Think you have EDS (Ehlers-Danlos)? Here's what to do

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 31 тра 2024
  • Are you or your doctor suspecting you might have Ehlers-Danlos syndrome
    (EDS)? In this video, we discuss the diagnostic process and basic information about EDS.
    ☞ EDS diagnostic criteria: • Hypermobile EDS Diagno...
    ☞ EDS vs HSD: • hEDS, HSD, Hypermobili...
    ☞ Is an EDS diagnosis "worth it": • Video
    ☞ How I manage my chronic pain: • How I manage my chroni...
    ☞ Difference between hEDS, cEDS, vEDS, clEDS: • Differences Between cE...
    It can be extremely difficult to find a knowledgeable doctor who can diagnose EDS. In the meantime, many people are left in limbo while searching for the doctor who holds the answer. Many people have questions about EDS, its inheritance, and its disease progression, and I hope this video can help you with these questions.
    SUBSCRIBE TO MY CHANNEL ▶ bit.ly/2M4Ko0c
    📸 Instagram ▶ / izzy.kornblau
    ⏰ TikTok ▶ / izzyk_dna
    The views expressed in this video are my own and do not reflect the views of Mount Sinai Hospital.
    ✩ ✩ ✩ ✩ ✩ ✩
    WHAT’S EHLERS-DANLOS SYNDROME?
    The Ehlers-Danlos Syndromes (EDS) are a group of more than 13 genetic connective tissue disorders that affect the joints and ligaments, blood vessels, gastrointestinal tract, and autonomic nervous system, among others. The most common type of EDS is hypermobile EDS (hEDS), which used to be known at type III. Some of the most common symptoms and co-morbidities of hEDS include chronic joint pain, joint instability and dislocations, dysautonomia, and GI tract dysmotility.
    MORE INFO ABOUT EDS:
    🧬 www.ehlers-danlos.com/eds-types/
    🧬 bit.ly/2N95xTE
    MORE INFO ABOUT POTS:
    💓 www.potsuk.org/what_is_pots2
    ❤️ cle.clinic/2p1lByR
    MORE INFO ABOUT GASTROPARESIS:
    💚 mayocl.in/2BRQTuR
    MORE INFO ABOUT MUSCLE TENSION DYSPHONIA:
    🤍 bit.ly/2MLUYXI
    FTC Disclaimer: This is not a sponsored video.
    As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
    #eds #ehlersdanlos #ehlersdanlossyndrome

КОМЕНТАРІ • 281

  • @Dulcimerist
    @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +175

    The best thing about getting properly diagnosed with EDS is knowing what you have. It deflects the "all in your head" gas lighting from doctors, and opens the door to better treatment of the various symptoms that EDS can cause. EDS researchers are constantly thinking outside the box and coming up with good treatment options. Medications such as beta blockers, Clonidine, Guanfacine, Mestinon, and Ivabradine have had a lot of success in managing EDS dysautonomia, for example. Additionally, knowing you have EDS is important to other doctors - surgeons need to know that your skin can tear more easily, and dentists need to know that you're likely resistant to local anesthetic due to your EDS. Being properly diagnosed with EDS is empowering for a patient, and leads to better overall medical care.

    • @mandy1667
      @mandy1667 3 роки тому +3

      Oh God I hate the dentist... he does not believe the anastethic didn't work. I slapped him one time because it hurt so bad. I also had an ingrown toenail once that would not sedate. They tried with 13 needles giving me more anesthetic but it just didn't do anything. I had to go for complete anesthetic... at first they didn't want to do it because they only did that with scared children and people with a mental disability like down syndrome.

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +3

      @@mandy1667 Find a different dentist. You've been officially diagnosed as having Ehlers Danlos syndrome? If so, prior to dental visits, inform the dentist that for medical liability reasons, you need to disclose that you have a medical condition that affects dental and oral health, called Ehlers Danlos syndrome. There are additional issues beyond local anesthetic that dentists need to be mindful of, such as increased risk of TMJ dislocation. Have these resources available to give the dentist:
      - ehlers-danlos.com/wp-content/uploads/MRGDentistryS.pdf
      - www.hypermobility.org/dental-health
      Extra resources on EDS and JHS patients being resistant to local anesthetic can be found here:
      www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6834718/
      www.nature.com/articles/s41415-020-2019-3
      (The whopping 88% number of EDS patients who report resistance to local anesthetic was large enough to surprise me!)
      ​@Izzy - An EDS video about dental and oral health would be awesome! :)

    • @emilyloveday2407
      @emilyloveday2407 3 роки тому +1

      I have not been properly diagnosed with anything but pots & mvp. They have me on anxiety medicine as well as a Midodrine just started these & my bp keeps going to low

    • @emilyloveday2407
      @emilyloveday2407 3 роки тому +3

      I am in a bad place today mentally I want to be able to get up & go. I just sit here & watch the day go by. I know get a hobby to do while you have to sit I have some. I got a veiled chameleon ( actually kindly crazy seems they are exactly like pots patients.) made his enclosure. Now I’m back to nothing. It takes me every bit of 6 hours just to get ready , like shower & dry my hair if I can get that done. I’m 46 in August & I was told by a cardiologist the 1 st time when I was 44. So does this mean, from what I’ve looked up pots patients have the life expectancy of 50. Do you know if this is true?

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +5

      @@emilyloveday2407 The life expectancy of 50 refers to vascular type EDS. A related disorder called Loeys-Dietz might also have lowered life expectancy. Pretty much all of the other EDS types don't tend to have reduced life expectancy. POTS itself doesn't reduce life expectancy, so don't worry about that. The underlying cause of the POTS could reduce life expectancy, but you'd need a doctor to get to the bottom of what causes your POTS. In your other posts you had mention swollen hands, which doesn't quite fit. Hopefully you can see a rheumatologist and a cardiologist.

  • @lorenam8028
    @lorenam8028 3 місяці тому +13

    I'm a 47 year old woman, and about 4 months ago I finally figured I have EDS, and while the symptoms were relatively mild before (no prolapses or dislocations), they were definitely there since I was literally a baby: my mother always bitterly complained that she couldn't breast feed me because I would inevitably start vomiting, and until I was 2 years old, it was practically impossible to feed me while I was awake.
    About seven years ago, around the time I turned 40, all those symptoms started getting worse and worse, to the point where last summer I could barely get out of bed. And like I said, it was shortly after that that I realized I have EDS.
    Now, here comes the important part: after I figured what was the problem, I started wondering why suddenly I started getting worse, after an entire life with relatively mild symptoms. And suddenly it occurred to me that it could have something to do with hormones. After all, as I get closer and closer to menopause, my hormones are progressively dwindling.
    Well, long story short: I started early Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT), basically just started taking the contraceptive pill to supplement my hormones and stabilize them. And lo and behind, I am doing much better. Not perfect yet, but improving little by little.
    So for any women out there getting worse symptoms around their 40s, you might want to look into that.

    • @Mokshana.ankara
      @Mokshana.ankara 27 днів тому

      wow what does the vomiting as an infant have to do with EDS? My mother couldnt even breastfeed me. and i couldnt keep down any formula. the only thing i could keep down was boiled condensed milk with the skin skimmed off the top. i was born doing a split and my legs were stuck up for a while. and i just never slept as an infant. i never thought about these being a sign of EDS. I still don't have an official diagnosis yet. its been almost a year of doctors and tests. but my symptoms are worsening and lately ive been getting capillary bursts in my hands that are so incredibly painful! i am 38. definitely feeling the "getting worse as i approach 40"

  • @HollhouseVanHouten
    @HollhouseVanHouten 3 роки тому +73

    I got my official HEDS diagnosis!!!! If it wasn’t for your UA-cam channel and your incredibly helpful videos I probably would have waited many more years before seeing a specialist rheumatologist. Thank you Izzy ❤️

  • @nixd9872
    @nixd9872 Рік тому +20

    I understand the stigma and hesitance surrounding self-diagnosis, but I will continue to say I have EDS. My doctors are all 99.9% sure that I have it, but can't officially diagnose me because they aren't specialists. The waitlist for the specialist is 2 years, I've been misdiagnosed 4 times and this is the only condition that aligns with every single one of my symptoms.
    A diagnosis is absolutely a privilege, my doctors say that I have EDS, but still refuse to give me an official Dx. I think self-diagnosis can be harmful, but we know our bodies better than our doctors do lmao

  • @gothfairy11
    @gothfairy11 2 роки тому +19

    A professor who has EDS first tipped me off to the fact that I have a ton of symptoms. After a horrible rheumatologist tried to tell me my pain was my own fault, I went to a physical therapy screening. The therapist had seen a bunch of patients with EDS and after testing my joints and asking about my pain, she was immediately sure I have EDS. She was so surprised at how much it affected my gait; all the therapists in the clinic had never seen a gait quite like mine. Apparently I've been hyperextending my knees for YEARS while walking.

