The scary truth is that sometimes your M.D. is just plain wrong. Take
these five common misdiagnoses for men, some of which could lead to
facing the knife unnecessarily. A better plan? Protect yourself with the
strategies outlined here, and feel better faster.
1. Diagnosis: Allergies
What you might really have: Vasomotor rhinitis
Doctors usually blame congestion, watery eyes, and serious bouts of
sneezing on allergies, but unless you recently moved or changed jobs,
it's rare to develop allergies in your 20s and 30s. Instead, your
symptoms may be the result of vasomotor rhinitis, a condition triggered
by nonallergen irritants, such as perfume, smog, and cigarette smoke,
that inflame your nasal mucous membranes, says Patricia Wheeler, M.D.,
an associate professor of family medicine at the University of
Louisville. The allergy medicines you're prescribed won't provide
relief.
Your strategy: Schedule a skin-prick test to identify any allergies. No dice? Then it's time to go over potential triggers with your doctor.
2. Diagnosis: Torn Meniscus
What you might really have: Iliotibial-band friction syndrome
The average doctor's first step in diagnosing severe knee pain is an
MRI. The test is so sensitive that it almost always reveals tears in the
meniscus, the cartilage in your knee joint. "Nine times out of 10, it's
normal wear and not the source of the pain," says Ronald Grelsamer,
M.D., an orthopedic surgeon at Mt. Sinai Hospital of New York. Surgical
treatment "will lead away from the real problem." An MRI won't reveal
injuries to your IT band—fibers stretching from your hip to your knee—a
source of knee pain that's treated with physical therapy or orthotics.
Your strategy: Request an Ober's test, a physical exam that reveals injuries to the IT band.
3. Diagnosis: Sinus Headache
What you might really have: Migraines
Researchers at the American Headache Society examined 100 people with
brain pain and found 86 percent of those who thought they had sinus
headaches actually had migraines. "If a doctor hears 'facial pressure,'
he'll assume sinus headache," says Craig Schwimmer, M.D., an
otolaryngologist in Dallas, Texas. But sinus meds can't defeat the
heavyweight of headaches.
Your strategy: Mark every headache you have on your
calendar. If they occur regularly for more than 2 weeks, call a
neurologist.
4. Diagnosis: Bronchitis
What you might really have: Asthma
If you hack it up hard after each cold you catch, the culprit could be
"hidden" asthma, says Sidney S. Braman, M.D., a professor of medicine at
Brown University medical school. "You shouldn't develop a nagging cough
with every cold," he says. "If so, a bug may be triggering asthma you
didn't know you had."
Your strategy: Set up a pulmonary-function test to measure lung strength. Lung capacity lower than 80 percent may signal asthma.
5. Diagnosis: Appendicitis
What you might really have: An inflamed lymph node or stomach virus
Despite advances in diagnostic screening, 16 percent of appendectomies
are performed on patients who don't need them, according to a recent
University of Washington study. Appendicitis can be deadly, so doctors
are quick to remove the 6-centimeter organ before doing a CT scan to
confirm the diagnosis. An inflamed lymph node or virus could produce
similar symptoms (and not require surgery).
Your strategy: If blood tests reveal that your white-cell count is over 10,000 cells per microliter, ask for a CT scan of your stomach.
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