I only have a moment to post but my answer to the question is that when we looked into 'gastroparesis' on a thread here we found literature suggesting that the motility tests add nothing useful to the history of symptoms. I suspect that stomachs do become immobile but I am very sceptical that there is a 'condition' called 'gastroparesis' that is a useful diagnosis.
Thanks for the input! I am not surprised to hear that was the conclusion on the test.
On the psychiatric side, I think things are more complicated, but I am reading you
@Verity as thinking they are too.
Yes, definitely, and thanks for the benefit of the doubt—I’m not sure I expressed myself well.
If all you are saying is that sometimes people with psych diagnoses get additional or are incorrectly diagnosed with other conditions which can cause harm, I don't think that is particularly controversial. But that doesn't negate the fact that psych diagnoses face similar issues when they go beyond describing symptoms/behavior and try to attribute some kind of cause (especially when that cause involves bad thoughts). I think its is fair for pw ME to point out these issues but I agree that telling their doctors that psych patients don't exist isn't the appropriate place for that.
To be honest, I can’t entirely remember what I meant at this point lol, but yes, that was at least part of it. I don’t think it should be controversial, at least. When a diagnosis becomes a fad, all kinds of things are likely to get diagnosed as it! It actually happened to me as a child—very obvious ADHD misdiagnosed as some kind of adrenal problem because I kept complaining that it was fatiguing. Adrenal fatigue was popular then.
I know that ME patients can be understandably very skeptical of individual cases of psychiatric disorders being misdiagnosed as popular diagnoses, and I just wanted to caution that when trying to get through to doctors about our relationship to the hEDS/MCAS/POTS situation, excessive skepticism about things they’ve seen with their own eyes may make some question our version of events.
Quick edit: All that is to say I think it’s more useful to take a “sloppy diagnosis and questionable concepts of certain conditions are hurting everyone” approach, instead of “
all patients with hEDS/MCAS/POTS/gastroparesis do not have psychiatric conditions and need their actual organic medical problem to be found.” I get the latter vibe among pwME sometimes.