Tuesday, February 2, 2010

What Kind Of Dr For Bursities What Kind Of Dr. Should I See For Combo GI, Brain And Cardio Problems To Get One Diagnosis?

What kind of dr. should I see for combo GI, brain and cardio problems to get one diagnosis? - what kind of dr for bursities

Last year I had the following symptoms: indigestion, headaches, numbness or tingling in the hands / feet, muscle cramps, severe insomnia, fatigue, fainting and loss of short-term memory. He had a CT scan of the brain, Hydascan, ultrasound, blood tests, colonoscopy, endoscopy. The diagnosis of vitamin B12, cholesterol and triglyceride levels (can not tolerate statins is therefore untreated), benign tumor (lipoma), non-fatty liver and the brain alcohol hyperintensities. Injections of vitamin B12 and Cymbalta for the neuropathy, but to no help. I need a new document to me is whether this relationship can say - my doc not or does not care. Suggestions about what kind of specialist should I see? Thank you - I'm so tired of living from it!

4 comments:

Elizabet... said...

Hmmm ... This is confusing.

First - Do you have a family doctor? A PCP must manage the health of patients and make appropriate recommendations if necessary and PCP is expected to help get in touch on the symptoms of joint compound to find and make a diagnosis. If you do not have much management attention PCP, I propose that we work together a new PCP that is best with you to try to find the common link for all of your symptoms.

Second .... I medical terminology for the symptoms listed on search engines, and were written in different groups, and it appeared a few times during my research. I have no idea if it fits all the symptoms, but it was all that was discussed in the various working groups of the symptoms, I thought it would happen to the links.

Acute intermittent porphyria --
http://www.merck.com/mmhe/sec12/ch160/ch ...
http://www.porphyriafoundation.com/about ...

Her symptoms coincided with the AIP are digestive problems, paresthesia (tingling / numbness), newlyropathy (nerve pain), muscle twitching, tiredness (fatigue and sleep disorders), neurological disorders (loss of memory, power cuts).

Another thing that seemed the game was, vitamin B12, because the tentative agreement appears to be the cause of malabsorption (the inability of the stomach / intestines absorb nutrients) and foie gras (it seems to me that may affect the AIP) liver.

All this is at the search links on the basis that I gave you, and read the article on eMedicine AIP (link below) which is written with many medical terms.
http://www.emedicine.com/med/topic1880.h ...


I do not know whether it helps or not. Please do not hesitate to let me know and I can do more research for you.

Schwinn said...

You need to be more than one specialist to their problems. For the brain tumor, a neurosurgeon to see, to see if you need to need surgery or radiotherapy. Although benign, they can grow and cause neurological problems, depending on where in the brain. If you do not need not to treat the tumor, the neurosurgeon must refer to a neurologist in order to cope with the effects of secondary tumors such as cramps, headaches, etc.

For your questions to see a cardiologist.

You can be referred by your doctor need to see these specialists. If this is the case, then consult a doctor again.

emtd65 said...

I have only a few years ago. You need to listen to a new doctor who is willing to refer to find open-minded and are willing to other physicians and work with them. I went to a doctor to see the sick, armed only with my health history, as long as I can remember and put it on your desktop. It turned out that I Lupus No. 14 different things. Lupus happens, the culprit in my case. Then all you can start with the letter. Including drug and allergic reactions - and you will find everything a new doctor. Good luck!

becca said...

sounds like poison to me, might lead to?
Sincerely, an internist must be able to view them all together, you can also try to see an alternative practitioner than maturopaths "" the connection between the brain of a body. Good luck - I hope you fell better.

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