Living with Forestier's disease

Posted , 86 users are following.

I have finally found info on Forestier's disease!!

When I was first diagnosed back in 1988 my doctor had no material on this subject. I was told to go home and find it on my computer, which I did. There was a researcher in Canada who hit the nail right on the head, Forestier's is no pick nick! He was so right!

When I was first diagnosed with the disease, I was in a lot of back pain. I had x-rays done and this article is correct....my vertebral area looked as if I were leaking wax. I saw all sorts of bony hooks hanging from each and every vertebrate and I was in a lot of pain; but my doctor at that time said I couldn't be in pain, as it wasn't painful??? On the contrary, the article I was told to research stated that there is a great deal of pain associated with the disease and eventually it would be crippling and that is where I am, 20 years later.

At the first time I was diagnosed, I didn't know that my choking could be associated with the disease itself, I thought it was just asthma...after all \"it isn't that bad.\" I was placed on many anti-inflammatory medications. I was place on one that I suddenly would loose my speech and get confused...I was told they might be TIA's. Later this particular drug was found to do just that. Since it wasn't helping, I was put on another anti-inflammatory and the doctor doubled the recommended dose and later I found that the sphincter muscle to my stomach and been burned away from too much of a good thing.

I was told not to see a chiropractor and for good reason! I had a complication from a surgery and they had to knock me out in order to go down my throat....while under someone turned my head further than I could myself and broke a facet in my neck; now I have plates in my neck and need more surgery....Once my neck was repaired, I didn't choke any longer. Right now, the disease has gotten so bad that I have many areas of stenosis and nerve root cut off. The neurosurgeon who performed my first neck surgery stated that every opening that allows the nerve roots to channel through my body was loaded with razor sharp spurs. This is just the spinal region of my body.

I am beginning to calcify at every ligament insertion site. I have bony over growth in my feet, which interfere with the articulation of my foot joints. I can feel the bones sticking out of my ankles and the tops of my feet; I'm beginning to fuse in my left foot. In three weeks I'm heading for a double knee replacement because my left knee can't support my knee cap; over growth of bone has pushed it away. It is getting more and more difficult to participate in daily activities as my range of motion is becoming limited. My elbows and my shoulders are affected as well...I can feel bony growth there as well. I'm losing feeling in my legs, as my nerves are being pinched; the pain shoots down to my feet and it is gripping. My hands can't grip a phone for any length of time.

I found if my pain can be controlled, I can function well, but too many doctors are not up on the pain this disease produces. Controlling the pain keeps me moving, and that is what you need to do, but the support isn't there for this. The disease is so rare that it is brushed off as regular osteoarthritis and it isn't, it's no where near the same.

I was diagnosed in my thirties and I have lived with chronic pain for over twenty years now. I was told that it affects mostly males over the age of 70....bunk! It is genetic, as my mother had it and wasn't properly diagnosed with the disease and my brother has it as well. My mother and I were deeply affected, she had it her feet as well and by the time she reached 70, she couldn't walk without crying in despair.

I had one doctor treat me with Suboxone and it was the only drug that gave me back the quality of life others enjoyed. He left for the north and I am back in severe pain once again. The problem with this disease, it's a square peg and everyone wants to fit into a round hole. I try to keep a smile on my face for my families sake, but the pain can be read all over my face. I'm still young, by today's standards and I just want to be a participant in this life, not stuck in some corner watching my life and the world go passed me.

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  • Posted

    I quitt taking xanax  about seven years ago. Since then I have had pain all over. I was diagnosed with DISH disease.  So I feel for  you. Dish disease is forestier's disease.  My main problem is in my neck and throat, it aches all day and it gets stiff as a board. How the heck, does one function like thise.  Could you reccommend something i  could do for my neck.  Surgery??  Pills ?  . I think we should find a good holistic doctor. All the doctors I met just want to give pills. What do you think.  I wish you luck David
  • Posted

    Hello everyone

     I just got my X-ray report yesterday of my hands and feet and the radiologist has diagnosed me DISH.  I am 43yrs old and i live in canada.  I was initially diagnosed with ankylosing spondylitis and then inflammatory arthritis. Tried two biologics and it did nothing. The only drug that seems to work for me has been prednisone. Has anyone tried this? 

    I am very thankful for this site and to learn from all of you.  

    • Posted

      Hi sharmilla  try face book forestiers/dish. Best resource I found you have to request to join the group. Best site I found 
    • Posted

      Last evening I officially got the diagnosis of DISH after seeing my third rheumatologist. I have to say that there is such a sense of relief knowing what is going with me physiologically. It seems I am between mid to late stages of DISH and I have found out the reason it took them 13 yrs to diagnose me because I am a woman who was 31yrs old when I first started exhibiting symptoms.  
    • Posted

      I feel your pain. I never thought that this would be my life. Full of pain and having to take meds that don't work. It's robbed my life of the things I can't do. While I'm grateful to God I'm not in a wheel chair. As for me, it took over 20 years to be diagnosed. Wish you well. Stan
  • Posted

    Difficult as to may be, and it is, you have to struggle on, do not give up. Once you do this wretched disease will take over. Try to keep as mobile as you can, it's not much fun but better than a wheel chair although I now have to use a scooter. Lee
    • Posted

      Hi Lee,

      I'm moving all the time, but when you watch football, GO PACK GO, I even stand.

