I need. That I’m essentially on my own.

What’s important about this is that it can easily flip into its opposite. Beneath the belief that no one will ever give me the care I need lies the fantasy that someone out there somewhere will be able to care for me perfectly.

Both sides of this contradiction are likely to be in play whenever I’m at a medical appointment. In my own anxiety I tend to simultaneously crave understanding for what I’m going through while also trying to minimize just how badly I feel.

Usually I can stay conscious enough of this dynamic to contain any confusing behavior and form a constructive relationship with my doctor. But on a bad day the doctor might be getting a mixed message from me in which I simultaneously demand that they care for me perfectly while also insisting that they can’t possibly do that.

And of course that’s going to meet up with whatever attachment anxieties that the doctor brings to the relationship. Ideally, that doctor will secure enough him or herself to be able to avoid getting tangled up in my projections. But doctors are human too, and they’re subject to the same relational anxieties as the rest of us.

I’m confident that many people with chronic illnesses go through some version of this struggle. Personally, I try hard to stay aware of it so that I can rein it in as much as possible. But I’m acutely aware that these attachment anxieties are going to be especially activated at the point at which I make a decision to see change doctors.

Which is where this is all heading.

Is it working?

So, back to that essential question.

In trying to figure out whether my treatment was working I focused first on my symptom pattern. Prior to starting the Zhang protocol I’d experienced a few months of a pattern that seemed somewhat stable: two bad weeks, followed by two not-so-bad weeks. But in the past three or four months that pattern has evaporated. I still have good days and bad days (often it feels more like good hours and bad hours), but it’s grown harder to predict when each will come.

Making sense of symptom patterns over time is a basic diagnostic skill. As I’m preparing to teach a class in mental health diagnosis this Spring, I’ve been thinking about how crucial this skill is in making an accurate diagnosis of mood disorders like Depression or Bipolar disorder, which are defined by episodes which occur over time. Identifying the larger pattern is essentially a statistical task: when you smooth out the individual spikes and dips, what does the overall pattern look like?

When I took this approach to my Lyme symptoms, what I saw was a continuing gradual decline. If the treatment was working, the dips (which would partially consist of herxheimer reactions) would be more than offset by the improvements. I still wasn’t sure whether my worst episodes were herxheimer reactions or just general Lyme crumminess, but either way, they weren’t resulting in overall improvement over time. The bad times kept feeling a little worse. And new symptoms kept emerging.

Why I’ve stayed with this treatment so far

Over these past months people have asked me – and I’ve asked myself – whether I shouldn’t be going straight to a doctor who would prescribe antibiotics. After all, antibiotics are the primary recommended treatment for Lyme. I asked myself: am I wasting valuable time pursuing these alternative treatments? Am I just giving the Lyme more time to worm its way further into my system?

That has been a crucial but an unanswerable question. People argue passionately on either side of it, but it ultimately seems to me that no one has enough knowledge to make an absolutely clear case either way.

Ultimately my decision has been driven by several factors.

  • I started my treatment with thirty days of antibiotics. Although the reason for their inefficacy is up for grabs, the fact is that I have given them at least a partial shot.
  • As I’ve discussed above, antibiotics come with significant risks. If there were an alternative that worked, it would simply be sensible to try it, to start with the least invasive, least risky alternative.
  • I trust my naturopath. Although it’s not easy to know why we trust the people we do, I believe that it goes back to those attachment dynamics that I was describing earlier. She seemed from the beginning to possess a healthy balance between her capacity to feel concern and care for me, and her understanding of the realistic limits of her own abilities. On the first day I met with her she told me that if she couldn’t get results for me, she’d refer me to the physician she’d trained with. From that statement alone, I knew that I could work with her.
  • Once I’ve started with a treatment, I want to give it enough time to actually work. With the Chinese herbs, that meant sticking with them at least a few months.

And there’s one other thing, which is less rational: I’m afraid of antibiotics. I’m especially afraid of the heavy IV antibiotics that are commonly prescribed in various combinations to treat chronic Lyme.

This fear is directly tied to my personal history. Because when people describe the experience of taking these drugs, it sounds to me like they’re going through chemotherapy. And I remember all too well what it was like to go through radiation treatment when I had testicular cancer in my twenties. I remember the dreadful weeks in which I felt barely alive. That’s what my fear of antibiotics is really about. It reminds me too much of my cancer.

I understand that in order to kill certain bugs, you have to introduce substances into your body that will hurt a lot of other things as well. And yes, I know that antibiotics can and need to be complimented with a regime of probiotics and other supportive supplements. Still, I’m afraid of what such a treatment will mean for my functioning. Because so far, even though I’ve felt awful a lot of the time, I’ve still been able to function reasonably well. I’ve continued to see clients, I’ve been able to teach and to promote my book and to maintain this blog. I’ve been lucky. Although I don’t do any of these things with as much energy as I’d like, I continue to move forward with my life.

Why I’m making a change now

In spite of all of this, I’ve realized that the time has come to make a change.

While I’ve had a general sense over the past month or so that I needed to make a change, the thing that pushed me over that line was the development of a disturbing new symptom. Several weeks I woke up in the night with a strange feeling in the index finger of my right hand. When I bent the finger, I found that not only did it hurt but I couldn’t easily unbend it. Rather than moving fluidly into a straightened position it would snap suddenly back, with a sensation that felt a bit like the finger was breaking.

