The Ehlers-Danlos Syndromes (EDS)

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  • Опубликовано: 19 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 262

  • @StrongMed
    @StrongMed  Год назад +34

    Because this has come up in the comments more than once, and because I have seen misinformation about this online:
    There is no genetic test for hypermobile EDS (i.e. the most common form of EDS); however there are genetic tests available for all other subtypes of EDS. This is because we do not yet know the gene (or genes) responsible for hEDS. If your doctor says that blood tests showed you have hypermobile EDS,, I'm not doubting that happened, but I really don't know what tests the doctor would be looking at...maybe that the genetic tests for other EDS subtypes were negative so they think you have hEDS by process of elimination? But that is not how hEDS should be diagnosed. It is a clinical diagnosis - meaning diagnosed on the basis of symptoms and medical complications, family history, and in particular, a physical exam consistent with the diagnosis. I would not consider it to be a so-called "diagnosis of exclusion" (i.e. diagnosed only after ruling out alternatives).

    • @darilekron4590
      @darilekron4590 Год назад +5

      Update: The Norris Lab at MUSC found out about 20 percent of people in their hEDS study have a common gene variant. They are waiting for peer review before releasing results if the gene variant that they discovered.
      They are hoping to pinpoint more genes underlying hEDS.

    • @christinecochran5215
      @christinecochran5215 Год назад +6

      @@darilekron4590 I see that dated as 2021....wonder what happened? Actually, I'm reaching out to a member of that team for an update. Will post here when/if hear!

    • @wackyl5692
      @wackyl5692 7 месяцев назад

      @@darilekron4590plz lmk🙏😭

    • @wackyl5692
      @wackyl5692 7 месяцев назад

      @@darilekron4590have you heard anything since October last year perhaps?🙏🙏

    • @cathy2893
      @cathy2893 2 месяца назад

      I had a skin biopsy at UCSF, which confirmed EDS with a tenascin x, so I'm not sure why this guy is saying there isn't a test.

  • @spookytini6202
    @spookytini6202 2 года назад +337

    I was diagnosed with hEDS when I was around 13. I was told I was just hyper mobile and it was pretty common. Nothing serious. I’m now 19, suffering heart problems, chronic fatigue, arthritis, scoliosis, chronic pain, vision loss, and dental issues. I don’t know what I have anymore and no longer have healthcare to get re evaluated. Wish that doctor had taken me more seriously.

    • @stephanieann1213
      @stephanieann1213 2 года назад +28

      I would love to talk to you. I have been ignored and dismissed by doctors for years. The good doctors I have came across have diagnosed me with things from Scheuerman’s disease and Osgood Slaters disease, I have suffered from nerve pain, chronic pain and now heart problems. Not to mention many other health issues. I’m so frustrated that I can’t get a good doctor to tie all my symptoms together.

    • @Itsyouactually
      @Itsyouactually 2 года назад +7

      That is rough 😕 Can I ask you about your vision? I’m experiencing problems too.

    • @stephanieann1213
      @stephanieann1213 2 года назад +7

      @@Itsyouactually I have a referral to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester. It’s taking forever to get the testing done to get there. I’m hoping beyond everything else that they will have answers for me. I get so down because of the pain. I’m not sure how people can be optimistic because I am not. Suffering stinks. I hope have a better outlook than I do!

    • @kennadybrewer5647
      @kennadybrewer5647 2 года назад +4

      Sounds like HEDS I have all the same issues haven’t been diagnosed yet but all my issues line up to yours

    • @kennadybrewer5647
      @kennadybrewer5647 2 года назад +8

      Ur doctors lied to u… you aren’t just hyper mobile even though that comes with it…. U are hyper mobile plus u have EDS syndrome I jahe all ur symptoms anf I am 99.9% sure I have this… I am 21 years old and suffering all this and it got worse starting at 20 but I’ve always had other symptoms leading up to this when I was little

  • @karenburgner217
    @karenburgner217 2 месяца назад +6

    As a physician with hEDS and a parent to a child severely affected with hEDS- I appreciate your nuanced approach to this complex topic
    My only addition would be to discuss the frequent overlap between hEDS and autism/adhd. I find the neurological overlap issues that arise to be particularly interesting and under-researched!

  • @sillililli01
    @sillililli01 Год назад +28

    I knew nothing of this disease until I met a beautiful young woman who has it, she, unfortunately, has vEDS, and is wasting away at home bedridden, not getting the treatment and support she needs (the hospital sent her home to die). This is very difficult for the family to see her in this condition. Her life is being cut short by this disease, and too many have died because there isn't enough funding for the necessary research into it. Thank you for putting this information together and sharing it on this video.

  • @terrianntylenda6412
    @terrianntylenda6412 2 года назад +48

    For decades I was labeled as "clumsy" and "double jointed". After years of repeated injuries, ER trips and doctors that thought I needed "psychiatric care", I passed out at work on top of another employee I begged my primary doctor to find out what was wrong with me. That ER trip the doctor said I had an "atypical migraine"! That's it, no other explanation...on your way. My primary had her suspicions for years but sent me to a rheumatologist. I received my diagnosis at the age 36! I fought back my tears. That was more than 10 years ago. My symptoms have always been there but were manageable. A little under 3 years ago I dislocated my C1 and C2 for the first time. It's been all downhill since then. I can no longer work, I have days that I can no longer do my own personal care and I am now on serious pain management medications. And I'm not going to shy away from this but I HATE pain meds. They take away so much. But anyway.....This disease robbed me of my ability to have a baby (2 miscarriages), ultimately my uterus, the ability to make any plans, and it makes it hard for me to think positively about the future. I try my hardest and I put on a great smile but it's hard. Knowing that you will be dealing with it for the rest of your life is hard to picture. But I'm working hard to stay positive and upbeat while adapting my world around me to fit this disease into a full life. I hope that in the end I can look back and say that I did the best anyone could do under with this disability. Better days are ahead.....Have a great day and thank you for the video!

    • @MJ-gj6mj
      @MJ-gj6mj 11 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you for sharing your experience. I've had the worst time with employment. There was a leave called FMLA for 12 weeks of leave (but not paid, unless you use any sick days you had and those would be paid). So obviously these things don't resolve in 12 weeks and I have yet another unexplained injury among other symptoms. Not only did they say not to come back, they want the sick days paid back! I don't know what caused things to get so bad. People are saying Covid related but who knows bc I've had signs for so many years. Hoping you're doing ok!

  • @BusasGaming
    @BusasGaming Год назад +50

    I started going to the Dr for EDS symptoms when I was 14. I was diagnosed in 2020 at age 33. That should give you an idea of how confusing this area of medicine is. According to my genetic tests, meaning they were inconclusive, I have hEDS, but according to my symptoms I was told I am 1 of a couple hundred known people in the world who have some vascular symptoms without having vascular EDS. Basically this means I get all the crappy common symptoms as well as the chance that my heart will one day explode and I will die. If you are watching this video because you are frustrated with Drs, your body, or just plain confused, don't worry the rest of us are as well haha. Just be careful when getting recommended surgery or other "routine procedures." Stay in the best physical shape your body / pain tolerance will allow. Personally I exercise 6 days a week, but don't do heavy things like squats and deadlifts that may cause issues with my EDS. Personally, I stretch even though some Drs have told me not to. I do it because while stretching may weaken my "unrepairable tendons and joints" I also know what the pain of arthritis and inactivity feels like. (spoiler alert) They hurt much more than a little stretching. Hang in there everyone and good luck!

