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  1. #12
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    northern Virginia
    Posts
    5,897
    Um okay. The ENT was a jerk.

    Apparently it just a coincidence that this started just as I was getting over a bad cold. My left vocal cord is paralyzed.

    There are three basic possible causes for this. (1) Damage during surgery. This does not apply to me. (2) Ideopathic. A fancy word that means "we have no clue." (3) A problem with the nerve than runs down from my head, around my heart and back up again. I have two CT scans scheduled for next week to look into this.

    According to this doctor there is no treatment. They can shoot collagen into it temporarily improve my ability to speak but that would make the breathing problem worse. Except he refused to believe it was causing a breathing problem -- I had to get angry and then cry before he paid attention to that part. "It would take extreme exercise for that to happen." Well yeah, that's what I do, jacka$$. (I am really angry at him.)

    Anyway. What I didn't tell him, because why waste the energy on someone who's clearly not listening, is that I have a friend whose vocal cords were damaged during a surgical procedure, and it affects her breathing during bike rides. So I know I'm not imagining the wheezing that comes from my throat when I ride my bike up a hill. In fact I referred my friend to the pulmonologist who treats my asthma, and he did tests to confirm she had no lung problems and then referred her to an ENT. That ENT apparently suggested some treatments to possibly improve her situation. I think speech therapy might have been one of them, I'm not sure.

    So I will go for the CT scan next week and then have a follow up with the jerk doctor early the following week. In the meantime I will schedule an appointment with the other ENT that my pulmonologist recommended to my friend.

    After I left the doctor's office, I remembered something that happened to me a long time ago. I was living in Chicago at the time so it must have been around 1990, give or take. I had to go to a meeting for work. The only details I remember were that it was at an office I'd never been to before, I had to rent a car to drive there, and I was by myself, which was unusual because usually a senior manager was involved with any meetings that I attended. Anyway when I got to the place and parked my car in the garage, I realized that I had lost my voice. Spontaneous laryngitis with no apparent cause. It was weird. I don't remember how long it lasted, probably a day or so at most, and it went away on its own. I assumed it was some sort of stress reaction.

    So here is the really important question: if you have a CT scan of the neck and chest with IV contrast, would you be able to go for a bike ride afterwards?? The place where I'm going for the tests is right near the route of my usual post-work bike ride. It might be a nice way to clear my head afterwards.

    ==

    Update. Oh jeezy peezy. The Mayo Clinic website knows more about this that the doctor does. http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-c...n/con-20026357

    I'm leading a bike ride on Saturday that will require a few pre-ride announcements. I guess I will type them up and staple them to the cue sheets.
    Last edited by ny biker; 05-28-2015 at 02:52 PM.

    - Gray 2010 carbon WSD road bike, Rivet Independence saddle
    - Red hardtail 26" aluminum mountain bike, Bontrager Evoke WSD saddle
    - Royal blue 2018 aluminum gravel bike, Rivet Pearl saddle

    Gone but not forgotten:
    - Silver 2003 aluminum road bike
    - Two awesome worn out Juliana saddles

 

 

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