Part 6: The Story So Far…

 

[In part five of this series I discussed traveling to the Mayo Clinic in search of a diagnosis, and I described alternative treatments I explored.]

To sum up

If you watch “House, M.D.,” you’re familiar with those meetings in which the doctors put all patient’s known information on a board, which they then study for hidden patterns. Here’s what the board looked like for me as I began writing this series.

Doctors and other medical professionals who have examined and treated me

  • Internist
  • Endocrinologist
  • Cardiologist
  • Oncologist
  • Gastroenterologist
  • Neurologist(s)
  • Physical therapist
  • Nutritionist
  • Allergist
  • Rheumatologist
  • Sleep specialist

Blood tests performed

Multiple tests over 2+ years, for a variety of conditions, including: hormone functioning (testosterone and thyroid levels), rheumatoid arthritis, Epstein Barr, heavy metals, Lyme Disease (ELISA), Myasthenia Gravis. In addition to tests for specific conditions, a wide range of standard indicators were tested. With the exception of a light elevation in my liver enzymes, probably the result of the statins I take to manage my cholesterol, all of these tests came out negative.

Other tests performed

  • Stress echochardiogram
  • Esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD)
  • Ultrasound of thyroid
  • CAT scan – abdominal
  • MRI scans – brain, cervical spine, lumbar spine
  • Electromyography (EMG) and nerve conduction test (2)
  • Autonomic reflex scan (QSART)
  • Thermoregulatory sweat test
  • Nocurnal oxymetry
  • Nocturnal polysomnogram (2)

Results of these tests

  • A few small spots showed up on the CAT scan, almost certainly benign but worth tracking due to my cancer history.
  • Mild disk degeneration showed up on the MRI.
  • Mild carpal tunnel syndrome showed up on the EMGs.
  • Some autonomic neuropathy in my feet was found in the thermoregulatory sweat test.
  • Sleep studies (not discussed in prior posts) showed a low level of sleep apnea – hypopnea – which has been effectively treated with a sub-clinical dose of amitriptyline.

A few of the illnesses and conditions that seemed to have been ruled out by these tests

ALS, MS, Parkinson’s, Multiple Myeloma, Celiac Disease, Lyme Disease, heavy metal poisoning, Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyneuropathy, Rheumatoid Arthritis, HIV/AIDS, a recurrence of Cancer, including Paraneoplastic Syndrome, Autonomic Nervous System disorders including Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome, Cardiac disorders of any nature, Polymyositis, Amyloidosis, Whipple’s Disease, Giardia.

Treatment suggested by the medical professionals after reviewing these tests

  • Physical therapy
  • Psychotherapy

Alternative treatments I’ve explored

  • Acupuncture
  • Chinese herbs
  • Therapeutic massage (Rosen method)
  • Yin yoga.
  • Hmong shamanic healing ceremony

Symptoms

As of mid-summer, 2010. Many of these have been describe in previous posts, some of them are new or have evolved.

  • Perceived muscle weakness
  • Exercise intolerance
  • Orthostatic hypotension Occasional intense light-headedness when rising from a sitting or crouching position.
  • Episodes that mimic hypoglycemia Which include but go beyond the light-headedness described above.
  • Fatigue fluctuating in intensity but nearly always present to some degree, and intermittently crushing. It’s usually pretty bad in the afternoon (so I try to get as much work as I can done in the mornings). I find that I do reasonably well when I get ten hours of sleep (less than that and all the other symptoms get worse), and/or when I have the opportunity to nap in the afternoon.
  • Pain Migratory and fluctuating in intensity. It is most commonly a diffuse sort of pain which I can only describe as “cellular” – meaning that it feels like it’s an accumulation of pain emanating from all of my cells. So rather than being focused in one part of my body, it feels more like a cloud of pain that engulfs me. It’s a bit like the ache you get with the flu, but it’s not even as focused as that. In addition to this diffuse, cellular pain, I also get more acute, focused but migratory pain in my joints and muscles. Sometimes it feels clearly like nerve pain – shooting, electrical shocks that hit the tops of my feet or my thighs or my upper arms. Other times it’s just a regular old pain, like the ache you feel after having been punched.
  • Neck pain I separate this from the rest of the pain because it is a recent development and because it has a different quality. I first noticed it late in the Spring during my yoga class. I thought that I had strained a muscle in my neck. But it hasn’t eased off, the way a pulled muscle does. Rather, it’s gotten worse.
  • Sexual dysfunction My earliest symptom has remained, although my understanding of it has evolved somewhat. Rather than being a circulatory issue, it feels clear to me that the larger issue is that the bottom has dropped out on my libido. While my body is capable of achieving an erection, there’s little or no fuel available with which to kindle or sustain a sexual fire. In other words, it still feels like a hormonal issue. Even though my testosterone and thyroid levels have been supplemented until their blood levels are optimal.
  • Weight changes From a high of 187 pounds in January of 2009, I reached a low of 157 in June of that year. Since that time I’ve gradually regained much of that weight and I’m currently in the 175-180 range. The changes in my physique have remained, however. The muscles in my arms and legs look different than they used to in ways that are difficult to describe. It’s hard to say whether the muscles are more defined, or the spaces between them are less so. In general, my body seems bonier than it used to be.
  • Neurologic symptoms These are numerous and often so bizarre that it is difficult to describe them. They include:
    • Fasciculations Muscle twitches and spasms. Although they vary in intensity and location, they have been one of the most constant features throughout all of this. Sometimes they’re very intense, other times they’re mild. Sometimes they hammer away at one spot on my body, other times they seem to hit all over the place, randomly. Sometimes they bubble around constantly, other times they’re just sporadic, random blips.
    • Numbness, tingling, and buzzing This is a catch-all category for a variety of odd experiences. I have areas on my body – especially the outside of my legs below the knees, and on the tops of my feet – that feel like they have been permanently shot up with novocaine. In addition, I experience varying degrees of tingling numbness in various parts of my body, but especially in my hands and feet. When I lie down, the soles of my feet feel like they’re burning. And I’ve started to experience a distinct “buzzing” feeling which is different from both the fasciculations or the tingling or the shooting nerve pain. It’s localized and it goes off in my body the way a cell phone goes off when it’s set to “vibrate.” It’s a discrete buzz that starts and then stops and then repeats, sometimes for hours. I can get it in the base of my groin. Or in my thigh. Or anywhere.
    • Migraine-like aura This is a new one. I’ve only had a true migraine a few times in my life and it’s been years since the last one, but I remember well the unnerving optical sensations that preceded them, the “migraine aura.” Lately I’ve started experiencing that aura again, but without the ensuing headache. It’s like a bright, jagged stimulus hovering in my peripheral vision. It can occur on either side.
  • Metallic taste Started somewhere near the beginning of 2010. A strong, unpleasant taste in my mouth, usually metallic in nature. It’s not always particularly intense. It seems to come and go in cycles. But it influences me even when it’s not strong. For instance, I can no longer drink red wine. This metallic tastes gives it all a taste more or less like rubbing alcohol.
  • Cognitive impairment This has probably been the most distressing of all my symptoms, because I rely profoundly on the agility of my mind in my work as a writer, a teacher and a psychotherapist. The cognitive fog that I experience can take many different forms, but I notice it most in the way that it affects the pace at which I can work. I’ve always got a running list of work that I need to do, which might include writing projects, including these blog posts, developing proposals for presentations (such as the one I’ll be doing at the American Counseling Association next year), preparing for teaching (as I’m doing now for the Ethics course I’ll be teaching to counseling students this Fall). It used to be that these tasks sort of flowed by. But these days, the list stays static for long periods of times because my ability to focus clearly and think well has become a bottleneck. It takes a lot longer to get things done. I sit down to read and I simply can’t make my mind absorb the sentence in front of me. I try to write or to compose music and I find my mind to be filled with mud. Days can go by like this. It’s bad when I’m working, but it’s even worse interpersonally. Often during conversations, I feel like the mechanisms linking my thought to my speech are malfunctioning. As a result, a simple conversation can be exhausting to me. Seeing more than a few clients in a morning wipes me out. And presenting before groups, while not impossible, is very challenging, and very exhausting.

