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Why Dysautonomia Is Often Misdiagnosed
In the 19th century, there was a common medical condition called neurasthenia. Previously healthy people would find themselves suddenly unable to function due to a host of inexplicable symptoms.
These often included fatigue, weakness, unusual pain that would come and go and move from place to place, dizziness, various gastrointestinal symptoms, and syncope (passing out). Doctors would not find anything to explain these symptoms, so they were attributed to a "weak nervous system," or neurasthenia.
Women with neurasthenia (men were usually not given this diagnosis) were often confined to their beds, where they would either recover or eventually die (since prolonged, enforced bed rest is very bad for one’s health). And while nobody knew what caused this condition, everyone, doctors and laymen alike, took it quite seriously.
While neurasthenia could not be scientifically explained, it was regarded as a serious condition, and its victims were regarded with sympathy and respect. Most modern doctors who hear about this mysterious condition merely shake their heads in wonder. What, they ask themselves, ever became of this neurasthenia?
Few seem to consider the possibility that neurasthenia is still with us. Consequently, they are less capable of recognizing the manifestations of this condition than were their old-time counterparts, and they tend to be far less sympathetic to people who suffer from it.
People who a century ago would have been called neurasthenics today are given a host of diagnoses. These include (but are not limited to):
- • Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS)
- • Vasovagal or neurocardiogenic syncope
- • Panic attacks
- • Inappropriate sinus tachycardia (IST)
- • Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)
- • Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS)
- • Fibromyalgia
Unfortunately, too many people with these conditions are written off as being nuts. They are not nuts. (Or, if they are, it is a coincidence.) People with these conditions tend to experience an imbalance, and most often peculiar volatility, in the autonomic nervous system. This imbalance, which explains their strange symptoms, is called dysautonomia.
What Is Dysautonomia?
Dysautonomia is a general term for a disorder in which the autonomic nervous system (ANS)—which unconsciously regulates body functions such as breathing and digestion—is out of balance and doesn’t function normally.
The Autonomic Nervous System
The autonomic nervous system controls the unconscious bodily functions, such as heart rate, digestion, and breathing patterns. It consists of two parts: the sympathetic system and the parasympathetic system.
The sympathetic nervous system can best be thought of as controlling the fight or flight reactions of the body, producing rapid heart rates, increased breathing, and increased blood flow to the muscles to escape danger or cope with stress.
The parasympathetic nervous system controls the “quiet” bodily functions, such as the digestive system. The sympathetic system gets us ready for action, while the parasympathetic system gets us ready for rest.
Normally, the parasympathetic and sympathetic components of the autonomic nervous systems are in perfect balance, from moment to moment, depending on the body’s instantaneous needs.
In people who have dysautonomia, the autonomic nervous system loses its balance, and at various times the parasympathetic or sympathetic systems inappropriately predominate.
Dysautonomia Symptoms
Symptoms can include frequent vague but disturbing aches and pains, faintness (or fainting spells), fatigue and inertia, severe anxiety attacks, tachycardia (fast heart rate), hypotension (low blood pressure), poor exercise tolerance, gastrointestinal symptoms, sweating, dizziness, blurred vision, numbness and tingling, pain, anxiety, and depression.
People with dysautonomia can experience all these symptoms or just a few of them. They can experience one cluster of symptoms at one time, and another set of symptoms at other times.
The symptoms are often fleeting and unpredictable, but on the other hand, they can be triggered by specific situations or actions. (Some people have symptoms with exertion, for instance, or when standing up, or after ingesting certain foods.)
Since people with dysautonomia are usually normal in every other way, when the doctor does a physical exam they often find no objective abnormalities.
Because the physical exam and laboratory tests are usually quite normal, doctors (being trained in the sciences, and thus, trained to expect objective evidence of disease) tend to write people with dysautonomia off as being mentally unstable, (or, more often, as having an anxiety disorder).
What Causes Dysautonomia?
Dysautonomia can be caused by many different things; there is not a universal cause. Dysautonomia can occur as a primary condition or in association with degenerative neurological diseases such as Parkinson's disease.
It seems clear that some people inherit the propensity to develop the dysautonomia syndromes since variations of dysautonomia often seem to run in families.
Viral illnesses can trigger dysautonomia syndrome. Chronic fatigue syndrome most classically begins following a typical viral-like illness (sore throat, fever, and muscle aches), but any of the dysautonomia syndromes can have a similar onset.
Exposure to chemicals is another trigger. Gulf War syndrome is, in effect, dysautonomia, with symptoms of low blood pressure, tachycardia, fatigue, and other symptoms that, government denials aside, appear to have been triggered by exposure to toxins
Dysautonomia can result from various types of trauma, especially trauma to the head and chest—including surgical trauma. It has been reported to occur after breast implant surgery.
Dysautonomias caused by viral infections, toxic exposures, or trauma often have a rather sudden onset.
Prognosis
There is no cure for dysautonomia. Fortunately, the prognosis appears far better than it was in the days when the disorder was called neurasthenia. This is likely because bed rest is no longer considered the treatment of choice.
Most people with dysautonomia eventually find that their symptoms either go away or diminish to the point that they are able to lead nearly normal lives. Sometimes, in fact, the probability that things will ultimately improve on their own may be the only thing that keeps some of these individuals going.
A Word From Verywell
The dysautonomia syndromes can have a profoundly negative impact on peoples’ lives. Even though the symptoms eventually improve in most cases, many people with dysautonomia experience symptoms that completely disrupt their lives, and the search for competent medical assistance is too often a difficult one.
If you think you may have dysautonomia, you should learn as much as you can about the various forms of this condition, and especially about the kinds of treatments that have been effective.
Source
Note 1:
Dysautonomia: Diagnosis and Management