When I first “cracked the code” on stabilizing and reversing prolapse, and wrote and published Saving the Whole Woman, I set up this forum. While I had finally gotten my own severe uterine prolapse under control with the knowledge I had gained, I didn’t actually know if I could teach other women to do for themselves what I had done for my condition.
So I just started teaching women on this forum. Within weeks, the women started writing back, “It’s working! I can feel the difference!”
From that moment on, the forum became the hub of the Whole Woman Community. Unfortunately, spammers also discovered the forum, along with the thousands of women we had been helping. The level of spamming became so intolerable and time-consuming, we regretfully took the forum down.
Technology never sleeps, however, and we have better tools today for controlling spam than we did just a few years ago. So I am very excited and pleased to bring the forum back online.
If you are already a registered user you may now log in and post. If you have lost your password, just click the request new password tab and follow the directions.
Please review and agree to the disclaimer and the forum rules. Our moderators will remove any posts that are promotional or otherwise fail to meet our guidelines and will block repeat offenders.
Remember, the forum is here for two reasons. First, to get your questions answered by other women who have knowledge and experience to share. Second, it is the place to share your results and successes. Your stories will help other women learn that Whole Woman is what they need.
Whether you’re an old friend or a new acquaintance, welcome! The Whole Woman forum is a place where you can make a difference in your own life and the lives of thousands of women around the world!
Best wishes,
Christine Kent
Founder
Whole Woman
louiseds
March 27, 2009 - 6:57pm
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Whooping cough
Hi Christine
Sorry to hear that the prognosis is weeks more coughing, and that it is having such a negative effect on your bladder control. Hang in there. I am sure you will recover to your previous level of health and that your bladder will recover its previous good composure. It will just take time. It is a hard pill to swallow, but when we have a setback like this it is a reminder of the how distressing it is for a woman who experiences it for the first time.
Your body is strong and resilient. You will be fine in the end.
Cheers
Louise
alemama
March 27, 2009 - 7:43pm
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castor oil packs?
have you considered this?
Honesty Christine I think one thing we as a modern society have forgotten how to do as we developed our medical system is convalesce.
Get in your bed woman! do not get out. and while you are there have someone come and nurse you. The only time you need to get out of bed is to get in a steaming hot shower. Then have someone beat your lungs- or do vigorous chest rubs. Have your dd pump milk for you- her immunity will help you get better faster.
Eat broths- warm and steamy- that someone else makes for you.
Rest and recover. Be well.
Christine
March 27, 2009 - 8:04pm
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will try
Thank you Louise and Alemom! Geez, I just don’t think we’re in a place where I can be MIA right now. We walk a pretty fine line here keeping everything afloat, but I’ve copied and forwarded your message to the rest of the team. I know I seem invincible to them, but at some point it has to be recognized that I’m pretty ill. They keep encouraging me to “think well” and that hasn’t quite worked thus far. Also, I’m a doer by nature and it makes me crazy to stay in bed - especially in springtime with another business to do!! But I can see that my options are becoming limited.
kiki
March 28, 2009 - 3:41am
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whooping cough!
oh christine, i am so sorry to hear this. i am so sorry to hear how ill you are.
i have always been so worried about whooping cough since i got my prolapses. For adults, it's only a DTP combination, and it's a fairly new vaccine. But i may look into it hearing your story!...I know the old live Pertussin was very problematic, but i haven't looked into the killed one (assuming adult is that one--kids here are now). I'd love to hear other natural mama's views on this vacc too...?
i am hoping for a speedy recovery for you now that you know what is going on--and for your pelvis to return to its strength.
the antibiotics are only effective is making it non contagious--not in treating it. i don't know if they work later in the illness, or only at the beginning. some people do believe though that they lower the immune system, making it harder to fight it...
there are homeopathic remedies that are meant to be very effective that might help. very quick search found:
(From Cassandra Marks:)
Whooping cough: In my 21 years as a homeopath I have used Pertussin to ward off whooping cough. I usually recommend that your child takes a dose of Pertussin 30 potency, if he or she has been in contact with another child with the characteristic barking cough. The child should take another dose a week to 10 days later. I have also successfully treated a good number of cases of whooping cough with remedies such as Drosera and Coccus cacti described in my article in issue ? of the Informed Parent.
(from another site:)
Drosera: spasmodic Cough dep in the chest. Violent tickling in the larynx brings on cough. Cough impulses so violent cannot catch breath. Cough as soon as head hits pillow. Principal remedy for whooping cough.