Why I don’t want to tell you any of this

What does it mean for you – for anyone – to know these things about me? This is a question I have struggled with throughout these past two years.

Although it might not be evident from this blog, I am by nature an intensely private person. I know that I don’t have much control over the ways in which other people see me, and it’s precisely because of this that I like to have as much influence as possible over the things that I can control.

Mostly this has meant playing my cards very close to my vest.

But being sick and seeking a diagnosis, necessarily puts you in front of the eyes of others. And not just expose the gaze of the medical professionals whom you seek out for help.

Once you’ve been identified as being sick, everyone looks a little more carefully at you. They scan for the illness in you. Even more so when you’re sick without a diagnosis.

This dance between exposure and concealment is even more complicated in my case because my father happened to be a doctor and because he had an intrusive gaze. To make things worse, I grew up in a monolithic religious community, a religious organization which gathered and used personal information against its membership with a Stalinist zeal.

As a result of all of this, I learned some very effective ways to hold parts of myself out of public view.

What I figured out, growing up, was that seeing into the intimate lives of others gave you information about them, and that this information could give you power over them, which could be used in tremendously harmful ways.

As a result, I have lived my life guarding information about myself very carefully. I am constantly monitoring what other people know and don’t know about me. I can’t shut this part of my mind off, even with the people I trust most deeply in the world. Some part of my mind is always keeping track of what they have on me. I am never not aware of this.

(It’s not lost on me that I have chosen a profession in which I am able to experience the extraordinary range of human passion while simultaneously revealing very little about myself. I suspect that many, if not most, of my colleagues share some version of this trait.)

So, I am writing every word of these posts while containing my anxiety that they will in some way be used against me. In the simplest version, my fears are simply that you’ll think of me as someone who is whiny, helpless, unmasculine, weak, deluded, or attention-seeking.

I have worse fears than that, of course.

But for the moment I’ll keep them to myself.

Why I’m telling you anyway

Given all of this, I’ve wondered over the past weeks just why it is that I have felt compelled to tell this story publically. One answer has been that regardless how I imagine myself being perceived by others, this is the simple truth of my experience. Another answer lies in my awareness that being undiagnosable means more than just the accumulation of symptoms and tests and conditions that I’ve described above. On some level, undiagnosability is the human condition. It’s an existential truth: so many of our questions are eternally unanswerable. Finally, I’ve been writing this because of the simple recognition that my experience is not uncommon. There are many people who are desperately seeking a name for their seemingly unnameable suffering. Telling this story doesn’t give that suffering a name, but it does give it a voice.

But there’s something more. Something deeper.

It’s this. The experience of being undiagnosable has changed me. Writing this story is a sort of coming out for me. I’ve worn myself out over the years doing all the work it takes to keep myself so carefully concealed. Somewhere in all of this experience, something has shifted in my personality. That change took place during the period I will describe in the next post, the period in which I abandoned all hope of ever getting an answer. Giving up freed me, in utterly unexpected ways.

 

[In part seven of this series I will explore what it means to abandon the hope of finding a diagnosis, and how doing was essential for my well-being.]

 






[In part five of this series I discussed travelling to the Mayo Clinic in search of a diagnosis, and I described alternative treatments I explored.]

To sum up

If you watch “House, M.D.,” you’re familiar with those meetings in which the doctors put all patient’s known information on a board, which they then study for hidden patterns. Here’s what the board looked like for me as I began writing this series.

Doctors and other medical professionals who have examined and treated me

· Internist

· Endocrinologist

· Cardiologist

· Oncologist

· Gastroenterologist

· Neurologist(s)

· Physical therapist

· Nutritionist

· Allergist

· Rheumatologist

· Sleep specialist

Blood tests performed

Multiple tests over 2+ years, for a variety of conditions, including: hormone functioning (testosterone and thyroid levels), rheumatoid arthritis, Epstein Barr, heavy metals, Lyme Disease (ELISA), Myasthenia Gravis. In addition to tests for specific conditions, a wide range of standard indicators were tested. With the exception of a light elevation in my liver enzymes, probably the result of the statins I take to manage my cholesterol, all of these tests came out negative.

Other tests performed:

· Stress echochardiogram

· Esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD)

· Ultrasound of thyroid

· CAT scan – abdominal

· MRI scans – brain, cervical spine, lumbar spine

· Electromyography (EMG) and nerve conduction test (2)

· Autonomic reflex scan (QSART)

· Thermoregulatory sweat test

· Nocurnal oxymetry

· Nocturnal polysomnogram (2)

Results of these tests

· A few small spots showed up on the CAT scan, almost certainly benign but worth tracking due to my cancer history.

· Mild disk degeneration showed up on the MRI.

· Mild carpal tunnel syndrome showed up on the EMGs.

· Some autonomic neuropathy in my feet was found in the thermoregulatory sweat test.