This seemed completely bizarre to me, but it turns out that it’s a well-known condition called trigger finger. And when I asked other Lyme patients about it, it was clear that this is not at all an uncommon in people with Lyme. It’s associated with Rheumatoid Arthritis, and arthritis is a hallmark symptom of Lyme. I’ve had plenty of joint pain over the past year. While it’s annoying and uncomfortable, it hasn’t impaired me in any major way. But the idea of losing capacity in my hands alarms me tremendously. From being able to type to being able to play piano…the potential losses really scare me.

I hoped that it would be a transient symptom, but it’s stayed with me and it’s getting worse. It mostly comes on during the night, but I’ve started to feel the pain during the day as well. It’s worse in my right hand index finger than anywhere else, but it’s in my other fingers as well, and in both hands.

This development felt like the signal I needed. It confirmed for me that things really were growing worse, that the treatment I was receiving really wasn’t arresting the disease.

I steeled myself before my last appointment with my naturopath, at which I was going to deliver this news. I said it simply: “this isn’t working.” She didn’t bat an eye. She picked up the phone right there and called the clinic in California.

In the several weeks since then, much of my life has been taken up with working out the arrangements for this shift in my treatment – scheduling an appointment, figuring out the care of my sons while I travel to California and figuring out for sure whether this is the direction I should take.

In sorting all of this out I’ve been talking with a number of other people who’ve been living with Chronic Lyme, many of them for much longer than I have. One person said something that was particularly helpful to me in this regard. She said that it seemed like many people with Lyme reach certain points over the course of their illness at which they need to change doctors. Not necessarily because they’re getting inappropriate care, but because not every practitioner knows all there is to know about Lyme. An occasional careful change of doctor, she said, is a sign that a person with Lyme is managing their care well.

I don’t know if others would agree with that sentiment, but it feels profoundly right to me.

A final note: the return of the diagnostic dilemma

So where do things go from here?

Much remains to be seen. My appointment is in early February. I’m assuming, although I could be wrong, that I’ll be put on some combination of antibiotics, possibly IV administered. I am preparing myself for this, trying to push through my anxiety and preparing myself to learn what I need to learn about whatever drugs I’m given. I will coordinate whatever treatment I am prescribed with my doctor here.

If the treatment is as hard on me as I anticipate, I’ll probably have to do some rearranging of my life. I may have to stop seeing clients for a little while. I’m not sure how it will affect my teaching.

But I’m ready to take this the step I know it’s what I need to do. And one of the major reasons I know I need to take this step is that after all this time I am still trying to confirm my diagnosis.

I really hate to say that. But it’s true.

When I finally received the Lyme diagnosis, after two agonizing years of searching, a part of me let go and settled in. I wanted that diagnosis to be definitive. I needed to be able to take a break from the stress of not-knowing what was wrong with me.

This was in spite of the fact that I know better. I know that diagnosis is always an on-going process, and that latching onto a particular diagnosis can blind you to other factors, or other conditions, that might be involved.

My naturopath drove this point home when she made the referral.

“They’ll probably put you on antibiotics,” she said. “And if that doesn’t work for you then we’ll have to consider the possibility that what we’re dealing with isn’t Lyme.”

That statement frankly shocked me. Not Lyme? I hadn’t really let myself consider that as a possibility. Given the controversial nature of chronic Lyme, I would get occasional flickers of doubt. But I just sort of pushed them out of mind. Because I needed to believe that I knew what was wrong.

So in certain ways I now find myself back where I was when I began writing the Being Undiagnosable series. Back to the same set of diagnostic dilemmas that I outlined in that initial post, which all come down to the same question: how do I really know for sure what is wrong with me?

Don’t get me wrong. I still think that Lyme is what I’ve got. It’s the simplest and most logical explanation for the pattern of symptoms I continue to experience.

But I’m also allowing myself to keep the question open. As a diagnostician myself, I know that it’s the right thing to do. As a result my next round of treatment, whatever it is, will be more than simply treatment. It will be diagnostic test which we will use as we continue to try to answer the riddle that my symptoms continue to pose.

I’ll let you know what I discover in the next update.

 

 

Read the next post in the Life with Lyme series here.

 

 

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Borrellia

On 12/8/2010 an article appeared in the Chicago Tribune entitled, Chronic Lyme disease: A dubious diagnosis. The following is my response.

 

According to the Infectious Diseases Society of America, I can’t possibly have Lyme disease.

That doesn’t change the fact that in the Fall of 2008 my health went to hell. It started with weakness. I was a marathon runner, but suddenly it became difficult to bike up the small hill where I picked up my sons from school. Then I started having muscle twitches and spasms, all over my body, all of the time. Parts of my body started going numb. Other parts were intermittently tingly, or would have sudden shooting pains, like electric shocks running through my muscles. I became heavily fatigued so that most afternoons I needed to spend several hours napping. It became harder to think clearly. I lost thirty pounds in a couple of months, for no clear reason. One winter morning I spent a half hour shoveling snow – something I ordinarily enjoy – when I suddenly went dramatically weak, pale, shaky. It took me several hours to recover.

I made an urgent appointment with my doctor. He was certain it was a cardiovascular episode. I was at the cardiologist’s office the next day, doing a stress echocardiogram. Turned out my heart was in great shape. That wasn’t the problem.

What was the problem? I had no idea. And neither did any of the doctors that I saw over the next two years. Not the first neurologist, not the oncologist, not the gastroenterologist, not the rheumatologist, not the allergist. And not the second neurologist, at the Mayo Clinic.