(not sure of dosage--one person recommended a 10m, when we thought our little one had i'm sure the dosage she had me order was lower...)
so wishing you speedy recovery, and that you feel much much better
kiki
davemayamom
March 28, 2009 - 6:29am
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Sending healing and immunity
Sending healing and immunity vibes your way! I hope you are feeling well soon! I know it is hard to rest when all you want to do is go, go, go!
bad_mirror
March 28, 2009 - 12:54pm
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bright side?
On the (maybe) bright side of this, doesn't going ten rounds with whooping cough now protect you against future episodes for a long time? Nature's vaccine? I hope so, for your sake. What a lousy thing to go through, but maybe you will emerge with an immunity to protect your pelvis for a good long time. Best wishes!
Christine
March 28, 2009 - 4:07pm
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immunity
Thanks so much everyone. The issue of immunity is so central to health for all of us. Yes, I do believe I will be immune to pertussis - maybe for the long term. We were basically All vaccinated at some point as children and beyond. Is “unnatural” immunity the reason for this surge in adult cases? Remember that the whole idea of immunizations was conceived from the observation that milkmaids were immune to both small and cow pox. Although the horrible scourge of smallpox was eradicated - almost worldwide - many other vaccinations have been associated with unsettling “issues”. That the early Salk vaccine was contaminated with a cancer-causing monkey virus is not unlike a horror show. Also...these “childhood” diseases are very tough on older people. This is the first time I’ve been able to sense how people die from respiratory distress. All I ever wanted to be was a healthy, happy, natural milkmaid!!
kiki
March 28, 2009 - 4:23pm
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weighing it up
i just find it so hard to weigh the risks vs benefits up...
i have total faith that if my children got whooping cough they would get through it in one piece. we would be exhausted, but they would be healthier for it and fine. however, if i got it, i have the greater issues of still needing to be a mother and to work and all...and the POP issues, all things that start to make me feel like i should be vaxed. but the fear of the unknown risks weighs heavily in my mind...
how to make that decision?
i am sure Christine you will now have immunity, from what i've read at least for 10 to 15 years, hopefully forever!
and, if it helps to make you feel even better about this, apparently whooping cough helps to make the lungs much healthier in the long run.... so you will emerge with a stronger healthier set of lungs!
there is, btw, apparently still lots of childhood whooping cough--it's just that in children who are vaxed it gets diagnosed as asthma or other coughs, not whooping cough. it was found in a study a few years ago, and i raised it with a doctor when DS had a bad cough as a baby, and the doctor asked if we were vaxed. he said it was true--if we were he wouldn't go down the whooping cough route, but as we weren't he would--even though they know the vaccine wears off so quickly (and turned out just to be a bad cough...)
Christine
March 28, 2009 - 4:54pm
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natural immunity
I know it’s not perfect, but don’t you think Nature sets us up for natural immunity before we reach our teens? Not all children survive. But imho I think we should try to stay with the natural order of things as much as possible. Alas, most of us never got that opportunity.
I have gone past the very yucky stage of massively runny nose, etc and now believe I’m in the acute whooping stage. I really don’t know how many weeks it’s been. Gosh, Kiki...thank you so much for telling me that my lungs might even prevail! I’ve been so worried. xC.
alemama
March 28, 2009 - 5:24pm
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childhood asthma- mumps
as a preteen I was diagnosed with childhood asthma- this happened right as I hit puberty and escalated so that I was on asthma meds for a few years-
all that ended when I got the mumps as a 14 year old.
Research that I have done since confirms what I now suspect- that having the mumps got rid of the asthma.
Some of these things we vax against actually do help us out in other ways....
and yes I had the MMR- as a baby and then again as boosters- apparently my body never acquired immunity- well I have it now!
and yes as a 14 year old my parents "made" me get the MMR again- which I think is totally stupid since I had the M and the R and the naturally acquired other M.
Christine
March 28, 2009 - 5:33pm
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tonsils?
I've been bemoaning the loss my tonsils and adenoids when I was eight years old. I *should* be a very robust woman - I have that sort of constitution, but have been hit with upper respiratory illness - most esp. sore throats - throughout teenage and adulthood.
bad_mirror
March 28, 2009 - 5:53pm
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asthma alemama
I don't want to hi-jack this thread but . . .
Alemama -- I find it interesting that you had asthma as a child, as I was also diagnosed and "grew out" of it all around my pubescent years. Another link in the set-up-to-POP chain of events? I had the meds and all, but not sure I really had classic asthma. What I did have was a fairly chronic cough at night that the doc had no idea what else to do with. I haven't coughed like that in 16 years, but wonder now if it had a smidge of implication in what's going on now. Hmmm . . . .