    • @florameadow
      @florameadow 9 месяцев назад +1

      Because of your heart problems.. Have you been checked for Marfan syndrome?

    • @BusasGaming
      @BusasGaming 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@florameadow I have been checked for Marfan syndrome. I just got the short end of the stick symptom wise lol.

    • @darnellbillings9733
      @darnellbillings9733 5 месяцев назад +1

      You’re essentially on the same journey as me but I push my body to it’s extremes when exercising because I have chosen bodybuilding life.

  • @NeighborhoodOfBlue
    @NeighborhoodOfBlue 9 месяцев назад +7

    This is the most validating video I've ever heard on EDS. That you're a doctor, acknowledging these things, is very comforting to me after my journey with EDS thus far.

  • @catfission
    @catfission 2 года назад +111

    It took me 25 years to be diagnosed with EDS. Only after I developed severe dysautonomia/ MCAS and heart problems that almost killed me. I have so many comorbidities and I’m really shocked that I spent so long desperate for answers while having a textbook case of EDS.

    • @erikliubakka6514
      @erikliubakka6514 2 года назад +19

      I'm 25, and I'm like 99% I have EDS. Life long chronic fatigue (tardiness, sleeping in school even with full nights rest, adult diagnosed ADHD), developmental astigmatism that started when I was 7, and some knee/hip/shoulder issues as a cross country runner, chronic throat clearing, jaw clicking, insomnia.
      The REALLY problematic and disabling stuff started when I was 21. Functional Dyspepsia was the first diagnosis. Medication and two weeks later, and I have a traumatic episode of tachycardia, chest pain, nerve pain, High blood pressure, vision, hearing dysautonomia, leading to an existential panic attack that I was dying.
      The ER just said all the symptoms were caused by the panic attack/having been high on weed at the time. Yet, next day, sober as ever, all of the same symptoms and intense discomfort remained.
      Following 4 years consisted of many more panic attacks, unproductive ER visits and blood tests, alcohol and sleeping pill addiction self medicating my chronic pain. A whole laundry list of other symptoms. Always being told by family friends and doctors that I'm depressed and have an anxiety disorder.
      Well, been sober all 2022, tapering off my SNRI for anxiety. All the problems are still there, and many more! And although dysautonomic attacks still spike a lot of anxiety, I've learned to manage and reduce hitting full blown panic and other methods of reducing the dysautonomia until I pass out and sleep till morning.
      Have appointments scheduled with a few different docs to seek diagnosis, but my family is still set that I have misdiagnosed mental problems and that my treatment lies entirely with therapy and psychology. Not saying more of that stuff wouldnt help, but they already have helped a ton with my mental health. but all the other stuff remains.
      Im just done with people telling me I'm tired cause I'm depressed, and that all my symptoms are in my head and just anxiety.

    • @mateowm4224
      @mateowm4224 7 месяцев назад

      maybe you didn’t had it broder

    • @Truerealism747
      @Truerealism747 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@mateowm4224?

    • @olivialawrence2707
      @olivialawrence2707 7 месяцев назад

      How old are you now if I may ask

    • @Truerealism747
      @Truerealism747 7 месяцев назад

      @@olivialawrence2707 ime 43 soon to be 44

  • @joelineleach6530
    @joelineleach6530 2 года назад +90

    Thank you for normalizing the discussion of EDS. Roughly 10 years ago I spoke with my doctor as I have Hyper mobility in all leg joints in the form of dislocation, scholiosis, stretchy skin, bruising (and fibromyalgia runs in my family). Otherwise I am very healthy 🤣.
    My doctor just told me 'I don't understand why you are here telling me you might have EDS, even if you did, it's only putting a grouped name against your other symptoms, naming it doesn't do anything' !!! And off I was sent feeling like I was a time waster.

    • @MJ-gj6mj
      @MJ-gj6mj 11 месяцев назад +6

      Uggggh that is annoying! Those Drs. just are not helpful at all. I hope things will change.

    • @jaybea3158
      @jaybea3158 7 месяцев назад +9

      Doctors gaslighting is discusting

  • @bluebyrne7412
    @bluebyrne7412 2 года назад +58

    THANK YOU!!! I was only diagnosed with fibro+hEDS a couple months ago, but I'm a teenager, so I was statistically lucky to get a diagnosis at all. I was constantly told that the pain was in my head, and that I was just flexible. When I learned about EDS, specifically hEDS, it was such a huge revelation. I really appreciate you pointing out the self-diagnosis struggles. Sometimes people are misinformed, but generally, we're looking for explanations for what we're going through, and in doing so, do very thorough research.
    EDS is such a diverse condition, and it presents very differently in lots of people. Doctors and health specialists should definitely be informed more about conditions like it, and about chronic illnesses in general!!!

    • @bianca1212
      @bianca1212 2 года назад +2

      Omg help. I’m 18 and no one believes me . They say it’s just normal period cramping and my ovaries are fine but I get really bad serve bad and scored all of them on the chart. How did u move forward?

    • @Ann963
      @Ann963 2 года назад +4

      @@bianca1212 with period pain, you should check out endometriosis too

    • @spikeybunny6577
      @spikeybunny6577 Год назад +1

      @@bianca1212 and Adenomyosis (like endometriosis but on the inside of the uterus)

    • @saygehail5868
      @saygehail5868 5 месяцев назад

      Me too I just a couple months ago got diagnosed.

  • @astraldeer
    @astraldeer Год назад +24

    My father's side of the family has passed away around 40-50 with heart issues... There was testing for Marfan's but given these symptoms, I'm chatting with a doctor about possibly having vEDS in the family. Thank you so much for this video.

    • @lima8364
      @lima8364 Год назад +2

      Any diagnose yet?

    • @traildriving
      @traildriving 6 месяцев назад

      I was told Mafans and Eds are related.

  • @megang1712
    @megang1712 Год назад +25

    I just randomly read an article about this and I believe this is what my problems are from. I’ve always been hyper mobile, my joints loudly pop all day, my hips slip in the socket. I can apply sunless tanner to my entire back no problem, do praying hands mid back. I also have pale translucent skin, skin that stretches, low blood pressure, vain’s that leak, heart palpitations, I’m losing the cartilage in my big toe (hallux rigidus) my low back feels like it’s filled with broken glass. My hip labrum is separating and frayed. I have severe spinal stenosis amongst other injuries. I’ve sprained my ankles more times than I can count and starting to get torn muscles more often. I’ll go to the doctor asap but this is crazy to finally hear about this.

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Год назад +1

      Was it the article on CNN.com?

    • @megang1712
      @megang1712 Год назад +2

      @@StrongMed I’m not sure actually, it was on my news feed yesterday.

    • @georgerife8729
      @georgerife8729 11 месяцев назад +1

      It sure sounds as though you have it. Hopefully you are getting some medical help.

    • @epsomtuzud.3932
      @epsomtuzud.3932 6 месяцев назад +1

      Can collagen supplements help?

  • @RPostVideos
    @RPostVideos Год назад +21

    I think my daughter and I got extremely lucky. We went to a regular, well child check-up and the new, young, PA that we saw immediately put referrals in for rheumatology to check for hEDS. Which she has now been diagnosed with. Going to cardiologist this week. Reading these comments, I can see that many people haven't been so lucky. Mind you, my daughter has been complaining of pain for years. We were told she was having growing pains. As much pain as she had, she should be around 10 feet tall! But, I feel like things are moving quickly now!!