· Sleep studies (not discussed in prior posts) showed a low level of sleep apnea – hypopnea – which has been effectively treated with a sub-clinical dose of amitriptyline.

A few of the illnesses and conditions that seemed to have been ruled out by these tests

ALS, MS, Parkinson’s, Multiple Myeloma, Celiac Disease, Lyme Disease, heavy metal poisoning, Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyneuropathy, Rheumatoid Arthritis, HIV/AIDS, a recurrence of Cancer, including Paraneoplastic Syndrome, Autonomic Nervous System disorders including Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome, Cardiac disorders of any nature, Polymyositis, Amyloidosis, Whipple’s Disease, Giardia.

Treatment suggested by the medical professionals after reviewing these tests

· Physical therapy

· Psychotherapy

Alternative treatments I’ve explored

· Acupuncture

· Chinese herbs

· Therapeutic massage (Rosen method)

· Yin yoga.

· Hmong shamanic healing ceremony

Symptoms

As of mid-summer, 2010. Many of these have been describe in previous posts, some of them are new or have evolved.

· Perceived muscle weakness

· Exercise intolerance

· Orthostatic hypotension Occasional intense light-headedness when rising from a sitting or crouching position.

· Episodes that mimic hypoglycemia Which include but go beyond the light-headedness described above.

· Fatigue fluctuating in intensity but nearly always present to some degree, and intermittently crushing. It’s usually pretty bad in the afternoon (so I try to get as much work as I can done in the mornings). I find that I do reasonably well when I get ten hours of sleep (less than that and all the other symptoms get worse), and/or when I have the opportunity to nap in the afternoon.

· Pain Migratory and fluctuating in intensity. It is most commonly a diffuse sort of pain which I can only describe as “cellular” – meaning that it feels like it’s an accumulation of pain emanating from all of my cells. So rather than being focused in one part of my body, it feels more like a cloud of pain that engulfs me. It’s a bit like the ache you get with the flu, but it’s not even as focused as that. In addition to this diffuse, cellular pain, I also get more acute, focused but migratory pain in my joints and muscles. Sometimes it feels clearly like nerve pain – shooting, electrical shocks that hit the tops of my feet or my thighs or my upper arms. Other times it’s just a regular old pain, like the ache you feel after having been punched.

· Neck pain I separate this from the rest of the pain because it is a recent development and because it has a different quality. I first noticed it late in the Spring during my yoga class. I thought that I had strained a muscle in my neck. But it hasn’t eased off, the way a pulled muscle does. Rather, it’s gotten worse.

· Weight changes From a high of 187 pounds in January of 2009, I reached a low of 157 in June of that year. Since that time I’ve gradually regained much of that weight and I’m currently in the 175-180 range. The changes in my physique have remained, however. The muscles in my arms and legs look different than they used to in ways that are difficult to describe. It’s hard to say whether the muscles are more defined, or the spaces between them are less so. In general, my body seems bonier than it used to be.

· Neurologic symptoms These are numerous and often so bizarre that it is difficult to describe them. They include:

o Fasciculations Muscle twitches and spasms. Although they vary in intensity and location, they have been one of the most constant features throughout all of this. Sometimes they’re very intense, other times they’re mild. Sometimes they hammer away at one spot on my body, other times they seem to hit all over the place, randomly. Sometimes they bubble around constantly, other times they’re just sporadic, random blips.

o Numbness, tingling, and buzzing This is a catch-all category for a variety of odd experiences. I have areas on my body – especially the outside of my legs below the knees, and on the tops of my feet – that feel like they have been permanently shot up with novocaine. In addition, I experience varying degrees of tingling numbness in various parts of my body, but especially in my hands and feet. When I lie down, the soles of my feet feel like they’re burning. And I’ve started to experience a distinct “buzzing” feeling which is different from both the fasciculations or the tingling or the shooting nerve pain. It’s localized and it goes off in my body the way a cell phone goes off when it’s set to “vibrate.” It’s a discrete buzz that starts and then stops and then repeats, sometimes for hours. I can get it in the base of my groin. Or in my thigh. Or anywhere.

o Migraine-like aura This is a new one. I’ve only had a true migraine a few times in my life and it’s been years since the last one, but I remember well the unnerving optical sensations that preceded them, the “migraine aura.” Lately I’ve started experiencing that aura again, but without the ensuing headache. It’s like a bright, jagged stimulus hovering in my peripheral vision. It can occur on either side.

· Cognitive impairment This has probably been the most distressing of all my symptoms, because I rely profoundly on the agility of my mind in my work as a writer, a teacher and a psychotherapist. The cognitive fog that I experience can take many different forms, but I notice it most in the way that it affects the pace at which I can work. I’ve always got a running list of work that I need to do, which might include writing projects, including these blog posts, developing proposals for presentations (such as the one I’ll be doing at the American Counseling Association next year), preparing for teaching (as I’m doing now for the Ethics course I’ll be teaching to counseling students this Fall). It used to be that these tasks sort of flowed by. But these days, the list stays static for long periods of times because my ability to focus clearly and think well has become a bottleneck. It takes a lot longer to get things done. I sit down to read and I simply can’t make my mind absorb the sentence in front of me. I try to write or to compose music and I find my mind to be filled with mud. Days can go by like this. It’s bad when I’m working, but it’s even worse interpersonally. Often during conversations, I feel like the mechanisms linking my thought to my speech are malfunctioning. As a result, a simple conversation can be exhausting to me. Seeing more than a few clients in a morning wipes me out. And presenting before groups, while not impossible, is very challenging, and very exhausting.

Why I don’t want to tell you any of this

What does it mean for you – for anyone – to know these things about me? This is a question I have struggled with throughout these past two years.

Although it might not be evident from this blog, I am by nature an intensely private person. I know that I don’t have much control over the ways in which other people see me, and it’s precisely because of this that I like to have as much influence as possible over the things that I can control.

Mostly this has meant playing my cards very close to my vest.

But being sick and seeking a diagnosis, necessarily puts you in front of the eyes of others. And not just expose the gaze of the medical professionals whom you seek out for help.

Once you’ve been identified as being sick, everyone looks a little more carefully at you. They scan for the illness in you. Even more so when you’re sick without a diagnosis.

This dance between exposure and concealment is even more complicated in my case because my father happened to be a doctor and because he had an intrusive gaze. To make things worse, I grew up in a monolithic religious community, a religious organization which gathered and used personal information against its membership with a Stalinist zeal.