  • @rhyan.m963
    @rhyan.m963 3 роки тому +55

    My rheumatologist was awesome and listened to everything I said and believed me. He told me he believes HSD is the same thing as hEDS

    • @IzzyKDNA
      @IzzyKDNA  3 роки тому +19

      ahhh I'm SO happy to hear that he listened and believed you! Yes, so many other docs think it's probably the exact same thing too but they are separating it for the meantime to try to find a gene mutation

    • @ServiceDogRosie
      @ServiceDogRosie 3 роки тому +2

      @@IzzyKDNA it be interesting in next 10 years to find out if they will be relumped together, separate branches of eds or remain same for investigating..unfortunately 10yrs is not much time in medicine it seams for reaserch by 1 or more companies then has to be excepted by the intl standards for use in that countries reaserch

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +4

      @@ServiceDogRosie The HEDGE project is in the process of gathering DNA samples from 1000+ people who have hEDS, in order to do a complete gene sequencing. Within the next two years, they hope to identify specific genes which might be responsible for hEDS. Within that large group of hEDS people, perhaps they'll be able to split hEDS into several subgroups, according to the specific gene that's affected. Even better, they hope to develop specific genetic tests to screen for hEDS, which is the only type of EDS that doesn't currently have a genetic test.

  • @sarabartel4285
    @sarabartel4285 3 роки тому +38

    Hypermobility on it's own is definitely not enough for a diagnosis, but make sure to look into all the comorbidities and side effects, and be honest with yourself. I am diagnosed with HEDS and my brother is more hypermobile than me, but that's it, he's perfectly healthy. It took me a long time to get diagnosed because I didn't understand that my constellation of symptoms weren't just "complaints," but valid pieces of information that doctors need to make an informed diagnosis.

  • @shaunar2799
    @shaunar2799 3 роки тому +55

    Hey girl! I’ve dealt with issues my whole life, and especially the past two years due to IIH. Long story short, I stumbled across EDS as I was researching for an upcoming surgery. You were one of my first sources of information. Fast forward a few months, and I’ve been diagnosed with HEDS. Thanks for making me feel a little less alone, and thanks for helping me get answers about my body so that I can be treated properly ❤️❤️❤️

    • @IzzyKDNA
      @IzzyKDNA  3 роки тому +8

      I'm so happy to hear I could be a source of info and that i've made you feel less alone!!! ❤❤

  • @Dulcimerist
    @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +39

    5:35 - It would be good to elaborate that the 14 different types of EDS can have varying degrees of hypermobility. For example, the hypermobility of vascular type EDS tends to be confined to just the fingers and toes. Someone with vEDS might not be hypermobile in their larger joints (hips, shoulders, knees, elbows) at all.

    • @IzzyKDNA
      @IzzyKDNA  3 роки тому +14

      LOL I LOVE that you're saying this because I had a section literally talking about this and I either deleted it all together or put it in my file for part 2

    • @malanamarie5206
      @malanamarie5206 3 роки тому +2

      this is really good to know I am hypermobile everywhere and I suspect I have vEDS as well as my sister because we both had congenital club foot and she has scoliosis but I was worried about my sister getting a diagnosis because she is not hyper mobile anywhere but her toes and fingers

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +3

      @@malanamarie5206 Hopefully you can both get in to see a knowledgeable geneticist who can screen you for that and any differential diagnoses, as there are some funky non-EDS collagen disorders out there like Marfan, Loeys-Dietz, Stickler, Marshall, and others to sort through, which may or may not fit your family history. The most helpful would be if you and your sister could have a joint appointment so that the geneticist could check you both at the same time. Also bring a full family history to document that issues run in your family. If you do have vEDS, it's best to get diagnosed sooner than later, as delayed diagnosis is dangerous.
      rarediseases.info.nih.gov/diseases/2082/vascular-ehlers-danlos-syndrome

    • @malanamarie5206
      @malanamarie5206 3 роки тому +1

      @@Dulcimerist my second cousin has eds I am already set to get a genetic test so I assume if anything comes back that I do have a type of Eds it will be easier for my sister to get a diagnosis thanks for the info!!

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +4

      @@malanamarie5206 Keep in mind that if the genetic test for any type of EDS comes back negative, you could still have hypermobile type EDS (hEDS). hEDS is the most common of the 14 different EDS types, but its gene or genes have not been identified. Therefore, there is no genetic test for hEDS. Diagnosis for that is made by using these criteria:
      www.ehlers-danlos.com/heds-diagnostic-checklist/

  • @DeanandCasTrash
    @DeanandCasTrash 3 роки тому +17

    my rheumatologist diagnosed me with hypermobility spectrum disorder and refused to diagnose me with eds as she said i had to see a geneticist to get a diagnosis but she told me it wasn’t necessary bc there is no treatment 😀 gr8

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +9

      There's no cure, but there's a wide array of treatments available for the various effects of EDS. Some doctors are simply too lazy to learn. Hopefully you can find a good doctor who can diagnose and treat you. You can find a doctor through the Ehlers Danlos Society website.

    • @ko0974
      @ko0974 9 місяців тому

      Are you from Ireland?they don't diagnose or seem to know anything ..it's heartbreaking at this stage

  • @jessicabohl933
    @jessicabohl933 3 роки тому +10

    i recently saw a rheumatologist to try to get a diagnosis and he spent 45 minutes focusing on my flat feet and told me if i just fix my feet all my problems will go away 🙃

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +2

      Did they do their job and run you through the hEDS criteria checklist?
      www.ehlers-danlos.com/heds-diagnostic-checklist/
      If not, print it out and bring it to your next appointment. Also check out Izzy's video that visually runs through the hEDS criteria. Many doctors are clueless about EDS, so we have to be our own advocates for our healthcare.

    • @jessicabohl933
      @jessicabohl933 3 роки тому +1

      @@Dulcimerist nope! im gonna have a lovely chat with my primary who refered me cause this man was off his rocker (walking 15 miles a week will fix my hips coming out of socket, im too young to be in pain but heres heavy muscle relaxers, etc.)

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +2

      @@jessicabohl933 Muscle relaxers are dangerous for people with EDS! They cause decreased muscle tone, increasing joint instability and increasing the risk of subluxations and dislocations after taking them. Muscle relaxers also aggravate the proprioception issues that EDS people often have, increasing the risks of falls and other accidents which could cause subluxations, dislocations, or other injuries. Walking 15 miles a week won't fix your hips from coming out of socket, and could put you at risk for further injury. You need a referral to physical therapy or some sort of exercise program to safely increase muscle mass to help stabilize your hips. Furthermore, the "you're too young to be in pain" thing is pure bullshit, and is one of the most insulting, insensitive things someone could ever tell someone who has a chronic pain condition such as EDS! If I were in your shoes, I would be tempted to notify my insurance company that this incompetent rheumatologist failed to provide the medical care that you were sent there for, and challenge the bill; but I don't know what your official referral to the rheumatologist said.

    • @jessicabohl933
      @jessicabohl933 3 роки тому +1

      @@Dulcimerist i havent talked to my primary yet sadly i have tricare so i have to go where they send me and yes i took one dose and my pain increased ten fold so ive just kinda egnored them thankfully i dont have full dislocations but thats why he blew off the doctors concerns

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +2

      ​@@jessicabohl933 Sorry you're stuck with Tricare. That system is a nightmare for anyone who has a rare or uncommon medical condition, since it's likely that whomever you get sent to will be unfamiliar with the condition. EDS is especially tough, due to the confusion of 14 different types of EDS, type classifications and diagnostic criteria being updated in 2017, and so many doctors having outdated or erroneous knowledge of EDS. This increases the risk of misdiagnosis or missed diagnosis, improper treatment, and malpractice. The rheumatologist focused on your flat feet, acknowledged your hip subluxations, and attempted to address your chronic pain - all of which are signs and symptoms of EDS, yet he didn't bother to run you through the Beighton hypermobility assessment and hEDS diagnostic criteria. Your rheumatologist visit would be like if a patient was referred to be evaluated for diabetes, and the doctor didn't run a blood glucose test and then gave the patient a sack full of candy and cupcakes.
      I'm really curious if you meet enough of the hEDS criteria for a diagnosis. If you look up above here in Izzy's video description, the first link she lists is an excellent video with detailed visuals of how to run through the hEDS diagnostic criteria. You can follow along with the hEDS checklist from my previous link. If you do meet enough of the criteria to qualify, firmly and insistently advocate for yourself to be diagnosed. The rheumatologist obviously lacked the training and competence to diagnose you, and even gave you advice and medication which could worsen your condition and put your overall health and well-being at risk. Your primary care physician should be able to diagnose you if you have hEDS. The diagnostic criteria are straightforward and easy to understand.
      I had a similar experience with a rheumatologist in 1996, which caused my hEDS diagnosis to be delayed until 2013. The result of that delay cost so much time, energy, and money as my other doctors looked elsewhere for answers; while also delaying treatment, allowing my EDS symptoms to worsen, and putting my overall health and well-being at risk. Hopefully your primary care physician can jump in there and get the job done so that you don't have to go through what I did.