    • @SlapHappyPants
      @SlapHappyPants Год назад +2

      reading this made me tear up thank you for listening to your daughter. I have only just recently been diagnosed with hEDS at 25 and for my entire childhood I complained of pains and was always told it was something like growing pains and never taken seriously. I understand how hard it can be sometimes to know how seriously to take children at their word when they're talking about being in a lot of pain, but I thought having severe pain 24/7 was normal for my entire life because of it. I'm so happy your daughter has such a wonderful parent looking out for her and listening to what she's saying

    • @WHITE11WIZARD
      @WHITE11WIZARD 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@SlapHappyPantsyes, I get what you're going through. I'm 70 and wasn't diagnosed until I was 50. My childhood was agony.

  • @ashbat8613
    @ashbat8613 2 года назад +10

    I’ve experienced chronic pain since I was 11 or 12 and was told by EVERYONE I was seeking attention or medication. I got diagnosed with osteogenesis imperfecta this year type 1 and when I brought up my hyper mobility and chronic pain and my concern I may also have hEDS I was told I didn’t know what I was talking about it wasn’t until I managed to get in a pain clinic that a doctor listened and believed me he mentioned it before I did and is now working on treatments for me I’m 25 it took over a decade to receive help. I say all this because if you’re reading this and feeling like no one believes you don’t give up I know it’s so so difficult but advocate for yourself and don’t take I don’t knows and “maybe try exercising” as an answer you deserve treatment

  • @Santi._.403
    @Santi._.403 Год назад +28

    Anybody else feels like their ribs are slowly detaching from their sternums? No doctor has believed me and I've seen four so far. It's incredibly painful. Besides that I've got very translucent and weak teeth, myopia with astigmatism, strange dislocations and subluxations, intestinal problem, pots... I can go on, but I feel defeated by my doctors, none of them take me seriously. Last year a friend showed me an article on how to deal with the different symptoms of EDS by a mix of supplementation, diet, and exercises and it's been my go to. I've been able to deal with the extreme fatigues from the pots and I eliminated gluten and many high histamine foods from my diet so I haven't felt as weak since. Also the gradual strength exercises help with some of the joint pains. Honestly I feel like I have my life back, but I still have issues because nobody believes my pains, especially the feeling of my ribs detaching from my sternum, there doesn't seem to be anything I can do to keep that from deteriorating.

    • @bterrell40
      @bterrell40 6 месяцев назад +2

      OMG! Finally someone that believes me!

    • @kittencaboodles
      @kittencaboodles 5 месяцев назад +1

      I can literally move my ribs around with my hand, I don’t think they’re attached to each other in front anymore and they pop behind each other sometimes it’s such a weird feeling!

    • @brendachew3769
      @brendachew3769 5 месяцев назад +1

      called slipping ribs syndrome.one or two lower ribs slip in front or behind the lower ones.usually when you bend over like sitting down and bending to put your shoes on.they usually pop back easily but take care and don't panic if they sometimes get stuck. just gentle manipulation sorts it out. hurts like hell though. don't ever be put off by ignorant doctors. your health could be at risk. you might not know what's happening but you have had to. deal with your body all your life, and you know it better than anyone.

    • @wendyannh
      @wendyannh 3 месяца назад

      ⁠@@brendachew3769OMG, I’ve had a couple of episodes in the past year that sound just like this. I bent over to tie down one of corners of my wheelchair, and I felt a rib sort of “pop,” and Both that and the aftermath were quite scary.

  • @tullulah5294
    @tullulah5294 2 года назад +6

    I have spent 20 years searching for help ! Once I was diagnosed my life have changed for better , therapy full-time awareness on how my anatomy works, nutrition, rehabilitation, and the most important thing is to have people around you who are positive and supporting you on journey to recovery! Hope you can find the support you need ! Love to all 💕

  • @SerendipityArtandGaming
    @SerendipityArtandGaming 2 года назад +30

    I have hEDS and was very lucky, I got diagnosed when I was in around 2-3 grade. I have chronic pain and chronic fatigue, Hypermobile, but I’ve been in weekly pt for years so I’m not as flexible. It’s really nice to see someone kinda show it exists, it’s very unpopular. (Here is the list of things I can remember that I’m diagnosed with, this will be funnnn 😅- adhd, asd, ocd, depression, on track to POTS, pain, fatigue, anxiety, and I’m sure there is stuff I’m forgetting as well…., but basically it affects everywhere and anywhere of/on your body.) For others going through things like this, you can make it through, we are here for you, and even when it’s hard, you are strong

    • @tullulah5294
      @tullulah5294 2 года назад +2

      It's so nice of you to share your experiences ❤️

    • @randyfunk8312
      @randyfunk8312 Год назад +2

      My daughter has the same diagnoses that you do. 2nd or 3rd grade is amazing to get a diagnosis.

    • @SerendipityArtandGaming
      @SerendipityArtandGaming Год назад +1

      @@randyfunk8312 I don’t have an official diagnosis (can’t until the age I currently just turned, appointment relating to it soon), but I am pretty impressed myself

    • @nickboylan161
      @nickboylan161 Год назад +1

      How do you manage the symptoms ?

    • @SerendipityArtandGaming
      @SerendipityArtandGaming Год назад +1

      @@nickboylan161 it is awful honestly, my mother won’t allow me to be on pain meds. I go to therapy, physical therapy, lots of doctors, meds for my mental things, speech therapy, the list goes on

  • @WoolRevival
    @WoolRevival 2 года назад +6

    Thank you, Dr Strong! As a diagnosed hypermobile EDS individual, I’m so grateful for your advocacy. It’s such a challenging disease to live with at this time.

    • @Truerealism747
      @Truerealism747 Год назад

      Me to diagnosed yesterday 43 comers with Asperger's add to do you have pain everyday

    • @Thee_Kuromiota
      @Thee_Kuromiota 9 месяцев назад

      Same!! It's nice to see other people like me :)

  • @jeannerountree952
    @jeannerountree952 11 месяцев назад +5

    I was initially diagnosed with benign hypermobility. Which, medically to everyone that saw it, including myself as an occupational therapist meant nothing. He might as well diagnosed me with nothing. I went in thinking I had fibromyalgia. He pushed on all the pressure points, and they were never reactive. Meaning to me I did not have fibromyalgia. He confirmed to me stating you do not have fibromyalgia. However, it’s in my charts to this date because he coded it into my documents with my billing. I’ve been diagnosed with EDS.

  • @sjcobra84
    @sjcobra84 2 года назад +36

    My girlfriend has this and I'm trying to learn more about it. 😢

    • @ahac9120
      @ahac9120 2 года назад +8

      What a sweetheart. I asked the last guy I dated to read about it because he kept dismissing my symptoms, he didn’t bother. I had to cut him off.

    • @audreyanna7628
      @audreyanna7628 Год назад +2

      God bless you! She’s lucky to have you!

    • @3t0rmvi
      @3t0rmvi 7 месяцев назад +1

      My boyfriend has it and I’m doing the same thing 🫂

  • @dillonscott227
    @dillonscott227 6 месяцев назад +3

    It should be mentioned that although joints may stiffen with age, many hypermobile people have injuries sustained due to ligament laxity that leaves joints - particularly the ankles and knees - with increased instability that can worsen with age and often requires prosthetic bracing to prevent falls and serious injuries.

