Showing posts with label Mast Cell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mast Cell. Show all posts

Friday 7 February 2020

A Tilly Moment while living with ME - Sitting On A Bunch Of Keys


ME is Myalgic Encephalomyelitis
PEM is Post Exertional Malaise
I had packed the car ready for the two-hour journey for my son to have treatment. I have 101 things to say about that but will leave that for another day. Going anywhere for my son Angus, is like getting ready for the Olympics, so much training has to be done in order to do an event and should be an Paralympics sport as a ME triathlon event. Event 1: getting out of bed Event 2: dressing Event 3: travelling in wheelchair of a distance of 100 meters, not self-propelled but pushed.
It sounds far-fetched and when I explain about this to any medical professional, it is met with utter disbelief and lack of understanding. How can simple movements; innocuous as they are for any ill person, have such detrimental effects that it takes weeks, months or never to recover from. The science is there but is complex and too much money is to be made from “Cognitive Therapies” to ever look at the truth.
The only problem with those who have ME entering an event is that they may never recover from even the training. You think I am over exaggerating, sadly I’m not. Look at the overtraining of the Olympians and you will find ME symptoms. In fact, there was a paper that showed the similarities, there is also a paper that explains PEM when doing a hand gripping test. Fluff, I broke my promise - to save the science for another day. Back to the event of the Key sitting.
Angus had struggled to wake that morning and this alone in enough to make the next week a bad week for him. He knew the importance of the tests and treatments so tried not to moan too much. I had to help him get dressed; he finds this so hard to accept. For any 14-year-old privacy and dignity are keenly felt and how do you honour that when he is so incapacitated on some days? The physical exhaustion was taking his ability to be mentally alert and is the first sign of him reaching the over training state and I knew we were in for a quiet drive. My heart sank to my boots and it took all I had to pull those bootstraps up. But pull them up I did, with my stiff upper lip.
You know that dreaded question about who you would invite to a dinner party - alive or dead, well very often at these times I think a lot about this. Among my invited guests would be an alert Angus. You see he can, at the right time of day and when he is not suffering PEM, be full of conversation, asking questions that only a quantum physicist could answer; like what Dark Matter is and how did the big bang theory start. I normally retort with who wrote the big bang theory for the TV series. Only I have to quickly go on my phone and find out their names as I’m not good at remembering names “Chuck Lorre and Bill Prady”, I respond. We both giggle; which is not good for Angus and this pushes him deeper into PEM, due to laughing being like a physical workout and his aerobic capacity reached. There is research to prove that laughing can be part of your exercise regime – I kid you not.
I have my own way of explaining complex matters which Angus finds both funny and exasperating. I tend to break them down to my level of thinking and use everyday objects I’m familiar with. So here goes for a Tilly Moment explanation of the big bang theory (not the program).
In a dark room, void of all matter I flack my duster which causes a bang - we have particles and static electric - the beginning of life starts. It takes a few minutes for his stunned silence to explode with his indignation of “you cannot be serious mum”. The joy of it has to be experienced at least once in your life; seeing someone so depleted in ability and suffering, to still be able to laugh and put a good forceful counter argument together, of how wrong you are, is so delicious. However, the guilt after the event is very hard to cope with and it is Angus that then pulls my bootstraps up and reminds me, it is not my fault.  
On our 2-hour journey we normally stop for something to eat, another simple pleasure that most people take for granted.  A break from the movement, cars flashing by and the rolling countryside that makes it so difficult for his body and brain to cope. He can’t get out of the car so a drive through is the only option. Those few minutes have become precious to me, a few seconds of normal life and to glimpse at the growing understanding of the complexity of the life my son now has. I don’t think anyone could be prouder than I am on these journeys, even if he won the Olympics or world events, I don’t think I would feel the way I do on those few precious moments. To know and truly appreciate the complexities of ME, you have to live through it to understand why I am so dam proud of him and why this young lad is my ME hero of epic proportions.


