Nord Wolf
The Northman
- Messages
- 684
- Location
- New England
This seems to be an old thread of many years. I’m wondering if anyone has any new information/clarification on this subject, because there seems to be so much confusion and or contradictory information on this subject… at least in what I’ve located thus far, and been told by the oh so “wise” healthcare “profession”.
PoTS and ME - are they the same thing, in that PoTS is the severest form of ME? I know that ME and CFS are proven to be two different conditions, and I agree with that. But where does PoTS fit in? I realize it all fits in to the tag of dysautonomia, but in various forms of dysautonomia there seem to be clear defining protocols for diagnosis and labeling. Parkinson's disease, multiple system atrophy, dementia with Lewy bodies, Ehlers-Danlos syndromes, autoimmune autonomic ganglionopathy and autonomic neuropathy, HIV/AIDS, autonomic failure, and postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome all appear to be under the dysautonomia tag. But clearly PD is different than MSA, for example.
For me I was diagnosed with dysautonomia. Then came testing and the diagnosis of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis, then a separate diagnosis of CFS. I have quite a few other diagnosed conditions as well, but I’l keep the focus on ME, PoTS and dysautonomia.
On average my resting prone BP hovers around 112-72 with a resting HTR of 60 bpm. As soon as I stand up my HTR jumps to between 110 and 130 bpm. My BP shoots up to between 139-84 to 200-97. Of course dizziness, lightheadedness, slight nausea, some swelling of certain lower body parts, coldness and decreased feeling in the hands, instant cognitive decline, lung and nasal inflammation, spasmodic coughing, etc, all come into play upon standing from having been prone.
All of that is my normal from being prone to standing. It all decreases when laying back down again.
I’ve done the 10 minute prone while logging BP and HTR each minute, to standing for 10 minutes while logging the same. BP and HTR increase for the entire time standing, along with symptoms listed above.
My healthcare team is obviously thinking PoTS of one of the 3 forms, or something similar. I speak with my neurologist in a couple weeks.
Does anyone have a clear answer as to PoTS being an extreme of ME, or something completely on its own? Reading through this thread of old seems like there isn’t a very clear answer, at least in 2013.
My basic 10 minute test results:
PoTS and ME - are they the same thing, in that PoTS is the severest form of ME? I know that ME and CFS are proven to be two different conditions, and I agree with that. But where does PoTS fit in? I realize it all fits in to the tag of dysautonomia, but in various forms of dysautonomia there seem to be clear defining protocols for diagnosis and labeling. Parkinson's disease, multiple system atrophy, dementia with Lewy bodies, Ehlers-Danlos syndromes, autoimmune autonomic ganglionopathy and autonomic neuropathy, HIV/AIDS, autonomic failure, and postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome all appear to be under the dysautonomia tag. But clearly PD is different than MSA, for example.
For me I was diagnosed with dysautonomia. Then came testing and the diagnosis of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis, then a separate diagnosis of CFS. I have quite a few other diagnosed conditions as well, but I’l keep the focus on ME, PoTS and dysautonomia.
On average my resting prone BP hovers around 112-72 with a resting HTR of 60 bpm. As soon as I stand up my HTR jumps to between 110 and 130 bpm. My BP shoots up to between 139-84 to 200-97. Of course dizziness, lightheadedness, slight nausea, some swelling of certain lower body parts, coldness and decreased feeling in the hands, instant cognitive decline, lung and nasal inflammation, spasmodic coughing, etc, all come into play upon standing from having been prone.
All of that is my normal from being prone to standing. It all decreases when laying back down again.
I’ve done the 10 minute prone while logging BP and HTR each minute, to standing for 10 minutes while logging the same. BP and HTR increase for the entire time standing, along with symptoms listed above.
My healthcare team is obviously thinking PoTS of one of the 3 forms, or something similar. I speak with my neurologist in a couple weeks.
Does anyone have a clear answer as to PoTS being an extreme of ME, or something completely on its own? Reading through this thread of old seems like there isn’t a very clear answer, at least in 2013.
My basic 10 minute test results: