dangermouse
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Yes. I get the burning pain too and need to rest till it eases. Arms and legs get it.
Same here.
The weird thing was that I could still sprint faster than most of my peers if the distance was short enough (50 meters for example) and I did not have a reduction in strength (for example in lifting a heavy object) if the exertion was short enough. Anyone experienced that as well, that discrepancy betwedn short and long term exertion?
Lack of stamina isn't mentioned all that often but (muscle) fatigability is. I'm guessing they're just used interchangeably so indirectly low stamina is recognised under the concept fatigability.Stamina: "The ability to withstand long physical or mental strain." Oxford English Minidictionary
I haven't often noted low/very low stamina as part of the symptom description for ME, and was surprised and happy to see this in a recent NIH article.
And yes I do get it, too. At one point during an almost-remission period I went on a hiking holiday. For almost 3 weeks I walked 20-25km daily, in mountainous terrain, no problem. Until one day it was a problem. From one day to the next I struggled to go 5km on the flat (had to be rescued by vehicle). Clearly I couldn't have been deconditioned but after those 5km I felt like I'd run a double marathon and then some. Wobbly legs, burning muscles and all (followed by a laundry list of PEM symptoms the next day).
And yes I do get it, too. At one point during an almost-remission period I went on a hiking holiday. For almost 3 weeks I walked 20-25km daily, in mountainous terrain, no problem. Until one day it was a problem. From one day to the next I struggled to go 5km on the flat (had to be rescued by vehicle). Clearly I couldn't have been deconditioned but after those 5km I felt like I'd run a double marathon and then some.
it's almost certain that I had what's called "exercise-induced asthma," more properly called "exercise-induced broncoconstriction" (EIB) (it's not really asthma).
also couldn't swim more than a width or a length at secondary school
Sudden onset of problems walking was my first indication that something was going very wrong. Could barely move my legs. Stamina hasn’t proved so much of interest as I’ve never recovered the strength to test itI used to be able to run fast, but often only for short distances (e.g. at school, and I didn't get ME until I was 42).
I'm not sure whether the ME leg fatigue was obvious straight away; I think it was more gradual in development. I remember being puzzled by the extreme fatigue in my leg muscles when walking up a fairly short, not very steep hill to a neighbour's house.
Yes I did immediately have reduced stamina. I tend to describe it as rapid muscle fatiguability.
I had to stop all the energetic things I was enjoying the week before my ME started, so it was nothing to do with deconditioning or lack of fitness. I simply couldn't walk nearly as far, or run more than a few metres, or dance, or climb more than one flight of stairs, or anything like that without feeling my legs were going to collapse from rapid loss of power and needing to sit down.
Not sure why I wrote 'over a decade' - it was 30 years before getting ME! BTW I could do other activities quite well - it was just the swimming where I couldn't. Until I took up driving - I found that exhausting too!Just remembered - also couldn't swim more than a width or a length at secondary school - when I was still 'fit' and over a decade before getting ME - without having to stop. I tried everything, but nothing worked - varying strokes, concentrating on breathing, etc.
I recently got an electric bike that helps you pedal and after more than a month of using it almost daily I still get sore legs after using it every time (despite the fact that it is supposed to be very easy due to the assistance). In other words biking with it seems just as difficult as when I first started with no improvement after consistent and regular training.