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Denied Fibro Because Of Joint Pain

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Draggin'

Question

I have been denied fibromyalgia by the DRO because:

  • "You noted a complaint of pain in various joints, however, you were show to have specific diagnoses related to these complaints to include bilateral ankle sprains, bilateral plantar fascitis, bilateral wrist tendonitis, bilateral shoulder strains, bilateral patellofemoral syndrome of the knees, right foot first metatarsal degenerative joint disease and talonavicular degenerative changes of the left foot."

Not that they found me service connected for all of these little diagnosis...but anyway...

My argument (below) is that fibromyalgia has more symptoms than joint pain. If awarded...What are the odds of them trying to lump in already awarded things that could be associated with fibro For example:

Right ankle sprain 10% (see above considered joint pain)

Left knee patellofemoral syndrome 10% (considered joint pain)

Right Shoulder Strain 10% (considered joint pain)

Lumbosacral Strain 10%

Migraines 0% - I'm willing to throw this one in under fibro

(By the way I am most likely appealing the amounts on all of these as well-separate from fibro.)

Here's my argument:

Although there is an explainable diagnosis for joint pains. There is still a plentiful amount of unexplained widespread pain and other symptoms of fibromyalgia that have existed for six months or more.

The medical documentation will show complaints of fibromyalgia symptoms, including:

Unexplained weight gain or loss

Headaches & migraines

Back pain

Vision changes, including rapidly worsening vision

Morning stiffness

Diffuse swelling

Fatigue

Sleep starts (falling sensations)

Twitchy muscles at night

Restless Leg Syndrome

Teeth grinding (bruxism)

Loss of libido

Chronic neck pain from stiffness & excessively tight neck muscles

Pain in both legs including muscle cramping, aching and stiffness

Bloating & nausea

Abdominal cramps

Irritable bowel syndrome

Poor balance and coordination

Hemorrhoids

Also personal documentation will confirm the following:

Sensitivity to odors

Cravings for carbohydrate and chocolate

Directional disorientation

Thanks Draggin'

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retired

the sleep study works fine for people that need a C-Pap machine, where their breathing is interuppted..

but if you have problems that are different each night, than the sleep study isn't very useful. I am not saying don't do it, just saying through experience, it is not very inclusive and decisive. It is something that some people need to take advantage of to help them get the help and get problems documented.

Take for instance I lived in a VA hospital bed at the va for 6 months and the nurses noted every thing I did 24/7 for 6 months. I also had nurses come to my house for 6 weeks after one of my discharges, so they could continue care and therapy at my home.

You would think the VA claims people would read the millions of pages of doctors and nurses notes after they actually watched me and kept me alive 24/7 for 6 months. I also wore a monitor when I left my room and went to other rooms and floors. But the damned VA claims people didn't even bother to read my records, that I what I had to tel them in person, among all the the other issues and written proof they refused to consider.

The reason I mentioned the in-home sleep study is because I have both sleep apnea and insomnia. My original sleep study was inconclusive but I kept having problems and my doctor ordered me an in-home sleep study and as a result I was diagnosed with insomnia and sleep apnea. I did wear the heart monitor for a while but since it was negative my doctor requested a sleep study at home. I also suffer from severe acid reflux which may be aggravating my sleep apnea but time will tell. As for VA claims people didn't bother to read your evidence, a lot of veterans are going through that. I am currently fighting several CUE claims where I proved VA made errors in my rating decisions but VA still failed to correct their decisions even after I sent them copies of their own records.

Edited by pete992
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