Mayo was able to tell me that I didn’t have ALS, which was a great relief since that’s what my symptoms most closely resembled. Through doctor visits and many, many tests I was also able to rule out cancer, MS, Parkinson’s, Celiac Disease, Polymyositis, and many other more obscure conditions. Whatever was wrong with me looked at least a little like all of those things, but was clearly something different. Something no one seemed to be able to identify.

Somewhere along the line I even had a test for Lyme disease, the ELISA screening test, which came back negative. Made sense to me at the time. Lyme was the last thing I suspected. For one thing I live in Montana, where popular wisdom has it that Lyme does not exist. For another thing, I didn’t have that classic bullseye rash that you’re supposed to get.

I didn’t know at the time that the ELISA produces many false negatives. And I didn’t know that you can get Lyme without having the classic rash pattern. As a result, I didn’t give much thought to the rash that I actually did have, a month or two before my symptoms started.

In the meantime, my entire life was transformed. I had to stop running and doing any other demanding exercise. Work wore me out so I did as little of it as possible. I was consumed with fear, trying to figure out what the hell was going on with me. And I spent a whole lot of money trying to get an answer.

In the summer of 2010, on the recommendation of a friend, I went to my doctor and asked for a more sophisticated (and much more expensive) test for Lyme – the Western Blot.

According to mainstream medical practices, my doctor had no business ordering that test for me. According to the CDC, if a test comes out negative on the ELISA, you don’t have Lyme. Period.

 

Funny thing though…the new test came back positive. For Borrelia burgdorferi, the spirochete that causes Lyme disease. And the test results were unequivocal. They met the CDC standards for reporting Lyme.

Finally, I had a diagnosis. Finally I could start treating the symptoms that had already stolen so much of my life away.

Except for one thing.

I couldn’t, according to the IDSA, actually have Lyme disease.

Here’s why. My doctor (who was skeptical that I could possibly have Lyme) was willing to prescribe me a month’s worth of antibiotics – the IDSA recommended treatment for the disease. I filled the prescription and took the medication faithfully. The result: nothing. I might as well have been taking Tic Tacs. My symptoms continued exactly as they had before.

By the logic of the IDSA, if symptoms corresponding with Lyme don’t respond to the recommended treatment, then the disease isn’t Lyme.

Stop for a moment to consider that argument. Imagine the same logic being applied to any other disease. Say, to treatment for cancer. Try to imagine a conversation between a breast cancer patient and her oncologist going like this:

“I’m sorry Ms. Jones., but since you haven’t responded to the chemotherapy I can only conclude that you don’t actually have cancer. It has to be something else.”

And the next line in the conversation would almost inevitably be:

“I suspect that there might be psychological issues involved, so I’m giving you a referral to a therapist.”

The absurdity is self-evident. But this is exactly what Lyme patients are being told every day.

 

Mis-diagnosis goes both ways.

The Chicago Tribune article conveys the impression that hundreds or even thousands of people are being told that they have Lyme disease when they don’t, that Lyme is being massively over-diagnosed by loony-tune doctors, who then murder their patients by giving them dangerous treatments that they don’t need.

It’s awfully hard to square this accusation with experience of so many people with Lyme, who have spent years going from doctor to doctor, just like I did, who are themselves being mis-diagnosed with everything from arthritis to ALS. Or who are being told that there is nothing wrong with them at all, that their pain and fatigue and cognitive impairments are all in their head.

Non-diagnosis can be just as harmful as a mis-diagnosis.

The truth is that nothing in medicine is as clear as the way IDSA defines Lyme disease. Every illness in the world has variations and subtleties. Every disease manifests itself a little differently in every human being. And every treatment for every illness is variable in its effectiveness.

Except, according to the IDSA, for Lyme.

 

So, according to the Infectious Diseases Society of America, there’s no way that I can have Lyme disease.

But that doesn’t change the fact that my life has been turned upside down by Lyme. That I continue to experience the same set of ever-shifting symptoms which dramatically limit my life and leave me feel like I’m about to turn 80 rather than 50.

And by comparison with many other people with Lyme, I’ve got it pretty easy. I have some pretty decent days – as long as I get a lot of sleep and don’t work too hard, as long as I don’t try to go running or skiing or to rake leaves or shovel snow or do anything else which will inevitably trigger a reaction.

I’m lucky enough now to have found a doctor who believes that I have Lyme and who is willing to treat it. The treatments haven’t helped much yet, but that’s not surprising. Because the very controversies which the Chicago Tribune describes have paralyzed research into effective Lyme treatment.

The great paradox here is that if we want our doctors to become more adept at diagnosing and treating chronic Lyme, then we have to investigate the experience of those who us who actually have it. If we continue to marginalize patients then it will never be possible to do the research which can truly determine what is and is not an appropriate treatment for the disease.

To put it bluntly: those practitioners who don’t believe in the existence of chronic Lyme are responsible for creating the very problem they are complaining about. Because there’s no way to identify safe diagnostic procedures and treatments without first acknowledging the existence of the disease.

I don’t know of any other disease in which patients are blamed for the failure of their treatment.

And I can’t imagine any other illness about which the argument would be made that ineffective treatment means that the disease doesn’t exist.


Read Other “My Lyme Disease is not the IDSA Lyme Disease” stories:

Ashley

Eric

Molly

Candice

Kim

Alix


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I’m honored to be the featured artist in the Lymenaide Holiday Bazaar. Please consider supporting those with Lyme by visiting the Bazaar. And while you’re there, enter for a chance to win a signed copy of The Next Ten Minutes. The details are below.

