Meadbh
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2006
- Messages
- 11,401
Totally agree with this. This is getting off-topic, but I went to a couple different doctors with some troubling symptoms I was having this past spring. Had a bunch of blood tests, and both docs said based on the results, everything looked "normal". Neither doctor had any idea what was causing my symptoms, so I really got no help there. With blood test results in hand, I went online and started looking around, and eventually found that my iron panel results were actually quite high (right at the top of the reference range for transferrin saturation and ferritin). The numbers did not raise any red flags with either doctor, but they were still much higher than what is considered optimum. So I began to suspect that the excess iron in my blood and system (iron overload) was a major cause of the symptoms. If you have excess iron, the only efficient way to get rid of it is to donate blood. So I did that, and about 80% of the symptoms disappeared right away. After the second blood donation two months later, the symptoms are now completely gone. I just got the results from the latest iron panel blood test, and both the transferrin and ferritin have come down a lot (still above optimum, but much lower than before). I guess someone could argue that donating blood and the disappearance of symptoms were not related, but all I know is that I feel much better now. This does not mean that I have no faith in doctors anymore, but I am also a believer in self-investigation when the situation warrants it.
Good detection there!
I agree with you. The information explosion in medicine makes it impossible for any single physician to know "everything". I always appreciated patients who were sufficiently motivated to research issues independently, provided that they used peer reviewed sources. It made us a more effective team.