2023年2月24日 星期五

"I feel like I'm burning alive. It's hard for people to believe me."

Plus more health news |

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What it feels like to have "man on fire" syndrome
By Rachel Sonis
Ideas Editor

Erythromelalgia—or “Man on Fire Syndrome”— is a neurovascular condition that causes episodes of pain on one’s skin that feels similar to, well, burning. By “burning,” I don’t mean that parts of the body just become very warm. Put simply, once an episode flairs, erythromelalgia makes you feel like you’re burning alive.

An illness that feels stranger than fiction, erythromelalgia is, indeed, very rare (only 1 in 100,000 people in the U.S. have reportedly been diagnosed), which causes many people to misunderstand or even disregard this condition as anything truly serious.

Writer Je Banach pulls back the curtain on what living life with erythromelalgia looks like, and calls for an open, honest dialogue when it comes to uplifting people who have misunderstood conditions like hers. Because it is one thing to have a life-altering chronic illness—it is another to be believed that you have one.

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ONE LAST READ
Lab-crafted psychedelics in the works

Well-known psychedelics like MDMA and psilocybin mushrooms are inching closer to getting regulatory approval for use in treating mental health illnesses.

As they do, the Wall Street Journal reports, investors are putting money into lab-made chemicals that start-ups say provide the health benefits without the long, complex psychedelic trips induced by the old-school versions.

Read More »

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Today's newsletter was written by Rachel Sonis, and edited by Elijah Wolfson.

 
 
 
 
 
 

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