Featured Artist

Monday, November 15th
Featured Artist: Andrew Peterson



Lymenaide is proud to introduce this season’s first Holiday Bazaar Featured Artist: Andrew Peterson.
Andrew is a relatively newly diagnosed Lyme patient, but is not stranger to physical pain and hardship. He suffered for two years, saw numerous doctors, and even acquired a tentative diagnosis of ALS before he was diagnosed with late stage Lyme disease.
I was diagnosed with Lyme in July of this year, after spending two years going from doctor to doctor in search of a diagnosis for all my crazy symptoms. I even wound up at the Mayo Clinic because for awhile it seemed very possible that I had ALS. The specialists all kept telling me that there was nothing wrong with me, even as my symptoms worsened. Like so many other people, I came out negative on the ELISA test and this, in conjunction with the fact that I live in Montana (where Lyme supposedly doesn’t exist) kept any of my doctors from worrying about Lyme. I finally got the Lyme diagnosis when I insisted on getting a Western Blot, which came back positive for borellia. (I’ve written extensively about the search for a diagnosis on my blog, in a series called “Being Undiagnosable.” It’s an experience I know that many Lymies will relate to.) So as best I can figure, I’ve had Lyme for almost two and a half years.”
Yet even through the hardship and debilitation that Andrew has faced, he has remained incredibly positive and admirably motivated. Instead of letting the disease destroy everything that he is and was, he used it as fuel to continue on with his passion and shape who he is today.
As so many people who face my life with Lyme come to realize, it’s a disease which robs you of the ability to work as hard or as well as you used to be able. I came to an important realization during the course of the past few years, which was that while I may not be able to get as much work done as I used to, I can still move my life forward. I can get a little bit done every day, and that will add up. Looking back on it, I can’t believe that I was able to write and publish a book during this difficult time. But the way I did it was by staying focused on what it was possible for me to do at any given moment. By resting when I needed to rest and working when I was able. The book itself has become a symbol to me that even though Lyme has dramatically altered my life, it does not have complete control.

The other thing that has been very exciting to me is that the realization, as The Next Ten Minutes neared its publication date, that I had the opportunity not just to promote my book, but to use that promotion to advocate for greater Lyme awareness. In interviews and discussions about the book, I have the chance to talk about my experience with Lyme and put a human face to the disease.”

“The Next Ten Minutes” Book Giveaway


What better way to kick off Lymenaide’s series of Holiday Bazaar Featured Artist Giveaways than with such an inspiring book, by an incredible author and fellow lyme survivor.

“The Next Ten Minutes contains a set of simple yet powerful exercises which will transform your state of mind by directing your full awareness to the habits and routines of your everyday life. The seeds of change are embedded within the most ordinary routines of daily life. These exercises will help you see how, when you bring your full attention to these routines, daily life can become an act of meditation.”



To enter to win a signed copy of “The Next Ten Minutes”, please do the following:


1. Comment on “The Next Ten Minutes” bazaar booth, which can be found here. In your comment, please either write an encouraging, motivating, or inspiring message to late stage Lyme battlers, or state how you’ve used a talent or passion of your own to cope with your illness like Andrew Peterson has.

2. Either share the link to this featured artist write-up on your blog, twitter account or facebook page, or make a purchase from one of the booths at the bazaar. In your comment on “The Next Ten Minutes” bazaar booth, please either include the link to where you’ve shared, or a link to the booth that you have purchased from.

3. Include your email address at the end of your comment, so we can contact you if you so happen to win.

Your comment will enter you in a drawing that will take place this Friday, November 20th. The winner will be announced on Lymenaide’s facebook page and will receive an email notification. Andrew Peterson will personally mail the winner a signed copy of his book.

“I believe deeply that this disease does not have to stop us in our tracks. Each of the booths in the Lymenaide holiday bazaar represents a triumph over Lyme. Sometimes it seems like we’re only capable of taking the tiniest steps forward…but that is still progress. We can all find ways to move forward with hope and compassion, for ourselves and for everyone else who suffers from Lyme.” – Andrew Peterson



Enter on Andrew’s booth- http://bit.ly/9i2DSR
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Part 8: Commencement

[In part seven of this series I described the point at which I surrendered any hope of ever obtaining a definitive diagnosis for my symptoms.]


The end

The conclusion to this story is a story unto itself.

It is about finally receiving a diagnosis…although perhaps it would more accurate to describe it as entering into a dance with a diagnostic possibility. Because after more than two years of going to doctors and getting no answers, something shifted. I was about to receive not just one diagnosis, but three.

It’s going to be helpful, I think, to remember the list of diagnostic dilemmas that I described in the first post in this series. In particular, dilemma number five.

How do you determine whether you are dealing with a single syndrome as it evolves over time, or whether are you looking at two or more co-occuring conditions?

A single diagnosis brings focus to your efforts to care for yourself and to heal. Even if it’s a terrible diagnosis. Even if it’s terminal. Receiving multiple simultaneous diagnoses – “co-morbidity” is the medical term – is rather like trying to dance coherently with three or four partners at once. It is an answer from which emerges many more questions.

The culmination of this series was meant to be, to paraphrase the way a friend recently put it, that to be human is in some sense to be undiagnosable. The comforting assumption that everything about our lives can be understood is a helpful illusion that protects us from our anxiety about all the things that we can never fully understand.

The message of this series was to be: living authentically means living with an open awareness of mystery.

Once I had a diagnosis, didn’t that sort of muddy that message?

If receiving a diagnosis removed the all the mysteries, that might be true. But in fact, as I’ll describe, receiving a diagnosis can be almost as confusing as living without one.

