Minerva78
06-21-2007, 10:15 AM
I was wondering if others wouldn't mind sharing some of the things that triggers flares and increasing symptoms in them, and how do you manage these. How do you know when a flare-up has truly "ended"? Do they ever really "end"? And how often do your symptoms vary from day to day? For instance, if sunlight is a trigger, and you spend several days indoors out of the sun, do you notice your symptoms decrease, only to increase again after sun exposure?
I don't have a lupus diagnosis, but the course my symptoms are taking make me wonder if I may be in the very early stages of developing something autoimmune, so I hope you don't mind me hanging around asking questions! The most puzzling thing to me, and the one aspect my current rheumatologist isn't really trying to understand, is that how I feel can vary SO MUCH from day to day. It's very frustrating to me, because if I stay indoors, out of the sun, heat and take it easy for a few days, I almost feel "normal" again. :) And I get my hopes up, because I think whatever is wrong with me just MIGHT be gone on its own. But then I go to work for several days, deal with some indirect sunlight and heat, try to get a lot of work done, in addition to doing extra work at home (ironically, to make some extra money to help pay for all of these doctors' appointments I have :dizzy: ) So then the fatigue and aches slowly start coming back and today I am so fatigued and achy it hurts to move - I feel like my body just crashed. And, I had a few other seizure-like spasms last night, which are some new symptoms I have just developed in the past few weeks. :( Sigh. It makes me hate to go outdoors even briefly, drive a car when it's sunny, or even leave my house, but I have no choice!
Is this something that happens in lupus, or is this varying of symptoms more common in other illnesses? I have had 2 previous inflammation "flare-ups", but they seemed to go away - one after a heavy dose of Aleve for a few weeks and the second after prednisone - and I think the 2nd "flare-up" could have been also triggered by being premenstrual, a climate change, increased sunlight and heat exposure as well. But this "flare" seems to be hanging around for months and I start to wonder if it will EVER go away. Advil and Aleve only help my headaches, and no one is suggesting prednisone again, so this "flare" keeps hanging around.
How do you get doctors to take these triggers seriously? I know working at an activity level I used to do without a problem is giving me problems now, and I know premenstrual and now very early menstrual time is bad for my symptoms, even IF I avoid other possible triggers. While I don't yet know whether or not sunlight is a bigger trigger or if it's truly heat (both seem to bother me), I've written enough of my symptoms down day-to-day to know SOMETHING is triggering my symptoms, and this is NOT just a coincidence! People who see me everyday know that, but it's hard to get the message across to doctors, who only see you once in a while. And it makes me wonder if I'm focusing on these possible triggers for nothing - are these really not important in helping to figure out what is wrong? None of my abnormal bloodwork is "significant enough" to indicate a specific problem, but something is going on.
I was just looking for some insight as to how triggers and flare-ups affect you, and if you go through something similar, or if this is not characteristic of what you've experienced. Thanks for listening!
I don't have a lupus diagnosis, but the course my symptoms are taking make me wonder if I may be in the very early stages of developing something autoimmune, so I hope you don't mind me hanging around asking questions! The most puzzling thing to me, and the one aspect my current rheumatologist isn't really trying to understand, is that how I feel can vary SO MUCH from day to day. It's very frustrating to me, because if I stay indoors, out of the sun, heat and take it easy for a few days, I almost feel "normal" again. :) And I get my hopes up, because I think whatever is wrong with me just MIGHT be gone on its own. But then I go to work for several days, deal with some indirect sunlight and heat, try to get a lot of work done, in addition to doing extra work at home (ironically, to make some extra money to help pay for all of these doctors' appointments I have :dizzy: ) So then the fatigue and aches slowly start coming back and today I am so fatigued and achy it hurts to move - I feel like my body just crashed. And, I had a few other seizure-like spasms last night, which are some new symptoms I have just developed in the past few weeks. :( Sigh. It makes me hate to go outdoors even briefly, drive a car when it's sunny, or even leave my house, but I have no choice!
Is this something that happens in lupus, or is this varying of symptoms more common in other illnesses? I have had 2 previous inflammation "flare-ups", but they seemed to go away - one after a heavy dose of Aleve for a few weeks and the second after prednisone - and I think the 2nd "flare-up" could have been also triggered by being premenstrual, a climate change, increased sunlight and heat exposure as well. But this "flare" seems to be hanging around for months and I start to wonder if it will EVER go away. Advil and Aleve only help my headaches, and no one is suggesting prednisone again, so this "flare" keeps hanging around.
How do you get doctors to take these triggers seriously? I know working at an activity level I used to do without a problem is giving me problems now, and I know premenstrual and now very early menstrual time is bad for my symptoms, even IF I avoid other possible triggers. While I don't yet know whether or not sunlight is a bigger trigger or if it's truly heat (both seem to bother me), I've written enough of my symptoms down day-to-day to know SOMETHING is triggering my symptoms, and this is NOT just a coincidence! People who see me everyday know that, but it's hard to get the message across to doctors, who only see you once in a while. And it makes me wonder if I'm focusing on these possible triggers for nothing - are these really not important in helping to figure out what is wrong? None of my abnormal bloodwork is "significant enough" to indicate a specific problem, but something is going on.
I was just looking for some insight as to how triggers and flare-ups affect you, and if you go through something similar, or if this is not characteristic of what you've experienced. Thanks for listening!

