I know that title sounds like an exaggeration, but unfortunately, it isn't. When I recently looked back at 2022, I discovered that it was my worst year since I first got ME/CFS (myalgic encephalomyelitis / chronic fatigue syndrome) in 2002 (and later, Lyme disease in 2007). I had two major relapses last year, one due to COVID and another due to long overdue (unfortunately necessary) medication changes. I have now crawled back up from those low points and have been feeling mostly well the past two weeks, so I'm ready to share what treatments helped ... just in time for a year-end review!
NOTE: I like data and am an analytical person. For details on how I simply track how I feel on a calendar, check out my post, My Progress in 2020 and Goals for 2021 and scroll down to My Health in 2020 and below that, the section called "How Do I Know This?" I use a 1 to 5 rating, where 1 is good and 5 is mostly bedridden. I also rate my exertion each day on a 1 to 5 scale. And for details on the process I use for goals, which focuses on taking small steps forward toward what I want in my life, see my recent video, Setting Goals When Chronically Ill (Improve Your Life in Tiny Steps).
2022 in Review
The data:
Average How I Felt = 2.9 (1 is good; 5 is bad)
- The lowest since 2004.
- 14% worse than in 2021.
- 21% worse than 2019, my last good year, before all these relapses began.
Average % crashed = 26% (meaning I was couchbound/bedridden 26% of the time)
- Crashed = a 4 or 5 on my scale, unable to function.
- My lowest ever, in 20 years.
- Includes my worst month ever, September 2022 when I was crashed 77% of the time.
- 13% worse than in 2021.
- 21% worse than 2019.
Average exertion = 3.5 (on a scale of 1 to 5)
- 6% worse than 2021.
- 7% worse than my best year, in 2019, when I was able to do more than in any previous year since getting sick.
- Clearly, I was still doing too much last year as my condition worsened!
2022 Timeline: Highs and Lows
I've included some notes into January 2023 so you can see the end of the story and my recovery (hopefully) back to my own "normal."
January 5 - I caught COVID from my father-in-law's nursing home (so did he and my son).
January - I was severely ill, mostly bedridden/couchbound for three weeks and then the COVID symptoms began to clear up, but my ME/CFS remained worse than usual. Overall in January, my average for how I felt was 3.8 (out of 5, where 5 is bad), and I was severely crashed 65% of the time.
February - April - I gradually improved, bit by bit, with the help of treatment changes.
May - July - Mostly at my normal baseline, with how I felt = 2.4 and only crashed an average of 4% of the time.
August - With my OB/GYN retiring at the end of the year, and my age (57), she finally took me off the 90-day birth control pills I had taken for decades to hold my hormone levels steady (for ME/CFS). As we had planned, blood tests showed I was completely through menopause. We both anticipated that the transition off hormones might be rough, but it was much, much worse than either of us expected!
September - my worst month ever, badly crashed (nonfunctional and couchbound/bedridden) 77% of the time.
October - After two months off the birth control pills, I still had daily headaches, very low energy and stamina, and constant flu-like aches (an indication of immune system activation). The hormone shift had affected everything. My OB/GYN started me on low-dose estrogen patches, with a low dose of progesterone every 3 months for two weeks.
November - The headaches immediately cleared up, and my energy slowly returned. The aches hung on, so my ME/CFS specialist tried another dose of steroids for 5 days (which had helped me finally get back to normal in April).
December - Additional testing showed that the hormonal shifts had messed up all of my hormones (and the endocrine (aka hormone) system is closely tied to the immune and nervous systems). My ME/CFS specialist added a very low dose of testosterone and asked me to wait another month for things to stabilize before adjusting my thyroid meds.
January 2023 - With a family funeral to attend in early January (another rough start to the new year), I asked my primary care doctor to look over my latest labs and adjust my thyroid meds. Every single one of the 8 or so thyroid tests had come back low! She added a second thyroid medication. I managed the very long travel days to and from Texas and the funeral. The week that we came back (last week) was the best week I've had in six months!
LAST-MINUTE UPDATE: I've had trouble with the latest brand of estrogen patches my pharmacy sent me; they often fall off within 2-5 days (they're supposed to last 7 days), and I don't always notice right away. When I go without it, I crash badly. One fell off this week and I ran out of testosterone. I slept most of Tuesday and spent most of Wednesday in bed, badly crashed. With a new patch securely applied and back on testosterone, I am feeling better again, though I am still sleeping more than usual and have low energy the past two days. (My son has a cold, so this might also be my reaction to being exposed to a virus.)
What Helped Me
Post-COVID:
See my previous Relapses and Recoveries post for the treatment changes that helped me recover from the post-COVID relapse at the start of the year. There's a long list there of things that helped me.
Endocrine System/Hormones:
The endocrine system produces hormones that regulate everything in the body, including the immune system, the nervous system, heart rate, blood pressure, energy, temperature regulation--everything. When I stopped taking the combination of estrogen and progesterone I'd been on for decades, it threw everything off, not just the things regulated by those two hormones. It was a domino effect that sent me into my worst relapse ever.
So, my doctors helped me with estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone, based on my lab tests, but my thyroid function (which is normally a bit underactive) was also thrown off and needed to be tested and treated.
Thyroid dysfunction is very common in ME/CFS (again, that domino effect - all systems in the body are connected and affect each other), but it's critical to get the right tests. To be thorough and look at all measures of thyroid function, ask your doctor to test:
- TSH
- Thyroxine (T4)
- T3 Uptake
- Free Thyroxine Index
- Triiodothyronine (T3)
- T4, direct
- Reverse T3, serum
- T3, free