The fantasy is that a diagnosis will be an explanation.

But mysteries will remain. Mysteries will always remain.

And so the message is the same.

As I move forward through a new set of struggles, the question is no longer what it means to live without a diagnosis. I’m not entirely sure what that new question will be. I will keep writing about it in this space, but it won’t be part of this series. This post will mark, as they say at high school graduations ceremonies, both the end of one period of my life, and the beginning of something new.

Persist

What made the difference?

It’s a question I always ask my clients when they’ve finally succeeded at making a difficult change in their lives: what did you do differently that made a difference?

The point of the question is twofold. First, it’s meant to anchor positive change by putting a narrative to the process which created it. Second, it’s an inoculation. When we (inevitably) relapse into our old ways, it’s easier to recover if we can remember what it was that helped us get out the first time.

In my case, the answer to that question is unrevealing. I came upon a diagnosis by doing exactly the same things I had been doing all along: going to doctors and insisting on tests. Nothing really changed.

You could, I suppose, argue that it was a matter of persistence. And I find myself tempted to make that into the message here. Keep trying. Never give up. But I’m skeptical of such sentiment. I don’t believe that persistence at a goal is necessarily correlated with achieving that goal.

At any rate, it wasn’t my persistence that led to a diagnosis. I was done with it all. I’d given up hope.

And my doctor had essentially given up as well. In my conversations with him over the past year he began to acknowledge the limits of allopathic medicine when it comes to figuring out what was wrong in certain complex cases.

“There’s a small set of people,” he said, “that we just can’t figure out. And the truth is, we don’t know everything. Sometimes the alternative docs and non-western practitioners can help where we can’t.”

The first time he said it, I felt annoyed. It seemed like he was trying to shake loose of me and my problems. But when he repeated it last June, it actually sounded right to me. I was ready to let go of traditional medicine. I was looking forward to a trip to Seattle, because I was planning to go back to get more of the Chinese herbs that had helped the summer before. I was considering asking the Hmong healer for more help. I had officially surrendered.

So what exactly did “persistence” have to do with it? If anything, it was my wife’s persistence that finally led to an answer. It was at her urging that I got a test for babesiosis, based on an energetic diagnosis from a healer I had never met.

My doctor pondered that request for a long time. He clearly didn’t believe that I had babesiosis. But he was willing to honor the request.

“If we’re going to do this,” he said, “I want to do it right.” He knew that I’d already had negative results on the standard screening test for Lyme (about which more in a moment), a test which doesn’t look for co-infections to Lyme. He said that he wanted me to get tested at a laboratory that specialized in this. It was, he said, a laboratory that the alternative medicine doctors used. He communicated a certain degree of personal doubt as to the validity of the lab’s work, but he understood what I wanted and he tried to give it to me.

The lab’s name was Igenex. The tests, a Western Blot for Lyme Disease, and a series of other tests for common Lyme co-infections, cost $1,100, upfront and out of pocket. I bit the bullet and paid for it. My doctor also ordered another huge round of blood tests. It was, he said, the largest number of blood tests he’d ever ordered for someone at a single time.

I asked him for something else at that visit. At my wife’s suggestion, I said I wanted a trial of antibiotics. We’d been thinking about this and we realized that if I did have a tick-borne illness, then antibiotics would be the treatment. And if what I had wasn’t tick-borne, we thought, then maybe whatever I did have would respond to antibiotics. We were fishing, but at that point the risks of taking a month’s worth of antibiotics seemed small in comparison to the hope that they might help.

He agreed to prescribe 30 days of Doxycycline – a prescription which, I was soon to understand, came with a certain degree of professional risk.

I went on my way. I had my blood drawn and I started taking the antibiotics. I wasn’t expecting anything to come of it. It would be awhile before we got all the test results. I took my boys to Seattle. I went back to the Chinese pharmacy, where, to my amazement, the doctor there was able to look up his records from my visit the year before. He felt my pulses, asked some questions and wrote out a new prescription. The previous prescription had a lot of bark in it. This one had more leaves. He also sold me a very expensive medicine that came in a red and gold metal tin. It was a small ball that looked a little like a tiny chocolate truffle. But tasted like tar. I was to take half of it that night, half the next night. Then I was to wait a week and take another.

That night I let it dissolve in my mouth. It was like swallowing turpentine.

I made my way through the trial of antibiotics. Nothing changed. That seemed to prove that whatever I had wasn’t tick-borne.

But when we got back from Seattle a lab result sheet from my doctor was waiting in the mail.

It said simply: “Positive for Lyme. Please call.”

Lyme

I stared at that paper for a long, long time. Internally I found myself struggling between disbelief, hope and fear. I knew next to nothing about Lyme at that point. Because I’d previously tested negative I hadn’t researched it at all. What I’d knew, or assumed, was that Lyme was a primarily Northeastern phenomenon. Aside from a winter on Cape Cod eighteen years ago, I hadn’t spent time in any of the areas that were endemic for Lyme. It didn’t make sense that I’d contract it in Montana. In fact, people I knew said that Lyme didn’t exist in Montana. I looked up the CDC statistics on Lyme Disease by state. Montana hadn’t had a single case until 2006, when they’d recorded one. In 2007 there were four. Six in 2008 and three in 2009.

If my diagnosis was accurate, it would apparently make me case number fifteen.

When I met with the doctor he expressed his skepticism about the results of the test he had ordered.

“I’m not sure what to tell you,” he said. “According to this lab you have Lyme, but you based on the CDC criteria it’s not definitive.”

