|
Click here to visit The Institute for Stress Management and Performance Improvement and read more articles and reports by Tim O'Brien.
|
|
|
|
You had what disease?
Hyperparathyroidism
By Tim O'Brien
"The tumor was the size of a walnut and probably 10 years old," Dr. Jim
Norman told me as I awoke after surgery. "Everything went very well. It
took about nine minutes. You will feel much better in just a couple
days." Here is an unusual personal story about an obscure disease I had
but didn't know it. It might relate to you.
Hyperparathyroidism, have you ever heard of it? I hadn't. Even with all
the reading and study I have done, I must admit I didn't even know I
had a parathyroid gland, actually four of them. Where are they? They
are in our neck. What do they do? Their sole purpose is to regulate
calcium levels in our bodies. What happened to me? One of my four
parathyroid glands grew a tumor. It grew from the normal size of a
grain of rice into a tumor more than an inch long, 3/4 of an inch
thick, and 3/4 of an inch wide.
What were my symptoms? How did I find out about it? How did I find Dr.
Norman, the world's foremost authority on hyperparathyroidism, to do my
surgery? Do you have it? How would you know? Here is a short course on
hyperparathyroidism.
- In November 2005, I'd had enough of feeling
listless for the first time in my life. I was 56 years old, and my
blood pressure had risen to a point where I could not control it
naturally. I made an appointment with my physician. I had a physical. I
had blood work done. As I learned later, almost all patients with
Hyperparathyroidism have symptoms. According to Dr. Norman: "Sometimes the symptoms are real obvious, like kidney stones,
frequent headaches, and depression. Sometimes the symptoms are not so
obvious, like high blood pressure and the inability to
concentrate.";
- My physician called with the results of my blood
work. I had a high serum calcium level. He looked back and I'd had the
same high reading since 2001. He'd always thought it was just a slight
lab error. This time, he looked up causes of high calcium in one of his
medical books. "The book said that high calcium could indicate a
problem with the parathyroid gland";
- He gave me a prescription to get my parathyroid
hormone (PTH) level checked. I did. It was 179. Normal is between 10
and 65. It appeared I had a problem.
- While waiting on the results of the PTH test, I
went onto the Internet and searched under "parathyroid gland." The
number one web site from the search was http://www.parathyroid.com
I went there and read for more than an hour. What I read convinced me
that I did indeed have a problem and it was probably a tumor on one of
my four glands. The disease strikes at the average age of 56, that was
me. It affects women two to three times as often as men. That
wasn't me, but most of the other symptoms sounded like what I
felt like. I also learned that these parathyroid tumors were almost
never cancerous. That was good news. However, left untreated, these
tumors can lead to serious health problems including high blood
pressure, osteoporosis, and kidney stones.
- I sent my physician the link to www.parathyroid.com and
asked him to look at it. He did. When my PTH level came back so high he
felt this confirmed that I did have hyperparathyroidism.
- I asked him if he knew of anywhere or anyone to go
to for the surgery. I also asked my physician brother. They both
confirmed what I had read and concluded myself. Dr. James Norman, of
the Norman Endocrine Clinic in Tampa, Florida is the top surgeon in the
world for the procedure I needed. The fact that he was in Tampa, an
area I am very familiar with, and, he had some of his training and was
on the staff for several years at the University of South Florida,
where I graduated, gave me an initial comfort level. After I read about
him and his minimally invasive radio guided procedure (MIRP) he had
developed, I was sure I wanted him to do the procedure.
- After I completed my file with the Norman Clinic,
I received a call from Dr. Douglas Politz M.D. He is Dr. Norman's
partner. He asked me to get two new blood tests and a bone density scan
to confirm that I did have hyperparathyroid disease. I had the tests.
They all confirmed that I had the disease.
- Tampa General Hospital called me to go over insurance and admitting information. And, they set the date for my surgery.
- February 21, 2006 at 6:00 a.m. I entered Tampa
General Hospital. At 8:58 a.m. I walked out of the hospital, procedure
completed. During those three hours the staff injected me with a
radioactive solution, and then performed a sestamibi scan. That scan
clearly pinpointed the location of the tumor: on the lower left side of
my neck. I met Dr. Norman and his team. They explained the process and
procedure. The anesthesiologist injected a solution into the
intravenous line in my arm. The next thing I remember is Dr. Norman
telling me how well the surgery had gone. And, all I had as a reminder
of the surgery was a 1.5 inch incision at the base of my neck.
Within three days of the surgery, I felt much better. My energy levels
soared to levels I hadn't felt in several years. I slept
better and woke up fresher. I required less sleep. My mental clarity,
which I always felt was good, became much better.
What does any of this have to do with you? If you, or anyone you know,
have a high serum calcium level show up, ask to have a parathyroid
hormone level test. "There is never a reason for high blood calcium in
the body," says Dr. Norman. "It is never normal." I also suggest that
you go to www.parathyroid.com just
for the educational experience it offers. You might not ever have the
disease; however, you might hear someone mention high calcium levels,
or exhibits some of the symptoms of Hyperparathyroidism. This short
visit to the web site might save you or a friend from years of
discomfort.
There is one final step to see if the surgery healed me. Exactly two
weeks after the surgery, I went to have my calcium and PTH levels
checked. I just got them back. They are both in the normal range. I'm
cured! Thank you Dr. Norman and your staff.
Coypright © 2006 Timothy J. O'Brien
|
|
|
|