  • @sylvanticx
    @sylvanticx 8 месяцев назад +1

    I was recently diagnosed with hEDS at age 15. I’m very grateful that I was diagnosed so early. I’m mostly just concerned about what my future will look like- I want to be a doctor, but I worry about what my pain and mobility will be like as an adult. I am already in pain a lot of the time, either from my joints/muscles or from heartburn.
    I found it interesting how much my doctor found abnormal during my diagnosis that I thought everyone had. I didn’t know that feet were supposed to have arches when you’re standing on them. I didn’t know that other people don’t have skin as stretchy as mine. I was shocked that my thumbs sticking out past my palms when I make a fist isn’t the same as everyone else’s. My dad was also shocked by some of these features, as he also displays them, although he has no hEDS diagnosis nor any need to see a doctor about this.
    My genetic test came back negative for all other subtypes of EDS, but it did say that I am a carrier of dermatosparaxis EDS. I’m not sure if there’s a link between carrying another form of EDS and having hEDS, but I’d be interested in learning more.

  • @KxNOxUTA
    @KxNOxUTA 11 месяцев назад +3

    Wish me luck. I'm one of those ppl on the internet that saw EDS videos and kept feeling "somehow this talks about me!". It's just ... I do possibly have some of the joint hypermobility by definitely not all. I have actually successfully "self-diagnosed" and then professionally confirmed two other diagnoses before. And I've heard of many things so far, but just like the other two diagnoses, EDS oddly rings sth. with me. The effects on patient's lives ring very true to me. And I've learned before, that it's a bad idea to not listen to myself.
    I have a really good family doc. So I'll just bring him the list of my observations and ask him what he knows about EDS AND anything else that may have similar presentation. And as him if he knows any place I could get referred to, to possibly figure out what is going on. Because whatever the cause .... I'm struggling. And what I need the most is not even "a cure" or "a fix", but rather: an understanding what is going on, what to be cautious about and what supportive things might make managing this a bit more purposeful. Cause I'm "managing" it either way!

  • @harleehall2032
    @harleehall2032 7 месяцев назад +1

    I got diagnosed with hEDS in 2021 and the person who diagnosed me said well its no big deal and run out the room. I got my diagnosis reconfirmed a year later by a specialist and walked out with a bunch of referrals and I am now waiting on my wheelchair for my EDS.

  • @ozzieg2415
    @ozzieg2415 2 года назад +5

    I am being sent to the geneticist at mount sinai sometime soon but am waiting for them to call back which can be months. My spine joints are hyper mobile/popping and subluxing a lot and my wrist and shoulder are as well. Absolute pain in the butt. I start PT next week. Therapists who knows hyper mobility but not Eds. I wish you all the best as this disorder is not taken seriously enough and this country healthcare system needs to do better.

    • @TwinkieHeart
      @TwinkieHeart Год назад +1

      If you only have hypermobility type it will not show up on genetic testing, that is diagnosed clinically by presentation of symptoms.

  • @Alice.Goldenberg
    @Alice.Goldenberg 2 года назад +20

    Thanks for the contribution. I also suffer from the EDS syndrome, along with other diseases (chronic idiopathic pancreatitis, pancreatic duct anomaly, pancreatic insufficiency, pancreatic cyst, gastroparesis, extreme mesenteric artery compression syndrome, heart valve insufficiency, coronary buttock spasms). I have been tube fed for 14 years and oral feeding is no longer possible. A proportion of patients who suffer from EDS also have a comorbidity with a compression syndrome in the intestine (there are various e.g. the mesenteric artery compression syndrome, Dunbar syndrome, nutcracker, May-Turner, etc.). This is shown, among other things, by pain after oral intake of food, some cardiovascular problems, etc. Unfortunately, the knowledge of this correlation/comorbidity is not widespread. There is a scientific paper on it in Researchgate. Unfortunately, since the knowledge of this comorbidity is not widespread, I wanted to post the comment/note here, maybe this information will help someone

    • @xxxAQueerieSoEeriexxx
      @xxxAQueerieSoEeriexxx Год назад +1

      i think you just solved my problem. thank you

    • @user-no2ez9qw5w
      @user-no2ez9qw5w Год назад

      Hi, I have friend who suffers from weird GI symptoms with a host of genetic issues and a COL gene mutation. are there any compression syndromes in the intestines that you know of? Thank you.

    • @Alice.Goldenberg
      @Alice.Goldenberg Год назад

      @@user-no2ez9qw5w Hello, Yes. I know about the : Arteria-mesenterica-superior-Syndrom. But there also some others like the May-Thurner Syndrom and Nutcracker Syndrome. It would be important to look for a MD who knows about these compressionssyndroms. Unfortunately most doctors do not know about it. If you need an address here in Europe I can tell you some names of great specialists. All the best and if you have any questions, please feel free to ask, Alice Goldenberg

  • @DeepSeeBlue3636
    @DeepSeeBlue3636 6 месяцев назад

    Diagnosed at 32 ,18 years ago. Got much better treated for a long time but now it seems some things going backwards. Leave it a small country with not much alternatives . Thank you for the video. Good one.

  • @shannongreenwell1278
    @shannongreenwell1278 2 года назад +7

    According to my sister, EDS runs in my family and that explains where I got it from. I have Classical EDS type two. My dad is showing signs of EDS and my mom had Osteogenesis Imperfecta and from research, the genetics that’s responsible for Osteogenesis is also responsible for Classical EDS. My sister has O.I. And I have EDS. I was able to do these as a little child but I’m older now. I have the signs of Classical, and my Neurologist saw it in me. I am hyper mobile in my fingers and my hands, I can’t bend my thumb like the regular way that is typically seen by the test, I can do it backwards. Ugh. The chronic pain is so Unbearable and very annoying when it wakes me up from a peaceful sleep!

  • @the_REAL_Pearl_
    @the_REAL_Pearl_ 2 года назад +9

    I'll note here that fibromyalgia is often either a comorbidity of EDS, or sometimes a misdiagnosis.

  • @Bendylife
    @Bendylife Год назад +6

    I just got diagnosed by my doctor but even though I live in a major city, Vancouver British Columbia, there are no genetic clinics accepting family doctor referral. I've heard of only one specialist that might be able to refer people but they are located in another city. It's heart breaking how little support there is. I just want to be able to keep living my life normally, maybe be a mom one day.

    • @janetm16jm
      @janetm16jm 25 дней назад

      I currently reside in Vancouver, British Columbia, and have recently received a diagnosis from a medical specialist. My primary care physician referred me to the specialist, and the referral process resulted in an appointment within a month. The diagnosis was provided to me a few days ago.

  • @rayventales8686
    @rayventales8686 Год назад +3

    I had never heard about this until a few days ago, it explains so much of why my body just doesn’t like me lol, it was my sons dentist that suggested that I get tested for it, so I’m off to the doctor in a few days to get the genetic test

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Год назад +1

      Remember that there is no genetic test for the most common form of EDS (hypermobile); there are only genetic tests for the other forms (e.g. classical, vascular, etc..)

  • @ianberry5879
    @ianberry5879 7 месяцев назад +3

    I ran across this syndrome while looking into pectus excavatum, which I had as a child. The sunken chest has largely resolved as I grew. I was told I was double jointed, my thumbs can bend backwards much further than most people, and while seemingly not as significant as my younger years, used to be able to bend my fingers almost 90 degrees backwards. Reverse paralleling my feet like a ballet dancer is easy. Elbows don't bend negatively at all but I think my knees are a bit negative, and joint pain, predominantly in the knees is common. I'm wondering if this is what I've been suffering from along with Lyme for decades.