I didn’t know it yet, but I had just stumbled into one of the craziest medical controversies in recent years. The definition of the disease, the process for diagnosing it and the standard of practice for treating it are all matters of fierce debate between different groups of physicians.

And the most fiercely contested aspect of all is the existence of Chronic Lyme Disease.

If Lyme disease is discovered and treated immediately, it’s a pretty curable condition. In many cases early diagnosis is made easier by the appearance of a signature “bullseye” rash at the site of a tick bite. If you live in an endemic area and you get that rash, your doctor will give you a month’s worth of antibiotics and you should recover nicely.

The problem is that not everyone gets that rash. Some argue that less than half of those who are infected get it. And an even bigger problem is that the same standard of treatment doesn’t seem to apply to those whose infection doesn’t get treated for months or years after the bite.

I am a case in point. At the time of receiving the diagnosis I was just about finished with a month-long regimen of Doxycycline, which might as well have been sugar pills for all the effect that they had on me.

The bug that causes Lyme is called a spirochete. It’s the same type of organism that causes Syphilis. Once the spirochete that causes Lyme has established a foothold in your bloodstream, it’s extremely devious. It can burrow into your cells to hide from the antigens which fight it. It changes the nature of the proteins on its surface in order to avoid detection. It even seems to be able to encase itself in a cyst in order to evade antibiotics, then to re-emerge once they’re gone. Over time, it can find its way into all of the organs of the body. In particular, it can invade the nervous system, giving rise to a host of neurologic symptoms like fasciculations, parasthesias (numbness, buzzing and tingling sensations), neck and other nerve pain, and cognitive fog. This set of symptoms is common enough that it has its own name: Neurological Lyme.

As it happens, we have a good friend here in Missoula who is a biochemist, whose principal field of study is the spirochete which causes Lyme Disease, called borrelia burdorferi.

When I told this friend about my diagnosis, he expressed skepticism. In his view, it wasn’t possible that I had contracted Lyme Disease here in Montana. The tick that spreads it, he said, doesn’t exist here.

But there had been a strange series of cases here which strongly resembled Lyme, down to the bullseye rash following a tick bite.

“We’ve told people, ‘We don’t know what you have, but we know what you don’t have, and that’s Lyme disease,’ ” state epidemiologist Todd Damrow has said of these cases.

So is this what it was going to come down to? I was finally going to get a diagnosis, but no one was going to believe that it was real?

I wasn’t sure what to think. All I knew for sure was that my test was positive, and that the diagnosis made sense in relation to my symptoms. If I had Lyme, I’d probably had it for at least two years. Which meant that if I had Lyme I probably had Chronic Lyme, especially since a round of antibiotics hadn’t touched it. But whether or not I had Chronic Lyme depended on which physicians you were listening to.

There’s no question that people whose Lyme Disease goes undetected and untreated for a long time struggle with evolving and debilitating symptoms. And I want to say that no one would argue that such people aren’t sick. But that’s not not entirely true. One common explanation that mainstream physicians give for those who are suffering from chronic Lyme is that their symptoms are psychiatric in nature. In other words, they’re not sick at all. They just think they are.

Remember diagnostic dilemma number two: how do you distinguish between psychological and physical causes of an illness?

It’s a complex issue, because people who have been sick with a chronic illness do experience cognitive decline. Their brains are fogged. They’re cranky, and they’re angry. As I have described previously, the longer you live in this condition, the more you start to look…well, crazy.

There’s another debate as well. Mainstream physicians and researchers believe that thirty days on antibiotics cures Lyme. If you accept this premise, and you also acknowledge that someone who has been previously diagnosed with Lyme is still sick…then how do you explain their illness? The argument they make is that in these patients the Lyme has triggered another, as yet unidentified autoimmune disorder. They don’t have Lyme, they have an “unidentified Lyme-induced disorder.”

These physicians, backed by the CDC, are strongly against the use of long-term antibiotics which most “Lyme literate” doctors (LLMDs) see as the only way to fully cure someone of the disease. In fact, doctors who prescribe long-term antibiotics are at risk of receiving severe professional censure.

All of this led me to be unsure about my own diagnosis. Could it be a false positive?

I felt like I’d wandered into an Alice in Wonderland riddle: When is a diagnosis not a diagnosis?

When it’s Lyme Disease.

From testing to treatment

Diagnostic testing for Lyme is a big part of the problem. The CDC standard of practice for diagnosing Lyme Disease is to give a screening test, an “enzyme-linked immunosorbant serum assay” or ELISA test. If a patient comes out positive on that test, then a more sophisticated test, the Western Blot is used to confirm the diagnosis. The problem is that the ELISA test (that’s the one that had come out negative for me before) is notoriously inaccurate, giving both false positive and false negatives. Some studies have shown it to be accurate less than fifty percent of the time.

And if it comes out negative, generally you’re stuck.

The Western Blot is a much more sophisticated and complex test. It separates the different antibodies that your body produces in response to specific proteins on the spirochete, which are separated into “bands” according to weight. The test is positive or negative for Lyme depending on how many of these individual bands are positive.

But there are many controversies about this test as well. For one thing, the strict CDC standard for a positive Lyme test requires a much higher standard than many LLMDs believe is reasonable.

This is further complicated by the fact that borrelia burgdorferi is inconsistently visible to even the best tests available. There are times in its life cycle when it is undetectable. Long-term patients with Lyme not uncommonly have a series of tests on which they are sometimes negative, sometimes positive, with varying degrees of confirmation.

