I've been an NRAS member for a while but rarely post. I was diagnosed with Inflammatory Arthritis 3 years ago. I think I'm sero-negative as my bloods never show any Rheumatoid factor and rarely show inflammation. I also never seem to show any physical signs of inflammations and was only diagnosed due to an ultrasound of my hands where my problem first started. The arthritis doesn't seem to be limited to any one place in my body and moves around of it's own accord. It was fairly under control with Sulfasalazine.
I became pregnant (planned) and gave birth in July 2012. When pregnant I came off all my drugs (Sulf, amitryptaline, pain killers etc) and my arthritis was under control due to the pregnancy. However, I suffered with SPD (Symphysis Pubis Dysfunction), basically where pregnancy hormones relax all the ligaments in your body and your pelvis stretches and isn't controlled. I ended up walking with crutches from only 11 weeks pregnant and was off sick from work and more or less housebound from 5 months of pregnancy. I could only shuffle rather than walk. From what I was told this wasn't related to the arthritis.
After I had the baby in July 2012 the SPD disappeared in a couple of days as expected, and arthritis flared up as expected to went straight back on my usual drugs. After 4 weeks I started having incredible back pain, primarily in my SI joint area. I couldn't get into bed, couldn't drive, struggled to pick baby up. GP put it down to post pregnancy issues and said it would go but it didn't, it increased and got debilitating.
5 months later after waiting for it to magically go away I managed to see my Rheumatologist and broke down in front of her because the pain was getting unbearable. She queried inflamed SI joint and sent me for an MRI which showed no inflamed SI joint but did show a slight prolapsed disc. 6 months on from that I am now on a cocktail of morphine, diazepam, sulf, amitryptaline, paracetomol and have had 2 steroid injections. The Rheumatologist seems to have more or less washed her hands of me. I've told her my knees, ankles and feet are now hurting where they never have before, and it feels very arthritis like. She does not want to put it down to arthritis because of my back issue and basically says the back issue needs to be sorted first by Neurosurgery before she will consider that my new symptoms are arthritic in nature. But if so, why has she recommended steroid injections? Aren't they to calm down any joint inflammation? She put me on a 6 month call-back. This seems wrong to me. I'm telling her I have new symptoms which I think are arthritis related, the initial arthritis still isn't yet back under control since giving birth, but I feel as if she's scheduling my appointments as though everything is stable. I understand there are a lot of factors at play in my body now (arthritis, post pregnancy, neurosurgery) but I feel it's wrong to put everything down to them. Especially as Nuerosurgery have said the disc prolapse is not significant enough, nor is in the right place, to be giving me my back pain. And the physio who thinks it is actually my pelvis that is still out of whack has said that can only be cured by Physio.
Today I've woken up with swollen ankles. My joints never swell. Can this really be caused by my back problem rather than arthritis?
Sorry, I'm just really confused and sick of getting passed from pillar to post. I feel like everytime I see a new Doctor/Physio/Consultant all I get it 'Oh well that part of the problem isn't my department so I'll send you to this person who will sort that out and once it's sorted then come back to me'. But because every single person seems to be doing this then how the hell do I actually get sorted out because I'm just going round and round in circles?
I don't even know why I'm writing this, I guess an outsiders perspective might be good because I'm so caught up in it that's it hard to see what problem belongs where and who should be helping me sort it out. I'm just frustrated that 10 months post birth I feel as if my maternity has just been one long period of sick leave and there is so so much I can't do with my daughter. I'm supposed to be going back to work at the end of July but I can't see how on earth that is going to happen given that some days it's so incredibly hard just to get up and down the stairs and the fatigue is still kicking my butt.
Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional.