Guest guest Posted August 3, 2006 Report Share Posted August 3, 2006 Bonnie, You are not nuts! That being said, one of the tests that needs to be done is Neuropsych testing. I've gone over this one in many a post-- but what this test does is eliminate the depression issues as the primary diagnosis. Yes, most of us have to deal with clinical depression. When your health, life, marriage, careers, jobs, relationships, finances, are all turned upside down-- you will be depressed. Also, with the pain and disruption of our sleep cycles due to illness- you become depressed. The other component is that sarcoidosis screws with our hormones and pitutary glands, blood sugars- (as well as the meds they treat us with do the same)-- you end up with depression. Depression is the easiest part of this disease to deal with. Neuropsych testing uses different tests - memory recall, short-term memory tests, geometric puzzles, hand-eye coordination tests, personality profile tests, all which require a different part of the brain to complete the task. If you have brain impairment, dementia resulting in short-term memory recall, vasculitis or have had or are having TIA's or strokes-- then these tests can show that the signals aren't working correctly, and all those "subjective" complaints we have-- are real! With vasculitis, with TIA's, with hydrocephalus or encephalitis (brain swelling)-- then you can have a clear brain CT or MRI. But if that's the case, these tests can show if there is damage that may not show up in the CT's. The fact that your MD's don't want to have the insurance pay for these tests is crap. You said you have pulmonary involvement. A simple bronchoscopy can give them proof that this is sarcoidosis. Even is you don't have active disease in your lungs at the present time, you will still have scarred tissue that will show that you have sarc. They can biopsy it, and then you have a firm diagnosis. I know you're embarrassed about calling the Rheumi back-- but ya know, you pay them to help you. It's ok to tell them that yep, you're emotional over this-- as you know that there is something wrong-- and you feel as though he's leaning towards a depression- mental diagnosis-- and you know that you're dealing with alot more than depression. This is raw frustration and anger over not being taken seriously. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 4, 2006 Report Share Posted August 4, 2006 Traci I hope you don't mind me butting in about the hydro. I had an mri in January & a cat scan a couple months ago & they couldn't tell my shunt was failing at the time. My neurosurgeon believes the sarc caused the original blockage & that it probably is what caused the first shunt to clog. Sooooo anyone with these issues please keep an eye on falls & being more off the wall than usual.grannylunatic@... See the all-new, redesigned Yahoo.com. Check it out. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 4, 2006 Report Share Posted August 4, 2006 I hope you don't mind me butting in about the hydro. I had an mri in January & a cat scan a couple months ago & they couldn't tell my shunt was failing at the time. My neurosurgeon believes the sarc caused the original blockage & that it probably is what caused the first shunt to clog. Sooooo anyone with these issues please keep an eye on falls & being more off the wall than usual. , I don't mind you butting in at all. Thank you for the first hand information. What both and i are saying is that CT's, and MRI's don't always show what it is that is happening. Sarcoidosis does not always show up as granulomas or white matter on brain imaging scans. When you have vasculitis (inflammation of the blood vessels) and it happens to be the vessels in the brain, it generally doesn't show up. Yet the inflammation can still be putting pressure on certain spots of the brain, and then the part of functioning that is controlled by this particular spot, will still be compromised. With neuropsych testing, it can show that the portion of the brain that controls ie. short-term memory, is impaired. Do follow up with any kind of seizures or mental changes. These can be serious. Thanks for sharing, Tracie NS Co-owner/moderator Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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