As a result of all of this, I learned some very effective ways to hold parts of myself out of public view.

What I figured out, growing up, was that seeing into the intimate lives of others gave you information about them, and that this information could give you power over them, which could be used in tremendously harmful ways.

As a result, I have lived my life guarding information about myself very carefully. I am constantly monitoring what other people know and don’t know about me. I can’t shut this part of my mind off, even with the people I trust most deeply in the world. Some part of my mind is always keeping track of what they have on me. I am never not aware of this.

(It’s not lost on me that I have chosen a profession in which I am able to experience the extraordinary range of human passion while simultaneously revealing very little about myself. I suspect that many, if not most, of my colleagues share some version of this trait.)

So, I am writing every word of these posts while containing my anxiety that they will in some way be used against me. In the simplest version, my fears are simply that you’ll think of me as someone who is whiny, helpless, unmasculine, weak, deluded, or attention-seeking.

I have worse fears than that, of course.

But for the moment I’ll keep them to myself.

Why I’m telling you anyway

Given all of this, I’ve wondered over the past weeks just why it is that I have felt compelled to tell this story publically. One answer has been that regardless how I imagine myself being perceived by others, this is the simple truth of my experience. Another answer lies in my awareness that being undiagnosable means more than just the accumulation of symptoms and tests and conditions that I’ve described above. On some level, undiagnosability is the human condition. It’s an existential truth: so many of our questions are eternally unanswerable. Finally, I’ve been writing this because of the simple recognition that my experience is not uncommon. There are many people who are desperately seeking a name for their seemingly unnameable suffering. Telling this story doesn’t give that suffering a name, but it does give it a voice.

But there’s something more. Something deeper.

It’s this. The experience of being undiagnosable has changed me. Writing this story is a sort of coming out for me. I’ve worn myself out over the years doing all the work it takes to keep myself so carefully concealed. Somewhere in all of this experience, something has shifted in my personality. That change took place during the period I will describe in the next post, the period in which I abandoned all hope of ever getting an answer. Giving up freed me, in utterly unexpected ways.

[In part seven of this series I will explore what it means to abandon the hope of finding a diagnosis, and how doing was essential for my well-being.]

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Part 4: Testing negative

 

[In part three of this series post I explored my evolving symptoms through the challenges of differential diagnosis. This post describes the turning point at which anxiety turned to fear, as I begin to consider diagnostic possibilities that seem truly unbearable.]


Iatrogenesis

In my mind I kept going back to cancer. As a survivor of that disease, I’ve always held a certain fear that it would recur. I asked my primary doctor for a referral to an oncologist, which he gave me. While we were waiting for that appointment, I had a regular follow-up appointment with my endocrinologist. I described the muscle spasms, the weakness, the weight loss. I told him about our appointment with the oncologist.

There’s no harm in doing that, he said. But it sounds to me like you ought to see a neurologist.

A neurologist?

Really?

That came as a genuine surprise to me. I thought of neurologists as people who do brain surgery. Which is to say I hadn’t given them much thought at all. I had certainly never taken the trouble to think through the fact that disorders of the nerves that run through our bodies are the specialty of neurologists. It had certainly never occurred to me that nerves are the mechanism which trigger muscle movement. When I experienced a muscle spasm, that was a neuromuscular event.

The thought of needing a neurologist alarmed me more than anything else had thus far. While I didn’t like to be going to an oncologist, at least that was familiar territory. Neurology was something else altogether, a land of unfamiliar and truly frightening possibilities.

I began reading about the possible causes of muscle twitches and spasms. They ranged from benign to awful. I learned the word fasciculation. I learned that muscle fasciculations were an early sign of ALS. I didn’t know much about ALS. Not yet. But it sounded awful.

I certainly didn’t think I had that.

The oncologist considered my history, did a brief physical exam and said that although he had no explanation for my weight loss, it seemed unlikely to him that the cause of my problems was a recurrence of the cancer. What about Multiple Myeloma, I asked? I’d been reading about this form of cancer, how it could strike people who had been previously treated for and recovered from cancer.

I started tracking down the research on the long-term sequelae of testicular cancer and learned the rate of recurrence was significant, years and even decades after the original treatment. And of course it was the treatment itself which could be the cause…radiation kills cancer cells but it also causes cancer.

There’s a word for that: iatrogenic. It’s a complex and, to me, an oddly beautiful concept. It speaks to the hard truth that the art of healing creates opportunities for the development of new illness.

It can happen in many ways. Gathering patients together in hospitals and clinics concentrates communicable diseases in one place and gives them the chance to spread. The invasive nature of many medical procedures also creates opportunities for infections. And, as with cancer treatment, there are times when the only thing that can heal us is something that simultaneously does us harm.

It’s a term that mental health professionals rarely use…although it probably should be a part of our vocabulary. The reason we don’t use it is in large part due to the nature of the diagnostic system for mental disorders. Unlike medical diagnosis, the DSM is agnostic as to the causes of mental disorders. It seeks only to identify them, not (with a few small exceptions) to identify what led to them.

Although this makes for a clearer diagnostic manual, it belies a deeper human truth. Because whether a diagnosis is medical or psychological, one of the first things anyone asks upon receiving it is: why?

In my case, I was looking at causes precisely because I didn’t have a diagnosis. I was starting from the most logical cause I could locate in my history. Which was cancer.

It was a decent theory, which was only strengthened when I read an account of another testicular cancer survivor who later developed Multiple Myeloma. His first symptom? Muscle weakness.

I asked the oncologist if I could have it.

Not likely, he said. If so it would have shown up on your blood tests. Nevertheless, he said, with your history and your symptoms it’s worth doing some scans.

So I had chest and abdominal CAT scans, which came back showing no major abnormalities. Although, he said, there were a few small spots here and there. A lot of people have those, he added. Usually they’re benign.

Still, he said, it’s probably worth following-up with another scan in a year, just to be sure.

 

Imagining the worst

So was cancer ruled-out?

It wasn’t clear. Cancer wasn’t the likely cause of my problems, but there was certainly room to worry. If I chose to.

To put this another way: is a diagnosis – or a diagnostic rule-out – valid if the patient doesn’t believe it?

Does diagnostic certainty require consensus?

In many cases, particularly in cases of a clear affirmative diagnosis, the answer is obviously no. A malignant tumor in the brain means brain cancer, even if the patient happens to be in denial about it.

