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Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 21,346 Likes: 2
Very_Addicted_to_AS_Kickin
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Very_Addicted_to_AS_Kickin
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 21,346 Likes: 2 |
I've had migraines from the age of 8 or so...I remember my first one vividly; that's how I know when they started. The GI part of my spondy started in my mid to late 20's, really flared at age 30, but the joint stuff didn't start til age 35.
When my neck was bad, I'd have head pain...inflammation and muscle spasms of the occipital muscle and pain in the occipital nerve...or neck pain that would cause headache like pain. If not for all the migraines up to that point, I may have not known the difference. Anything that relieved the cervical inflammation and neck/head/upper back spasms would help that head pain. Once I had a trigger point injection right into the occipital muscle...OMG was that helpful...prior to that, the headpain there was so great I couldn't lay my head on a feather pillow to sleep without more pain.
I still get migraines on occasion, but less than in the past. I'm on Humira now. Interestingly, what I've noticed is that I tend to get migraines a day or two before its time once again for my Humira shot. Yesterday was just such a day, woke with a terrible migraine, took an Aleve, which took care of the migraine. Today I will get my shot. I get Humira every 10-14 days, usually on day 11 or 12, depending on how I feel. Humira really has changed my life in ways that are hard for even me to believe.
To get to the Humira, I spent 12 years wading through 5 rheumies to get to a dx. Once I finally found a rheumy who would dx me, we tried just about every NSAID class out there. Many did nothing, some worked but with Edema and Gastritis. Even the Aleve will give me Edema and Gastritis if I take it for more than a few days, but now it can get me to my next Humira shot if I need it (for migraine or neck inflammation / pain or SI inflammation / pain). After that, we tried methylprednisone for the flares, but I was needing it every ~10 weeks or so, too often (osteopenia and diabetes can be made worse by it, both of which I have). To be approved for the Humira, I had to have tried at least 3 NSAIDs, I had tried about 10, so was ready to go with the Humira. It worked right away, never any side effects, for the first few years, I'd still flare, but not as often, not as bad, and the Humira could nip the flares in the bud. Now the flares are much much less and the Humira stops them in their tracks.
I still have methylpred as a backup, but haven't needed it in years. I still take an Aleve once or twice a month. I still use ice as needed. I still take a muscle relaxant as needed. I still use flector patches over my SI joint (I tried to stop them here and there, but always my SI joint tells me they are still needed...topical NSAID patch seems to work locally without the gastritis or edema). I still can't sit in most chairs or most cars. Still can't travel much. Those last two are mostly due to bone spurs in my neck that were caused by the for years untreated inflammation in my neck, but at least with the inflammation down now, so long as I don't sit where nerves get compressed, I have a lot less pain and spasm there. I did just buy some topical magnesium oil, so I'm still willing to try things. I still have my husband do ultrasound on my neck / upper back on occasion. I still rub the blue icy gel on areas as needed. I still eat a casein (dairy) free diet, still avoid S. cerevisiae (yeast) in my diet (IgA/IgG blood work showed my sensitivity to these....like celiac disease but to casein and yeast...more typical than one might think).
But the Humira makes me feel human again. Can't stress that enough.
PS also lucky to never have uveitis. But I have a good ophthalmologist due to spondy and diabetes. So far, eyes are good. Eye doc said he'd be able to see any evidence of past inflammation. I've had eye pain, but I'm assuming uveitis eye pain would be off the charts bad and that I haven't had. I do get dry eyes due to the inflammatory process, but systaine and another shot of Humira help. Fortunate that uveitis has never been part of my body's inflammatory response. But having a good ophthalmologist on hand is a good thing for all of us, just to make sure.
Last edited by Sue22; 01/05/17 03:31 PM.
sue
Spondyloarthropathy, HLAB27 negative Humira (still methylprednisone for flares, just not as often. Aleve if needed, rarely.) LDN/zanaflex/flector patches over SI/ice vits C, D. probiotics. hyaluronic acid. CoQ, Mg, Ca, K. chiro walk, bike no dairy (casein sensitivity), limited eggs, limited yeast (bread)
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