When we arrive at the centre, we all eagerly await for him to recover enough from the journey for his banter to start. His unfolding personality and his humour that brightens up their day is another rare joy that we want more of. We can all see the incremental improvements and with just a blood test to go we then make our way out to start the journey back home. This is one of the handful of times my son in the last 7 years has had outside his home. There are no charities that showcase his illness by sending him to swim with dolphins or to theme parks. No personalities that want to go on catch phrase to support my son in any way. He has no elevating carefree times, just an expanse of time like ground hog day, where the only thing that changes is his age - going from child to young man in the same state.
Navigating the doors with his wheelchair we treat the journey out of the building and into the car like a slalom, which I am happy to report I am getting better at. Time trials next. He has to sit for a few minutes before he attempts to get in the car; because we have laughed so much his body goes into a whirlwind of refusing to do anything but keeping his world dizzy and crippled with chest pain.
While he summons up the determination to move again, I put the bags in the backseat and busy myself so he can take the time he needs. I have to wait for him to move trying to engage with him at this point puts him under pressure to do things against his bodies better judgment and causes more problems later on. When he has got himself in the seat of the car, I pack and lift the wheelchair in the back and tie it down. As yet I have been unable to get a blue badge; again for 101 reasons but mostly because just trying to get proper healthcare for him is like taking a Mensa test while doing downhill slalom at speed. I have found I have needed a fully operational office and know a system that is as fragmented and hidden as Dark Matter. Getting a wheelchair in a car in a normal parking spot is difficult, two herniated discs prove that.  I then proceed to find the keys that I have put in the endless pit of doom I call my handbag. No keys. I know I’ll empty it onto the backseat of the car. I find everything I have lost in the last 6+ months much to the amusement of Angus. But no car Keys. It’s not as though they are easy to lose either for the love of plucked feathers where are they.  I must have put them on the folded seat in the back of the car while putting wheelchair in? No keys near the wheelchair? No keys, In the bags, they may have dropped in there? No keys.
We start to giggle as I look all around embarrassed, in and out of the car using my phone as a torch. Taking my own advice that I give to others; I start to think and visualise what I had done since unlocking the car. Where did I put the keys? Did I definitely unlock the car; self-doubt creeps in. Could I have left them in the building? By this time, we had everyone looking for them. I eventually asked Angus to get out of the seat so that I could look under the seat to see; in a vein hope, if I had dropped them there. Knowing this would cause him more physical problems I apologised and felt so guilty. However, there on the seat were the keys. “How could you not feel them” I asked? It’s not like there was just one key, there was a pile of them. We giggled about his insensitive behind and remembered when he forgot the chocolate, I had brought him one day that he sat on and which melted and made such a mess.
The elation of the everyday is a short-lived joy but one that I hope, in time, we will have more of without the PEM. For readers that do not know the ramifications of ME and PEM probably do not appreciate what a day out like this means to me and Angus. Angus has been 95% bedbound for the last 6 years and ill and house bound for 7. The next morning, he could not wake until 11.30 and it took him until 1.30 to be able to speak to me. His lips looked as if he had gone in the dessert with no water for days and the pain was painfully written on his face. He asked me to leave him, to let him recover he needs solitude, quiet and no interaction.
Living through these times is the hardest to cope with for me. This is compounded knowing what my other two children were doing at his age. For Angus like all athletes it is part of his discipline and the price he has to pay. Unlike athletes he has no one patting him on the back saying he is amazing.  The feeling of inadequacy deepens for him. His bodies inability to live frustrates him beyond any endurance training.
This enforced solitude hurts beyond any words I have found or any analogies to equate it to. It takes all our strength of character to get through these dark times and he manages it better than me.
It can take weeks or months for his body to ease the grip it has on him and we both know from experience it may never come back. With the new treatment it fades in just over 2 weeks and back to the normal pain and difficulties that most of us would find intolerable, that he has had to learnt to accept as his new normal. We get ready for the next outing and one day; soon I hope, we will be going out to something he would like to do instead of doing something that he needs to do.
Like the opening of those glorious spring flowers now popping their heads out in the bitter wind, he starts his conversations and my heart leaps with uncontrolled joy on the inside and a loving smile on the outside.
The banter of a mother and son can be heard once again. The subject of my inability to keep safe hold of keys and his inability to feel those keys while sitting on them becomes a verbal tug of war and one of those family anecdotes you keep hold of and love the retelling of and long may that continue.

 





Wednesday 29 August 2018

Time to hear the voice of mother and more importantly the child.


Family courts and family law in England and Wales are to make things clearer?

How is this going to work?

Will the voice of those that matter be heard? That is the young person, their prime carer – mostly their mother and the family unit. Surely their voices are more important than any others? Yet we never hear those voices or rarely and mostly only when devastation has caused outrage.

Is it about time that changed?

What studies are there that look at the mother’s instinct of their child’s health and wellbeing and how correct are they? 

