Friday, November 5, 2010

Dr. Jack Says Sclerosis of the Spine

"Well, I have vulvodynia -- chronic vulvar pain."

"Yes, I know what it is."

I know simple transcription doesn't always capture things like condescension and hostility, but generally, this is not a good way to start off an appointment.

Also not good: being questioned about why I made a same-day appointment for hip pain I've had for a year or more.

Why? Because I woke up last weekend with electric skin from my waistline to my mid-thigh, from my bellybutton to my outer hip. It lit up with just the touch of my finger, just the brush of fabric while getting dressed. And it's still like that six days later, and while I don't think it's in the process of killing me, I also don't want to wait a month to see someone about it. Is that okay with you, Dr. Jack Something? Something with an A?

Everything Dr. Jack said was confrontational. I wasn't taking any vitamins? How could I have such a high vitamin D level if I wasn't taking any vitamins? Not any vitamins at all? Why wasn't I taking any vitamins? Had anyone ever recommended vitamins? Why had I made a same-day appointment? I hadn't ever seen Dr. Kelleher? Why was Dr. Kelleher listed as my primary-care physician if I had never seen her?

"I don't know," I said, letting my voice fall to the floor.

To ward off tears, a friend once told me, look up. I looked across the room to the blood-pressure dial, staring its flat face at me from the wall. It twirled its needle nose, nodded a reminder about the delicious pending snow, and told me, "Get mad, not sad."

"Get mad, not sad," I thought.

"Get mad, not sad."

Mad, not sad. I'm mad. I'm mad. I'm mad. This doctor is short! And awfully rude! Manners aside! Self-doubt aside! I am permitted to get mad!

The blood-pressure dial started rocking against the wall and flailing its little black pumps out into the air. Get mad, not sad! Get mad, not sad! Mad, not sad!

I was sad because as soon as a doctor disrespects you, you know you had a bad throw of the dice. Now you've spent all this time, all this money, and maybe you've even taken your clothes off and spread your legs, and all it got you was more stress. I was sad because I felt so unlucky.

And no matter the blood-pressure dial's flailing, I couldn't get mad. Why is it so hard not to feel wrong in the presence of a Dr. Jack? How could it be right for a doctor to be confrontational from the door? How had he shrunk me to a pea?

Speaking of pee.

"Any chance you're pregnant?" the X-ray tech asked.

"I guess technically, yeah," I said.

"You are?!" she asked.

"No, I mean, I'm not on my period. You never know for sure."

Robe off, clothes back on, back up four floors to the internists' office telling everyone I saw I was there to take a pregnancy test. Pee in the cup -- IN the cup, INNNN the cup -- tell me, Dear Lord, why do they always put the paper towels and the cup-receiving box on the opposite wall? And why is there never a little table that says, Dear Patient, THIS is a good temporary spot for your pee-doused cup?

I am not pregnant. Surprise.

Should I have lied? Do people think 97% means not ever ever possible? Why aren't pregnancy tests standard before X-rays? Pregnancy is like Schrodinger's cat: until you open the box, the cat is both alive AND dead. Until my next period, I am both pregnant AND not pregnant.

And besides, technically, TECHNICALLY, it is THEORETICALLY POSSIBLE that sperm could quantum tunnel into my uterus at a point in time coinciding with ovulation and fertilize me. Take that, activists. Not even abstinence is 100%.

Back down, clothes off, robe on, "I agree with you about never knowing for sure," said the tech. Finally, another fan of quantum mechanics.

I stood up for three X-rays and laid down for two. And just now, sitting at my parents' house among two frolicking and/or growling dogs and with Medical Mysteries on in the background, I got the results, online.

HI Esther,

Your hip xray was normal.The lumbar xrays showed an interesting finding of sclerosis of the L5- S1joints.That is an indication of "wear and tear"or a previous injury.I wonder if this is playing a role with the chronic pain that you get when you sit too long, which you have attributed to a pudendal neuralgia.I again urge you to consider seeing a pain specialist.Hopefully the meloxicam will help with your pain.

Dr. Forgiven...