  • @Rebander1549
    @Rebander1549 Год назад +2

    I'm 64 now and I strongly believe that I have the hypermobile EDS. I unfortunately don't live near where I can be examined by specialists. But all my life I have been flexible all over. Getting stiffer with arthritis is painful but it seems that my joints aren't as floppy. Ive had mitral valve repair in 2005 at the Mayo clinic. I have a slightly enlarged heart and back pain because my SI joints like to slip out of place. All doctors don't listen to me or dismiss me. I am so sure that a genetic study would confirm this. I had a heart attack in 2021 that was not typical. It was called the broken heart syndrome but really nothing was done to treat me. I kept getting medicines for the typical clogged up arteries. Mine are clear. In any case I have had to advocate strongly for my health because it seems like I get treated like a prima Donna and dismissed because when I make a suggestion about what this could be I'm told I am too old for a study. 😢 I would like to have a study done but how?

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Год назад +2

      I'm sorry to hear about your health and experiences with the American healthcare system. Unfortunately, there actually is no genetic test for hypermobile EDS. While few experts if any doubt a genetic cause, the gene (or genes) responsible have not yet been identified, which is kind of weird since all other forms of EDS (including ones far far rarer) do have established genetic tests. To me, this suggests that the underlying mechanism of hEDS is potentially something quite novel that researchers haven't yet discovered because they don't know exactly how to look for it.
      A diagnosis of hEDS really just requires a good history and physical exam performed by someone with expertise in the disease, which can be hard to find in many parts of the country.

    • @darilekron4590
      @darilekron4590 Год назад

      ​@@StrongMed
      The Norris Lab at MUSC has a large study of hEDS participants and has found a gene variant for about 20 percent of people in the study. They're hoping to pinpoint other gene variants.
      Results are being peer reviewed now. Hopefully their findings will be released soon.

  • @florabraswell-nm1re
    @florabraswell-nm1re 7 месяцев назад +2

    There is people who have MS and they don’t get accurately diagnosed ,due to Doctors not being educated enough about these things , autoimmune diseases, hypermobility problems, and EDS , Doctors may need to go back to School, there have been dozens of people trying to get diagnosed for MS. Lupus, other autoimmune disorders 🙏❤️

  • @jwilleseries7764
    @jwilleseries7764 Год назад +3

    I really hope that there will be an updated diagnostic criteria becasue EDS Is the most similiar to whatever undignosed condition I have with several co-morbidities. It is quite frustrating as the connective tissue dissorder that I do have is qutie debilitating so it would be nice to be able to know for certain if it is EDS Or something else

  • @hannahvitu
    @hannahvitu 2 года назад +20

    Great explanation! I look forward to pointing people this direction and saving myself some yammering.
    I want to specifically thank you for calling out the problem of the "trendy diagnosis/self-misdiagnosis" assumption. Certainly, self-misdiagnosis exists and can be a very challenging problem for patients and physicians alike. It's also a breath of fresh air to hear a non-EDS-specialist physician admit there is a bias growing in medicine against EDS as a condition and (to a point) against EDS patients. That bias is why it took me years to be diagnosed with hEDS, and is why I am still treated poorly by some healthcare professionals. It's good to hear it's not imaginary, as is so often implied.

  • @curtishodges7610
    @curtishodges7610 2 года назад +4

    Awesome, I just had this case about one month ago. Love you channel. You are a great resource. Thanks

  • @mstipakbro6960
    @mstipakbro6960 2 года назад +3

    Thanks! I use this video to help people understand my diagnosis! Brief and informative!

  • @uncrownedoak7777
    @uncrownedoak7777 9 месяцев назад +2

    I can touch my wrist with my thumb, bend fingers a little past 90 degrees, and place my hands together behind my shoulder blades. But i can't say I've had any noticeable discomforts. I've been told I walk funny and everything pops and cracks but nothing painful.

  • @SKOLAH
    @SKOLAH Год назад +2

    I have severe HEDS. It sucks. Sucks. The poor healing, the pain...Don't forget...
    A study in Exeter found a HEDS family that also carried the COL3A1 gene. Conventional thinking says this doesn't happen.
    Further to this, HEDS bodies often have TNXB issues. Tennascin X is a protein between the collagen cells.
    Having TNXB can open HEDS body to more issues that can asking to VEDS - vascular involvement.
    The figure of 1:10,000 that he gave here?
    Some good sources say as many as 1:2500, but recognition of EDS is often poor, hence it could be much more common.
    The 1:10,000 figure...I haven't seen that figure. Maybe it's a US thing?

  • @lzeng78
    @lzeng78 3 месяца назад

    Thank you, can you please add more information about steps a provider go about to diagnose EDS?

  • @chickenmama5051
    @chickenmama5051 Год назад +3

    Im 55 and looking back can now attribute hEDS to chronic lifelong pain, infertility, skin problems, 2 lower back spinal fusions, and dislocations…(knees multiple times, shoulders and elbows) as a child, easy bruising, multiple spraines and strains, and daily painful subluxations….wish i knew this dx 35 years ago…..it all makes so much sense now.

  • @saygehail5868
    @saygehail5868 5 месяцев назад +1

    Just got doagnosed with eds, i belive typical but the orthopedic only seen me for like five minutes. Its crappy because i have high tendencys to dislocate limbs. I also suffer from pain, some days are better then others. Atm i am 18 and after years of being labeled double jointed or, "growing pains" i finally got someone to listen to me. Now we just have to get genetic testibg and my heart checked.

  • @briannaconstantino6417
    @briannaconstantino6417 Год назад +1

    I was diagnosed with hEDS at 5 years old and this last year I was diagnosed with POTS

  • @velvetpaws999
    @velvetpaws999 Год назад +3

    Everything about the presentation is very informative and interesting! However, I am not happy to see two base-line yogic postures parading as examples of EDS: The "reverse Namaste" and the forward fold. Almost any practitioner of yoga can do these after a couple of years of regular practice. It is misleading to insinuate that a person has EDS if they can do these two. Maybe you should consider to take them out! Thank you for a well-done presentation overall!

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Год назад +5

      I appreciate the feedback. In extreme brief, the issue is whether a person can perform these positions without training or practice. There's at least one paper that discusses the "reverse Namaskar" sign as a potential sign of EDS: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2856381/
      In medicine, virtually no physical signs are diagnostic of a particular disease; they almost all require the correct clinical context. No doctor is going to assume that a long-term practitioner of yoga has EDS on the basis of them being able to hold these positions.

    • @shivapriyasaraswati7171
      @shivapriyasaraswati7171 2 месяца назад

      At 52yo I can do these and have rarely ever done yoga asanas and stretching exercises

  • @cassidytoombs9044
    @cassidytoombs9044 Месяц назад

    I have had double jointed elbows for as long as I can remember.. I am a 30 year old female. 123 (been losing weight since I’ve had a full blown I guess ANS attack my BP was 183/200 for over an hour.) and blah blah blah I got diagnosed with this and a mass in my lung. Soooo ☹️ pray for me guys.

  • @shellibelli4387
    @shellibelli4387 2 года назад +11

    Ehlers is pronounced “Ellers”.

  • @maryalex4806
    @maryalex4806 2 года назад +4

    Do LARGE Vericose Veins and bad cellulite have any correlation with this?