How many times have hospitals got it wrong and the mother right? I would suspect that this is never noted down. This I would suggest is where we go wrong. Not getting to the truth of a situation leads to misinformation and the same mistakes being made.

How can we be sure we know all the facts and have balance if the family, mother or child's voice is never heard. It is only when the child is 18 that their voices can be heard and by then it is too late to make amends for the damage done.

Now consider - how much research has been put into how mothers negatively impact on their child/children? This is all done from a very vacant and technical viewpoint that has nothing to do with being human, sensitive or empathetic.

One illness that for decades has not been listened to is Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME) the history is filled with academia and bizarre beliefs like "malleable brain" and "Neuroplasticity". If these theories worked then eating chocolate would always give you a happy buzz or you would never eat it as you have trained you brain and conserve your hips, brain training games would make me a genius and our educational system would be the finest in the world. However, we are more complicated and have amazing ecosystems and cells that entwine with such delicate complexities to untangle will take more than just saying I am happy and making life better. 

Why is it that one illness taken over by those that think they can control our DNA, Cells by denying the reality of the patient and why did the NHS fund such a trial 
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3049137/#__sec6title

To view a mother/parent in such a manor when their child has a disease that is disruptive and puts all of their bodies systems out of kilter... well words quite frankly fail.

How can you advertise a trial as a treatment that most will recover at 6 months in the first place and no authority think this is wrong? Trials are set up to prove or disprove. All of the trials on children with ME do not record harm, do not give heart rate monitors to make sure children keep under the anaerobic threshold. Those that research on children with this devastating disease cannot or will not explain they cycle of Post exertional malaise (PEM) and why even doing a small dot-to-dot can have the same response as walking a mile. Why convalescent rest is needed after activity and in a PEM state and how or why this happens. They do not track the PEM cycle and they do not make if the child has more time with feet on the floor time.

For a researcher not to know why this is important in ME is unforgivable.



To call our children MUPPETS is beyond insensitive and yet they can openly do so, who is there to stop them?

On their flawed science so the courts make their decisions about the parents behavior. The authorities are OK with this?

The difference between the lived reality and that of academia is acutely astounding. If there were studies into how the mother’s instinct makes a positive impact on the outcome of long-term conditions, or acute ones, I wonder what we would find. How many deaths would be avoided if the mothers voice was acted upon with more respect and urgency?

Sir John O’Hare QC who headed up the 14-year-old inquiry into avoidable deaths of young children, in the Royal Belfast Hospital said (I will paraphrase for brevity) “there was an “indefensible” culture in which parents were “deliberately mislead” by doctors and health trust chef’s intent on “avoiding scrutiny” and protecting their own reputations.”

How is there going to be clarity within the family courts, when no one listens to those on the receiving end of bad practice or false allegations?

Does the public understand the position parents are in with the court restrictions, when they are accused of Fabricating and Inducing Illness (FII), even when proven innocent? How does that position impact on parents when they are trying to pull together professionals, to get the right treatment for their child.

I was recently told by the GMC that there is a differing opinion on a condition my son suffers from. Healthcare should not be about politics or opinion, but on individual medical history and research along with no more harm and probability. No one said healthcare was easy. 

Avoidable suffering and deaths are happening to children throughout the healthcare system and most are covered up with accusing the parents of FII, belittling or gaslighting them. As Sir John O’Hare QC suggests; a culture has been allowed to build up.

What are the courts going to do with the misunderstanding over complex cases and where fraudulent or flawed research give the wrong treatments or advocates procedures that are causing harm or death? 

Covered by clever and manipulation by academia and not balance of all facts of known experiences  hampers diagnosis, treatment and informed consent. This also gives both professionals, barristers, lawyers and courts along with the public the wrong idea about FII or the relationship of a mother to their child, and of a child to their mother. This normal bond of care is being broken for gain or an agenda well meaning as it might be. The voice and experience of the parents are not heard and therefore no balance. How do we get balance back?

There is no common law duty of care to parents, this has I believe, led to the explosion of FII. FII is used as a method of “avoiding scrutiny”. Have courts; trying to protect children, now becoming a weapon used against parents?

The mounting case of parents with children that have hidden illnesses accused of FII:

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) and the PACE trial is a battle of establishment Goliath against a severe hidden illness. Over 200 parents accused of FII (again mostly mothers but not exclusively) none have been found guilty. You just need to look at the Tymes Trust webpage to see a condition that sucks the life out of our children. The Tymes Trust have been battling against an opinion without foundation for decades now. Many children would have been lost if it were not for the Tymes Trust tireless efforts.

