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Untitled Comment
Lene Andersen
Monday, July 20, 2009 at 11:21 AM -
thx
AKBayce
Monday, July 20, 2009 at 01:22 PM -
Untitled Comment
andrew
Monday, July 20, 2009 at 04:31 PMAs Lene states, we're not doctors. But you may wish to ask about Reactive Arthritis which comes when your body reacts to an earlier infection.
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/reactive-arthritis/DS00486
re: Untitled Comment
AKBayce
Monday, July 20, 2009 at 04:41 PMThanks....That was our first idea, but I don't have some of the common conjunctivitis or urethritis symptoms and am HLA-B27 negative. My buest guess is undifferentiated spondylarthropathy - but I think that the treatments for that are broad and nonspecific (like the disease diagnosis).
I really appreciate everyone's suggestions.
re: re: Untitled Comment
andrew
Monday, July 20, 2009 at 06:53 PMBeing "undifferentiated/unspecified" is a tough place to be. I was there for several months until additional symptoms began to manifest and clarify things as RA. Actually, treatments are pretty much the same for RA as for spondylitis - undifferentiated or not. And remember, 20-30% (maybe even higher) don't have any positive blood tests. Check out this website. http://www.spondylitis.org/About/undif.aspx
Hope you get clarity, treatment, and relief soon!
Andrew
re: re: re: re: Untitled Comment
andrew
Tuesday, July 21, 2009 at 01:07 AMHere's an excellent article about Managing seronegative spondarthritides
http://rheumatology.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/39/4/360
I have a friend in his late 40s now. He got spondalytis in his early 20s, battled it for 10 or so years, mostly with NSAIDs since all there was at the time. He eventually went into remission but still has bouts now and then when his hips and back flare up.
The thing that strikes me as interesting in your case is the problems with PIP and MCP joints which is often common in RA. Are the finger problems symmetrical (on both sides) or unilateral (on one hand). Symmetrical joint problems are more common in RA where unilateral symptoms more common is spondalytis.
Andrew
re: re: re: re: re: Untitled Comment
AKBayce
Tuesday, July 21, 2009 at 12:59 PMHi Andrew,
My middle finger has been fat on both sides of the PIP since at least 2004. All of my PIP joints are bigger than they ought to be, too, but family members and such look at it and say "you have knobby knuckles, get over it". I saw a rheumatologist at Mayo Clinic who said that I had no sign of inflammatory disease. One in my hometown initially thought that I didn't have anything, but then changed his mind to unspecified seroneg. polyarthritis and put me on some DMARDS. A rheum at Cedars in CA thought that I did have something, had no idea what it was, and decided to watch and wait.
I think it's pretty obvious that I do have something...I have had fatigue and swollen knuckles my adult life and knee problems for the last few years. I don't think it is classic RA or classic spondylarthropathy, but it presents as a light form of both...and someone made the point that the drugs are the same in any case.
So I'm thinking treat, and see how I feel. I've been on Sulfa and HydroxyChloroquine for about a month with no real results so far, but I guess it can take forever.
Thanks!!
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Keep in mind that none of us who answer questions here are doctors, so any information we give you is based only on personal experience. Approximately 20% of people who have RA are what's called seronegative, which means they test negative for RA (for more lab tests and what they mean, click here). That said, some of your symptoms reminded me of little of fibromyalgia, which can come with chronic fatigue and sleep disturbances (for more on this, check out the fibromyalgia area of our chronic pain site). However, the rest of it... I have no idea. Keep pushing, keep going to doctors, sooner or later you'll meet someone who'll know what's going on.
Sorry I couldn't be of more help.