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My experience with a neurologist back in 1992 was positive. He ordered a lot of blood work to r/o other illnesses and sent to the hospital for various tests for vertigo. I was never sent to a spine specialist/surgeon, thank goodness.
Mine too, Mij, a positive experience with neurology, thankfully.
During period 1982 - 1987, I attended the late Prof Behan's clinic in Glasgow (west of Scotland). He was also having referrals sent from north of England at this time, such was his 'expertise' in ME then. I will be forever grateful to him for diagnosing me with 'presumed' ME. I, of course, had no idea then that he worked with Melvin Ramsay, we had never heard of ME before, any of us. Or Coxsackie. I also had no idea that, in thirty years time, I would have to bore myself stupid (and believe me, I really do bore myself!) highlighting what RamsayME is amidst a proliferation of criteria that have since been introduced.
I was never investigated for CCI or tethered cord or anything structural as it was clear to Behan (after EMG and muscle biopsy and immune profiling) that I had severe ME - and there has been nothing remotely since then to suggest I have any mechanical issues. I have also never heard Prof Chaudhuri, Behan's predecessor for a while, mention mechanical issues and ME either. He is the cons neurologist who did autopsy on the late Sophia Mirza. He also lists Chiari as a differential diagnosis in the most recent MEA clinical guideline. I tend to trust what he says.
In the 1980s pwME were told they had candida overgrowth, that was the root of ME! We all gave up bread and cheese and of course it made no difference if you actually had ME and not candida overgrowth. Hypotheses come and go, treatments are in vogue, but at least not eating bread was not going to endanger you in even the slightest way. FWIW I remained neutral about both XMRV and rituximab, waiting to see how they panned out. I never got carried away by hope. Or hype. One has to protect oneself from false hope with this illness.
Of course, we know that many neurologists in UK currently - Behan was bravely with a few others going against the establishment thinking - are still utterly clueless - and we have the FND club right here in Edinburgh (Stone and co).
Edit: Just to add, I attended the late Prof Behan's service recently, was important to pay my respects and a friend/colleague of his - who is actually professor of psychiatry - made reference in his eulogy to Behan's sterling work on ME in 1980s, when very few doctors were giving the illness the respect it deserved.
*edited to add 'eulogy'
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