But it’s a different situation when it comes to rule-outs. If you test negative for cancer (or for MS, or Lyme Disease or Celiac), but you’re still experiencing the symptoms of that condition…if you don’t fully trust the results of the tests…if you still don’t have an adequate explanation for why you feel the way you do…then in certain ways nothing is ever ruled out.

After all, you can’t disprove a negative.

With each new test suggesting that I didn’t have this or that disease, the thought began growing in the back of my mind. What if I just happen to be hyper-sensitive to the early signs of whatever condition this is? What if it hasn’t grown strong enough yet to show up on the tests? Do I just have to wait until things get worse before I can get diagnosed and treated? Isn’t the value of early detection supposed to drive effective treatment?

These questions were only going to grow more pointed and more maddening.

The first available appointment with a neurologist was months out in the future. While waiting, I tried to diagnose myself using the information I could obtain over the Internet. I learned a lot, in an unstructured sort of way which left me wide open to bouts of pure panic. About ALS in particular. Because any search of my primary symptoms – muscle weakness, fasciculations, weight loss – always led me straight to ALS. The more I let myself recognize that this was possible, the more aggravating it became that I couldn’t get a timely appointment with a specialist who was qualified to diagnose it.

“We’re not a critical care facility,” the receptionist at the neurologist’s office icily informed me when I called to push for an earlier opening.

It was disturbing to realize what a powerful role the simple task of scheduling an appointment could play in the diagnostic process. “Early detection” may be the stated goal of healthcare professionals, but because detection can’t happen without examination, it hinges in a concrete way on the mechanics of scheduling.

We learned that a new neurologist was moving to our town and my wife managed to get me an appointment with her on her first morning of work here. Arriving in her office felt like an epic accomplishment. Here was a person, I let myself hope, who could finally tell me what was wrong with me.

She listened to my story and did a full neurological exam. She couldn’t see anything abnormal on the exam, but she ordered a new batch of blood tests and MRIs of my brain and spine. She scheduled me for an EMG and a nerve conduction test the next week.

At first I didn’t fully comprehend what was at stake with this particular test, in which needles would be inserted into my muscles and the electrical activity of those muscles is measured. In ALS the motor neurons (which direct voluntary movement of muscles) degenerate and die. If you’ve got ALS, you’ll have abnormal results on an EMG.

This test, I gradually let myself realize, might tell me that I was about to begin a rapid descent into paralysis and death.

In addition to the obvious emotional stress, that EMG was one of the most physically painful procedures I’ve had to endure. The sensation of that thick needle penetrating muscles was excruciating. But once it was over, the neurologist looked at us calmly and said she didn’t see any sign of ALS. She said that the MRIs hadn’t shown any sign of MS. She said that I didn’t have Parkinson’s. She said that my blood tests came back negative for Celiac, Lyme, AIDS and a bunch of other things that might potentially cause my symptoms.

I’m not sure what to tell you, she said. But those are things that in my opinion you definitely don’t have.

It should have been a relief. I tried hard to make myself feel that. I don’t have ALS, I repeated to myself. I don’t have ALS. I tried to make it sound true. But because her answer was entirely in the realm of the negative – things I didn’t have – and because the same symptoms that I’d been experiencing were steadily growing worse, I found that I couldn’t convert this absence of diagnosis into feeling of comfort.

I discovered that as long as I was still experiencing the same symptoms, I didn’t feel any relief. There was no way that someone telling me I was fine was going to feel like a resolution. The only relief that I could imagine would have been a clear explanation of my symptoms, a definitive diagnosis.

But I remained undiagnosable.

The neurologist seemed confident and competent. But when you’re as unsettled as I was, you can figure out ways to doubt anyone.

Just how certain was she about the test results?

We asked her.

This is the way it looks to me, she said. But if you want to feel more confidence about this, you should definitely get a second opinion. I would completely understand if you chose to do that.

You could even go to the Mayo Clinic, she said, if that you would set your minds to rest.


[Part five of this series will range from the most traditional Western medical approaches to diagnosis and treatment, exemplified by the Mayo Clinic, with some of extremely non-Western approaches which I also embraced.]



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Part 3: Ruled Out


[Part two of this series looked at some of my early symptoms through the lens of my experience teaching mental health diagnosis. In this post I describe the challenges that evolving symptoms pose in my efforts to obtain a clear diagnosis.]

Twitch

So….

I’d been experiencing sexual dysfunction and had learned that I was hypothyroid. I was still having intermittent sciatic pain and I had the sense that I was generally growing weaker. And I’d begun to have these odd “episodes,” which appeared to be but were not cardiac in nature. I had come to understand them as events which were triggered by a certain threshold level of physical exertion.

This was the situation toward the end of 2008: something was wrong and I wasn’t sure what and none of the symptoms were strong or clear enough to lead my primary doctor to a diagnosis.

Then….

The twitching started. We all have little muscle twitches from time to time. They’re annoying but harmless, just a small muscle somewhere on our body having a little party. That’s what I figured was happening one morning as I realized, while sitting in a meeting, that the same muscle in my chest had been clenching rather powerfully every minute or so since the previous evening. The spasm was strong enough that I’d started keeping my hand in that spot, putting pressure on it to try to stop it. It was strong enough that I felt the need to explain to my colleagues why I kept pressing on my chest as we talked.

Eventually the twitching stopped. But not long afterward I developed another twitch in a different spot. Then another. Then they began to overlap and evolve. After awhile they seemed to be happening more or less continuously. At some point I stopped thinking of this as something normal and began feeling like it was a new symptom.

That’s an extremely important diagnostic distinction. When do we cross that cognitive line, when we begin to define a particular experience as a symptom? It’s this line which determines what you include in your account when you’re asked by a doctor to describe what’s wrong with you.

And it can make all the difference in how you’re evaluated. If everything looks like a symptom (and I was just beginning to feel the risk of this happening to me), you wind up flooding the doctor with meaningless information…and very possibly sounding a little crazy. If, on the other hand, you minimize things and include only the most blatant symptoms, you’re likely to leave out the details which will allow a physician to make an accurate diagnosis. Underlying this problem is an unavoidable truth: you don’t know for sure what information is relevant and what is not.

Underlying this decision is a subtle strategic game between doctor and patient. The doctor holds the power to define and thus to legitimize the patient’s condition. The patient, consciously or unconsciously, is always shaping his or her narrative in order to lead the doctor in a particular direction. Sometimes the argument is focused on an explicit diagnosis: I know that I have MS and I want you to recognize this and give me a diagnosis. Other times, the goal of the argument is simply to be taken seriously: believe that there is something wrong with me and help me by giving it a name. And sometimes the argument is negative: please tell me that this is not ALS. But always, there is some sort of a goal behind a patient’s narrative.