  • @jocelyntownsend5710
    @jocelyntownsend5710 3 роки тому +14

    I thought I'd share this. Three of my best friends throughout my life got diagnosed with EDS or had a family member with EDS, then learned that I have EDS so showed me how stretchy their skin is and how hypermobile their joints are (plus their history of allergies) and then two other people I worked in a lab with have EDS. While I agree that birds of a feather flock together, I think a lot of people just aren't getting diagnosed or misdiagnosed. I think people who are 40+ likely have misdiagnosis because they didn't look for EDS often in the past.

    • @TheMazinoz
      @TheMazinoz 5 місяців тому +1

      Absolutely. I think awareness is increasing. I was a student case study when first diagnosed over 40 years ago, because they hadn't had many patients with it or been diagnosed with it. Mind you I accidentally handed them the diagnosis by doing a 180 degree leg raise and saying how if it was RA I should be in a wheelchair because of the pain I was in and crippled but I was still very flexible. I had not heard of Ehlers Danlos or Hypermobility syndrome. I worked as a microbiologist. I think we tend towards more sedentary occupations because of pain, though I had finished my BSc before HEDS joint issues arose. But had fatigue, fainting.

  • @graciegladson4960
    @graciegladson4960 11 днів тому +1

    At 54 I will say that while eds may not get worse, but the damage from it definitely does. We learned just a few years ago that the type we have is a defect with the cola12a1 gene plus a few other gnarly ones. If you think you have eds, try to get diagnosed.

  • @LadyInWhite741
    @LadyInWhite741 2 роки тому +6

    A mythical Zeba unicorn here- hEDS, MCAS, POTS, hypoglycemia, Castrochondritis, dystonia and Cranialcervical Instability. Didn’t get diagnosed till last year (2021) when I was 37. I was diagnosed clinically by my PCP and confirmed my my Neurologist. In pain 24/7 but being on Low Dose Naltrexone, CBD/THC (3:1) and Penetrex cream; this combo has made a huge difference.
    I wear a neck collar, (hard and soft) ankle & wrist stabilizers, leg compressions and arm stalkings/gloves, custom Orthopaedic shoe inserts, posture corrector and sometimes need to use a cane. And I go to intensive PT 2 times per week for over 2 1/2 hours each time. This combo has made life more bare able but I’m still pretty miserable and hurt more often than not. I get terrible flare ups that can last from a day or two to weeks. And sometimes I get them back to back.
    But, if I wasn’t doing this things, I can’t even imagine what life would be like! My major symptoms didn’t start making themselves known till Feb 2021 and it was from sudden chest wall pain. Then the Mast Cells started acting up. I’m on a low histamine diet and take a DAO enzyme supplement with each meal and am now able to eat pretty much anything I want. But there are a few things that I just can’t tolerate like avocados, spaghetti/pizza sauces and high amounts of sugar like a slice of cake.
    I am also on full disability. Very blessed to have a wonderful support system and my husband fights this battle with me! I hope by sharing all of this, it can help someone else also. You’re not alone!!

  • @dominiquezayas9574
    @dominiquezayas9574 3 роки тому +13

    Yup I def need new doctors

  • @mariethedicedragon5977
    @mariethedicedragon5977 3 роки тому +4

    The way my Dr put it was that the EDS itself does not get worse but the symptoms do. The EDS is in your genetics, it does not change. The long term effects that it has on your body can get worse, just like normal stress on a non EDS body.

  • @Luna04567
    @Luna04567 3 роки тому +10

    It was my GI doctor that said I might have EDS, right now I’m still working with my doctor to see if thats true

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +1

      Glad that your gastroenterologist knew enough about EDS to be able to keep an eye out for it! Do you have gastroparesis, IBS-C, GERD, or other gut motility issues which can be associated with EDS?

  • @amberdoty1167
    @amberdoty1167 2 роки тому +10

    Thank you for videos! My 10 year old daughter was diagnosed with hEDS today. I found out about EDS from you on TikTok. It made so much sense. Our family dr said he’s never seen anyone with EDS and it was impossible for her to have it. I went behind his back and took her to a rheumatologist. She was diagnosed right away! I can’t wait to see what the GP has to say about it! 😂

    • @TheMazinoz
      @TheMazinoz 5 місяців тому +1

      One GP told me flat out I was a drug seeking security fraudster - decades after I had been diagnosed by a Prof Medicine. I almost fainted! Next visit I brought in a copy of a letter from my hospital medical records to my referring GP from decades ago. I'm not anal retentive, but had had so many issues with GP's I got my medical records.

  • @gwuniverse
    @gwuniverse 3 роки тому +23

    This is such a fantastic and comprehensive guide, Izzy! Getting diagnosed with EDS can be a huge challenge. Here in the UK a lot of us end up in a sort of 'grey area' where if hEDS is suspected we aren't offered genetic testing or sometimes even denied rheumatology appointments, instead just given physio. I'm so glad you mentioned how important a diagnosis can be to patients because it really can be life-changing in terms of validation or access to support. But also, super tricky to get there for some of us!

    • @supergrass_
      @supergrass_ 2 роки тому +2

      hi, i know you commented this a year ago but i’m also from the UK and wondering where i go from being told: yes i am hyper mobile and that my pain is caused by muscle weakness (doesn’t make sense since i did gymnastics and hockey). that was from the NHS and it just doesn’t feel like a fair answer to my problems!!

    • @tomsale5142
      @tomsale5142 10 місяців тому

      @@supergrass_ have you found somewhere

    • @CL-un9gg
      @CL-un9gg 9 місяців тому

      @@supergrass_dr Pauline Ho is the U.K. EDS specialist. She’s based in Manchester. You can see her privately at spire hospital or through the nhs at a considerable lengthy wait.

    • @elibell19
      @elibell19 2 місяці тому

      I wonder if you can please share how to convince the GP to get a diagnosis

  • @heatherreadsreddit8579
    @heatherreadsreddit8579 День тому

    Pernicious anemia is also comorbid with EDS, so ask your doctor to keep an eye on your vitamin B12 level. If it gets low, ask to be tested for the similar-to-lupus autoimmune disease.

  • @sicqt9598
    @sicqt9598 3 роки тому +16

    I’m lucky to be the first comment on a celebrity’s video🤪😊

    • @IzzyKDNA
      @IzzyKDNA  3 роки тому +7

      LOL definitely not a celebrity hahah

  • @shannongreenwell1278
    @shannongreenwell1278 2 роки тому +5

    My Neurologist was the one who diagnosed me with my EDS. He knows about the different types of EDS. Mine is the classical type. Type two. I thank you for all your information and help, Izzy! Your an inspiration to me! And I say that because you have helped me learn more about EDS. I am hoping to go see a orthopedic doctor soon.

    • @JustJ-Me
      @JustJ-Me 7 місяців тому

      Do you mind me asking what the neurologist was specifically seeing you for and how they diagnosed you with EDS? I suspect I may have some form of EDS. I have a neurologist appt coming up bc of nerve pain on top of my feet and chronic migraines for at least 2 decades. Medication hasn't been helping either of them. I've also suspected POTS or something similar (tachycardia and fainting or near-fainting being a major issue)... I'm actually exhausted just thinking about the list of issues that affect nearly every part/ system of my body. I need to get in touch with a rheumatologist, geneticist, and pain management doc. My quality of life is in the gutter.

  • @candispencer3861
    @candispencer3861 3 роки тому +8

    A local support group or message board might be a good place to locate a doctor knowledgeable in EDS.

    • @IzzyKDNA
      @IzzyKDNA  3 роки тому +2

      totally!!!

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +2

      The international directory of physicians who are very familiar with EDS on the Ehlers Danlos Society website is another good place to look.

  • @riannaf927
    @riannaf927 3 роки тому +6

    seeing your videos is what made me push my doctors to look for a real answer rather than just brushing me off. I'm now in the process of seeing if I have hEDS and am getting more support so thank you :)

    • @IzzyKDNA
      @IzzyKDNA  3 роки тому +2

      I'm so happy to hear that you are on your journey to finding out answers, and I'm so happy my videos could help you along the way!!!

