I deal with two doctors aside from my PCP, a urologist and a back doctor, and I could add another if I was inclined. I have the following issues:
1. Spondylolithesis (spinal slippage) due to an injury the L5 vertibra is slipped causing compression and bending of my spinal cord.
2. Hematuria - Blood in the urine, in my case microscopic.
3. Impotence - can't get it up.
4. Incontinence - can't hold it in.
5. Generalized Anxiety Disorder - can't calm down.
Back doctor says that my back issue should cause retention, not incontinence but the research I've done says incontinence rather than retention. If I overdue it, I get pain in back and down the leg and into the foot. At this point regular monitoring is the course he is taking, does not see need for surgery at this point - he says to be careful not to lift anything over 20 pounds, use motrin, ice packs, physical therapy again.
After Cystoscopy, Ultrasound of bladder and kidneys, and a few other tests, the Urologist has not come up with a cause for the blood in urine or incontinence. For Incon, I'm left with option of surgery or trying more medications. I don't know why he suggests surgery since he has not established the cause, and dismisses bent spinal cord. As far as Meds, they were helping when it was OAB, but as Urge Incon started, they were less and less effective. Sometimes it's like Urge, other times I'll pee without warning or feeling, so it's a mixed bag. For Hematuria, will monitor level of blood in urine to insure it does not get worse, ultrasounds, prostate checks, etc.
None of the doctors had anything much to say about Impotence, but Viagra does not help.
Have dealt with an Anxiety condition for most of my life, the others are more recently occuring (within the past 12 years or 57 years total). Antidepressents turn me into a zombie (horrible reaction), so can't take them. Anti Anxiety meds like Xanax knock me out. VALIUM is the one Med that helps, it does not really cure or treat anxiety, it makes you drowsy so your still anxious but too too drowsey to pay attention to it, plus it helps my back because of the effect of relaxing muscles.
So where am I now. I have one medication (valium) for two conditions, no meds that help for anything else, and doctors with conflicting views.
But what I have learned from almost a lifetime of dealing with anxiety is that there are many proposed courses of treatment - medications, biofeedback, exercise, etc., etc, etc, and I've found that I just have to accept living with this because the only way for me to avoid anxiety is to be free of stress, demands, or pressure - NO WAY in this life.
Some things can be cured, some managed, and some you just have to live with. Knowing when and where to draw the line is what's important. That does not mean don't try, but to realise when the effort is more of an intrusion on your life than accepting and adapting to a situation.
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