During this adventure I have had basically every single medicine, therapy, and attempted procedure out there. As a result, I have some serious insight into what actually works to treat MY case of CRPS.
Let’s start with what DOESN’T work…opioids, drugs, pain medicine, ignorance, and staying still. All of these are things I have experienced or done or been told to do. Let’s start with the big bad word, Opioids. These are great short-term options for broken bones, major surgery, dental work, big bad injuries, and all around pain that WILL go away. Now here’s the kicker, most doctors prescribe these without even thinking about the potential repercussions. let’s say you break your arm and they give you Hydrocodone, an extremely common and relatively low dose opioid, to help with the initial pain. Then let’s say the pain doesn’t stop, your arm is still broken, healing but broken, and things are regenerating and it can hurt. SO you go back to the doctor, tell them this and then they hand you another script for more pain pills or a higher dose. After that, they send you off to a pain doctor, who might try muscle relaxers [basically an obnoxious group of medicines that are SHORT term help] and before you know it your arm may be healed but there is this small part inside of you craving the relief of no pain AND the sleep aid all those pills gave you. Now you can’t sleep. So another doctor writes you a sleeping medicine prescription. And now here we are. So lets recap- a simple, single injury can lead down a major path of unknown, unintentional addiction to medications. Now you are reliant upon all these medications to survive. I’m not saying this is always what happens or that this happening means someone is weak willed or not strong, it’s just the way the system is set up. Half the time regular doctors wont prescribe an opioid because of the risk but think that a muscle relaxer is somehow magically “less” addictive. The honest truth? It’s not.
So now we’ve gone through opioids into muscle relaxers, which really can help, but I always say “how long and how do I get off of them”. This comes from a personal position where I truly do NOT like the feeling of not being able to control myself or that nagging bodily “need” for a medicine. I would rather just go through it than cave and take the medicine. But everyone reaches a breaking point. I did in December. At that point I was unable to walk, move, or even do the most basic things without help, so we turned to a muscle relaxer and suddenly I was up from 2 a day to 6 or more,1 every 3-4 hours and the pain would come back. Between that and these lovely drugs they call “anti-convulsants with nerve pain benefits” [we will get to those later] I was a drugged out, space cadet with no real recognition of what was going on. Throw in the fact that the medicine stopped working [tolerance builds FAST people, FAST] so then we are on to the next medicine, and then the next, each one stronger, with worse side effects, and not really helping. One made me feel like I was on 6 shots of espresso, another gave me night terrors, anaphylaxis with another, and at this point I was exhausted.
So we went non-medical, a sympathetic nerve block [fun fact, these are GREAT for extremity injuries, however mine is a TRUNK injury, AKA middle of my body and including my abdomen etc] which put me down and out of an entire week unable to move. That’s where those muscle relaxers came in and thus the cycle began. By this point I had been on that drug class I mentioned early for a while “nerve pain blockers” lyrica [AKA groundhog day and 50 first dates for me personally where everything I was seeing, learning, doing, was being misfiled and never going even into short term memory, after coming off of it, I can now say, 3 months later, those classes I was taking, all that intel is randomly coming back to me] and eventually Gabapentin. Gaba can be good for some people but what is VERY important to note about it is that even in small doses it can inhibit neuroplasticity, AKA brain nerve growth, which is where the continued memory issues occurred. In my case I got an extremely rare side effect of full body tremor/seizure like movements that no one could or would explain [thank you pharmacist Allison for figuring it out for me]. The other thing often forgotten is basically every medicine has a warning label about dizziness, so I had zero balance and risked falling. My detox off Gaba was less than pleasant, rather I caution anyone using it to make sure and note that detoxing off of it can be as dangerous as detoxing off of a drug addiction. Me? I got the nausea, vomiting, pain, exhaustion, shakes, and depression all wound up into 7 days of hell. Lucky me though, I was only on a lower dose, safely titrated off, and was on it for only 2 months. But here’s what is so important, I was AFRAID to stop taking it because I was convinced the pain would be worse without it. Not true at all, but knowing it was prescribed for my “nerve pain” made me assume that.