  • @Chirpingcherub
    @Chirpingcherub Місяць тому +1

    I just got diagnosed yesterday it was a shock as I didn’t know much about hEDS before

  • @sarahb.6475
    @sarahb.6475 3 роки тому +7

    My primary care doctor doesn't seem to realize that my hypermobility is probably linked to my ongoing stomach problems. I showed her how I can turn my elbow 180 degrees and I'm hypermobile in all my joints but she didn't think anything of it at all. Acted like that was normal. I also bruise so easily, get dizzy on occasion, have those papules on my heels, my hair is falling out like crazy, symptoms of MCAS, react to too much stuff. Ten pounds underweight at the moment. I also have Asperger's..was diagnosed with that in June.

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +3

      There's a higher incidence of Asperger's amongst people who have EDS. You have a compelling case for EDS. Check out all of these articles, and at least print out the EDS Gastrointestinal article for your doctor:
      www.ehlers-danlos.com/2017-eds-classification-non-experts/

    • @sarahb.6475
      @sarahb.6475 2 роки тому +1

      @@Dulcimerist My weird medical issues have been driving my PCP nuts so she finally gave me a referral to 2 different doctors. One was an "integrative" doctor that my PCP trusts. This doctor said I had EDS & MCAS & POTS. But she could not diagnose me but gave me referrals (but more important is she would explain the issues to my PCP). The second Dr I saw today, a neurologist. And he actually diagnosed me with EDS! And while I don't have diagnosis yet for POTS or MCAS he sneakily asked me questions about them like "do you get dizzy when you stand up". And he understood the sensitivities too! So I finally got my diagnosis and a referral to a geneticist too! 😀

    • @tomsale5142
      @tomsale5142 Рік тому

      Same as mine sure I have Asperger's to father had CFS mother father both hypomobile CPP 25 years now fybro symptoms OCD from 5 are you in UK trying get tested thought s are with you starting ldn soon

  • @pastorgibson5357
    @pastorgibson5357 3 роки тому +8

    I really appreciate your channel! I was diagnosed in 2015 with EDS Hypermobility and POTS after a seizure and 7 years of different doctors, specialists, and tests. Every doctor new something was wrong they just couldn't figure out what is was. I'm usually the first EDS patient any of my doctors and dentists have ever had outside of my doctors at Stanford where I was diagnosed. I've only met 1 person face-to-face with EDS which has been a little challenging because for people without EDS you really can't understand what an EDS patient goes through day to day with just the simplest of tasks like standing up or taking a step and passing out or dislocating something. I'm soon to be 50 and I've been told that I'm doing well being diagnosed later in life so to speak which makes me laugh because I've literally had a headache since 10/2007, which I was hospitalized for, that no one can get to break or get go away so with all the headache treatment I undergo on a regular basis, braces on both legs, and wrists when needed, my neck, fingers etc., falling, and dropping stuff on the regular I'm thankful because it could be worse and it's not...even on my worst day it could always be worse! Your channel is refreshing and informitive and I thank you for that!!!

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +1

      I was diagnosed later in life as well. Sorry you have bad headaches. Migraines often plague those of us who have EDS. Have they tried you on a beta blocker, Clonidine, or Guanfacine to prevent migraines? Those medications can treat the migraines, dysautonomia/POTS, and anxiety which often plague people with EDS. Additionally Clonidine and Guanfacine can treat sleep issues, and Clonidine has analgesic properties which can help to offset EDS pain. One medication to treat multiple issues means fewer medications overall.

    • @tomsale5142
      @tomsale5142 Рік тому

      Check out Dr schubiner I've had that years ago sycosomatic.but now it's constant muscle pain

    • @JustJ-Me
      @JustJ-Me 7 місяців тому

      Wow, someone else who understands daily headaches! I haven't gone a day without 1 for well over a decade, and they often turn into migraines. Propanolol helped for a bit (It was amazing bc I had forgotten what it felt like to NOT have a headache every day). Butalbitol works sometimes. Nothing else even comes close to helping, and most opiate pain meds (other than IV Morphine at the ER) actually make it worse. The Ibuprofen/Tylenol cocktail doesn't do anything. Torodal is useless. Immitrex, Treximet, Maxalt, Qulipta and others haven't helped.
      I'm so sorry. It's a miserable way to live- if you can even call it "living".

    • @tomsale5142
      @tomsale5142 5 місяців тому

      ​@@JustJ-Mein 1998 I had a migraine for 10 months since then I e had so many constant things b3 years constant in my shoulders armpits neurologist says it's migraine without headache?

  • @SKDxkiller
    @SKDxkiller 3 роки тому +2

    I thought about this legit just yesterday! Then you put one out!! Fantastic!!
    You are a lifesaver

  • @Saturns48
    @Saturns48 2 роки тому +1

    I'm 38 years old, I was diagnosed 10 years ago by Dr. Tinkle, and since then it has progressed. If asked then do I think it's progressive I would have said no, symptoms are pretty steady as far as comorbidities. I have had progression in GI problems, for example. GI started with abdominal pain, spastic vomiting, and gastroparesis from early childhood, developed IBD and ulcerative colitis in 2018 and in 2021(would have been 2020) I was diagnosed with Crohns disease. You may also come to a point where there are no more treatment options. I have had EVERY possible treatment for my headaches over the course of 35 years and there are no more treatments left. My last option is a coordinated effort between my group of physicians to try to manage the pain. I enjoy your videos and feel they are very helpful. I never post on EDS pages. I only do patient to patient interactions through my doctors, but I thought a couple of examples of what EDS may look like 10 years after diagnosis with aggressive treatment might help someone. Keep up the excellent work❤

  • @tiffaniemoglovkin
    @tiffaniemoglovkin 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you for these videos, you have helped and my kids and I were diagnosed.

  • @Xiollele
    @Xiollele 4 місяці тому +1

    I just don't know who to vent this to.
    My mother has it. I have it.
    She's been a single mom for a long time and I am an adult now.
    We both struggle a lot with health and money. It actually makes me think about how others who are healthy get to live more normal lives.

    • @JR-pn7xf
      @JR-pn7xf 2 дні тому +1

      Same boat, no one wants to talk about the people (like me) who are disabled with eds and poor. If I had a family and support system people would flock to me for support, I watch it happen all the time. I have noticed that I am the black sheep of eds/connective tissue disorders because of my financial and family situation and if I speak up about it…I am always met with silence.

    • @Xiollele
      @Xiollele День тому +1

      @@JR-pn7xf same. Sometimes I need someone to talk to about it :/

  • @sweetstrawberry2470
    @sweetstrawberry2470 4 місяці тому

    i'm glad to know i have eds and have an explanation for my symptoms ..it only took 53 yrs .. i was tired of seeing dr.'s that look at you like you're seeing them because you want pain meds .. i don't want pain meds i want help .. i'm not a drug addict .. i don't even take tylenol for a headache

  • @Tulsitea12333
    @Tulsitea12333 Рік тому +1

    I just made a geneticist appointment after being on a wait list for almost three years lol! Your channel has been helpful especially while I’ve been waiting

  • @laurajxn9540
    @laurajxn9540 5 місяців тому

    I have a rare form of EDS, TNXB with two deaths in immediate family. It’s a very hard condition to pin point and diagnose. I had so many strange symptoms that involved so many different systems in the body. It took well over 20 years to put all the pieces of the puzzle together.

  • @karleybioanthro
    @karleybioanthro 3 роки тому +3

    This is perfect timing so I can get a referral at my GP next week!

  • @JBoo
    @JBoo 10 місяців тому +1

    My sister and I both have hEDS, as well as our dad. He had a stroke July 2020. I reccomend ppl see a geneticist to get bloodwork to confirm.

  • @hannahcrawford9886
    @hannahcrawford9886 3 роки тому +9

    I was diagnosed with hypermoble EDS yesterday (I thought I had it becouse my mom has it and turns out I was right). And I’m pretty out of my depth right now haha. I already have a lot going on along with the fact that I turn 18 in a few days and everything feels kinda crazy right now. I found your channel and i can’t tell you how greatfull I am to you for making these videos. It’s one thing to watch a boring science video with people who are 3x my age saying all the worst facts about what I have, and it’s another to watch a very engaging video from someone who’s lived with this and someone who is closer to my age. Thank you so much 💛💛

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +1

      Sorry that you have hEDS, but glad that you got diagnosed so that you have a unifying diagnosis for the various EDS-related health issues that you have. Learning all you can about hEDS is super important, since many doctors are clueless or have erroneous knowledge of hEDS. That's why videos such as Izzy's are very important as a resource to patients and doctors.
      After I was diagnosed, these articles were also super helpful for my doctors and myself:
      www.ehlers-danlos.com/2017-eds-classification-non-experts/

    • @IzzyKDNA
      @IzzyKDNA  3 роки тому +2

      ❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @jamesleonard9435
    @jamesleonard9435 3 роки тому +4

    Thank you so much for helping me with these videos, it’s been a blessing trying to understand what’s going on.
    I recently went to a geneticist and he thinks I probably have heds but I may have mosaic forms of fragile x and klinefelters syndrome as well that are contributing to my joint laxity.

