Another paper. From Hutan's post above (#75):is this a quote from the software/hardware paper or some other paper?
A Case of Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease Presenting as Conversion Disorder
Another paper. From Hutan's post above (#75):is this a quote from the software/hardware paper or some other paper?
In actuality, an FND diagnosis on your medical chart is pretty much a death sentence because you'll never be treated seriously by any healthcare provider ever again and should you ever develop another condition that's actually fatal you will very likely end up being dismissed as anxious/hysterical, delaying your diagnosis and experiencing extreme abuse.
Another paper. From Hutan's post above (#75):
By which they most likely mean when the clinicians' rigid thinking and prejudice about the existing symptoms changed.When the patient’s presentation changed,
By which they most likely mean when the clinicians' rigid thinking and prejudice about the existing symptoms changed.
It would be similar to the "normal appearing white matter" (NAWM) in MS, which absolutely isn't at autopsy, now able to be shown in vivo with advanced MRI techniques. This gets diagnosed as "MS with FND overlay".
Can you explain this? Not quite sure what you mean.
MR spectroscopic imaging at 7.0 T allowed in vivo visualization of multiple sclerosis pathologic findings not visible at T1 or T2-weighted MRI. Metabolic abnormalities in the normal-appearing white matter and cortical gray matter were associated with disability.
MWI is a neuroimaging technique with increased specificity to myelin and offers greater insight to MS-driven pathology and its clinical manifestations, including motor and cognitive dysfunction and rehabilitation response.
MS encompasses a wide clinical spectrum and identifying functional domains that moderate or mediate one another across individuals is key to enhancing targeted rehabilitation strategies. Examining functional domains in a siloed nature only provides limited insight to the underlying mechanisms at play.
In conclusion, our data strongly suggest that diffuse pathology in the NAWM, which includes paranodal disruption, could be caused by the presence of local cytokine-induced inflammation leading to excess glutamate release from microglia. Such paranodal pathology, which cannot be attributed to focal demyelinating lesions, would be expected to alter the efficiency and velocity of AP conduction, adding to the overall neurological dysfunction in MS. This could also be relevant to white matter changes seen in other neurodegenerative conditions in which chronic microglial activation is a feature.
Altogether, our data suggests an endogenous inflammatory reaction throughout the whole white matter of multiple sclerosis brain, in which oligodendrocytes actively participate. This reaction might further influence and to some extent facilitate lesion formation.
I agree about the variety of conditions dumped into the FND bucket. But we have seen enough published case studies of people who have been given an FND diagnosis and then have gone on to have worsening symptoms and eventually be diagnosed with a progressive neurological diseases to question the capacity of the medical system to always accurately identify progressive conditions.
I agree about the variety of conditions dumped into the FND bucket. But we have seen enough published case studies of people who have been given an FND diagnosis and then have gone on to have worsening symptoms and eventually be diagnosed with a progressive neurological diseases to question the capacity of the medical system to always accurately identify progressive conditions. For example, there was the woman with Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease who was initially diagnosed with FND (with the case study authors continuing to insist that she had an overlay of FND, even after the identification of the CJD, even as her brain disintegrated. I still find that case study one of the most astonishing medical accounts I have come across.)
A family member had a malformation of the blood vessels on the surface of the brain - as I understand it, an artery not connecting up properly to the capillaries, but instead bypassing those to shunt the high pressure blood into a vein. Such a malformation has all sorts of causes - congenital, physical trauma and disease. The vascular malformation caused some death of brain cells that had been served by the bypassed capillaries and, so, a loss of function, some of which was regained as neural plasticity allowed other parts of the brain to take over that function.
The structural problem also caused swelling where the vein became leaky under the high pressure of the shunted blood supply. The swelling, pressing on the brain and its blood supply, would periodically get worse, typically after some activity increasing blood pressure, and then reduce. That produced a pattern of fluctuating symptoms, including a loss of function in a hand, cognitive issues and delirium.
In my family member's case, the malformation was not diagnosed straight away, and in fact may not have ever been. He was very fortunate that someone took another look and arranged the right sort of scan. To my knowledge, he was never given an FND diagnosis. He is of the age where strokes are expected, and that is the diagnosis he was given. If he was a young girl with the same problem, maybe the outcome would have been different.
This experience underlined to me the ridiculousness of suggesting that a fluctuating pattern of symptoms is evidence of conversion disorder. Stress, whether it be physical or emotional stress, does have impacts on the body, and those impacts, such as an increase in blood pressure, absolutely can exacerbate neurological disease.
(sorry for a few edits for clarity)
Compensation is only available to Victims who have suffered vCJD, and their families and carers. Before a claim can be considered, the Trustees will need to be satisfied that the two eligibility requirements as set out in the Trust Deed have been met; first, that the Victim suffered vCJD on the legal test of the balance of probabilities, which means that the Victim was at least 51% likely to have suffered vCJD, and secondly, that he or she was resident in the UK for at least 5 years between 1982 and 1996.
A sum of at least £120,000 shall be paid to the Victim, some or all of which can be paid during the Victim’s life. The Basic Sum will be increased annually to reflect the impact of inflation upon the award. ..... If a balance of the Basic Sum remains to be paid after the Victim has died, the Trustees have a discretion as to how that balance should be distributed.