Regardless of all of this, my test was clearly positive. When I learned how to read the results, I realized that my doctor had actually been wrong. My results were unequivocally positive even by CDC standards.

So the diagnosis stood. I really did have Lyme Disease.

I began educating myself about the controversies surrounding diagnosis and testing and treatment, and especially about the experience of those who had been suffering from Lyme for extended periods of time. I read Cure Unknown, an exceptional book on the subject by Pamela Weintraub, who is both a journalist covering scientific issues and a victim of Lyme Disease herself.

I began mapping my symptoms over the past two years to the symptoms for Lyme Disease. They include:

  • Neck pain and stiffness
  • Backache, back pain, sciatica
  • Muscle fasciculations
  • Muscle pains or cramps (which “migrate” through the body)
  • Burning, shooting or stabbing pain
  • Extreme fatigue/malaise/lethargy
  • Numbness and tingling
  • Lightheadedness
  • Brain fog
  • Confusion, difficulty in thinking
  • Difficulty with concentration or reading
  • Loss of sex drive,
  • Sexual dysfunction
  • Taste abnormalities
  • Unexplained weight gain or loss

Check. Check. Check. It added up. Lyme seemed to provide an explanation for all of the symptoms I’d been experiencing. Possibly even including the rash.  As I described above, the earliest symptom of Lyme is often the “bullseye” rash. I thought back to that rash I had in the summer of 2008. I don’t believe it had that the classic characteristics. But it was strange. And I would give anything now to have a photograph of it.

So there was an answer. But it opened up new questions. If I had Lyme, when did I contract it? And where? And which of my symptoms did it account for?

Because of course I’d been having hormonal problems and sciatic pain even before the rash. They would seem to be unrelated to the Lyme. But for that matter, I didn’t know that the rash itself was related to Lyme. Was it possible that I contracted Lyme years ago but only started showing symptoms in the past two to three years? And what did it mean that I had experienced no effect after a month of antibiotics? According to the CDC, I should cured.

I doubt that any of these questions are ultimately answerable. And they were about to be complicated by several new discoveries.

In the meantime, I had to figure out how to proceed with treatment. My doctor, to his great credit, acknowledged his uncertainty about the whole matter and offered me several options. I could work with him and he would do the best he could. Or I could try to find another MD who had more experience with Lyme. Or (and this was an extraordinary thing for an allopathic physician to say), I could seek out a naturopath to work with.

Although I have been wary of naturopaths in the past, I chose the latter option. There was a naturopath in Missoula who had specific training in Lyme from the International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society (ILADS). I called her up and scheduled and appointment.

Heavy metal

But there was one more test to do first. On that exhaustive round of blood tests, the arsenic level in my blood was a little high. That was odd. To verify or disconfirm this result, I needed to do a 24-hour urine draw, to test specifically for arsenic. A week or so later I got a call from my doctor. I was in fact positive for arsenic. The levels in my urine should have been below 50 micrograms. Mine was 117.

Now this really was starting to sound like a House episode. A truly bizarre finding that made no sense. Did it have any relation to the Lyme diagnosis? That seemed unlikely. But how could I tell?

It was all the more confusing because symptoms of arsenic poisoning – neurological effects, sexual dysfunction, metallic taste – overlapped with so many of my symptoms.

It’s well-known that comparatively high amounts of arsenic are socked away in Montana’s rivers and soil, the aftermath of years of less-than-safe mining practices. But I hadn’t done anything in particular that would have created this level of exposure to it. I didn’t work in an industry where exposure was a risk. We were on city water, which was tested regularly.

It just didn’t make sense.

People started teasing me that my wife must be poisoning me.

But then I remembered those Chinese herbs. Especially that tar ball. I took that medicine on faith. I really had no idea what was in it. Could that tar ball have contained arsenic?

It seemed possible.

Full Circle

When this all started, before my symptoms were alarming (when they were merely distressing), I understood that something was off with my hormones. As I described in the first post in this series, the awareness that something was wrong began with a loss of sexual drive and functioning. I treated my testosterone and thyroid and got their levels to where they should be. But it changed very little. And that had remained a mystery to me over these two years. If my levels were right, why didn’t I feel better?

When I look at my hormone problems in relation to my Lyme diagnosis, there were several possible relationships. One was that my hormone problems predated Lyme and had nothing to do with it except that they made it harder for my body to fight off the spirochete. Another was that Lyme predated and was the source of the hormonal problems.

Or perhaps there was some way in which both of these possibilities could be true.

It’s a question that is as important as it is unanswerable.

Back to diagnostic dilemma number one: when does an illness begin?

In fact, my hormonal issues could date back to my testicular cancer 25 years before. Or even earlier. I’m not convinced that these issues haven’t been a lifelong problem for me.

Whatever the case, when I met with the naturopath it was clear that in addition to the Lyme and the heavy metal exposure, she was going to look aggressively at my hormones. She ordered a six-hour urine draw for a comprehensive endocrine panel. Another $400, up front.

“I’m going to include human growth hormone in this,” she said. “I don’t always, and it’s more expensive, but in your case I think it’s worth checking.”

She started me on a series of anti-microbial medications and IV treatments to address the Lyme. None of it seemed to affect me at all. I still felt, in cyclically varying degrees, like shit.

The hormone tests came back. Or most of them did. The human growth hormone results were delayed. The naturopath read them the way a psychic might read tea leaves. My estrogen levels were a little high. My adrenals looked fine. My testosterone, which I was already supplementing, seemed good. So did my thyroid levels, also supplemented.