At some point my muscle spasms became so continuous and persistent, so genuinely irksome, that in my mind they clearly rose to the level of symptom. They could happen anywhere on my body. It could be one hard muscular jerk, a long series of pulsing spasms, or something more diffuse, an undulating wave beneath the surface of my skin. (“A bag of worms” is how I once heard them described, and it’s a very good description.) When I lay down in bed I watched them ripple through me. I studied them, trying to detect a pattern. Were they related to some behavior that I could modify? Did they increase after exercise? After caffeine? Could I reduce them by meditating or doing progressive relaxation?

Stress is most people’s default explanation for a phenomenon like this, and it was mine as well.  But they seemed so independent of my emotional state. Could they be caused by the thyroid medication I’d started taking? I knew that too much thyroid hormone can make a person jittery. But my hormone levels still weren’t as high as the doctor wanted them and the medication hadn’t had any other perceivable effect on me. It hardly seemed likely that I’d jumped from hypo- to hyperthyroid without experiencing any of the benefits.

Then….

One evening my wife looked at me and commented that I’d lost weight. I’d noticed it as well. I’ve rarely paid much attention to my weight. For most of my adult life whenever I stepped on the scales I weighed somewhere between 180 and 190 pounds. It didn’t matter whether I was in full training for a marathon or whether I was barely exercising at all. That was just where the thermostat controlling my body’s weight was set.

At a doctor’s visit in January of 2009 I’d weighed in at 187. A few weeks later when I stepped onto the scale at the gym I was closer to 180. Odd, I thought. My appetite hadn’t changed in any noticeable way. But I wasn’t yet alarmed. Losing a little weight didn’t seem like a bad thing. It was nice that it was happening without any effort on my part.

But it seemed like every time I checked my weight…and I started checking much more often…I was a little lighter.

Just as with the muscle spasms, my mind went first to stress or anxiety or depression as an explanation. I tried to make that explanation fit, because it was an explanation I could do something about. But somehow it just wasn’t right. After decades of therapy I have become deeply familiar with the patterns of my own anxiety and depression. Like a diabetic who has become adept at tracking their blood sugar, I know when I’m depressed, and when I am I know how to gauge just how depressed I am.

I talked it through in my individual therapy, in our marriage therapy, again and again. And I kept coming down to the same simple conclusion: I’d been far more depressed and anxious in the past…and I’d never lost weight as a result.

And there were other changes. The musculature in my arms and shoulders and legs started looking different to me. I was bonier, and my muscles seemed much more clearly defined. As with the weight loss, this looked on the surface like a positive thing. It was as if the fat on my body was melting away. The thing was, as with the weight loss, I’d done nothing to deserve this. I was exercising less and less, trying to avoid triggering the sciatic pain and to stay beneath my ill-defined exertion threshold. It was just happening.

It’s unnerving to watch your body change for no reason, even if the change seems like a good thing. I didn’t know how to make sense of what was happening. I was trying to keep my mind from defining this change in my musculature as “atrophy.”


Being differential

Self-diagnosis, anyone will tell you, is a risky business.

But in the absence of a diagnosis you’ve got little choice but to try to make sense of your symptoms yourself.

And anyway, it’s irresistible to try. It’s a mystery that you feel you should be able to solve. Symptoms X and Y should add up to illness Z. You ought to be able to figure that out.

But of course it’s never so simple.

Symptoms are like the shadows in Plato’s cave. They’re the secondary manifestations of a primary cause (or causes). Often they’re subjectively experienced, often they’re murky and  indistinct. Making sense of them can be like trying to understand a joke in a foreign language. Even if you’re reasonably fluent in the language, the subtleties of meaning and the contextual features that make humor work are very hard to catch and interpret.

A single symptom (or a clearly-defined set of symptoms) that is well established as a marker for an illness makes things easy. A headache might mean any number of things. But a malignant mass in the brain definitely means you’ve got brain cancer.

But add any other element and all those dilemmas from Part One of this series come rushing back in. Two or more symptoms that aren’t obviously related to one another. Unstable symptoms that emerge and retreat over time. And most difficult of all, symptoms that are subjectively experienced and not empirically verifiable…like fatigue, perceived weakness, or pain.

That’s why diagnosis is, as the cliché goes, both an art and a science.

The science of the procedure is embodied by something called “differential diagnosis.” In theory this is a systematic process of elimination, considering the possible causes of symptoms, eliminating possible causes until you are left with a single, clear answer. In practice, the art of diagnosis often involves the consideration of contextual information and subjective impressions that go beyond the strict list of diagnostic criteria.

The mechanical process of differential diagnosis can be reduced to a flow chart which is guided by logical operators. If the symptom is a headache, what are all the possible causes? Concussion, meningitis, malaria, typhus, tumor, brucellosis, flu, encephalitis, migraine, common cold, etc. Once a full history of the symptom has been gathered, you can start considering the entire pool, then begin eliminating everything that can be proved not to be the cause.

Differential diagnosis proceeds by a process of ruling out alternatives to the most parsimonious explanation for a given symptom. Rule-outs are especially important – and are usually reasonably easy to establish – for dangerous and debilitating conditions. Your headache could be caused either by stress or by a brain tumor. Being able to feel reassured that it’s not the latter is extremely helpful.

Theoretically this is a systematic process but in fact of course it’s rarely done in an entirely systematic manner. The structure of diagnostic decision-making is narrative and conversational. During a diagnostic work-up information emerges in fits and starts, questions are asked in no particular order. Ideally, at some point in the course of an examination, all of the relevant information eventually comes out, the physician has asked all of the necessary questions.

That’s to say, the supposedly linear practice of differential diagnosis is actually usually more holistic in nature. Further, what is considered is not simply the diagnostic decision-making tree, but the clinician’s subjective judgment. What this feels like. Which is shaped by the particular symptoms and diseases to which the clinician has been exposed. To a physician practicing in the tropics, a patient presenting with Dengue Fever is going to have a certain “feeling” which goes beyond the strict set of objective markers of the disease.

To make a different comparison, as a mental health diagnostician I have learned through experience that there is a certain feeling I get when I’m sitting with someone who suffers from clinical depression. It’s different than the feeling I get when I’m sitting with someone who is suffering from panic attacks. Even before that person has said a word about what they’re going through, possibly even in the initial phone call setting up the appointment, I’m already gathering a diagnostic impression. (This is a subject I’ll be discussing in more depth in a future post.)