Alright so let’s get to the GOOD part. What works? Well every single case of CRPS is unique, as Steve [a former DR and specialist for CRPS] quotes, RSD means “really stupid disease/diagnosis” since it is a catch all like neuropothies or fibromialgia. But the KEY factor is movement, teaching the body and the affected part what a “good” movement is, whats normal movement. But CRPS fights you hard. Every single symptom is basically forcing you back into bed or onto a heating pad or to take those pills. Aqua Therapy was my first step. My first real step and real success. Jackie, my PT therapist, is amazing. She recognized where I was an never pushed me too far, she let me lead the way. And I was determined as hell when I met her to walk again and stop barely making it from one chair to another. Water really takes all the weight off the joints and allows the muscles to work gently. Plus I slather Vaseline and lotion all over my sensitive skin. MAGNESIUM in lipoderm. Magnesium is amazing and essential or bone strength [CRPS starts to reduce their density] but orally can create a disaster in your stomach and topically some people are too sensitive [ME ME ME], but luckily, my women’s health DR had a recipe with a compounding pharmacy who made it for me AND suppositories of Valium. This one is actually a good idea because it allows on those HORRIFIC pain days, for my body to absorb the medicine internally right where it is actually needed.
But what else works? Well for me, my B12 levels were dangerously low, and CRPS = no energy, so the b12 shots and sublingual have helped give me energy and allow my physical state to match my mental state and get up and go. Melatonin for sleep [I also utilize other things but maybe I’ll discuss that another time] Setting required appointments also helps, because it FORCES you to go, you can’t back out of an appointment when you commit yourself to it. NUTRITION. I am really bad at that one, let’s get real. I don’t always have the energy to cook something healthy, or the stomach to eat the right foods, but I do try. Getting those fresh, good quality nutrients into your body helps you fight the battle. Reflexology. For me Tia was my God send, because reflexology [which like 99% of Drs have never heard of] works the ears, hands, and feet, it can stimulate and relax those affected parts without direct contact which causes pain. She sent me on to Lymphatic massage with one of THE BEST and most well trained therapists out there. It’s extremely gentle, but I felt so much better 48 hours later.
POSITIVITY. Ya that one is hard. I have broken down more times than I can count. You can’t see what I am dealing with on the outside, only slight redness on my skin, some thinning skin, and now a cane to help me balance. But before the cane, people would knock into me all day and even a brush against a wall on my injured side would set off a nightmare chain reaction. Often times I’ve wished for broken bones, cancer, even to just give up and die because I am so tired of the way the world treats chronic pain. I’m not a pill seeking junkies nor am I an attention seeking individual. All I want is answers and effective cures. So yes, sometimes that positivity fades and the frustrations mounted come back to bite me and I let that mental woe overwhelm me. It happens more than I want to admit. CRPS is as much a physical disease and battle as it is a mental one. What people don’t see is imagine the spoon theory for depression only remove half of the spoons. CRPS takes away simple joys, freedom, driving, walking, cooking, being alone, going to the gym, playing with your kids, everything. It rips it all away at any given moment and you are left with only your thoughts about it. So how do we fight it? For me, sometimes I don’t, sometimes I just recognize that there are limitations and I will just need to learn patience and endurance while I keep recovering. And sometimes I make myself a small drink. Not always the best choice but honestly I’ve stayed away from alcohol due to all the medicine anyway. And then sometimes I punch that feeling in the face. No really, I punch that thought, that image, away, just like I did that stupid Jellyfish. And then I remind myself that the minute I give in, give up, and just cave, I will be that statistic, I will have let all my hard work over the last decade go to waste. I won’t have a chance to change the world or even just one persons life. I won’t attain my goals and I won’t achieve my destiny, whatever it is at this point, I’m a little lost just like that song Lost Boy by Ruth B [it’ll make you cry]. But I guess part of this journey for me is finding my tribe, finding myself, and discovering strength I didn’t know I could gain.
Stay Strong my friends and never give up, no matter what comes your way, there is always a way over, around, under, or through that boulder in your path.





