Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts

Friday, 6 January 2017

Diagnosing your fatigue

After all the tests have been done and after three months of being exhausted, if you have no clear diagnosis, your doctors will switch strategy and suggest you have chronic fatigue of some sort. You can read the latest NICE guidelines on this, and have a good rummage round. You can also look at other diagnosis pathways by searching them on the Internet. Regardless of the cause of the fatigue, you may also be categorised along the following lines:

- unable to do anything, basically bedbound
- can leave the house for a little bit but unable to do much
- able to do about 2-4 hours of activity per day
- able to do a simple part time job
- able to lead a semi-normal life with difficulty
- leading a semi-normal life and managing symptoms

The outlook for you is generally good:

- 80% recover and are able to lead a satisfying life
- 10% recover completely
- 10% don't recover

This does not include those of us who have an illness that is causing fatigue.

At a certain point, you will realise that you have to take responsibility for dealing with your fatigue and there is a lot of work for you to do. There are psychological issues, life issues, relationship issues, money issues, existential issues, health issues. It is quite a lot to take on board, especially when you are feeling unwell. Get as much help as you can: counselling, occupational therapy, someone to talk to, anything. Don't give up and keep trying:everything changes and you will not be stuck forever.




Tuesday, 20 December 2016

About this blog

I'm going to pull together everything I know about living with fatigue - current scientific research, what I know after living with it for the last 17 years, and what you might expect if you find yourself completely wiped out.

Firstly, fatigue is heterogeneous - it has diverse causes and affects people in different ways. This means it takes a reasonable amount of investigation to find the cause. 

Secondly, no-one really knows (scientifically) what makes fatigue happen - there's not a single hormone or gene that directly makes someone tired. This means that people can claim anything they like about a cure or supposed treatment because a) it might work for someone and b) there's no way to categorically say whether something works or not because no-one really knows.

Luckily, there is a diagnostic pathway to explore that helps us understand some common causes of fatigue and what we might do to alleviate the problems. This is reassuring because once you've exhausted all the likely causes of fatigue, you can move on to next step of the process.

Finally, if you've had a specific illness or operation or trauma and you have been left with fatigue then I'll be collating all the things we can do to help manage this most difficult of conditions.