davidgillon: A foot, mine, in a camwalker brace (Boot)
David Gillon ([personal profile] davidgillon) wrote2014-09-06 06:57 pm
Entry tags:

Bendiness and Neurodiversity

I had lunch with a friend who had seen my mention on FB of doing the Living with HMS/EDS thing for DiversifYA, and in the course of chatting about it mentioned the fellow bendies I'd met at Worldcon. That got us talking about the fact all of us weren't just bendy, but neurodiverse* even though there's no documented link and she made an interesting point (well I thought it was interesting anyway).
 
She'd asked me how common HMS/EDS is, I'm not sure what the figure for HMS, but I've seen 1 in 2500 to one in 5000 suggested as the incidence for EDS, which on a UK population of 60 million suggests around 12-24,000 UK bendies. My friend has Post Polio, and commented the UK Post Polio population is about 120,000, so 5 to 10 times the size of the EDS population (this surprised me, I'd have guessed the two populations at about the same), and just as with EDS, the Post Polio peeps suspect there are a bunch of co-morbid conditions, but even with the much larger patient population no one has actually sat down to confirm the links. So if it hasn't happened with PPS, maybe it's no surprise it hasn't happened with EDS.

* And those are by no means all the neurodiverse bendies I know, I'm actually struggling to think of any bendies I know who aren't neurodiverse, and most of those are queer too...

In other bendy news, wearing an AFO seems to work just as well as the Camwalker in managing my ankle, which is randomly unhappy again, and with the bonus of not inducing a two or three inch leg-length discrepancy, which makes my pelvis happy...
shehasathree: (Default)

[personal profile] shehasathree 2014-09-08 12:08 am (UTC)(link)
Agreed. My Beighton score has been measured by qualified health professionals as anywhere between 1 and 8 over a one-year period, lol. At least the Brighton Criteria don't *overcount* anyone, though, right? Otoh, you can 'qualify' as having JHS/HEDS on the Brighton Criteria if you're over 50 and have a Beighton Score of zero, so that's a step in the right direction, at least.
shehasathree: (Default)

[personal profile] shehasathree 2014-09-08 12:50 am (UTC)(link)
No kidding!Inflammatory autoimmune and osteoarthritis started restricting range of motion in key joints for me in my very early twenties. "Oh, your range of motion is fine!" (No, it's not, is massively restricted, for me. But of course i didn't learn that i was hypermobile for another decade, almost.)