“The Suicide Disease” x 4

It is said that Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) is “ranked among the most painful of all medical problems and has been nicknamed the ‘suicide disease’ because there is no cure and limited effective treatments.

The pain from CRPS is so severe that it has been known to drive people to the brink of death. On the McGill Pain index, CRPS ranks 42 out of 50, making it one of the most severe pain conditions of all, even rated more painful than childbirth, amputation and the pain associated with cancer.” – Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy Syndrome Association

I have quadrilateral CRPS. That is, in all four limbs. Evidently this is uncommon. It is also a symptom of exceptionally traumatic lived experience combined with exceptional lack of necessary and appropriate psychosocial support.

Although mainstream medicine considers CRPS incurable, in my experience sufferers can find tremendous relief through a neuroscience-based recovery plan. My recovery has accelerated in the last 6 months, since I’ve been able to get Stellate Ganglion Blocks (SGBs) on an as-needed basis rather than spaced so far apart that I had to repeatedly reclaim the same ground. I was on a yo-yo trajectory. Each treatment gap was like being thrown back into hell.

Virtually all my symptoms–including pain, muscle spasms, flashbacks, night sweats, sleep problems, anxiety, intrusive thoughts, and fatigue– increased to make my life intolerable once more.

Insanely, to achieve sufficient access to this quick, inexpensive, minimally invasive, and highly effective treatment took over 5 years of asking, advocating, begging, and educating the medical industry and its practitioners, as well as my insurance company. It seems I succeeded only because I managed to pull together a nine page paper that presents scientific evidence and 3.5 years of personal biomarker data to support repeat Stellate Ganglion Blocks: as a crucial component in my recovery from sympathetically-driven health conditions as part of my individualized Interpersonal Neurobiology-based healing framework.

It shouldn’t be this freaking hard!

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