And that impression is going to guide my thinking as I formulate a concrete diagnosis. This has both benefits and risks. If I’m able to read people well (if I am able to use my self effectively as a diagnostic tool), I can often zoom in quickly on the best way to help. But on the other hand, I also run the risk of being overly confident about my own impressions, which can lead me either to misdiagnosis someone or to overlook co-morbid conditions.  If, for instance, I have a practice which consists largely of clients suffering from trauma, I’m going to be more likely to assume trauma as the cause of a new patient’s symptoms. So I have to figure out a way to build checks into my default diagnostic thinking.

Although medical diagnosis has a stronger empirical basis for much of its process, the same set of issues is unavoidably in play. Because ultimately, as I began this series by saying, diagnosis isn’t simply a matter of physical or mental health. It’s about how we understand our experience. Diagnosis takes place between human beings and in the end it is about how we come to know what we know within human relationships. It is in fact the same process you go through when you try to figure out why your spouse has grown distant. Diagnosis is a profoundly relational event.


[In part four of this series, my evolving symptoms will be placed before a set of specialists. And I will pose the question: what is the meaning of a diagnosis if the patient doesn’t agree with it?]

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Part Two: Insidious Onset


[Part one of this series described the early history of my physical symptoms while also identifying a series of diagnostic dilemmas.]


Receiving a diagnosis…being a diagnosis

Although I don’t usually think of myself in these terms, I am in fact a diagnostician by training. As a psychotherapist, it’s an integral part of my work which serves two basic functions. The first is mundane and uncomfortable: in order to be reimbursed for my services by insurers I need to provide those insurers with a reimbursable diagnosis for my patient. The second is more complex and more poignant: I am beginning the process of putting words to human suffering. And in psychotherapy, putting words to suffering is the way in which healing happens.

A more mechanistic way of saying this is that diagnosis guides treatment. More than a label, a diagnosis gives me a framework from which I can attempt to help.

Central though the task is however, diagnosis and mental health have never meshed well. Witness the interminable wars over the definition of categories and criteria for each new version of the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (the “bible” of mental health diagnosis). You don’t usually see vicious debates breaking out between doctors (and pundits and advocacy groups and ordinary people) over the definition of Arthritis, say, or Measles. Unlike mental health diagnoses, such conditions are characterized by clear-cut and physically observable symptoms, which can be confirmed by empirical lab tests.

Although, as will become clear as my own story plays out, when medicine bumps up against the outer edges of objectively definable symptoms (as in the case of conditions like Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, say, or Fibromyalgia), the same sorts of debates begin to flare up.

In mental health the discomfort around diagnosis speaks to an underlying dilemma in how we think of ourselves as human beings. As a mental health worker I am trained to value the uniqueness of each human experience. As a result I recognize how easily a diagnostic label can conflate with and distort a person’s identity. Because we don’t say “I have Depression,” but rather “I am depressed.” We don’t say “she suffers from Borderline Personality Disorder,” but rather “she’s borderline.” That tension exists in patients as well as clinicians. Part of us wants our experience to be clearly definable; another part of us insists that mystery lies at the core of our unique human experience.


Completely correct, absolutely wrong

From time to time I teach diagnosis to graduate counseling students, and it is always an invigorating experience. Counseling students commonly approach the DSM with a high degree of wariness, even hostility. They see it as a medical model which imposes a pathology-based perspective on human experience, contrary to the strength-based compassion from they wish to operate.

I tell them that are completely correct. And I also insist that they are absolutely wrong.

I suggest that they consider a simple, specific scenario.

Say you’re a counselor and someone comes to you saying that they are feeling overwhelmed by sadness over the break-up of a romantic relationship. As a counselor, how do you help them while refraining from imposing a diagnosis on them?

The answer to that question quickly reveals the many subtle levels of diagnosis that take place within all of our human interactions.

The hardcore counselor-type will maintain, following the technique of Carl Rogers, that simply listening and compassionately reflecting back a person’s experience is all that is necessary.

But what is it, exactly, that you are reflecting?

“You’re feeling really sad because your girlfriend left you.”

You may not be assigning a diagnosis in making that statement, but you are agreeing with (and thus reinforcing) your client’s self-diagnosis.

And where are you going to go from there? How are you going to help?

I maintain that you can’t move forward in any way without holding some sort of diagnostic theory in mind. I don’t think it’s possible for a counselor to set aside your own assessment of the meaning and causes of their client’s condition. Further, I believe that it’s potentially dangerous for us to believe that we can do that.

To be clear, this is a different level of diagnosis than the DSM code you put down on the form that you submit to an insurer. Diagnosing with the DSM is a process rife with problems. But that doesn’t mean that diagnosis itself is the problem. Because a diagnostic process of some sort is essential to our ability to make sense of other people (and ourselves). We understand others by attributing meaning to their words and actions. But of course the meaning that we assign may or may not correspond to the meaning others give it. Many who are drawn to mental health professions are uneasy with the idea of claiming an authority which allows them to interpret the behavior and the experience of others. This uneasiness is a good thing. Because there’s a power in that authority that can easily be mishandled or abused. The challenge of diagnosis lies in being able to recognize that while assigning a diagnosis to a human experience helps us to make sense of that experience, it simultaneously increases the risk of our misunderstanding that experience.


Refugee

There is a certain category of medical patient whose fundamental goal in interacting with medical professionals is solely to obtain a diagnosis. For that person, the meaning of a diagnosis transcends the meaning it might have in more routine medical interactions.

Say you’ve got a bad sore throat and your doctor does a culture and identifies it as strep. That is not an event which fundamentally alters your definition of yourself. But if instead you suffer from vague and shifting symptoms, if those symptoms come to shape your day-to-day experience, if they persist for months and years, and if no one in the medical profession can identify an empirical basis for those symptoms…

Well, that’s the situation I was about to find myself in. I was joining the ranks of the medical refugees. And from the perspective of a medical refugee a diagnosis – any diagnosis – becomes the holy grail. Because without a diagnosis, no one can treat you. In this situation even a really nasty diagnosis – MS, ALS, cancer – becomes preferable to living your life knowing something is very wrong without being able to identify what it is. Just as your identity and your experience has become shaped by your symptoms, the search for a coherent diagnosis becomes a profound search for meaning and self-definition. It’s a search for truth.