  • @annawhite1762
    @annawhite1762 Год назад +5

    Diagnosed cEDS at age 40. Many years being told "lose weight and you'll be better, take antidepressants you're just depressed". It has been hard. I have so much damage and pain and exhaustion. But the worst by far was not being believed by family and the doctors. Its very much a self managed condition imo.

  • @blondiejr9142
    @blondiejr9142 2 года назад +5

    I have EDS and also, May-Thurner Syndrome (as well as other conditions). I have come across others who have both and recently found a website that states that they are related, but I'm curious what the relation could be. I can't seem to find any information on it, though.

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  2 года назад +2

      I had not previously heard of any connection between the two, but just did a literature search and found this case report that discusses cases in which EDS and abdominal compression syndromes (including May-Thurner) coexisted: onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ajmg.c.31949 . Unfortunately, everything but the article's abstract is behind a paywall, but the gist is that the coexistence of the two occur at rates much higher than chance alone would predict if they were not related.

    • @echastee
      @echastee 2 года назад

      I have lipedema and possibly eds and now I wanna read about your may-thurner syndrome

  • @neo5802
    @neo5802 8 месяцев назад

    There's one part of the video I have a question about. Particularly it's around 7:19 where you say that a criteria for the hEDS diagnosis is that there is no other diagnosis which could explain hypermibility, such as marfan syndrome. I personally know someone who has both diagnosises and don't understand in how having one illness would mean you cannot have the other? Wouldn't it rather be so that it's super important to examine closely, if the symptoms of both illnesses are given? I would love an elaboration on this.
    On another note I want to thank you for this educative content. I want to learn about EDS so I can support this person in my life better, and this is a good place to start for me. So thank you.

  • @Hey-vz9jo
    @Hey-vz9jo Год назад +1

    i think i was pretty lucky that i was diagnosed with eds at 11 , my first doctor thought that I was in depression and that I had anxiety attacks, all my life even since my birth I had lots of joint and vascular problems, with puberty everything became more complicated I don't even have the strength to get up in the morning

  • @LDuke-pc7kq
    @LDuke-pc7kq Год назад +2

    This is probably the best, most all encompassing in information and understanding of the complexities for both patients and physicians medical summaries I've ever watched truely, 💛🥲🦓 Thank you So Much from the EDS and greater N.O.R.D. 'Zebra community' for bringing compassionate and comprehensive awareness! You are awesome Doc! 💛💪😇GOD Bless you !

  • @kirstencon
    @kirstencon 2 года назад +9

    Eds caused my pelvis to shatter when pregnant 😞 Also arthritis in my spine it’s an awful thing to live with

    • @solarfields5100
      @solarfields5100 2 года назад +4

      Oh my goshhhhh how are you doing now I’m so sorry

    • @mellowmangomamiz
      @mellowmangomamiz Год назад

      there is surgery to help with that. some use walkers/wheelchairs.

  • @tknzdworldfirstidentylinke6404
    @tknzdworldfirstidentylinke6404 2 года назад +3

    But what matters is what’s happening in the body. What’s happening with the chemistry of the body.

  • @gothafloxacin
    @gothafloxacin Год назад +1

    I have hEDS with multiple comorbidities. Global dysmotility, dysautonomia, osteoarthritis, pulmonary artery enlargement and multiple heart valve regurgitation, scoliosis/lordosis/kyphosis, neurogenic bladder with urinary retention as well as muscle issues plus a whole host of other things. EDS sucks is my point.

  • @ΆγιοςΧίλαριος
    @ΆγιοςΧίλαριος 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for these series. Great as always!

  • @grettagrids
    @grettagrids 2 года назад +2

    Im 47. And was just diagnosed in 2020.. ive been diagnosed with classical after all else was ruled. Out and. Tested for.

    • @yedhukrishnan6326
      @yedhukrishnan6326 2 года назад

      How to diagnose it.. I have all symptom's.. Is there any genetic test..

    • @grettagrids
      @grettagrids 2 года назад +1

      @@yedhukrishnan6326 for some forms of ehlers danlos yes, you wil need to see a genetics specialist.

  • @moxielouise
    @moxielouise Год назад +1

    Very informative video, thank you!

  • @DeniseSkidmore
    @DeniseSkidmore Год назад

    Found it interesting that your thumbnail is a trick I can do, but isn't on the diagnostic test I don't meet the qualifications of. I think if I got a proper diagnosis it would be hypermobillity spectrum disorder or regional joint hypermobillity.

  • @Celi.V
    @Celi.V Год назад +1

    Very informative thank you!

  • @baileyellison642
    @baileyellison642 9 месяцев назад

    I think I might have hEDS after becoming aware of just how hyper mobile I am after asking my doctor to put me in PT to help me learn how to walk without pain after a short distance. I was first directed to Hypermobility spectrum disorder by my PT and the google rabbit hole helped me find hEDS. The biggest difference between which one u have is basically just because they r extra strict with the hEDS diagnosis was what I concluded. Because of the family history in criteria 2. So idk which I have but I need to figure it out because I didn’t know hEDS was THAT serious til I watched this video

  • @humphrke
    @humphrke 2 года назад +2

    I finally got diagnosed with this on Monday after realising I had it last year and having it for 25 years

  • @julianmaycare6017
    @julianmaycare6017 Год назад +3

    Question for other EDS peeps here, Have you had issues conceiving? I've been trying for 7 years, and only recently read that EDS is linked to infertility.

    • @gnomerebel
      @gnomerebel Год назад +1

      This scares me so much, I am the husband and my wife just got diagnosed yesterday for EDS. We think its hEDS but not sure yet and we have heard of the troubles having a child and its a huge crushing blow to our hopes of having a family one day. I am wishing you the best in your journey to one day having a child as well, and hope we both have a great luck moving forward.

  • @sillygoofyguyy
    @sillygoofyguyy Год назад +1

    im in severe pain all the time and everytime i go to the er i can never find out whats wrong. i also might have pots because i almost faint everytime i stand up. i just wish i could live life pain free :( im only 16

  • @grettagrids
    @grettagrids Год назад +2

    TRENDY??? No. Its painful and sucks. I was confirmed by genetic testing.

  • @mandichism2347
    @mandichism2347 Год назад +1

    My Dr just told me about this we're doing testing .. like always but she took everything I had to say and listened .. shoe seems to fit though .. so not in my head... So what now ?

  • @amandagardiner6065
    @amandagardiner6065 Год назад +3

    My doctor refuses to diagnose me even though I meet TONS of the criteria including having four family members with it. Hyper mobility in most of my joints you can trace my veins all through my body I bruise super easy and heal slow and even IVs leave scars I also have an issue with minor scoliosis and other spinal alignment issues I wasn't born with and have even dislocated one of my shoulders just trying to get something off a shelf at the store and sprained an ankle just walking on flat pavement my skin tears and sheers easily I have a number of GI issues including reoccurring diverticulitis (I'm only 30) IV lines are difficult to get because my veins blow easily. It takes an IV poke 12 or so days to heal and the scab to fall off and that's with a pediatric needle and sores often split back open multiple times before they heal completely and scar over and I'm CONSTANTLY AND PAINFULLY popping snapping cracking and grinding at the joints and it HURTS and I sometimes fall because of it and end up covered in some pretty nasty bruises that take WEEKS to go away. I also have neuropathy really bad in my feet and hands now to.

    • @amandagardiner6065
      @amandagardiner6065 Год назад

      To add to this I have a number of other issues with vision skin issues etc but those are the main ones.

