Mo
Mo has granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA). She had three years of severe symptoms, including going deaf in one ear, before she was diagnosed. Mo leads a local support group and is pleased she has encouraged clinicians to think about quality of life.
In 2002, Mo was a mum of two young children, working part-time as a nurse. For three years, ear, nose, throat, eye, chest and joint problems had led to hospital admissions and multiple outpatient appointments. Then, over Christmas, Mo became seriously ill and was coughing up blood. During her six weeks in hospital, a rheumatologist started asking questions that tied everything together as Wegener’s vasculitis (now known as granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA)).
Mo says that getting the right diagnosis was a relief. However, she remembers the first five or six years were shi as she tried to balance her needs with those of family and work. Ongoing problems with fatigue, being deaf in one ear and constant hospital appointments were exhausting. She also had to cope with the effects of medication and describes going from death’s door to Zebedee with high dose steroids.
Most of all, Mo wanted to talk to someone going through a similar experience. As this wasn’t available, she set up a local support group (subsequently linked with a new national charity) so no-one else would have to go through it alone. Mo is pleased that clinicians have listened to her plea for quality of life services such as fatigue and pain management.
Mo feels fortunate that the team looking after her offer a vasculitis service and know her well. Low dose steroids, methotrexate and rituximab are currently keeping the monster at ba but she values being able to contact the team directly by email when it is grumbling. Mo self-manages as much as she can and likes to have antibiotics in the house as flares are usually set off by an infection.
Although vasculitis has affected her whole life, and meant Mo had to retire early from nursing, she keeps objects around the house that remind her to be grateful for what she has. To do what makes her happy, Mo is learning Italian, does yoga, and spends time in the fresh air with her horse.
* A character who bounced around on a spring in the children’s programme The Magic Roundabout.