  • @Idk-lc1pm
    @Idk-lc1pm 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you so much for this video!! After my second knee surgery (a TTO and MPFL reconstruction), my physical therapist strongly believing I have EDS, being diagnosed with hypermobility and POTS (along with many other issues), and many medical mysteries (that could be due to EDS) I have decided (with the help with my mom, she also shows symptoms) to seek a diagnosis. It’s all very overwhelming but this is very helpful!!

  • @geoffreyrosenberg8070
    @geoffreyrosenberg8070 3 роки тому +2

    I like how you encourage a full spectrum of managing pain. I'd like to see a video on how chronic pain affects mental health. Seems like a full spectrum approach vs complete pharmacologic reliance is the best method. I have some chronic issues and have learned a lot from your channel.

  • @MamaMoonShine
    @MamaMoonShine 3 роки тому +3

    For me, the progression of symptoms is what lead to my getting diagnosed.

    • @MamaMoonShine
      @MamaMoonShine 3 роки тому

      Diagnosed via Rheumy and confirmed via Geneticist at age 44. Diagnosed with Lupus at 20. Reconfirmed Lupus diagnosis again at age 44. Multiple mixed connective tissue issues cEDS, Lupus and MCAS lead to further investigation where they discovered cEDS even though I had PROM with all my pregnancies. (ruptures galore) they didn't put the pieces together. I was able to have 2 children, both born premature due to PROM and both have cEDS. Oldest also has Cerebral Palsy and youngest has Lupus and Gastroparesis. I started losing abilities around age 36.
      Today I use an electric powered wheelchair and am in a lupus flare up. I'm 48 and live in Minnesota.

    • @MamaMoonShine
      @MamaMoonShine 3 роки тому

      Also they discovered MTHFR gene mutation, double copy.

    • @tomsale5142
      @tomsale5142 Рік тому

      @@MamaMoonShine seams to be the problem tryed ldn so hard in pain

  • @graceshields2243
    @graceshields2243 2 роки тому +3

    Just found your UA-cam channel and wow I just wanted to say thank you! My daughter is 2 years old and currently under investigations in Australia for EDS. Getting doctors to believe there was something was going on with her was so difficult. "Babies are flexible" is often what I get told repeatedly, so frustrating. She was born with bilateral hip dysplasia requiring a brace for 8 weeks and she has dysphasia requiring thickened fluids and a soft diet, she has special orthopaedic shoes and has recently been found to have both ankles with fractures in them bearing in mind she is still walking and running round. I just wanted to thank you for your educational videos. We have seen a neurologist, metabolic specialist, physiotherapy, orthopaedic surgeon and have a paediatrician we have her first genetics appointment coming up

    • @TheMazinoz
      @TheMazinoz 5 місяців тому

      Good luck with the geneticist. It could be another hypermobility syndrome like Osteogenesis imperfecta, Marfans, or a mitochondrial myopathy. But a geneticist sounds like the right place to be, as they diagnose all these and various EDS. I saw one decades ago but was completely dismissed. I saw one at Brisbane Womens Hospital Clinical Genetics a few years ago who knew all about it and the various issues like dysautonomia, gynaecology, etc. Things have definitely improved, but you'll still find turkeys with their heads in a certain place.

  • @mariposavioleta9007
    @mariposavioleta9007 7 місяців тому

    Just starting the process of gettign the diagnosis for HEDS. My dr looked at me show her the beighton score and ordered the paperwork from the clinic to do the preassessement. It's an up to 24mth waitlist and 4.5hr drive to the only clinic in the entire country here in Canada. Hoping this will help with things even if only to know why I'm experiencing these symptoms for pretty much all my life and was gaslight by all previous drs as being nothing. Thankful for your channel and the info that helps me understand better

  • @dorydarkling5596
    @dorydarkling5596 2 роки тому

    My mom has hEDS, and after watching a bunch of your videos (and other people's) I found out I pass a lot of the criteria. I talked to my doctor about pursuing a diagnosis, and they're gonna do some tests.

  • @mandy1667
    @mandy1667 3 роки тому +1

    I have momentairaly seen 2 rheumatologist and one internist... the internist found nothing and the rheumathologist send me to an hyper mobility clinic..... but I'm still on the waiting list, I've been on the list for 2 months now and hope I will soon be able to see that docter. I had to drop out of medical school because my symptoms just came and worsend last year when I turned 19.

  • @MrTurtluv
    @MrTurtluv 3 роки тому +2

    Thanks Izzy! Love your vids, as always.
    Genetic testing is so hard, if not impossible, to procure in my state, which is nuts. I did pass the main criterion needed to receive my diagnosis, but it’s still difficult when a nurse or doctor looks at your chart and doesn’t even know what EDS is. ☹️

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +1

      I run into this as well. That's why it's so important for EDS patients to empower themselves with knowledge so that they can advocate for themselves and bring more awareness and education to healthcare workers.

  • @sicqt9598
    @sicqt9598 3 роки тому +7

    i love your info, it really helps me study. You are beautiful and smart, keep doing what you’re doing. I don’t have EDS as far as I know, but you really help me think. Love you and keep up the good work❤️❤️

    • @IzzyKDNA
      @IzzyKDNA  3 роки тому +1

      Thank you so much, this is incredibly kind!

  • @MissLeopard28
    @MissLeopard28 3 роки тому

    I am 37 years old and I was just diagnosed at the end of last month by a geneticist at a pediatric clinic within a large university hospital. I really struggled to find out what was wrong with me for YEARS because I have been dealing with chronic joint pain for a few years now. It got really bad when I was working in a high-stress job in 2017 and dealt with some trauma that year, so I honestly thought it might be autoimmune since that runs in my family. I saw a rheumatologist right before I was laid off the job in Jan 2018 and she diagnosed fibromyalgia and Undifferentiated Connective Tissue Disease based on the fact that I had a positive ANA but no specific antibodies. Neither of the DMARDs I tried worked (I tried Plaquenil and MTX) and I never developed specific antibodies for almost 3 years. Late last year, I saw a new rheumatologist who looked over my history and said it likely was not autoimmune if the DMARDs didn't help me and I didn't develop new antibodies. He checked me over with a physical exam and remarked how hypermobile I was. I've also been told this by a physical therapist and other doctors. I have horrible tendons and really soft, doughy skin (the words of the geneticist, LOL!). The new rheumy diagnosed Hypermobility Syndrome (an outdated disorder, but it led me to seek treatment outside of rheumatology). I saw the geneticist and she matched me to the 2017 hEDS criteria and I meet the criteria so I was given the diagnosis. I was surprised to learn that I actually have the heel papules because I thought I didn't! LOL!
    I'm now in physical therapy to strengthen my weak muscles and develop a home therapy plan. The geneticist was incredibly knowledgeable about EDS and even gave me a folder of information to read about EDS in depth.

  • @alihayman3834
    @alihayman3834 Рік тому

    I've had chronic pain and ankle pain and instability for so many years but it's gotten so much worse. I also have other symptoms of Ehlers Danlos syndrome besides though. Planning to go see my primary care physician

  • @robertmassucci1
    @robertmassucci1 2 місяці тому

    I'm not sure if the condition worsens but as you mentioned the symptoms progress.
    I could contort, voluntarily dislocate and do parlor tricks when I was young.
    Now at 62 I can barely move arthritis everywhere.

  • @rebeccau.8259
    @rebeccau.8259 3 роки тому +1

    I was first referred to a genetic clinic shortly before the pandemic but since I would have to travel to another state, the pandemic made things difficult :/ I am working on trying again to at least get on a wait list. I have been diagnosed with things like early osteoarthritis which make me more concerned about EDS since my initial referral so I think an evaluation is important. Thanks for this video!

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +1

      See if your doctor can run you through the hEDS criteria. Although it doesn't rule out other types of EDS or other health conditions, ruling out the most common type of EDS might give you some piece of mind until you can see a geneticist.
      www.ehlers-danlos.com/heds-diagnostic-checklist/

  • @annikabergstrom8733
    @annikabergstrom8733 3 роки тому +9

    I’m at a really frustrating point in my diagnosis right now. Have had an orthopedist refer me to genetics for it, only to have genetics refer me to a few other doctors and be super vague about why, which was a problem because I don’t want to hop around to different doctors, because when I’ve done that in the past, they think I’m faking. I just don’t know where to go and it’s been months cause of COVID.

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +1

      Sounds like they're passing you around like a hot potato. That happened to me as well. What types of specialists have they passed you around to? Do you meet these official hEDS criteria?:
      www.ehlers-danlos.com/heds-diagnostic-checklist/
      Bring that to pretty much any doctor, and they can diagnose you with these official diagnostic criteria.