PA runner
March 28, 2009 - 6:17pm
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I received the vaccination
I received the vaccination after the birth of my youngest who just turned three. I can't recall how soon after the birth or if I was still breastfeeding. I know several adults who have been diagnosed over the past few years. Extended bouts of coughing are guaranteed to aggravate my prolapse and what usually follows for me is urinary leaking which otherwise isn't an issue since I went for PT after the birth of my first child. I wasn't thinking of this when I requested the vaccination I was more concerned with the kids getting sick but if I had been thinking of the prolapse it would have been an added factor in choosing the vaccination. (Yes, for those of you who are new to POP you can get to the point where POP is not foremost in your mind, just be patient.) I did not look into the ingredients. I do not recall any reactions, who knows about the long term negatives but I felt it was the right decision for us at the time.
I currently have a mild/moderate cough/cold thing going on and have been reminded of the prolapse. Christine take the advice of your WW family and care for yourself. Your crew can get by without you on the short term or they will learn how much more difficult it is to not have you up and about for a longer duration.
louiseds
March 29, 2009 - 1:06am
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asthma alemama
You can add me to that list. Chronic post-viral coughing from mid primary school years, maybe before. I had tonsils removed at about age 6 because I got so sick from respiratory viruses. Didn't really make any difference that I could see. Finally diagnosed as asthma (well, it responded to the asthma meds, anyway) mid-40's. Finally on full preventer and reliever meds for three(?) years before learning Buteyko and kicking the asthma meds (Ironically, at the time I was trying to get rid of the asthma so I could be in good shape to have a hysterectomy and bladder repair, which is how I ended up here!). Now with full blown POPs behaving well, uterus intact, no surgery, breathing easier than I have ever in my life. Weird, eh? Great, eh?
Chronic coughing is all about massive amounts of intraabdominal forces being resolved any way they can for weeks on end. In a woman with 'fitness industry standard' style posture, how could it not be a major predisposing factor?
And many cough medicines make you constipated ...
Cheers
L
Christine
March 29, 2009 - 12:07pm
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coughing and prolapse
Sans tonsils...hmmm, maybe it’s the cheap cigars...
About chronic coughing....Louise just pointed this out, but I’ll elaborate a bit.
It is the wrong framework to conclude that coughing causes prolapse and incontinence. Think about women in traditional cultures who carry large clay ollas filled with water on their heads. It’s probably reasonable to assume that a deep, hacking cough equals the pressure created from such a load. There have been studies conducted showing that the normal vagina simply closes down harder under pressure. Therefore, you could even say the more pressure the better.
I’ve become an expert at this these last weeks and can tell you that the trouble comes from the shape of the spine while coughing. The very worst is coughing propped up in bed like I am now because I have no energy to sit all the way up, although I do have a sturdy little pillow under my lumbar spine. In these sorts of lounging positions, the lumbar curve is absent and the pelvis in counternutation. Second is lying on your back in bed with a pillow under your head and shoulders.
Amazingly, when you take the pillow out and lie flat on a firm mattress, the body moves intraabdominal pressure through much more naturally and the pelvic organs are spared. Your lumbar spine moves sharply forward with each cough and protects the pelvic interior. We are built to lie on our back - that’s why our tailbone curves under and out of the way unlike any other mammal. Acute-angle side-lying positions are also protective, as is lying on your stomach.
The same goes for standing postures, although it is the human thing to do to sort of collapse into a bad cough. I’ve been trying very hard to use everything I know to breathe healthfully. Pertussis is particularly difficult though, because the urge is to breathe very shallowly in hopes of preventing a coughing fit. But the bug won’t let you get away with it and periodically tickles your throat so you have no choice.
bad_mirror
March 29, 2009 - 6:08pm
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cherry juice
Good grief, I remember that inconsolable tickle from my chronic cough period . . . I'm sure you've tried everything, and I know your cough has a different cause then mine, but pure cherry juice did a lot for me to quiet that tickle. I don't know why! It was a remedy from my grandmother . . .
granolamom
March 29, 2009 - 8:07pm
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healing vibes, christine!
oh, christine, I'm sorry to hear you're so sick!
