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by cjbgkagh
492 days ago
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By my math the test for hEDS has a very high false negative rate and it will cause issues with future insurance so not only would I not bother with it I would recommend against it. This is how bad math in medicine flows on to create more bad math. It's generally not the hypermobility that is the problem, it's all the autoimmune conditions that come with it. Here is a list of the most common ones, https://ohtwist.com/about-eds/comorbidities. The comorbidities often have specific treatments and it helps to know the name of the things when looking for the treatments. The one that I think limits people the most if they have it is the ME/CFS that is very common in people with hEDS. I'm of the opinion that ME/CFS is downstream from dysautonomia. Low Dose Naltrexone should be step one for dysautonomia, after that weak ligands such as modafinil in the morning and amitriptyline at night - these medications seem compliment each other rather nicely. Modafinil can cause gut issues though so if that's already a problem modafinil can make things worse. A very strict zero sugar diet as well, dopamine dysregulation can cause strong sugar cravings which does make this rather difficult. I think semaglutide will likely be shown to be effective for auto-immune conditions and is probably the best medication I've taken for mine - but I am extremely sensitive to it and had to start at 1/20th the normal starting dose and still had pretty bad side effects. I'm basically 100% except that I have to still be careful with PEM - I'm in the process of building up a tolerance to PEM with the hope to eventually fix it. For the actual hypermobility I think weightlifting is the most effective. I was getting Craniocervical instability for a while and did a year long course of hGH peptides and Test Cypionate and that seemed to resolve it - but I have a severe form of hEDS and was worried about it putting me in a wheelchair. I was willing to take some risks to avoid that. |
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