Hello anticloud - are you in America or Canada? I am writing to you from England - about 60 miles north of London.
Before I say anything about calcium tests I'd like to address the issue of fibromyalgia and the numbers of blood tests you have had done. Fibro is an illness which is diagnosed by exclusion - is when tests have been done for 'everything else' the doctor concludes it must be fibro (also called ME/chronic fatigue syndrome (cfs) and in Australia it is called CFIDS. The name is always being debated and changed it's so hard to keep up. I have been diagnosed with ME/fibro for 30 years and too ill to work for 25 years 🤗😀
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Now then, the idea that you have had 'every blood test' or indeed that Fibro is diagnosed when 'everything else has been excluded is, if you think about it, a logical and financial imposibility. It is not possible, or affordable to exclude everything, and neither is it possible to have 'every test' done. And so if you are eventually diagnosed with fibro it is important to remember that from a patient's point of view you have been dumped into a 'DON'T KNOW ' pile. It is essential for people with this diagnosis to be very proactive, to keep records, letters and photocopies of blood test results, and to write down an outline of every meeting with a doctor because you might ultimately turn out to have something else, or even a rare illness that your doctor didn't consider or for which the tests are too expensive. Ultimately it is possible that what is REALLY WRONG will eventually be discovered - and if you have records it is more than likely that they will help your lawyer if you have to sue because of medical negligence in identifying what is really wrong with you. 😀😀
And so to the issue of raised calcium (Ca). The person who replied suggest you might have raised Ca because with your symptoms it is quite likely you have a rare condition called primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT). Your parathyroid glands are in your neck and lie near to the thyroid gland - "para" is the Greek word for 'near to' so your parathyroid glands are glands which are near to your thyroid gland. And which sit two above and two below the thyroid. They can also be in other plces but usually in your neck or under your collar bone, and sometimes, rarely, on or near to
Your heart. Nobody knows why, but when something goes wrong the cells in the parathyroid gland(s) start to multiply and produce a benign tumour which can grow to the size of an olive and if they are close to your throat can be felt as swellings. The symptoms of PHPT are very similar to fibro/ME and include bone, joint and muscle pains, extreme fatigue and sleep disorders and when the illness is advanced bone density problems, loss of appetite, extreme thirst, frequent peeing and kidney pain/kidney stones. You can find more good Information at parathyroid com
If you have PTHP the blood tests which will indicate its presence are high Ca, low Vit D and high parathyroid hormone (PTH. There can be variations but those are the most common test results. The Ca is raised because the damaged parathyroid gland mistakenly thinks that there is not enough Ca in the blood so starts drawing it from the bones, and the Vit D drops as a result.
This is not a very rare condition BUT at my local GP surgery there are 9,000 patients and four doctors - two of the doctors have been there 30 years - none of
them had ever seen a case of PHPT before I suggested I might have it. After two weeks of protesting by me they finally ran the tests, which they had never run before and 24 hours later I had my diagnosis.
So read the info and go to your primary care physician to ask for these blood tests - Ca, Vit D and PTH. They should all be done from one draw of blood and they need to arrive at the lab within an hour. So find out when the blood
Is collected from your medical centre and book the very last appointment. I dot know why that one hour matters but it does seem to affect the accuracy of the results.
When the test results come back ask for a printed copy. REMEMBER, for a diagnosis of PHPT the most common test results would be high calcium, high parathyroid hormone and low Vitamin D. If that is what your tests show you will need a referral to an endocrinologist and after that a surgeon. There are variations of the test results. but don't worry about that now. Just read up about PHPT and ask your doctor for the blood tests.
And thats it! I wish you luck and I hope this information begins to provide an answer to your terrible suffering and dreadful symptoms and I hope that this is also the answer to some of your questions. I send good wishes and hugs for the coming weeks. Do