I'm sure you will pull through this, but do take good care of yourself and rest now when you need it. a stitch in time....
a few of my friends have had the vax, the peds around here have been putting the fear of pertussis in everybody. I honestly did not realize it was so difficult a disease in adults.
doesn't make any sense to me that you can't get just the "P" part of the vax.
in any case, I hope you feel better soon.
sending healing vibes your way
Mae
March 29, 2009 - 8:42pm
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Get well soon Christine!
Hi Christine,
I am so sorry that you are still feeling so bad. Maybe, by the time you read this, God willing, you'll be feeling a lot better.
When I am sick, and especially when I have a cough, I find sucking on Sugar Free Ricola Cough Suppressant Throat Drops to be a God send. They really help me to control a cough and I get serious bronchitis!! Might want to give it a try.
Rest, rest, rest, as has been said soo many times here. That's what you need now. It will pay off in the end.
Love and healing vibes (and, of course, prayers) sent your way!
~Mae
louiseds
March 29, 2009 - 8:45pm
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Chronic coughing
Hi Christine
Thanks for elaborating on the dynamics of chronic coughing.
Would you and other coughing women try a little trial for me please?
*One* of the stages in learning Buteyko breathing is to learn to breath less. You learn to breathe very shallow(ly), breathing in deeply then just breathing out a little when your body tells you that you need more oxygen. This leaves a lot of carbon dioxide in your lungs, which is OK cos CO2 is actually essential in the process of transferring oxygen from the bloodstream into the tissues themselves. It also puffs out your chest and maintains your lumbar curve.
We actually need very little oxygen, much less than most of us breathe. If you breathe more slowly and breathe more shallow(ly) you will cut down the amount of cold air going down your irritable throat. This means your throat will be irritated less, so you are less likely to have a coughing fit. This means that your throat is stirred up less often. This will reduce inflammation, or at least not exacerbate it, allowing it to recover more quickly.
In addition, *do not ever open your mouth for any reason at all*, other than to eat or drink, or actually use your voice (or clean your teeth or apply lipstick).
This means:-
No gasping (drawing a breath through your mouth) before saying something.
No gasping before saying something on the phone.
No whistling or singing while you work. Hum instead.
No puffing and panting during exercise. Make yourself breathe through the nose, or slow down.
No heated, breathy arguments/discussions.
No clearing your throat with your mouth open.
No gaping in surprise.
No clicking your tongue up against the top of your mouth, tapping out a rhythm.
When singing, breathe more often, little breaths through the nose to keep the lungs full. If you allow your lungs to empty you will have to take a deep breath in through your mouth to get enough air for the next line. Try and forsee passages where you need to hold a note or a string of notes for a long time, and fill up before you start. I have seen and heard a professional opera singer who only nose breathed right through a major role in Porgy and Bess.
No smoking either. The cheap cigars just got too expensive to buy with A$$$. I just eat expensive chocolates instead! ;-)
This means breathing through your nose all the time, deeply into the belly. This means that all your breath has to pass through your nose, with all its convolutions that are designed to warm, moisten and filter the air going down your throat and into your lungs. It is the same effect as a hot steamy shower. This is another example of the amazing design of the human body. Newborns cannot spontaneously breathe through their mouth. This is why blocked nasal passages are cleared at birth. Breathing through the mouth is learned behaviour, which *can* begin when a newborn is inverted and slapped to make it breathe (scream with pain through its mouth).
Now for the trial.
When you are by yourself, see how little you can breathe.
1 Sit in Wholewoman posture.
2 Take a deep breath through your nose, then wait until your body signals that it wants to breathe out and take another breath. This will probably be only a few seconds.
3 Then effortlessly breathe out a tiny bit, then breathe in again.
4 Keep this going for as long as you like, using your normal, comfortable timing of breathing. Don't try to hold it for longer than is comfortable. *Simply keep your lungs half or more full and just breathe in less air at every breath.
I have done it for twenty minutes at a stretch without effort, right at the beginning of learning Buteyko breathing. I was no expert. You don't have to *try* to do anything, other than only breathing out a little bit.
* If you need to let go of it all to take another breath, you have breathed in too deeply, or have held your breath for too long.
* If you start to feel light-headed or nauseous you have held on too long, or not breathed in deeply enough in the first place (you really are running out of oxygen). Stop, breathe normally for five minutes, then try again, this time filling your lungs more initially and maintaining more volume in your lungs every time your exhale.
NB You may think you cannot do this because your nose is be blocked. If this is so, you can still do it if there is a tiny air passage in only one nostril. This takes some self-discipline as there is a temptation to panic and open your mouth for more air. I think the slight feeling of controlled panic is quite good in this instance, because I think your adrenalin level rises and dilates your air passages. Your blocked nose will clear slightly in response to this controlled panic.