Injury injury injury...when I think of my tailbone, I think of the two or three times I whacked the thing so hard I went breathless -- once, I think, in a pool, and once not in one. Is that enough injury?

Wear and tear -- I am 30. Posing this as the answer makes me think of my toothless and fully spent ancestors, worn and wise and the heads of their tribes at the unfathomable age of 30.

I do not have enough tribal clout to have acquired sclerosis of the spine through wear and tear.

I realized today that my mysterious condition is actually a lot harder to deal with when I'm visiting doctors. Doctors are exhausting. Even when they're not confrontational Dr. Jacks, they require a huge amount of energy -- communicating your story, managing their info intake -- "no, this, not that; and didn't you hear me say this?" -- and just making sure you say everything you came to say, which of course never happens. I am tired of it. The more I visit doctors, the more my pain stresses me out.

In my AmeriCorps service, I'm developing a health-literacy program. Health literacy is totally trendy right now in medicine -- or getting there -- and if it keeps growing, the next generation of doctors should be gargling with patient-communication skills by the time they get new letters in their names. Here's to fewer Dr. Jacks in the future!

As for me, I'm headed for the pain guys, even though I'm not sure why -- do they treat spine problems or just the resulting pain? Why does medicine insist on being confusing? Does more and more bureaucracy mean longer and longer lives? Is that the secret? We don't die until we get all the paperwork done?! Yes.

6 comments:

  1. Ugh. You're right, a new doctor is a roll of the dice.

    Frankly, when I read your description of the sudden waist/hip/thigh pain I first thought you might be gearing up for a go at the shingles. Classic symptoms that even the slightest touch is excruciating, sometimes for 2-3 weeks before you break out in the rash; still others can get a case without a rash, but that's rare. Just a thought. I've had them before and I remember the pain of just my clothes touching the skin for a good two weeks before I broke out in the rash.

    At least I didn't run you over the coals about vitamins. :)

    jenji

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  2. I liked your "get mad, not sad" mantra. I need to remember that. Tears don't help in the doctor's office.

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  3. I have a doctor like this right now too. And I'm just about done with him...

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  4. jenji, yikes! That sounds awful. I'm glad you made it through!

    If the pain were all over my body, I'd think it were something like that or fibromyalgia, but it's isolated...I think something is setting something else off. But I'll be on the lookout! Thanks.

    girl and AK, it's frustrating that so many of us having crappy experiences with doctors. Probably most of us. I have to remind myself of all the doctors who treated me right no matter if they could help me or not. It's at least half, right?!?! :)

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  5. Yes, there are many doctors who have been wonderful. And I am forever grateful to them. But you know those scars are deep from the ones that didn't listen.

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  6. "pissed the "F" off. im 44yr old female work very, very hard as a heavy equiptment mechanic most my 30yrs of working like a man at womans wages most likely due to lack of education, although i worked myself like this so i could put my kids through college if they so chose to do so, being a single mom and wanted and licked it that way i literally worked myself into a early grave, after about 19yrs of complaining to more than a dozen doctors and specialists there was just nothing wrong with me but maybe a "pulled muscle and some junky looking for pain pills" which to this day i have never even asked for but been straight up told if thats what i was there for i wasnt getting anything for pain or anything else for that matter!! so now almost 20 years later i finally get a so called doctor to take an x-ray of my foot only because i waited to go to the dr. until i had visible deformity of my feet to have something to show them i wasnt a lier. now i find out much to late to take the necessary precaution not to work so hard so long like a man cause we just arnt built the same for that kind of hard physical labor. test show that so far i have degenerative joint and disc disease in all joints and in L-2,L-3,L-4,L-5,L-6 and S-1 with facet disease,sclerosis,lumbar radiculopathy and cervical radiculopathy and the straighting of the natural curve in my neck. Now i would never had known this if i hadnt gone and got copies of the imaging report BECAUSE the doctor said theres nothing wrong with me but maybe a strained muscle try getting new shoes {by the way there was nothing wrong with the shoes i had on semi-new tennis shoes.} So.... i fired her and now its on my medical recordss that i fired her and now no doctors in my town want to see me. worked hard all my life for this as my reward and noone willing to help me.
    thats why im pissed the"F"off!!!

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