    • @emilyloveday2407
      @emilyloveday2407 3 роки тому +1

      It is really frustrating because they don’t know the answer so they assume your faking or make you feel as though you are. I’m right there with you. I was finally diagnosed with POTS at the age of 45. Having many nights in the hospital only to be told nothing is wrong or I have a bug. I have severe pots attacks with severe anxiety now something else is wrong with my joints. I dk if I’m dying soon but I do feel like my heart is slowing down more & more & nobody is listening or nobody cares.

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +2

      @@emilyloveday2407 Sorry you're experiencing this. Have they tried you on a beta blocker, Clonidine, or Guanfacine to treat your anxiety and POTS? Those medications can be very effective at treating both, especially in hypermobile disorders such as EDS. I highly recommend the webinars "When is Anxiety Not Anxiety: Psychiatric Misdiagnoses in EDS" by Dr. Alan Pocinki and also "All in Your Head: The Problem of Psychogenic Diagnosis for EDS" by Dr. Diane O'Leary, both of which are posted on UA-cam.

    • @MrRobiL
      @MrRobiL 3 роки тому +1

      Annika , do you live in Sweden ? If so ... You have to pull everything by you self , the doctors here don't know anything about eds... I have learned my doctor's about eds more then anybody

    • @shannongreenwell1278
      @shannongreenwell1278 2 роки тому

      I’m lucky to have my Neurologist and his knowledge of EDS, and I didn’t have to be bounced around from places to places. He also takes care of my Epilepsy.

  • @rheagalarneau1366
    @rheagalarneau1366 3 роки тому

    I’m working on going to find a diagnosis of this.

  • @thesisters3063
    @thesisters3063 3 роки тому

    Just joined iam struggling with my gastropericis really bad u encourage me

  • @donna8916
    @donna8916 10 місяців тому

    Thank you ❤

  • @kristileemaiellachoreo
    @kristileemaiellachoreo 3 роки тому +1

    Hey Izzy, do you have any tips for SI joint hyper mobility and lower back pain? I am starting PT soon. Also, have you heard of the Cusack protocol? A lot of people are saying it’s helping them tremendously with restoring their connective tissues.

  • @charmy2882
    @charmy2882 3 місяці тому

    My understanding there is a type that won’t come up by genetics. My specialist highly suspects I have hypomobility n so much pain, chronic n intractable neuropathic pain. I only say this as I watched this really good video by 3 doctors.

  • @jenniferharter
    @jenniferharter 3 роки тому +4

    Hi Izzy! Your videos have been really helpful over the last year, so thanks for making them!! I was recently diagnosed with hEDS (you are so right about the long wait for genetic appointments!), but I was wondering what your take on "easy bruising" is. For some reason a lot of my doctors got stuck on the bruising aspect of EDS and almost didn't refer me to a geneticist because I don't "bruise enough" in their opinion. Do think bruising with EDS is on a spectrum like skin elasticity? Or is a lack of "easy" and excessive bruising mandatory? You seem to have had some really great doctors when it comes to EDS, or at least better than most, so I was just wondering if they ever explained it. Thanks again! 💜

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +3

      Easy bruising is not mandatory. You'll see very easy bruising in vascular type EDS, due to blood vessels being especially fragile in vEDS. In hypermobile type EDS, easy bruising can help to point to it, but there are many hEDS people who do not bruise easily. It's not a qualifier, nor a disqualifier. It's not even in the diagnostic criteria for hEDS:
      www.ehlers-danlos.com/heds-diagnostic-checklist/
      There are the official diagnostic criteria for hEDS.

  • @tiffanyrussotto
    @tiffanyrussotto 3 роки тому +3

    I recently signed up for the study university of sc is doing. I really hope they find the gene for hEDS in our lifetime. Not for me but for my Children, we think my daughter who has down syndrome may have hEDS. I have hEDS and I think my mother did.

  • @najsbajsmedmajs
    @najsbajsmedmajs 2 роки тому +1

    I get 9/9 on the beighton score (22M), and on the second part I could get anywhere between 3 and 6 depending on how generous the diagnostician is. And regarding the last point about chronic pain and instability, I don't know if I've ever dislocated anything, and I don't really know how many subluxations I've had. The only one I know for sure is my jaw. And I don't really know if my joints count as having "frank joint instability or not" despite being freakishly hypermobile in pretty much every joint in my hands especially. And I do have discomfort and mild pain in multiple joints in my body most days, but apart from my back (which doesn't count towards hEDS) I don't really have any specific joint that will hurt every day. Mostly my joints just hurt if I do specific movements, or if I use them more than usual, like my knees and ankles hurting if I go on a long walk.
    I'm obviously hypermobile, and it's obviously symptomatic in every body part, as well as some autonomic dysfunction like POTS among others.
    I tried to book an appointment for getting an hEDS diagnosis but just got the reply that a hEDS diagnosis is pointless because you can't do anything other than treating symptoms as they come, and that if I wanted I could make an appointment with a physiotherapist if I have painful joints.
    And the thing is I do have some pain and discomfort, but it's mostly a minor inconvenience to me, and some things I simply can't do because they lead to pain, like throwing balls, and I had to stop doing MMA due to injuries and joint inflammations, which sucks, but it doesn't really affect my normal day-to-day level of pain, and I never really feel more than inconvened by my hypermobility syndrome. None of my problems are big enough for me to care enough to go to a doctor about them, and none of them can be treated really anyway. Which kinda sucks in a way, because I really would like to have an hEDS diagnosis, as confirmation that I'm not just some hypochondriatic self-diagnostician. I'm worried about potentially having arthritis in multiple joints in just a few years, and I want to know if I have a valid reason for thinking that might happen you know? If I dance at a party until I get so much joint pain that I can barely move, I wanna be able to tell people an explanation. I wanna be able to say "i have a syndrome called hEDS" instead of having to resort to vague explanations like "I don't have an actual diagnosis or anything but I think I might have this rare condition called hEDS, so basically my joints get worn down really prematurely due to hypermobility, so basically I have the joints of a 50 year old".
    I feel really insecure about whether I have hEDS or not. I feel like such an impostor. On one hand I do have the full 9p beighton score, as well as a lot of typical non-joint features, I -might- fulfill the official criteria, and I do have joint pain in every part of my body, but it's just not very significant. It's not the chronic suffering I hear every hEDS influencer talking about. Pain and problems are there, so I'm not asymptomatic, but I don't think it's enough for the official criteria. On the other hand it's gotten noticably worse in the last few years, and I expect it will keep getting worse. Idk, I just feel kinda stuck.

  • @Artista.Atipica
    @Artista.Atipica 7 місяців тому

    Hi Izzy, thanks for sharing! Could make a video abut the updates of hEDS? I saw the norris lab saying is 1:500, and some other researchers said is 1:300, are there any other changes?

  • @TheElvander
    @TheElvander Рік тому

    My sports physician helped with my diagnosis, in conjunction with my physio, a Zebras clinic, and my GP

  • @teresareinert8271
    @teresareinert8271 8 місяців тому

    I had two Drs right before a foot surgery and threw it at them that I think I have HEDS and they were curious and surprised that I knew about it at all. I score a 7 on the beighton score. I showed them other issues where it appears that I have very stretchy ligaments. I have bad back with multiple issues. My spine slips out of alignment on me kinda easy. I have scoliosis, a minor hernia at the opening of my stomach and minor mitro valve back wash that only shows itself when I have an upper respiratory infection. I have dislocations in my hands/ legs/ hips and knees. I have a prehensile tail that’s longer than normal and it’s broken off and just hanging there on the backside. Yes I can walk. Yes I have pain everyday. I have bad teeth and suffered teeth crowding all my life.
    I’m a classic case and waiting on my first Drs appointment with a rumatologist in a few days. I appreciated the Drs interests in my show of flexibility and joint looseness and their kindness instead of treating me like I spend to much time on the internet. Lol

  • @dawn3737
    @dawn3737 3 роки тому +1

    I heard you say on one of your older videos that you got infusions. If it's not too intrusive, could you say what the med is and what it treats. I'm working to revise my diagnosis from RA to EDS. But I've been receiving Rituxan for both the joint pain I have and fibro pain for several years as all the other RA types meds have failed. So just wondering.

  • @constantlychanged
    @constantlychanged 2 роки тому +1

    Hi! I was DX with hEDS with a Beighten Score of 8/9 by a geneticist. However, the geneticist did not run any blood test! I’d be willing to bet my insurance has something to do with it. It’s possible that many of those DX with hEDS actually have a different types but haven’t been tested. If everyone who was DX with hEDS got tested, it may be less common than current statistics suggest.

  • @ajohnson3830
    @ajohnson3830 9 місяців тому

    I have HEDS. 30 years I suffered until I was diagnosed. No treatment suggested yet.

