Ambulatory Blood Pressure
Monitoring (ABPM) is when your blood pressure is being measured as you move
around, living your normal daily life. It is normally carried over 24 hours. It
uses a small digital blood pressure machine that is attached to a belt around
your body and which is connected to a cuff around your upper arm. It small
enough that you can go about your normal daily life and even sleep with it on.
This is the technical definition. However, undergoing this procedure is surely
no fun and very painful for someone who suffers from Fibromyalgia (FM or FMS)
which is characterized by chronic widespread pain and allodynia (a heightened
and painful response to pressure).
During the ABMP exam, the
monitor goes on every 20 minutes during the day and every 30 minutes at night.
Therefore, what happens is, your arm is squeezed so tightly that it literally
feels like it is going to pop every time the monitor goes on. This is what a
normal person feels.
Now a person who suffers
from Fibromyalgia feels the same thing but ten times stronger. Actually the eyes
well every 20 minutes as the cuff around your left arm is inflated. These 20
minutes seem like a life time. It squeezes and squeezes and then it stops and
deflates, relieving you from the treacherous 20 minutes. Not to mention when
there is an inaccurate reading and the machine goes on again inflating the cuff
just few minutes before the last attempt causing tears to roll down your
cheeks.
While I was undergoing this
exam, the machine made several inaccurate attempts when I was driving. Now,
mind you, I drive a stick shift car, so every time the machine went on I was
supposed to lower my left arm and let it hang. Stuck in traffic doing that wasn’t
a problem, however, the problem was maneuvering in the garage and just keeping
the car in a straight line while driving on the highway. There came a moment
that I stopped the car and turned on my emergency lights because the machine
had made two inaccurate attempts to measure my blood pressure and going through
a third trial was stifling painful. This was when I broke down in tears. It is
supposed to be an exam where you can go on with your daily routine, yeah right.
Sleeping with this THING on
was horrifying. Every 30 minutes I would be woken up. Sometimes it is easy to
fall back asleep when I am awakened suddenly in the middle of the night. But on
this specific night, with each beep of the machine, I jumped in bed. There were
moments that falling asleep again never happened because by the time you were
almost asleep, it would go on again.
The ironic part of all of
this is that you need to keep a log of the activities that you do during the
day like physical activities or anything stressful that may happen. Then on the
report there is the question: How well did you sleep? Very well. Well. Not bad.
Not well. Of course I answered, not well. However, the thought that came to my
mind is: Does anybody ever answer, very well? I doubt it.
The following morning is
perhaps one of the most joyful; time to have this THING removed. When it is
removed this rotten odor reaches the nostrils. It is very unpleasant, so much
so, that the doctor uses alcohol to clean the arm and try to remove the stench.
And as I looked at my arm, I felt sorry for it because it was red and for sure
some parts would turn black and blue over the next couple of days.
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(Written May 3, 2013)
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