      What hurts the most with you, now getting buttock pain, and calves pain.

      Keep the faith.

      Paul

    • Posted

      Hello Paul, I have just come back from a trip that I abandoned as the pain stopped me completely. Not sure how I got in never mind getting out of the car! I have had DISH quite a while now so the spinal pain and now the spurs on my heels making life very difficult. I am going to have to take advice on that next week. I had a e mail form the Florida where they use nerve ablation and I am told is very effective. It's interesting how the advice and treatment varies form City to City and Coluntry to Country.

      Just have to keep going I guess. Take care. Lee

  • Posted

    Hi everyone. I am 62 yr old female and have had Foresters since my mid 40's. For me the pain has subsided as the fusion completes. I am still able to walk everyday and have sex. Those are my priorities. lol By the end of the day I need a half of a hydrocodone for the pain moving into my hip area. I have no movement left in my neck which makes getting into a vehicle and driving tricky.

    The most important thing to be careful of is falling. I moved from the snowy mountains to the desert so I won't slip on ice.

    My mother had this too (un diagnosed), and took a fall in her house and snapped her spine. She died 7 months later as a quadropaligec.

    Personally, I don't see my life lasting more than another 10 years. The latest MRI shows so many spurs that it's just a matter of time before they puncture an organ or pinch off something vital.

    Good luck to everyone here and keep your spirits up. We were delt a crappy hand but it's the only life we get, so make the most of it.

  • Posted

    You may find these twin sites worth looking at as they have a fair amount of Research Information and Support for DISH/Forestier's Disease which is an unfortunate unrelenting condition that we have!  You must request to join each group, as both these are closed groups.

    Burjis Shroff MD

    https://www.facebook.com/groups/DISHRESEARCH/

    and

    https://www.facebook.com/groups/DISHSUPPORT/

     

    • Posted

      Hi I went to both the sites you have listed and could not figured out how to join the never was a link or a continuation on the sign-up process any help is appreciated at this thank you
    • Posted

      Hi Robert

      Are you from WI, which sites did I tell you to look up, I could fwd them to you, have a email I could send them to or another way you feel comfortable.

    • Posted

      Hi yes I am in Appleton Wisconsin somebody on this site suggested to Facebook pages that ask that require me to join and yet I can't figure out how to join them I think somebody has to recommend me or something. Any suggestion?

    • Posted

      That's not true, how do I send a link to you, have them both on my phone.

    • Posted

      There they were two UK sites one for research and one for something else I think I was viewing them on my phone and maybe the entire page didn't load to complete the sign-up process and I have to use my computer instead

    • Posted

      That's funny there both on my phone and I receive a email like the one you sent, I assume you have a smart phone. How can I help anymore.

    • Posted

      We'll text again soon,getting late, I'm going to be 60 years young.

    • Posted

      Okay yes it is getting late I will check the web sites again and maybe we can text tomorrow I'm turning 66 in December and for me the dish is mild but I have greatly restricted neck motion , and have no real suggestions about what if anything there is to do or if for sure it will get worse. Mri 6 mo ago diagnpsed it. Scared mostly. Thanks for chating

    • Posted

      Robert you can go to Facebook and sign in as a member and then type in Forestier's/DISH in the tool bar and both the sites will be listed then request to join them.

    • Posted

      Hello again

      I was wondering what others think of the opinion that anti-inflammatories like ibuprofen and Aleve slow the DISH development of bone formation even if it's not needed for pain. I read both yes and no.

      Does inflammation contribute to Forestiers disease. I thought you might have dealt with this question yourself and maybe taking something with an opinion on what drug prefer.

    • Posted

      Hello Paul,

      My boss is 57 years old and has DISH severely. The pain is so bad he cannot move. Someone recommended the Radiofrequency Ablation. I see that you have had this done. Was this effective? I am trying to find something or someone who can help him. He has had the epidurals, he is with a pain management specialist, working with a nutritionist, on a special diet, taking special supplements. Now someone told him about the Radiofrequency Ablation. Would really love to hear back from you!

    • Posted

      Hi Burjis,

      I am a 58 year old male from Hyderabad, India diagnosed with DISH about six years ago. My doctor tells me the onset of the disease was probably fifteen to twenty years ago. I have extensive calcification of the cervical and lumbar spine and moderate calcification in my hip and shoulder joints.

      I joined Facebook a few days ago in order to get on to the DISH Research and Support groups but am not able to do so. Would appreciate your guidance on this.

      Achyuth Reddy

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