  • @majellawalsh5883
    @majellawalsh5883 3 роки тому +2

    I badly broke my leg and ankle 16months ago. I explained am always falling, straining etc myself. Or just have really bad pain joints. So was sent rheumatologist and straight knew I had Hypermobility EDS, as I have lots of the connected conditions. But my genetics person for neurofibromatosis type 1 doesn't believe in Hypermobility EDS which annoyed me.. Am waiting for my POTS testing, MCAS aswell. Xx

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +2

      That geneticist is incorrect. Believing that a real medical condition that's recognized by the medical and scientific community doesn't exist could result in malpractice. Perhaps the geneticist is simply behind the times, and still believes that hypermobile type is still classified as "type 3" EDS? The medical and scientific community did away with the numbered type system for EDS, and revised it all in 2017.

  • @aderyn7600
    @aderyn7600 3 роки тому +1

    I think I hear EDS. I'm hypermobile, have been told i am, however I'm not flexible. My joints just easily sublux or dislocate daily pretty much. But I can't touch my toes with my knees straight. Alot of what made me come to the conclusion to pursue looking into this is just that I've been looking for ten years and every test for everything else has come back negetive.

  • @enyasavory156
    @enyasavory156 3 роки тому +1

    I think I have gastro paresis and EDS and the only person that is listening is my cardiologist. I was diagnosed with sinus tachycardia but he said it could be POTS. I’m on ivabradine and motilium plus other meds and they are working to an extent

  • @ladyspartafitness
    @ladyspartafitness 6 місяців тому

    Clinic near me has a 2 year wait list and my doctor told me "it takes too long " . It's so frustrating when your doctor thinks you are over exaggerating everything I say or making it up

  • @tinymossdragon1508
    @tinymossdragon1508 3 роки тому +2

    So I have a question for the EDS people. I just got diagnosed with POTS. And looking through the criteria I highly suspect I have EDS as well. Down to hypermobility, shortened palette in my mouth, unexplained stretch marks, stretchy skin, chronic daily pain. Just a lot of stuff. The only thing is, my joints don't fully dislocate. They more just kinda... Stop working, and drop me. Like my hips, knees, ankles. My wrists will do it sometimes. They don't dislocate. They just kinda dont work and I fall. Like ill roll my ankles all the time. They just arn't sturdy. Is the dislocation thing like.... Important? Like is it most likely not EDS if the joints don't fully dislocate? Also I am seeing a Physiologist about it all and have a doctor, so don't worry I'm not trying to self diagnose or anything.

  • @heathermarchese4371
    @heathermarchese4371 3 роки тому +2

    Do you have any videos about the “precautionary measures” you mentioned possibly to try and prevent symptoms? I feel like I’m having one flare after the other right now. A rheumatologist finally listened and diagnosed me but ended the appointment with “I don’t treat this though so you’ll have to find another doctor.”

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +2

      It generally takes a team of doctors, based on your symptoms. My primary care doctor was open to me bringing him research, and we would try medications until we found the best ones. Perhaps your primary could do that, or perhaps they'd put in the referrals to specialists to treat the various issues that your EDS causes you. Management of EDS is based on symptom management.
      Physical therapy is a big preventative measure in EDS.

  • @bappamukherjee-gc3qg
    @bappamukherjee-gc3qg 7 місяців тому

    My brother "Epilepsy" occurred 1990 & doctor was late Anupam Dasgupta (Nuro) asia famous triangular park Kolkata, long term treatment 10 years, his (brother 25-12-1987, approx 1988) disease had genetic , but mine had injury when I come from nursing home by someone elbow attack on head of mine 1982. My mom had "CYST" & brother's wife had "CYST". All Types of "Brain Disease" comes from "CYST" and also "Genetics".

  • @macauleywhite9407
    @macauleywhite9407 2 роки тому

    Hi! How would a geneticist help if they don't have the EDS Hypermobile type gene nailed down yet? Thanks! Trying to figure out who I should go see.

  • @MimiNizan
    @MimiNizan 3 роки тому +1

    Izzy, thank you for all your videos, I’m learning so much! I have OH and POTS since march 2020. And have lung, and stomach issues (diagnosed), don’t know exactly whats going on or what’s causing all of this. Looking back there were some signs of health problems in the past that I’ve been ignoring. I was wondering if OH and POTS are usually a symptom of a bigger syndrome or that it can be just that on it’s own? Also, you explain how people without hypermobility probably don’t have EDS. Is that also the case in vEDS? I’ve never dislocated anything but been having pain in joints for a longer time and now chronic pain in neck and shoulder blades. Been basically bed bound for nearly a year. Lost a lot of weight and getting protein drinks from hospital to get back a healthy weight. Pressure on my chest and very painful right shoulder and right side of chest (no explenation from doctors). It’s difficult to figure out if en how to seek correct diagnoses. I know OH and POTS can also be caused by CFS. Sorry for my English, I’m Dutch ;)

    • @tomsale5142
      @tomsale5142 Рік тому

      I've got it chronic shoulders armpits to fatigue from.birth hypomobility but pain for me.trying get tested eds starting ldn soon I cured pots but ime hoping my pain sycosomatic in the fact it can go I hope one day body pain started in throat then chest now here heal pain when get up to pelvic pain AHH hope.you fealing better

    • @tomsale5142
      @tomsale5142 Рік тому

      The pain is in the fascia tryed college n?

  • @user-td3sl7wj9v
    @user-td3sl7wj9v 8 місяців тому

    What's the difference between Ligamentous Laxity and EDS?
    My doctor asked me to do the thumb bend, he also checked on my elbow and knee

  • @emilyloveday2407
    @emilyloveday2407 3 роки тому +2

    I have pots as well with something else & im going through pure hell to the point I’m saying my last prayer on a daily basis. I notice you talk a lot with your hand as I do. My hands throb. I’m always told it’s CT & I know it’s not when I wake up with such pain in my hands it wakes me,they swell, have woke up twice with blue hands.

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +1

      Have you been diagnosed with Raynaud's? Have you been screened for hEDS and other issues? Which medications are they using to manage your POTS? The swollen hands generally isn't an EDS thing, but might point to some odd rheumatology or cardiology issue. Have you been referred to a rheumatologist?

    • @emilyloveday2407
      @emilyloveday2407 3 роки тому +1

      @@Dulcimerist I have not been diagnosed with that. I just now got insurance back this year. I went a year with very poor health care. I pray that my new dr does know what he’s talking about.

  • @user-vp7ib6zu3b
    @user-vp7ib6zu3b 3 роки тому

    Hello, how much water do you drink in a day? I have slowly motility of stomach by nerv spasm for 7 months and have pain after eating and I drink 3 clear glass of water. And when you drink do you also have pain

  • @susanwalsh2648
    @susanwalsh2648 3 роки тому

    Izzy, are you able to share the name of your surgeon that did your knee surgery?

  • @wyndhamconway9720
    @wyndhamconway9720 3 роки тому +4

    My chiropractor diagnosed me with EDS using the Beighton scale. One thing that surprised me is that even though I can't reach my thumbs all the way to my wrist, he counted it because I was close. Was it correct for him to do that? Personally, I think EDS would explain a lot of my health challenges throughout my life, but I also don't want to incorrectly assume that I have it.

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +3

      How close were you? Perhaps he didn't want you to injure yourself. Do you remember your Beighton score? If you had enough points from the other places and checked enough boxes in the second section of the hEDS hypermobility criteria, those two points weren't necessary.
      www.ehlers-danlos.com/heds-diagnostic-checklist/
      There are a lot of critics of the Beighton, since it isn't a broad check of hypermobility. For example, the shoulders, ankles, and other key places are completely ignored.

  • @bappamukherjee-gc3qg
    @bappamukherjee-gc3qg 7 місяців тому

    Hi Izzy Diagnosis mean case study of disease, "HISTORIA", "EPILEPSY":- are "Brain Disease", my brother has"Epilepsy" :- it also "Genetic".

  • @maciejsiedziako2315
    @maciejsiedziako2315 3 роки тому

    Have you seen anybody from Postural Restoration Institute? EDS looks like Patho PEC, which they treat a bit.

  • @jo3190
    @jo3190 3 роки тому +5

    I’d love to get your opinion with the idea that adhd could be a comorbidity or have correlation to eds.

    • @AirChalfeezy
      @AirChalfeezy 3 роки тому +3

      Dr. James Kustow is one of many clinician-researchers who study the area; he believes there is a correlation. There’s a lengthy lecture on the subject that has been uploaded by the Ehlers Danlos Society that is pretty informative.

