Dean
Dean was diagnosed with arthritis when he was two years old. The arthritis went away when he was six. When he was thirteen he developed diabetes and arthritis. He stopped taking methotrexate because of panic attacks. He is allergic to anti-inflammatories.
Dean was nineteen at the time of the interview. He was diagnosed when he was two years old. He does not remember his early symptoms but his mum said that he had bad rashes and swelling. Dean grew out of his arthritis when he was six but it came back when he was thirteen. He was diagnosed with diabetes shortly before being diagnosed with arthritis. Having diabetes was a big shock for him.
Dean developed rashes on his ankles which is mum recognised from the first time he hard arthritis. Dean saw a rheumatologist who diagnosed him after a blood test. He was prescribed methotrexate tablets and was given a steroid injection in his ankle.
Dean was on methotrexate tablets for a year. They made him sick and he had problems sleeping. He tried taking methotrexate injections but he started having panic attacks. He read that the medicine was used for cancer patients and his mum was pregnant at the time. He was worried that if he spilt the methotrexate it would harm her. He decided to stop taking methotrexate.
Dean discovered that he was allergic to anti-inflammatories after having a reaction to them in hospital. At the time of the interview Dean was taking painkillers and steroid tablets. He sometimes has his joints aspirated and injected with steroids. He currently experiences stiffness in the mornings, lots of swelling, night sweats and pain. He can also get very tired. He sometimes feels down when his arthritis is bad and wonders why he has the condition. He finds it difficult managing the arthritis and the diabetes at the same time. He said, If I’m going to exercise to get my blood sugar down then I’m going to be sore from the arthritis and if I take like tablets for the arthritis then my blood sugar’s going to be high and I just can’t balance it.