Well, she didn't really have a choice. She does not like going to the doctor, and rarely goes, but her low BP freaked me out. I thought she was in heart failure. She didn't have a tilt test, but they did a full cardiac and kidney workup. Perhaps a visit to an endocrinologist wouldn't hurt now that you mention aldosterone. This may explain a lot. I don't know if I could get her to go, though. She complains about her cardiology follow ups.
I love caffeine, too! I've had to cut most of it out since it pisses off my jaw . Turkish coffee was my favorite. Makes my head rocket right off . Flushing minerals out is so not good for the body. I think you had mentioned somewhere else that minerals were underrated within the vitamin/supplement industry. I think that because of this, there is not much publicity, so people forget their importance. I'll have to ask her again, but I do think it was in the brachial plexus region. I don't recall if she had dizziness afterwards. I was in the U.S. and she was in Holland at the time. She did have extensive PT for about a year then was advised to move to a warmer climate, so she moved back to the States. Cold weather aggravated her shoulder. After therapy and moving back, she seemed fine. Every so often she would complain of stiffness and some localized pain, but a steam sauna and/or hot tub seemed to take care of it. She did little to zero PT here in the U.S. The muscle wasting is only confined to that small area between her thumb and index finger. The muscles appear normal along the rest of that arm. Very strange, though.
Depending on the degree of edema, this alone could put pressure on the nerves, I would think. Does your hand numbness coincide with arm edema?I would ask, just to rule in/out the unknown(s). This way you can focus on PT that is most helpful.
ha, interesting about the cold weather again!! i'm glad i'm in atlanta where it's a sauna i guess. i'm with your mom, i hate doctors. i hate going to the doctor, that's why i kind of gave up and started reading about all of this myself.
so with thoracic outlet syndrome they label it as vascular or neurogenic but i read this
The terms neurogenic and neurovascular are misconceptions. They are clinical terms.
Nerves DO have a blood supply! (arteries, veins, and lymphatics)1 Image the artery and you image the nerve that binds to the artery for its nutrient blood supply. Research shows, compressing a nerve also compresses the blood supply.is interesting to me
that's a good question about edema. i would say my arms "swelling" is correlated with a heavy heavy feeling in my arm and then it goes dead/ hands get more numb (it's always numb tho) but that usually doesn't happen with tingling. the tingling is totally random and drives me nuts. i thought i could analyze myself in different positions and figure out what was causing it and it gave up.
pisses me off docs have said i have full range of motion i DO NOT
there are tehse exercises called nerve glides. i can sometimes do them now but i used to not even be able to straighten my arm at my side
a good indicator if you have "neural tension"/impingement (these can be very dangerous so you guys have been warned!)
median
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ztm-k1AyHT8ulnar
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezg-4fzp_qEthe slump test, my pt does this and i bomb it
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y0gZg5bSJuQ