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Ann wrote:
He's talking to me with that quote and I have never seen that leaflet so he's wrong. Yo have to hit the "discussion" tab at the top of the page to see it all. I haven't looked to see if there's anything new there because I don't want to see it.milly wrote: You seem to have formed your opinions from unscientifically supported information gleaned from, among other places, the Platelet Disorder Support Association (PDSA) website. I do not consider PDSA to be a neutral source on ITP. While much of what they publish has previously been documented by the medical community in many other places, some of what they present as "fact" is not, or is distortion of fact. This is an organization with a slanted point of view whose membership seems to largely be women with some degree of hypochondria.
Quoted from Wiki, why would you even bother to go there. I am a women but I don't think I am a hypochondiac.
The study on fatigue is actually quite interesting because one of the measures says that the people with ITP actually underplay their symptoms compared with the controls. So we actually tend to think that our fatigue symptoms are more normal than they are, or we get so used to them that we under report it.
Fatigue and sleepiness are different measures. Some have one, some have both and some have neither. Fatigue to me means my legs feeling so heavy that I can't climb the stairs without hanging on to the banister. Or feeling that I don't have the energy to get out of the chair to go and get something to eat. Or starting to vacuum clean the carpet and having to sit down after the first two minutes because I just can't do it. That's not normal but it's only now after speaking to the author of that report that I accept it. Acknowledging I have fatigue doesn't make me a hypochondriac though, it's actually been quite helpful in a psychological kind of way.
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