    • @amandagardiner6065
      @amandagardiner6065 Год назад +2

      Update FINALLY GOT A DIAGNOSIS. I've had TMJ sense I was 8 so you'd think that that of all things would have raised a red flag

    • @amandagardiner6065
      @amandagardiner6065 Год назад +1

      My joints all now subluxate 😮‍💨

  • @andielynn7133
    @andielynn7133 2 года назад

    I was referred to a specialist but still waiting hopefully soon

  • @sittingaloneinvip
    @sittingaloneinvip 11 месяцев назад +1

    i have thissss and i also am late diagnosed autistic and have ADHD. all of these are comorbid i had no idea.

  • @prairiemomof2
    @prairiemomof2 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for presenting information on this condition.

  • @Mickeydoesmyhair
    @Mickeydoesmyhair 2 года назад +12

    My three sisters and I all have EDS. Would be open for doing studies I’m in LA.

    • @RealZayComo
      @RealZayComo 2 года назад +2

      Hello, do you have digestive issues? If so what kind ? 🙏

    • @MK-mj9gx
      @MK-mj9gx 2 года назад +3

      @@RealZayComo Gastroparesis, & Chronic Acid Reflux are common.

    • @darilekron4590
      @darilekron4590 Год назад

      ​@@RealZayComo
      I had chronic intestinal cramping before I started Intermittent fasting and reduced grains. My cramping is probably connected to inflammation due to overactive mast cells but is almost entirely gone since starting I.F.

    • @epsomtuzud.3932
      @epsomtuzud.3932 6 месяцев назад

      Can Collagen supplements help ?

  • @naturegirl4074
    @naturegirl4074 7 месяцев назад +1

    I was diagnosed at 48

  • @2115virgo13
    @2115virgo13 Год назад

    My Neuro say she believes I have hyper mobility . Had a hysterectomy at 27 . My uterus fell over. I’ve had ankle , knee, shoulder and know neck surgery bc I keep injuring myself with simple thing like picking up a small plant.Pulled elbow. I lost large intestine due to paralysis .
    To have the test is not covered.

  • @kar460
    @kar460 Год назад

    I can do all of the Heds except i dont think my elbow does that??
    I can do the praying hands but when i do, my hands are down not up. Would you know if this will qualify or no?
    Some people cant afford to go a specialist. On top of that they have to fly or drive and that cost even more.
    My hips and knees pops but ever sense turning 36 it hasnt gotten worst. I jogged from the gas pump to the door and felt if my left hip was about to give out. A few weeks ago i felt my right femur head almost came out of its socket. I even bruise easily. I have a few on my right leg and i have no idea how they got there. I also suffer from stiffness. Sometimes my back is so stiff its hard to get up from the ground. I can also turn my feet all the way around where my feet points behind me. (Not at the same time)
    Same with my left and
    right foot. I can turn them towards my right and its the same with my left. I can also bend my fingers joint backwards.

  • @magnolia8626
    @magnolia8626 2 года назад +5

    I think I might have a mild form of EDS. Hyper-mobile joints, skin with stretch marks, and possible dysautonomia. Interestingly, I learned about this disorder at a genetics counseling clinic.

    • @beauxsbooks
      @beauxsbooks 2 года назад +1

      Sounds like Hypermobility Spectrum Disorder, which is the next step down from EDS.

    • @RealZayComo
      @RealZayComo 2 года назад

      Hello, do you have digestive issues? If so what kind ? 🙏

    • @beauxsbooks
      @beauxsbooks 2 года назад +2

      @@RealZayComo I do have digestive issues. I have Gastroparesis and Gastritis

    • @RealZayComo
      @RealZayComo 2 года назад +1

      @@beauxsbooks do you have lower abdominal bloating, fullness daily ? 🙏

    • @beauxsbooks
      @beauxsbooks 2 года назад +1

      @@RealZayComo yeah those are some of the symptoms I get

  • @Gritt982
    @Gritt982 Год назад

    I knew I've noticed i had hypermibile eds since about 13 but my doctor doesn't take me seriously. Now 40, i have constant joint pain, muscle pain, shoulders popping, high blood pressure, chest pain etc i don't know what to do or where to start our who to see about it. My doctor said i need to "toughen up"

  • @sillybillyvideo
    @sillybillyvideo Год назад +1

    Having my 7th surgery soon. I had both knees and shoulders stabilized with anchors and donor ligaments. H-eds sure isn't fun.

    • @sillybillyvideo
      @sillybillyvideo 9 месяцев назад

      I still get sore if I sleep wrong or stretch too far. But nothing like the pain of constantly subluxing or dislocating. I'm still off work until the end of March from my spine surgery. They took out 3 disks that were about to cut through my spinal cord. They put donor bone in to fill the spots.

    • @sillybillyvideo
      @sillybillyvideo 9 месяцев назад

      @@theSD7 I'm not pain free by any means. I still have osteoarthritis, and numbness and weakness. Degenerative disk disease, and damaged spinal cord

  • @sunving
    @sunving 2 года назад +1

    Thank you very much Dr Strong, wonderful lecture. Very informative, few year back I ran into a case, she showed me how she could bend finger but I was limited to ask any more feathers, not much in text either. This is great lecture.

    • @MK-mj9gx
      @MK-mj9gx 2 года назад

      Are you a doctor? If so where are you located?

  • @florameadow
    @florameadow 9 месяцев назад +1

    Does anyone here have the same problems as me? So, if i wear a t-shirt with short sleeves in the summer i get elbow pain. And in winter i get wrist pain when it gets windy. I only need to open my window briefly and i get wrist pain. I will be tested for EDS but is it the same for you? because when I tell people this they think I'm crazy...
    I apologize for my grammar, english is my second language

  • @sum1sw
    @sum1sw Год назад

    I have a friend with EDS. She is 46. Various material on the internet says that the average age for someone with EDS is 48. How will the end be like? I would like to be ready to support her in any way I can.

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Год назад +3

      In brief, the different subtypes of EDS have different prognoses. Of the 3 most common subtypes, hypermobile and classical EDS predominantly are at risk of developing musculoskeletal complications and chronic pain, but have normal or near-normal life expectancy. Patients with vascular EDS are at a much higher risk of a catastrophic complication such as an arterial rupture. To support your friend, the best thing is to explain that you are there for her and to ask her what she needs.

    • @sum1sw
      @sum1sw Год назад

      @@StrongMed Thank you kindly.

  • @osteopathiccpdtraining
    @osteopathiccpdtraining 2 года назад

    Good video. Thanks.

  • @gogetter1861
    @gogetter1861 2 года назад +1

    I have been diagnosed with hyper mobility and I have been referred to Rhumatology. I bruise easily and muscle in hand in between thumb and finger has popped out pain in sternum and orthorpedicts say I have nodules in knuckles and they look red inflamed and I have tremor in hands and severe pain/ stiffness in neck and shoulders every morning and also today found muscle next to sternum pop out more now and deformed chest wall seen an orthorpedict yesterday who referred me to rhumetplogy and explained I might have something geneticly etc but wouldn’t explain what he thought

    • @gogetter1861
      @gogetter1861 2 года назад

      Brighton score 9

    • @nopressurenodiamonds5566
      @nopressurenodiamonds5566 Год назад +1

      I know your comment is 7 months old BUT OMG I have been trying to find out whats wrong with me and I have IDENTICAL symptoms. I bruise so easily, I am currently covered in huge dark bruises on arms and legs. I even had a bruise on the sole of my foot smh. For 2 months the fat pad on my palm where my thumb is has been swollen, my forearm and hand is weak, and I can see blue veins all throughout the palms of my hands. I have rib & sternum pain with swelling as well in my upper chest wall around 1st rib. All my scans so no tumor but cant tell me what it is. I am hoping its not a bulging artery. I have hand tremors now and then with severe hip pain and shoulder pain like they are going to dislocate. Yesterday I felt a hard part in my sternum it feels like its poking out more than the other side and a tad sore. I also have flat feet, tall & slim but recently lost 40 lbs in 4 months and I eat 3 meals a day. I can do the praying hands behind my back and I have poor bladder control. I am really starting to think after a year, I know whats wrong with me. I have vascular issues as well which is the scary part.

