Showing posts with label Spondylitis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spondylitis. Show all posts

Sunday, May 26, 2013

Whose truth ?




Truth can be stated in a thousand different ways, yet each one can be true.
Swami Vivekananda
Read more at http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/topics/topic_truth2.html#KQ6uQGtzwgqgYyKs.99






Have you ever noticed that the truth keeps changing ? Some things that were once true are  no longer and things that were once believed not to be true are now true. This happens across many different subjects. In some instances, a new researcher disputes the truth and his or her new research results in a new truth.

This happens  often in medicine.  At one time it was thought that more men than women get the disease ankylosing spondylitis. Recently published research has found that about the same number of men and women get the disease. The excerpts below bring this fact to light:

Women can get ankylosing spondylitis (AS) and related diseases. A goal of the Spondylitis Association of America (SAA) is to educate the public and medical community that contrary to traditional belief, spondylitis is not just "a man’s disease."
In general, it takes longer for women to be diagnosed with spondylitis than it does for men. The following reasons for the difficulty in diagnosing spondylitis in women are generalizations and not to be used to judge spondylitis in ALL men vs. ALL women.
  • Some women have a mild form of the disease that may not be as easily detected as it is in men.
  • The disease may progress more slowly in women.
  • Spondylitis can affect different parts of the body (neck, peripheral joints) in women than in men (low back, spine), yet the diagnostic criterion is based on men’s symptoms.
  • Some women with spondylitis develop symptoms that resemble fibromyalgia or early rheumatoid arthritis.
The average age of onset does not differ significantly between the sexes, but spinal fusion (ankylosis) may progress more slowly in women than men. Women tend to be worse off than men are when it comes to pain and the need for drug therapy. The slower and relatively incomplete progression of spinal fusion in women can mean that it takes longer for pain to decrease as a result of spinal fusion.(from the SAA website).

Q: Are men and women affected at different rates between these diseases? Can you give us some details on how these rates were determined?
Similar numbers of men and women are affected with spondyloarthritis. In the past, it was thought that ankylosing spondylitis was more common in men than women . More recent studies suggest that ankylosing spondylitis occurs in similar numbers of men and women . Early estimates of the occurence of ankylosing spondylitis suggested that ankylosing spondylitis occurred 9-10 times more frequently in men than women . However, there were problems with how these early studies were done. More recent studies reported that men are 2 to 3 times more likely than women to have ankylosing spondylitis. These studies use relatively narrow definitions of ankylosing spondylitis that rely on classic manifestations of inflammatory back pain and damage on x-rays. Classic inflammatory back pain may be the initial symptom in men more frequently than in women , andwomen may have less x-ray damage than men. Despite these differences, the overall disease severity is similar in men and women .
When broader definitions are used to identify people with spondyloarthritis in the pelvis and/or spine (axial spondyloarthritis), the prevalence is similar in men and women.  (from Spring 2013 Issue of Spondylitis Plus)

Some things will always be true. 1+1 will always equal 2. But other things can be disproved by a new researcher with a different method of looking at the truth.

What is your truth ? Has it changed?

Until next time,
Think, Live and Be Pain-free--

Joy:)



Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Wanted; New BFF

This is a tribute to past best friends and my longing to have a new one.
A post about best friends has to begin with my sister. Although we are complete opposites in personality (she's more outgoing and adventurous than I am), we are close enough in age that we could've been twins. We had a lot of the same teachers and/or the same classes. We shared a bedroom for many years and had games we would play (when we were supposed to be sleeping) a lot which were based on giving and guessing clues about mutual friends and classmates. Another incident I remember from that time is the day that we got fed up with each other's habits and used tape to make a line on the floor to mark our own space. Today we live a thousand miles apart but keep in touch by email and the occasional phone call and rare visit. Neighborhood playmates I remember are Maggie, Cathy and Harolyn and of course my siblings.

The next bff I remember I'll call RRR. We were classmates in grade school. We shared classtime as well as lunch and recess. My most endearing memory from this time is a day we decided to trade lunches. I don't remember what his lunch was but mine was a braunschweiger sandwich. RRR told me it smelled like dead fish. After that I didn't eat braunschweiger again until recently.  Eventually our families both moved and lost touch. Until a few years ago when I found RRR's sister on classmates. She has my dream job-a  librarian, lives in Baltimore and we keep
in touch thru facebook. ... to be continued.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

How to Have a Pain-Free Christmas

Unplug the Christmas Machine by Jo Anderson
Skipping Christmas by John Grisham

Read one or both of the above titles for inspiration.

Then take a half hour or so to remember and forgive yourself for those holiday things you did in the past that you no longer can or want to do.
Make sure to stick as close as possible to your normal waking, sleeping, medicine taking, exercising and eating schedule.
Build in some extra rest time. Some ways I like to do this are:
Sit and look at the lit tree and admire and remember where we got each ornament.
Reread the (Biblical) Christmas story and other favorite stories or poems of the season.
Snuggle up with your hubby (or a pet) and watch your favorite Holiday specials. ( I am partial to How the Grinch Stole Christmas; my hubby is a big fan of Its A Wonderful Life).
Most of all Have a Merry Christmas
and until next time- Remember to Think, Live and Be pain-free.

Joy♡☆