CFS is a controversial name brought in to mask Dr Ramsay defined ME.  

The main telling sign of ME is that symptoms are exasperated by any form of thinking, day to day task or emotion - that can be getting excited and laughing as much as feeling confined by the lack of energy. Basically put, anything that uses energy takes it out on the body, similar to diabetes.
A misconception that has been heavily played upon, is that avoidance of exercise was the problem. When this did not stick, it was avoidance of living or depression. Then came the deconditioning theory. You cannot image the damage this misconception has caused a whole plethora of illnesses. This has enabled many to Gaslight a whole community of the invisible illnesses/disability.

The truth is; as anyone who cares for a person with ME knows, there is a cycle that cannot be replicated by just an emotional outburst of unwillingness ­- of not wanting to engage with life, it’s called PEM, and is how you can diagnose ME. Ramsay explained that ME had an alarming tendency to become chronic when a small amount of energy is consumed and which takes a prolonged period to regain some energy back. This is now being taken very seriously in research terms, but it has taken from 1986 to now, to be seen as the path of discovery.

The PACE trial in 2011 set out to prove along with the DWP and the MRC, that this condition was treatable with Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) and Graded Exercise Therapy (GET), this trial data was not released openly or freely, as they said they would. Instead the community had to force the data to be released while being charged as vexatious.  Appalling accusations freely heaped on those that suffer, by the media and recently Executive Chair of the MRC Professor Fiona Watt.

The data from the PACE trial now reanalysed by many, has been shown to be steeped in flawed methodology. Even though the harm of those treatments are in plain sight in rooms all around the UK, they and their suffering are dismissed.

To cover this appauling use of research children are being made to pay the price. Further research promised to show this is still a valid treatment and so the DWP and MRC can hold their 

Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (EDS)

This is a genetic condition difficult to diagnose due to opinion, lack of understanding and funding into research. Again, doctors are targeted and sent to the GMC as with ME if they try to help with differing treatments and stand up for those that suffer. EDS has never really been given the attention it deserves, just like ME. Children can end up being tube fed and put in mental hospitals due to lack of understanding.

We do not know if vEDS is as rare as we are told, but we do know life expectancy is shorted due to vascular rupture, with median life span of 48 years. though this does and can happen at any time as even young people die as a result of a rupture. Why are courts ready to hear that parents are saying symptoms are worse than they are and keep taking children away from loving homes? Why do we not keep a track on their progress? These children are lost and forgotten in the system unless the mothers/parents fight hard and long battles. Simply trying to get tests can leave parents under threats as doctors are being taught to look out for these conditions and mother fabricating the complexity and severity of them. What hope of a diagnosis is there?

Mast Cell Syndrome (MCAS)

This is an immunological condition with near-anaphylaxis or anaphylaxis attaches. Why are so many of these conditions put down to anxiety. Mast Cell inappropriately release chemical mediators which result in a range of chronic symptoms and is rarely looked at. Again, this condition would take endless visits to doctors to get a diagnosis. There is a blood test looking for Tryptase; a protein that is usually elevated. Ultimately a bone marrow biopsy is the definitive test. Hopeful one day as with celiac this will become just a blood screening that is easy to do. Unfortunately, the symptoms are just linked in with mental health issues and the new Improved Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) so now parents have a bigger problem.

Post Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS)

Again, this is complex, and little understood to how prevalent this condition is and has been dismissed as a condition of little significance. The research would suggest otherwise. Thought to be anxiety driven it is now proving that it brings on anxiety due to the change of heart rate and blood pressure, with adrenalin surges. Mothers are again suspected of saying the condition is worse than it is, but when you consider the symptoms are so vast and some mimic heart attack, could you really blame mothers for their concern?

Lymes

This is caused by a tick bite and there are many symptoms with many reports of problems throughout the body. Although there is a blood test, this is very rarely asked for, and is known to be ineffective in many cases.

We should have learnt lesson from the Cot deaths and shaken baby syndrome
These are now recognised as having many causes and why babies are given Vitamin K. If these cases had gone unchallenged, we would still be blaming the parent, mostly it has to be said the mother.

How many children are caused undue suffering or die in care of these complex and intertwined conditions. How many parents unprotected by laws and are seen as insignificant collateral damage that protects children?

Are courts and research doing more harm due to lack of balance, when the voices of those that count the most are silenced.

It is now time to hear the voices that give the balance back to society, the voice of mother and more importantly the child. Will this ever happen?