As I described in my previous post, the diagnoses that I had been given (or had assigned to myself) to make sense of the changes in my sexual functioning included normal aging, endocrine imbalance, and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. The first was untreatable, the latter two had been treated without a resolution of the underlying symptoms, suggesting either that the treatment was inadequate or that the diagnosis was inaccurate.

And things were about to get much more complicated.


Markers

Although there are certain clear markers, the changes in my functioning didn’t happen abruptly. Rather, it was what the medical field refers to as an “insidious onset.”

Through the summer of 2008 I was continuing to see the endocrinologist, who was looking carefully at my blood levels as he tried to fine-tune the dosage of my testosterone and thyroid medication.  He witnessed one of those markers – an inexplicable abdominal rash that developed that summer. It was blistery and itchy and it persisted for six weeks or so. It was odd, nothing like anything I’d ever had before, and I noticed it without knowing what to make of it. He looked at it and did more or less the same thing that I did. He said, “hmmm.” Then he went about his business.

Around the same time I developed what I first assumed was an ordinary running injury. Every morning when I went out on my run I began getting sharp shooting pains in my left leg after about a half mile in. I assumed it was a pulled muscle of the sort I’d had in the past. My first response was simply to try to power through it. When it didn’t go away on its own, I laid off of running for awhile – that had always worked before. But it didn’t help this time. And worse, I began experiencing the same pain in other situations (driving was especially bad) and I started experiencing a series of other sharp pains in my lower back and leg.

Finally I went to my doctor, who said it was Sciatica. A nice, clean diagnosis. He prescribed an anti-inflammatory and some physical therapy. The treatment helped a little, but it didn’t eliminate the pain, which I continue to experience intermittently. It was an interesting diagnosis because it seemed both accurate and insufficient. I continue to wonder what, if any role this particular symptom plays in the larger diagnostic picture.

In order to avoid activating the sciatic pain I switched to biking for exercise. But I began to experience a heavy exhaustion when I biked at my usual pace up even very moderate hills. As a (former) distance runner, I am very attuned to the responses of my body to different levels of exertion, and so I could clearly recognize this as a change in how my body was performing. This was not just the ordinary aerobic effects of a good work out. This was a feeling of internal collapse.

It was odd and it was very distinct. It’s usually the place I start when doctors take a history, because it’s the clearest early symptom related to the fatigue and weakness that I suffer from presently. It is a key marker in my subjective experience as well, one of the few things that has been consistent over these past few years: when I exert myself beyond a certain level, I experience a physical collapse which is marked by a feeling of weakness, shakiness and light-headedness. One of my key adaptations over the past few years has been modifying my exercise routine in order not to trigger this response. I no longer run. I bike regularly, but not intensely and not on hills the way I have always enjoyed. Instead, I have joined a gym where I can work out on exercise machines in a regulated way which usually keeps me from triggering this response to exertion.

I hate the gym. But it’s the only way that I can continue to get the exercise I need.

This is where diagnosis begins to cross over into the realm of self-definition. Because whatever was wrong with me was altering my ability to do the things that make me who I am. I went back to my doctor and tried to explain what I was experiencing. I told him that there seemed to be something larger wrong with me, that these changes were broader than the limited diagnosis he’d given me. He shrugged and said, once again, “welcome to middle age.”


A Million Bucks

It was clearly time to find a new doctor. I talked to a colleague who recommended an Internist she knew. She said: “this guy’s like a dog with a bone when he gets a diagnostic puzzle. He’ll keep working on it until he figures out an answer” That sounded good to me. I met with him and he took a history, gave me a physical. He ran some basic blood tests, all of which came out normal.

“I can run more tests,” he said, “but I’m not sure what they’ll show.”

I asked for a referral to an oncologist. I wanted to rule out any recurrence of the cancer.

Then I had my first real “episode.”

This was in November of 2008. An early snow had fallen – it was wet and heavy. I went out at mid-day to shovel the sidewalk. This is an activity that I ordinarily enjoy. I like the physical work-out, the exertion, and the visible result of my efforts. But this time something started happening to me. I started feeling light-headed. And weak. It was like the experience I’d had while biking, but much more intense. It was a difficult sensation to describe, but I can say that I didn’t feel well connected to my own body and even though I seemed capable of continuing to exert the effort necessary to shovel the snow it didn’t feel like a good idea to keep doing it. And all of the physical sensations seemed oddly focused on the upper half of my body.

It was really strange. It was not something that had ever happened to me before.

My wife looked at me when I came inside and she grew instantly alarmed. She said I looked like a ghost. Which was what I felt like. I recovered after an hour or so and I felt depleted but more or less normal afterwards. My wife got me an appointment with the new doctor for the next day.

“I have an idea about this,” he said. “I don’t think that this is going to be a House episode.”

He gave me an EKG and he thought he saw an abnormality in it. It seemed to be a cardiac issue. I observed his diagnostic certainty. I tried to accept it. Coming from a mental health perspective, I could not think about any diagnosis without also considering the meanings attached to it. What would it mean to me to have heart problems? On one hand, the prospect of a heart attack was frightening. On the other hand, it seemed like one of the most well-understood and treatable of conditions. That was comforting.

But it also just didn’t quite fit. I was a marathon runner. Aside from high cholesterol, which was being adequately treated with statins, I had never had anything that remotely like a heart problem.

The next day I found myself on the treadmill at the cardiologist’s office.

The guy was old-school. Paternalistic and condescending.

“No one ever beats the treadmill,” he said.

But I was a trail runner, accustomed to running straight up the side of mountains. The test required that I get my heart rate up to a certain level at which I would be adequately “stressed.” It took a long time for me to get there. And when I finally did, when I was unplugged from the machine, the doctor came in and told me what I already suspected: my heart was in better condition than 99% of the ordinary population. The abnormality that my internist had seen was actually an artifact of how unusually strong my heart was.

I have struggled throughout this experience with this particular paradox: I look really healthy. That’s one reason why nearly every doctor I have seen throughout this odyssey has suggested that the real diagnosis must be depression, or anxiety, or both. Even though I am more familiar than they are with these diagnoses and their treatments, even though I have described to them the years of therapy I have been through and have outlined the lack of correlation between my mood and my physical symptoms.

“Have you considered going back to a therapist?” one doctor asked me. “Because on paper you look like a million bucks.”

As I began inexplicably losing weight, this disparity between my outward appearance and my inward experience was about to grow even greater.


[In Part Three of this series, I’ll describe my tour of medical specialists, which eventually led us to the Mayo Clinic. And I will further explore the cultural meaning of be identified with a diagnosis.]


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