    • @gogetter1861
      @gogetter1861 Год назад

      Do you have hyper mobility? I have now been diagnosed with HEDS, arthritis and scoliosis of the spine and much more all I did was switch doctors and was referred to rheumatology and neurology and everything is running swiftly with diagnosis

    • @lauramitchell6725
      @lauramitchell6725 Год назад +1

      Deformed chest wall,ask about Marfans Syndrome ?

    • @epsomtuzud.3932
      @epsomtuzud.3932 6 месяцев назад

      Can collagen supplements help?

  • @LucasdaMatta
    @LucasdaMatta 2 года назад +1

    great vid

  • @scoutwindsor
    @scoutwindsor 2 года назад

    Great video!!

  • @gamaltaher9714
    @gamaltaher9714 2 года назад

    Thanks

  • @rainHellsing
    @rainHellsing 8 месяцев назад

    this video makes me understand why the doctors thought my bendiness was so interesting lol

  • @iloveminiapplepies
    @iloveminiapplepies 8 месяцев назад

    "Trendy diagnosis" is such a pain in the ass these days. EDS, POTS, PTSD, Tourette Syndrome, autism etc are like a flood in teenager's instagram bios.

  • @clevercrowcuriosau876
    @clevercrowcuriosau876 Год назад +1

    I was told that because EDS isn’t curable that there was no point in getting diagnosed 🙄 idk why the gp said that, i have since seen a rheumatologist where I scored 9 on the Beighton test, I have had chronic pain and many other issues which I feel have been completely disregarded. I saw a new gp who googled EDS infront of me which is never a good sign lol 🤦🏻‍♀️

  • @breemorrison901
    @breemorrison901 7 месяцев назад

    I don't understand why the first action taken by physicians is to refer the patient to a different specialist for every symptom....isn't it less likely that any multi-systemic disease will be far less likely to be correctly diagnosed?

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  7 месяцев назад +1

      At least in the US, it's largely about incentives. It is more lucrative for a medical practice to see 4 patients for 15 minutes each than 1 patient for an hour. So if a patient comes in to their primary care doctor with back pain, high blood pressure, migraines, and an itchy rash - a good primary is knowledgeable enough to manage all these themselves. But instead, they focus on the back pain during their 15 minute appointment with the patient, and then refer out to cardiology, neurology, and dermatology. This is rarely the fault of the individual physician because most physicians in the US belong to large multispecialty groups now, which are largely managed by non-physicians who dictate how long visits can be, and in some cases, even how many problems can be addressed during one visit. I had a family member recently see a sports medicine doc with 2 different musculoskeletal symptoms, and the doc would only address one symptom during that visit and made my relative schedule a second appointment a month later for the second symptom. It is absurd, but that is the US healthcare system.

    • @epsomtuzud.3932
      @epsomtuzud.3932 6 месяцев назад

      @@StrongMed Can collagen supplements help?

  • @marinamenikolakoupatsi4493
    @marinamenikolakoupatsi4493 6 месяцев назад +1

    How can I find if I have it?

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  6 месяцев назад +1

      You need to see a physician in person who can examine you and who is familiar with the diagnostic criteria.

    • @marinamenikolakoupatsi4493
      @marinamenikolakoupatsi4493 6 месяцев назад +1

      Ok thanks

  • @epsomtuzud.3932
    @epsomtuzud.3932 6 месяцев назад

    Can collagen supplements help?

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  6 месяцев назад

      Unfortunately, there is no evidence that collagen supplements help any form of EDS.

  • @apacur
    @apacur Год назад

    Would a Neurologist diagnosis this? Rheumatology?

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Год назад +1

      Unfortunately, most types of EDS falls into the cracks between specialties. In other words, there is no specialty in which every doctor feels comfortable diagnosing and treating patients with EDS. If a patient believes they have hypermobile or classical EDS, probably the best bet is to use social media to find other patients in the same geographic area who have had success with a specific doctor. Other subtypes like vascular EDS are nuanced and dangerous enough that seeking care at a university-affiliated academic medical center is probably best, if that's an option.

    • @apacur
      @apacur Год назад

      @@StrongMed Thank you..
      Why are so many doctors afraid to fully engage or diagnose EDS?
      Even when symptoms point towards it ?

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Год назад +1

      @@apacur For most clinicians, I'd say that It's more that EDS is poorly covered in training, so many feel like it falls too far outside their expertise. (This is why I chose EDS to include in this series for doctors in training called "underappreciated diseases!").
      And with hEDS and cEDS, they do fall within the cracks between specialties. Patients have prominent joint symptoms which makes it seem like a rheumatology issue, but rheumatologists focus on immune system dysregulation, which is not a primary mechanism of pathology in EDS. The closest analogy might be something like Marfan syndrome, which is closest to being a "cardiovascular disease", but many community cardiologists refer cases to academic centers with Marfan specialists.
      Also, to be fully transparent, there is a common belief among docs that a non-negligible subset of patients who seek care for EDS have self-diagnosed it, do not actually have EDS, and are unwilling to consider that there is an alternative explanation for their symptoms - labeling such suggestions as "medical gaslighting". I have not personally encountered such a patient, but stories of the phenomenon show up periodically on medical-themed subreddits. So I think some physicians are hesitant to see new "EDS patients" out of concern the patient may be of that phenotype.

  • @AshleyMarie1992
    @AshleyMarie1992 2 года назад

    If I am hyper mobile does this mean I have EDS?

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  2 года назад +2

      Most individuals who are hypermobile do not satisfy the clinical criteria for EDS. You need to be assessed and examined in person by a physician familiar with EDS in order to determine if you have the diagnosis.

  • @grettagrids
    @grettagrids Год назад

    So. Am i gonna be crippled to a wheel chair. Like my mom.and sisters???

  • @uppermoonzeroo
    @uppermoonzeroo Год назад

    idk if i can have but I can do the hand thing in the cover

  • @tinaable-nx9hl
    @tinaable-nx9hl 3 дня назад

    My friend died from this.

  • @JGArtemis
    @JGArtemis 2 месяца назад

    Why am I 26 having to diagnose myself wtf !!!????? Why did no one tell me and just guilt be saying I’m lazy and my feelings aren’t real

  • @greycordero1312
    @greycordero1312 2 года назад +1

    What are the short or long term damages?

    • @AliSalman2889
      @AliSalman2889 2 года назад +4

      Short term? joint pain/dislocation Long term? Organ tearing i.e stomach

    • @greycordero1312
      @greycordero1312 2 года назад +1

      @@AliSalman2889 Hello, thanks for your response, the product was introduced through my nostrils, I did not ingest it through the mouth.

  • @jenmonty544
    @jenmonty544 2 года назад +1

    I'm back. I'd like to represent myself today and why they should back off the hazel eyes. Thanks.