*This is probably why adrenalin is administered to people having a serious asthma attack*.
You may not believe this bit about breathing through a blocked nose to clear it, but it works. Try it. You might not be able to do it for very long, and it may only clear enough to allow you to stop panicking. Just take a small breath through your mouth, then shut it again if the panic gets too much, and recommence shallow breathing through your nose.
Christine, see if this cuts down on your tickle and cuts down your coughing.
This little lesson is only one part of Buteyko breathing that I learned. Don't overdo it if it has untoward effects. I am not a trained teacher. Seek out a trained teacher if you want to learn the rest of it.
NB I wouldn't recommend trying it without trained supervsion if your health is not otherwise good, especially if your heart function is compromised. Lungs, not so sure, but err on the side of caution if doing it without trained supervision.
The Buteyko technique is used to rid the body of asthma, and I have rid my body of chronic wheezing and sinus and ear blockage of several years' standing, using the Buteyko technique. My asthma specialist told me that my x-rays had permanent thickening/damage to the lining of the lungs, so my lung function was definitely compromised when I learned it. As a result of this training I now breathe deeper, exhale less, and breathe slower, all the time. My brain is actually the bit has been trained, but the result is that my throat and lungs get a lot less wear and tear through environmental irritants, cold and viruses that have instead been caught in my convoluted nasal passages that are covered in mucous, and just wash it all away.
Cheers
Louise
rosewood
March 30, 2009 - 2:56am
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Here's a couple of ideas for further healing
Virgin coconut oil, 2 tblsp p/d (or start with one) -- get a good quality one. Bet you have it where you live, but if not, tropicaltraditions.com or radiantlifecompany. I don't particularly like taste, so I put in warm water so it melts then down it. Coconut oil is amazingly healing -- the less processed the better. Recommended it to a woman with chronic chronic cough and respiratory issues and it was amazing.
Chinese herbs -- my doc gave me something called "herbal ENT" in capsules. If you want maker, let me know and I'll get info.
"X-Clear" for any sinus stuff -- made with Xylitol -- breaks down bacteria -- not sure if you need this.
We've had coughs here for months, too -- finally the coconut oil and chinese herbs did it for us. Waited too long to get it.
Hope you are feeling much better soon. And, I kwym - really hard to slow down with so much going on --- but, even a few hours in bed can do wonders.
Love, Marie
Connie54
March 30, 2009 - 8:58am
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Doctor?
Believe me, I am the queen of self diagnosis, but Christine, don't you think you should see a doctor to make sure something more serious isn't going on? You are RN and I am sure other possiblities have ran through your mind, you can't help it, you know a vast amount about the human body having been in the medical profession for many years. I still has faith in conventional medicine and I know you do to. Hope you feel better soon. Connie
Christine
March 30, 2009 - 11:10am
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thank you
Thank you everyone! Louise...that information is so important for all of us...thank you!
Connie...yes, DH is taking me to the doctor today. He was gone to a conference all weekend - the worst weekend of my life - and said I was feverish off and on last night. I told him I didn’t think I could even get to the car and he said “We’re going!”
I got this bit of interesting information from a friend:
“The reason why antibiotics don't work later in the course of the disease is that the pathogenesis is due to a toxin that is made by the bacteria. The toxin damages the epithelial lining of the airways. So even if the bacteria are killed by the antibiotics, if they have already made the toxin, then the toxin can still wreak its damage and once the epithelium is damaged, it takes time to heal. You might want to still see a doctor because you may be at risk of getting some other kind of infection if the epithelial lining is indeed damaged as the epithelium provides a lot of protection against other microbes.”
I can feel that damage every time I breathe in and I’m sure the bacterial toxin is the reason for my nausea, too.
DD and I just talked and we both figure I picked this up that day in pediatric urgent care!
:( Christine
luvmiboyz
March 30, 2009 - 12:38pm
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i am surprised you were the
i am surprised you were the only one to get it though....hope you feel better soon
~Amanda
kiki
March 31, 2009 - 3:36am
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doctor
hi christine,
glad to hear your wonderful husband is back to look after you. hope that the doctor is able to shed some light--i have to say, you sound far iller than when i usually hear about whooping cough, so the idea of a secondary infection does make sense.
let us know how you get on at the doctors--we are thinking of you!!!
Kiki
Christine
March 31, 2009 - 12:11pm
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doctor visit
Thanks so much for your concern and I feel kinda selfish taking all this space for my health issue - but hopefully it will be instructive in some ways.