    • @jo3190
      @jo3190 3 роки тому

      Yes a saw! I’m so interested but of course there’s not too much data on the subject

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +2

      Yes, it is. Interestingly enough, the ADHD medications Clonidine and Guanfacine can also be effective at treating POTS.
      Also, check out the webinar "When is Anxiety Not Anxiety: Psychiatric Misdiagnoses in EDS" by Dr. Alan Pocinki.

    • @jo3190
      @jo3190 3 роки тому +1

      @@Dulcimerist ooh thanks! Absolutely will look into it

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +1

      @@jo3190 - Clonidine and Guanfacine are also often prescribed off-label to treat anxiety, sleep disorders, nerve pain, migraines, dysmenorrhea, and additional issues. They work by lowering the amount of norepinephrine in the body, which in turn calms the sympathetic nervous system and "fight or flight" panic response.

  • @marija
    @marija Місяць тому

    I wish I was able to get the help I need. Yes I’m hyper mobile - but I have all of the other symptoms but I can’t get to see a rheumatologist or get referred to anyone. The way the GPs work in the UK mean I’m stuck at waiting for a referral and asking one as I have been for years 😢

  • @somethingsalazar2613
    @somethingsalazar2613 3 роки тому +3

    ive been diagnosed with chronic pain syndrome and my doctor is just passing off my hypermobility and subluxing of joints, i also have gi issues and pots. i havnt specifically mentioned eds but i’ve kinda hinted at my diagnosis not being right, especially as chronic pain syndrome is very frequent idiomatic and it doesn’t really make sense for me.
    I’m happy to have a diagnosis but i really dont think it’s the right diagnosis and i almost wish i didn’t have one yet so that i could still be getting tested instead of treated wrong.

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +2

      At your next appointment, ask the doctor to run through the official hEDS diagnostic criteria with you:
      www.ehlers-danlos.com/heds-diagnostic-checklist/
      Doctors dismissed my hypermobility for years, and without my proper hEDS diagnosis, it just wasted a lot of time and money looking elsewhere for answers. Being diagnosed with hEDS opens the door to POTS medications which work well for EDS patients; such as beta blockers, Clonidine, Guanfacine, Mestinon, and Ivabradine. Mestinon also treats the gastroparesis or IBS-C that often is caused by EDS.

    • @somethingsalazar2613
      @somethingsalazar2613 3 роки тому +1

      @@Dulcimerist ah thank you! i have an appt in a week so i’ll try to do it then, i’m not great at mentioning things but i’ll try aha

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +2

      @@somethingsalazar2613 I used to not be good at mentioning things to doctors, but learned that I needed to do that if I ever wanted to get better and have a better quality of life.
      Check out Izzy's video which visually goes though the hEDS diagnostic criteria. Some things in the criteria, such as the little white bumps on the heels, need to be seen in order to understand what to look for.

  • @balazsluca637
    @balazsluca637 3 роки тому +2

    Hi girl! I was wondering if Orthopedist is good to diagnose EDS. I have been trying to get a diagnosis for a year now but have been dismissed in all. I also have severe scoliosis so I go to a orthopaedic do you think I can bring up EDS to him?

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +2

      An orthopedist could diagnose it, if you printed out the criteria and if they knew how to go through it with you:
      www.ehlers-danlos.com/heds-diagnostic-checklist/
      Izzy has a really good video which visually goes through the hEDS criteria as well.

    • @balazsluca637
      @balazsluca637 3 роки тому +2

      @@Dulcimerist Thank you so much it helps a lot!!!

  • @kmpossible3233
    @kmpossible3233 8 місяців тому

    My daughter and I took a 23andMe a few years ago, and like a curious person, I found out that you can type in different types of genetic markers and see if anything comes up. We each have the genetic markers for CEDS, cLEDS, and VEDS...is this normal?

  • @hele4299
    @hele4299 8 місяців тому

    Is it possible to have a mild version of EDS?

  • @jennycee8167
    @jennycee8167 2 роки тому

    I am unable to get a dx because I have a hx of RA and do not have a family hx of EDS despite fitting all other criteria.

  • @rlyry
    @rlyry 8 місяців тому

    What’s the difference between hEDS and EDS, if hypermobility is a requirement for all types?

  • @akblindgirl
    @akblindgirl 3 роки тому +4

    I enrolled in the HEDGE study and signed my consent form today. Have you considered participating or already signed up? Also Alaska has one and only one EDS specialist.

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +3

      I will be getting my form soon. Guess I should check my email! The nurse at the local EDS specialist has EDS and is also participating! :)

    • @IzzyKDNA
      @IzzyKDNA  3 роки тому +3

      Yes! I'm part of it too :)

    • @akblindgirl
      @akblindgirl 3 роки тому +2

      That's awesome I hope we can all contribute to groundbreaking science.

  • @PumpkinPie__
    @PumpkinPie__ 7 місяців тому

    I’m trying to get diagnosed but I’m also scared they’re going to say it’s not EDS and then I have no idea what’s wrong with me. My closest dr appointment availability isn’t until December and we’ll see if she can even know where to send me

  • @sandangels73
    @sandangels73 3 роки тому +3

    Im 48 and was diagnosed in the last year. My 16 year old daughter was also diagnosed shortly after me. I also suspect my middle son of having it as well but he has less symptoms. Im pretty sure my other 2 sons dont have it. My daughter has some mild circulatory sympyoms but doesnt seem to be a major problem for her. My pots is debilitating and has gradually gotten worse over time. It is so frustrating.

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +1

      Hoping you can get your POTS under control. The major medications that are often used to treat EDS POTS are beta blockers, Clonidine, Guanfacine, Mestinon, and Ivabradine. Have they tried any of those with you yet? Mestinon also treats gastroparesis and IBS-C, which is a bonus for some EDS patients.

    • @sandangels73
      @sandangels73 3 роки тому +1

      @@Dulcimerist No, the only thing I've been on is gabapentin which helps with the bloodpressure, breathing rate, and heartrate spikes, but im weaning off of it because it was causing dips in those to occur, especially when I sleep. My O2 levels will sometimes drop as low as the low 80s, my heartrate as low as 40, my breathing rate as low as 9, and my bloodpressure drops as well.

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +1

      @@sandangels73 Gabapentin tends to cause problems for EDS patients with long term use. The weight gain from it puts more strain on joints and increases pain in the long run. Its effects as a central nervous system depressant could help reduce tachycardia, but it's more of a last resort medications for trying to manage POTS. I'm very surprised that they haven't tried any of the first line and alternate POTS medications that I mentioned. Are you being treated by a neurologist instead of a cardiologist?

    • @sandangels73
      @sandangels73 3 роки тому +1

      @@Dulcimerist
      My PCP is trying to treat me but doesnt have alot of experience with EDS. This is a fairly remote area and specialists are a long ways away.

    • @Dulcimerist
      @Dulcimerist 3 роки тому +1

      @@sandangels73 Hoping you can dig up good research articles to help your PCP. Since you get bradycardia, I wouldn't recommend beta blockers or Ivabradine. The other medications I mentioned might be worth asking your doctor about. Do you also get digestive issues, such as gastroparesis?

  • @ahmedsaddig5337
    @ahmedsaddig5337 3 роки тому

    scared to get diagnosed since i feel like i don't tick the typical boxes & also because i want to become a doctor and fear that med school & jobs will reject me.

  • @KarolineSortland
    @KarolineSortland Місяць тому

    I am on a waiting list to Get checked for EDS

  • @visionsmagazineonlin
    @visionsmagazineonlin 5 місяців тому

    I wish docs would figure me out. Extreme flat foot since birth, unstable foot ligaments now that Im 58, osteo in knees, foot & back. Shoulder pain. Lifting groceries hurts like hell. Rheumy doc wasn't much help. I feel my days of walking are numbered which is scary cuz if I cant work I'm going homeless n hungry. All they do is push NSAIDS which mess up my stomach.

  • @dumbmusorowan
    @dumbmusorowan Рік тому

    5:33 i thought veds had little to no hypermobility symptoms?

  • @cristinahz
    @cristinahz 7 місяців тому

    I think I have EDS, I have talked to a doctor and she reffered me to a blood test. But if I have hEDS it won't be positive, right? Is it worth having it then?

  • @kirstenornelas881
    @kirstenornelas881 Рік тому

    My oldest child had EDS with internal organ inolment and throught the past 19 years and tons of research there is only one aka the hypermobility without other organ involvment which can be found in genetic testing, The other sixteen are able to be DX through genetic testing not available to everyone due to imsurance or lack thereof but is the one that has not been found to have a a gene that has been identified as of yet is the form most commonly thught of when you think of the old side shows and such

  • @lu-ql1ed
    @lu-ql1ed 2 роки тому

    I have always had soft hands and curly hair now I have dry hands and my hair is falling out. I have always had super flexible joints and I have just started feeling pain around them. I haven’t seen the doctor yet but I think I have Eds. Any body else have my symptoms?