Case 3: Syringomyelia
INTERVIEW
(Therapist): Case History: Male patient, born in 1940. Does not remember any childhood diseases. At 6 years of age, he was in hospital for Tuberculosis In 1975, at the age of thirty-five, the patient suddenly went into a coma and became paralyzed. That led to a diagnosis of tubercular meningitis. The patient has also experienced temporary paraplegia, a functional disorder of the rectum and urinary tract system, which went away after a time. Arachnoiditis spinalis was diagnosed. The only lingering functional, residual symptom reported was spasticity in the left leg, especially after a long walk. This condition went on for 10 years without any further incidence. Since the patient turned forty-five in 1985, his problems have increased. Walking became difficult and unsteady; headaches and neck pains extend to his right arm; also pains and disturbance of sensation in right leg. A computer tomogram diagnosed Syringomyelia – a degenerative disease of the spinal cord – was along the cervical cord. I found it rather difficult to assess any further symptoms or modali-ties. This is the only information I was able to obtain from the patient: muscular cramps, especially painful at night, in both legs; pains in the right arm are obviously worse at night, and he says it is as though his fingernails were being torn out. He has no special aversions, but he does have a strong desire for sweets. Defecation is difficult and painful; he seems to be constipated.