The Dr. is focusing on the vegal nerve, which has a very diverse influence, and can effect everything from spasms, and rhythms (the heart for instance) to digestion, orientation well, lots of things
Wow, this is exactly what I was expecting. No joke!
I have had so many problems in my life that implicated the vagus nerve that I could not help but feel that it would have some connection to POIS.
First, a list, so that the
connection between my health challenges and the nervous system are apparent, then a longer story to explain these after:
Current age: 27
- Major depression, treatment resistant for many years (now under control)
- Mania/psychosis, triggered after taking Provigil, and still something I need medication for
- Poor tolerance of the majority of psychiatric and neurologic meds I've taken (increased nervousness and anxiety, akathesia, dysphoria, depersonalization, or feeling strange weakness, and more, and more)
- Low, poor affect. Even when not feeling depressed, I seem to not display much emotion. I also fail to feel drives, like when I should be feeling angry I don't feel much
- Historically very sensitive to emotional distress, very fearful and upset as a child. Socially anxious as a teen and adult
- Infrequent bowel movements/long urine retention most of my life
- Digestive diseases - dysbiosis and possible new diagnosis of Small Intestine Bacterial Overgrowth, candida infection (suspected)
- Poor mobility at certain areas of my mouth/face, and speech problems that persist to adulthood - suggestive of herpesvirus impacting nerves in my face? Bell's palsy-like?
- Pectus excavatum/hypermobile joints/stria (stretch marks) - I understand connective tissue disorders can contribute to neuro disease like disautonomia. I can't help but wonder that if I had issues with my vagus nerve that my chest wouldn't grow right
- Bizarre sleep paralysis/would wake up startled with the feeling like I am passing away, yet I am unable to perform a typical "gasping reflex" to resolve the feeling of suffocating. Would happen after having alcohol or also antihistamines (benadryl) or relaxants
- Vascular issues - heart rate on the low end (nurses keep asking me if I'm an athlete, nope!) Reynaud's syndrome (poor circulation in my periphery), fluctuating blood pressure (more rare), often large difference between systolic and diastolic pressures. Fairly bad orthostatic hypotension when I was on SSRIs/SSNRIs
- Metabolic syndrome at age 24, despite only having been overweight for 1.5 years, but while on fairly high amounts of antipsychotics (I no longer have this condition after losing weight and reducing meds)
- Good response to B vitamin supplementation (with of course niacin)
- Certain textures (or even the thought of them) make me shiver down my spine
I personally have had what the doctors were only able to vaguely describe as a "vasovagal event" after taking the "wakefulness promoting agent" Provigil. I was also on the antidepressant Cymbalta which is known for its activating properties. I had one of the most bizarre and terrifying feeling of what seemed like hot liquid spilling, beginning from the base of my skull to throughout my body. It crept down my back, and spread to the center of my torso, where the vagus nerve begins. I was shaking, panicked, and sweating an unbelievable amount. I felt like my insides were being electrocuted. I thought I might die. I was in a psychiatric hospital at the time (luckily), so I had professionals observing me during this time. I paced back and forth until my legs gave out from under me. This was what the doctor latched onto when he thought I had a vasovagal event (essentially a type of fainting), but I never once lost consciousness. I unfortunately remember the entire torturing episode. It lasted about 15 minutes maybe.
One week later I had my first ever psychotic episode, and my journey to recovery took a turn for the worse. I was put on antipsychotics, but I was so extraordinarily sensitive to so many drugs I ended up staying at the hospital 3 months before they found the right drugs for me and felt comfortable letting me go.
I started my battle with depression the exact time POIS started. I was a nervous, shy kid with a slight speech impediment but a high acheiver. Once I hit 13, my life started to go downhill. I always wondered about vagus nerve stimulation, as I new it was being tried for treatment resistant depression, and I sure fit that category until I
1) I had Electro-Convulsive Therapy and 2) I stopped taking antidepressants and instead relied on lithium and 3) started taking clonazipam (Klonipn). I really can't function without it
Another reason I thought the vagus nerve is digestion. I have been fighting gut problems for close to three years now, and they often begin with faulty nervous function. Poor nervous system stimulation to the gut (vagus nerve participates in this from my memory) can lead to low "motility" in the gut, allowing excess bacteria and fungus an opportunity to take hold. I had some of my best times in the recent past when I was eating low to no sugar diets and after taking antifungals. I recently relapsed, and my gut hurts. I am in the process of finding out if I have a newer diagnosis, called Small Intestine Bacterial Overgrowth (SIBO). Just took a hydrogen breath test. Found out I am lactose intolerant (I didnt used to be) and I am waiting on my gastroenterologist's interpretation on SIBO.
Classes of meds and my reactions to them:- Mood stabilzers - Extreme intolerance to Lamictal and Trileptal. Extreme dysphoria. Almost killed myself on Trileptal
- Antidepressants - Poor response. Treatment resistant. Unsettling dreams, and nervousness on SNRIs. In combination with Provigil, Cymbalta probably contributed to my development of schizo-affective disorder
- Benzodiazepines - Really can't function without them, I get too edgy. Respond excellently to Klonapin
- Sleep meds - Not effective. Did not help me sleep, Provigil made me have the terrible reaction I detailed above and led to psychosis/schizo-affective disorder
- Dopamine agonists - made me sleepy and at worst slightly catatonic. I also had irritability with Wellbutrin
- Beta blocker - made me lethargic and felt weak
- Muscle relaxants - dangerous. Would feel very weak
- IV general anesthetics - had too many fasciculations (spasms) with the first anesthetic they tried on me for my electro-convulsive therapy (propofol?), had to switch to etomidate (typically reserved for emergency situations or sick patients because it produces fewer adverse physiological effects)
I've taken so many medications, I'll probably remember more later and have to update this. I actually am hoping that a disordered vagus nerve or other disordered nerve is our problem, as treatments like nerve stimulation already exist! See
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vagus_nerve_stimulationA question: why is my second consecutive orgasm so intense and so much more debilitating? My sensation of pleasure goes through the roof, then it feels my brain falls to the floor!
EDIT 1/5/14 - added further description of Provigil event, added general anesthetic history, added more description to a few bullet points
EDIT 1/12/14 - added info about klonapin