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Clinical depression often blamed before diagnosis of
fibromyalgia
FROM Vivian Song
http://www.healthzone.ca/health
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Vivan Song photo
Joanne Saraiva, 50, wears
a tri-coloured ribbon representing three chronic
illnesses which often strike together: fibromyalgia,
chronic fatigue syndrome and multiple chemical
sensitivities. It took years for her to get an official
diagnosis. |
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When Joanne Saraiva went to
her doctor for her chronic pain and fatigue and
debilitating mental fog, the physician chalked it up to
depression and sent her to a psychiatrist.
She was just depressed, her doctor
said, and had taken on too much. After all, Saraiva, now
50, had changed jobs, was raising two boys and had
suffered a loss in the family.
Desperate to get better and resume
her normal life as a busy, active mom and career woman,
Saraiva complied and was popping anti-depressants to
treat her degenerating health. She was constantly
exhausted and was always in pain.
“It was like someone took a bat
and beat me up all over,” Saraiva says in her Brampton
home. “Like I was walking on nerve endings.”
While she could endure the pain,
it was the cognitive decline that most alarmed her.
“It felt like someone was pulling
down the blinds on the window,” she says. “My energy,
concentration, ability to process information, word
retrieval and perception were all going.”
But after a year of visits, the
psychiatrist looked at her and confirmed what, deep
down, Saraiva always knew.
She wasn’t depressed. There was
something else more insidious at play.
“I know my own body. I wasn’t sad
over anything. And in fact, I work better under stress,
that’s who I am,” she says.
Misdiagnosing illnesses like
fibromyalgia, myalgic encephalomyelitis or chronic
fatigue syndrome, and multiple chemical sensitivities as
psychiatric problems and figments of the imagination is
common practice among today’s doctors who lack a general
understanding, says Dr. Riina Bray.
“We have to
educate physicians so that they don’t blow patients off
as looney,” says the medical director of the
Environmental Health Clinic at Women’s
College Hospital. “That’s
probably the easiest way out, to blow them off as
psychiatric issues.”
But there’s
a huge difference between people who suffer from
depression, and those who suffer from legitimate medical
conditions, adds
Alison Bested,
a hematological pathologist and specialist at the same
clinic.
People who are depressed, for
instance, are so low emotionally they can find little
inertia to get going and have lost all enjoyment of
life, Bested says. Meanwhile, those who suffer from one
or a combination of the three illnesses live for their
good days, she says.
“On a good day, these people are
off to the races.”
It would take years for Saraiva to
get an official diagnosis and understand what was wrong
with her. She suffers from chronic fatigue syndrome,
characterized by pathological exhaustion that cannot be
reversed by rest — she’s incapable of deep, restorative
sleep. She also suffers from fibromyalgia, chronic pain
throughout her body. Both can be traced back to a series
of viral infections that left her bed-ridden, a common
trigger. With these illnesses, brain fog is also common.
Saraiva was misjudging the stairs
and would draw complete blanks at work where she
multi-tasked as a senior clerical worker. Suddenly,
simple tasks eluded her: She couldn’t remember how to
put people on hold, and was reduced to writing cheat
sheets on how to log on to the computer she’d been using
for years.
For the
440,000 Ontarians who suffer from either one or a
combination of these illnesses, getting an official
diagnosis is often half the battle, said Jeanne Samonas,
president of the
Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Association of
Ontario.
“It blows your mind that that
number of people — the size of a city — are not getting
diagnoses or treatments,” Samosas says.
That’s
because there are few specialists in Canada with the
training to diagnose and treat the three illnesses,
which often strike as a package deal. The
Environmental Health Clinic
at Women’s College Hospital in Toronto is one of two
clinics in Canada — the other being in Nova Scotia —
where patients can seek help.
“It’s a huge problem,” Bested
says. “There are only a handful of doctors trained on
the pathology of these illnesses and there’s virtually
no ongoing research which is deeply needed.”
Twenty years ago not a word was
written about these illnesses in textbooks, she says.
Fibromyalgia, for example, was added in the World Health
Organization’s International Classification of Diseases
in 1992.
“Physicians my age and older
haven’t had the education or training to diagnose these
illnesses,” Bested, 56, says. “I learned about this
because people were coming to me with the illness.”
Saraiva only got her official
diagnosis after doing her own online research, which led
her to the Toronto environmental clinic. She was put on
a 10-month waiting list.
“Doctors didn’t know what to do
with me,” Saraiva says. “I had to become my own
advocate.”
During the waiting period, Saraiva
battled her employer’s insurance company for long-term
disability payments: Company doctors ordered her to go
back on anti-depressants and join a gym. She was given a
pedometre and had to clock 800 steps a week. They also
treated her illnesses as a psychiatric, lifestyle
choice, despite appeals from her own psychiatrist and
doctor who wrote on her behalf.
Similarly, she was denied three
times for Canadian Pension Plan disability benefits and
had to take the case to a tribunal which ruled in her
favour.
“We’re dealing with powerful,
wealthy insurance companies who have a bottom line,”
Samosas says. “A lot of people have had horrendous cases
in court with CPP and fight for years.
A lot of that stems from the fact
that fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome and Multiple
Chemical Sensitivities aren’t recognized as chronic
illnesses, Bested notes, and consequently receive no
funding for research. Nor do they figure well in
resident training.
“At the government level, they’re
invisible.”
Yet last
month, Canada became the first country in the world to
ban blood donations from people diagnosed with chronic
fatigue syndrome in the wake of groundbreaking study
published in the prestigious journal
Science,
advocates point out. U.S. researchers discovered a human
retrovirus, XMRV, that could be linked to CFS. The move
was a precautionary measure as it’s feared the virus,
which closely resembles the AIDS virus, could be
transmitted through blood transfusions. Australia
followed suite a few weeks later.
“We can’t get funding because
we’re not considered a chronic illness, and yet they
won’t take our blood,” Saraiva says.
In a rare
public display, sufferers organized a rally at Queen’s
Park May 12 to mark
International ME/CFS & FM Awareness Day
and appeal for a treatment centre.
According to the results of a 2005
Canadian Community Health Survey prepared by Statistics
Canada, of 23 chronic health conditions, chronic
fatigue, chemical sensitivities and fibromyalgia topped
the list for unmet health care needs.
“After diagnosis that’s where it
all ends for a lot of people,” Samonas says.
Saraiva is still looking for
someone to treat her. She misses the woman she used to
be: The woman who others called “supermom,” who jogged
three times a week and was the go-to person at work
whenever there was a problem.
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