ahimsa
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Yes, that is my understanding, too. But I guess some doctors use these terms differently? I don't claim to be an expert so take my comments with a grain of salt - pun intended!You can have orthostatic intolerance and not necessarily have POTS. I had thought they were the same.
Here's a quote from the Johns Hopkins handout found on the Dysautonomia International website:
(PDF file found here - http://www.dysautonomiainternational.org/pdf/RoweOIsummary.pdf )
Getting back to the thread topic, I definitely wish I had known how much of a problem standing was - or even sitting upright for long periods of time - when I first got sick.The medical term “orthostatic” is defined as relating to, or caused by, an upright or standing posture. Orthostatic intolerance, then, is an umbrella term for several conditions in which symptoms are made worse by upright posture and improve with recumbency. This document provides further information about neurally mediated hypotension (NMH) and postural tachycardia syndrome (POTS), two common forms of chronic orthostatic intolerance. Hypotension is the medical term for low blood pressure (BP), and tachycardia is the medical term for an increased heart rate (HR).
This may not apply to all ME patients (depends on the diagnostic criteria) but if it does then it is very helpful to know about.