I had a very unsatisfactory trip to the doctor yesterday and my experience echoed what I’ve read on the Web - that doctors are rather blind to adult pertussis because they think of it only in terms of a disease of childhood.
I actually saw two doctors - our middle-aged male internist friend and his new colleague, a young, bright Vietnamese woman. She listened to my lungs and said I didn’t have pneumonia. He wanted me to have a chest xray “just to be sure.” She said she had never seen pertussis and he acted like he hadn’t either. Long story short I got out of there without the xray and with a script to the ONLY lab in town that deals with pertussis. They actually send the blood to California and I will have the result in 2-8 days.
At this point I really don’t think it could be anything else and I don’t believe I have any secondary infection. Immunity is such a profoundly deep phenomenon. I’ve been terrified the rest of my family - most particularly my husband - will fall ill with it, but they say Absolutely not.
I’ve also read on the Web, Kiki, that many adults are not particularly ill in between coughing fits. However, there are a whole slew of classic symptoms that add up to much greater illness and I have most of those. I read the account of one woman who said she hardly remembers her bout with adult whooping cough because she was almost delirious she was so sick. I’m in the thick of it now with night sweats and pounding headache too. The very worst is the cough and the constant feeling that I breathed in caustic acid.
I have no idea why I came down with this - who knows, maybe I needed the rest. I do believe it will be cathartic and I'll so appreciate all of life when I return to health. For now, I’m enjoying lots of cherry juice (thank you, bad_mirror!), mindful breathing (Louise!), warm broths (Alemama!) and the help of my kind and loving family.
Christine
granolamom
March 31, 2009 - 8:03pm
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immunity
it is curious that only you caught this that day at ped care, and that your dh hasn't caught it from you.
my thoughts on the matter, which obviously, you are free to toss in the trash if it sounds like rubbish to you, is that so often our immunity is intertwined with our emotional lives. I think its entirely possible, that if you were going through something particularly emotionally stressful, that would put a chink in the armor of your immune system. Of course its nothing I can prove, but I think the positive aspect to my musings is that once I figure out what emotional upset has allowed illness to take hold, I try to connect the specific upset with the specifics of my illness and believe from emotional healing will come physical healing. maybe just magical thinking that works as a placebo for me, but thought I'd share it anyway.
I hope that you start to feel better soon and that you can breathe easy.
kiki
April 1, 2009 - 12:36am
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immunity
immunity is a funny one--a agree gmom, it is so emotionally linked, and so much we don't understand. When DS got measles, he never even saw the child he got it from. they must have passed in the hallway, and he--and everyone else who came in contact with this child, got it. We on the other hand had people lining up to catch it from us (i know, it'll sound crazy to some people here!) and not a single person caught it except his brother who was in his face the first four days of it till he got truly ill. The anti vaxers argue one problem with vaxes is susceptibility--some people are very susceptible, some aren't, and i think some people shed a lot, some don't.
I usually fight things off well, at the moment I'm catching everything and i know it's because i'm over worked and emotionally and physically exhausted.
So why only you caught it Christine, who knows. Sounds like if they were going to get it by now they would have (incubation 7 - 10 days norm), and if they haven't gotten it by now they must not be susceptible at this moment which is a relief!
i am sorry the doctors' was so unsatisfactory. i do hope you turn a corner soon, and please keep us updated!!!
Christine
May 2, 2009 - 11:21am
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update on my illness
Want to let everyone know that I’m completely recuperated. My case was not managed well and after I eventually took a nasal swab/culture I was well into the convalescent stage and the results came back negative. I initially gave blood for an antibody test, but canceled it days later after discovering culturing for pertussis is the only definitive way to diagnose it.
The thing about whooping cough is that the bacteria release a strong toxin that damages the epithelial lining of the airways and it is that damage that causes the horrible coughing and sickness. I don’t know how long before the immune system destroys the bacteria to leave only the toxic aftermath in the lungs.
There is no doubt in my mind that I had the disease - there’s really nothing else it could’ve been and for the heck of it I should probably go back for the blood test to see if my antibody levels are high.
Health to all!
Christine
davemayamom
May 2, 2009 - 6:52pm
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Glad to hear you are well
Glad to hear you are well Christine. Coughing and POP do not go together! I had whooping cough as a child and I coughed from early fall right through to the spring! This outbreak of Swine flu has got me nervous again about coughing! I hope it is contained soon, and I wish everyone immunity!
Janice