What did all that mean?

The endocrine system is like a set of interlocking homeostatic mechanisms. You have to think dialectically to make sense of it. An elevation in one level corresponds with a deficiency in another, in a set of complex relationships. We tried a series of changes. A new thyroid formula. Changing the application method on my testosterone cream. Adrenal support. Pregnenelon. Progesterone.

None of it seemed to change anything.

Then the rest of my test came back. It turned out that the reason the human growth hormone results had been delayed was that when they’d run it the first time they hadn’t found any in me. That was odd enough that they ran the test a second time to make sure it wasn’t an error.

Again, nothing.

It turned out that I had a serious HGH deficiency.

“It doesn’t mean your body isn’t making any,” the naturopath said. “but it’s making so little that by the time it gets to your urine there’s none left.”

It was, she said, a very important finding. She thought it might be the key to everything.

“Your immune system is so depressed that it can’t even muster a response to the Lyme.”

She wanted to get my hormones in balance before she continued trying to treat the Lyme. This made me a little uneasy. But, she said, if we don’t do that she would wind up treating a hormone deficiency “as if” it were Lyme.

I started researching human growth hormone, which was difficult to do given the performance-enhancement stories and anti-aging websites that drowned out everything else in the search results. I learned that the main cause of HGH deficiency in adults is a benign pituitary tumor, called an adenoma. Did I have one? And if so, what did that mean?

Another MRI is in my future to check that out.

The naturopath said the goal of her treatment was going to be to get my own body to start creating adequate HGH again. But my reading was telling me that this might not be too likely.

The treatment for human growth hormone deficiency is pretty straightforward: you give yourself daily injections of a supplement. It’s expensive – about $500 a month – and of course my catastrophic health insurance wouldn’t cover any of it. But I had to try.

You can’t help but feel, when you start giving yourself injections, that you’ve crossed a certain line. I know that this is a normal thing for diabetics, but as I started to give myself my nightly dose of HGH, the main images in my mind were not diabetics but junkies.

Four or five days after I started the injections, I began to feel a difference. It didn’t feel like a change to what I have now started differentiating as my “Lyme symptoms.” It was something else. The biggest change was in my mood. This was the best anti-depressant I’d ever taken. I’d tried numerous anti-depressants in various doses and combinations over the years, and none of them had made a dramatic difference. But with the HGH it was like a cloud was lifting. I felt lighter and more connected with those around me. I felt more hopeful. I felt like part of the world again.

It didn’t help too much with the cognitive fog, but it did seem to give me a bit of an energy boost. And there was this global physical change that is very hard to describe. I feel more fluidity in my movement. It is as if my entire body has been lubricated.

As I write these words, I’ve been on the HGH for about three weeks. And last week when I met with my naturopath I all but begged her not to take me off of this. Not that she was about to, but now that I’ve found something that has started to make me feel better, I’m desperate to hold onto it.

Unanswered questions

I wish that I could let this story settle into an easy ending.

But I’d be lying if I told you that I feel completely comfortable with this cluster of diagnoses. Diagnosis, I have come to understand, is largely a matter of belief.

Here’s what I believe at this moment.

I believe that I have a fairly long-standing and untreated case of Lyme Disease.

I’m fairly certain that my elevated arsenic level was a red herring, an aberration created by the Chinese herbs. I’m hopeful that when I re-test those levels, they’ll be normal. If they’re not, I have no idea what I’ll do.

And I believe that my endocrine system has been severely depleted, probably for a very long time, perhaps even for my entire life. I trust that supplementing with HGH will help everything get back into the balance, although I’m certain that there will be further fine-tuning to do as well, especially with testosterone. Because although my levels seem right, I still feel depleted. And my libido is still on the lam.

Am I convinced that I don’t have ALS?

Absolutely.

Am I fully confident that I don’t have MS?

No.

Do I trust that a recurrence of cancer has been completely ruled out?

Not at all.

How would I describe my health at this moment?

Although the HGH is helping, I still feel fragile. The Lyme symptoms are all still present, in varying degrees. My whole body often hurts – that “cellular” pain that I’ve described previously. I can get easily fatigued. My thinking still feels awfully slow. The fasciculations aren’t particularly intense lately, but they haven’t gone away. The buzzing, numbness and other odd sensations continue as before.

It’s all there. At the moment it’s not at its worst. But because of the way these symptoms come and go in cycles, I don’t trust any particular state to last. It’s exceedingly difficult to figure out what is and what isn’t a trend.

And unanswered questions keep coming into my mind.

Why did I lose all that weight last year?

Do I have a pituitary tumor?

Will I be on HGH for the rest of my life?

How long have I had Lyme?

How treatable is my Lyme?

Will I ever experience my sexual self again?

In the end it seems to me that this is as close to a definitive diagnosis as I’m likely to get. And that feels okay. Because what I’ve been coming to terms with through all of this is my relationship to the entire idea of diagnosis. In the process of struggling for a definitive diagnosis, and in surrendering the hope of obtaining one, I found myself, in certain ways, at peace.

In this state of mind I feel the genuine possibility of healing. And that possibility is enough. I am certain that my symptoms and their diagnostic interpretations will continue to evolve. As will my state of mind. That’s to say that even within my diagnoses I will continue to feel the ebb and flow of diagnostic possibilities. Which is another way of saying that in certain ways I will always be undiagnosable.

As we all are.

 

Note: while this post marks the end of the “Being Undiagnosable” series, you can follow my journey in a new series of posts, titled “Life with Lyme.”

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