Still Undiagnosed? 3 Options to Try

Millions of people suffer from undiagnosed or untreated chronic conditions. The most difficult to diagnose tend to be autoimmune, inflammatory, and autonomic disorders like POTS (Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome) in which multiple body systems that are supposed to work automatically don’t work as they should and create a plethora of potentially disabling symptoms.

Such disorders tend to defy conventional medical practice because:

  • Primary care physicians (PCPs) aren’t usually trained to recognize them.
  • They’re not acute care episodes with predefined and fast treatment protocols.
  • They defy traditional medical “silos” that focus on single body parts or systems.

For patients with disorders that overlap traditional disease categories, three promising new avenues may be worth investigating:

  • Functional Medicine
  • National Institutes of Health (NIH) Undiagnosed Diseases Network
  • CrowdMed (web-based crowd-sourcing network to accelerate diagnoses)

Each offers a potential way of accelerating the diagnostic process.

1. Functional Medicine

Conventional medical care is at a tipping point: insurance reimbursements are shifting toward outcomes rather than activity, so the medical establishment will have to seek ways of ensuring that medical visits have a positive impact on patient health. It’s hard to do that if you don’t know what’s wrong and why.

Functional medicine is an approach to patient care that looks beyond symptoms to define and treat the causes of debilitating chronic illnesses. It’s focused less on individual symptoms and body parts than on learning which of the patient’s biological processes aren’t working, and why. As a result, it’s particularly well suited to stubborn, complex medical conditions.

Unlike traditional medicine, which is focused on applying prescribed treatments to relieve immediate symptoms, functional medicine practitioners consider each patient’s unique genetic / chemical make-up and critical environmental and lifestyle factors (including exposure to toxins). Then they tailor solutions to the individual. In other words, the diagnostic process starts with the person and not with predetermined solutions.

The Institute for Functional Medicine (IFM) is the organization focused on educating healthcare workers, developing new research models for assessing whole body systems, and incorporating Functional Medicine into physician training and continuing medical education (CME). Its website also helps patients to access information and find FM practitioners worldwide.

A major milestone bound to accelerate this transition is the launch on September 23, 2014, of a multi-million-dollar Functional Medicine Institute at the Cleveland Clinic, a prestigious healthcare system. This holistic initiative is intended to help transform conventional medical care for debilitating autoimmune disorders, autonomic nervous system problems, and other chronic conditions that have so far defied diagnosis.

2. NIH Undiagnosed Diseases Network

In 2008, the NIH launched an Undiagnosed Diseases Program at its clinical center in Bethesda, Maryland, as a research program that accepted only a limited number of patients.

In July 2014, this program was expanded into a network of leading hospitals, each of which would draw on multi-disciplinary resources to help advance both diagnosis and potential treatments. The participating centers include Harvard (integrating resources from Massachusetts General, Brigham & Women’s, and Boston Children’s Hospitals), Baylor College of Medicine (including Texas Children’s), Duke University, Stanford University, UCLA, and Vanderbilt Medical Center. The Boston Globe reported that “coordination among these centers could help doctors see patterns that would be hard to detect in a single ill patient…”

Each rare or uncommon disease may only affect a small number of patients. Yet Dr. James Anderson, director of program coordination at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), was quoted by NBCNews.com as saying that such conditions “collectively affect about 10 percent of the population.” This broader network of hospitals may be a useful resource to the thousands of patients who have spent years, untold dollars, and enormous energy seeking the key to restoring normal living.

3. CrowdMed

A very different kind of integrative approach is CrowdMed, which uses cross-disciplinary “medical detectives” and prediction market technology to accelerate diagnosis of complex conditions.

The founder, Jared Heyman, was motivated by his sister’s experience seeing nearly two dozen doctors and incurring over $100,000 in medical bills without learning why she could sometimes no longer even get out of bed. An interdisciplinary team of top NIH medical experts finally discovered that Carly had a rare genetic mutation resolvable by wearing a simple hormone patch

Thousands of other patients and caregivers are struggling in search of diagnoses and treatments for uncommon or underdiagnosed conditions that present with a confusing array of changeable symptoms that don’t match the conditions traditionally taught in medical schools. These include Lyme Disease, Fibromyalgia, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, and POTS. Because physicians often mistakenly deem such conditions as having psychological causes or simply refer the patient to one specialist or another when the physiological cause can’t be found quickly, patients may invest many years and thousands of dollars without ever finding a solution.

CrowdMed rests on two fundamental principles: The patient “owns” and leads the diagnostic process, and information shared among diverse thinkers (called “medical detectives”), interacting with the patient, can accelerate diagnoses and treatments.

CrowdMed makes no guarantees, but since its founding in April 2013, it has served over 400 patients, more than half of whom report that they’ve been brought closer to a correct diagnosis or cure. Based on patient feedback, Heyman estimates that their solutions have been achieved 50 times faster and at 0.3 percent of the cost that would be incurred in our traditional medical system.

It’s possible to submit a case at no cost beyond a refundable deposit, but paying a little more does get more attention from more detectives for a longer period. CrowdMed medical detectives are compensated based on their results for patients, rather than for their professional status, time spent, or the number of cases they examine.

For those patients who are desperate to find out why they’re sick and how to restore normal life, Functional Medicine, the Undiagnosed Diseases Network, and CrowdMed might be worth considering.

The ROK Espresso Machine makes a perfectly tailored shot

ROK Espresso Machine

Is there nothing in this world more beautiful than a freshly drawn shot of espresso? It has a slight but delightful froth, and is almost hot enough to burn on the first sip. If you really enjoy espresso, but don’t like relying on the local coffee joint to do it for you, then you could always make it at home. Although, most espresso makers on the market don’t do their job correctly, making you regret the purchase.

Of course, if no one else is going to do the job right, why not do it yourself? The ROK Espresso Machine will give your morning drink to your exact specifications. This is a hand-press that will give you a steaming cup of “the good stuff”. The creator of this machine is well-versed in the history of espresso, and gives rather exacting instructions on how to make the perfect shot or cappuccino.

To make your own drink, warm the metal filter, put in enough grounds for one or two shots, and tamp it down so that no cracks or uneven gaps are present. Lock the filter in place over top of either a warmed cup for espresso, or frothed milk for a cappuccino, and then pour boiling water into the top. Lift the side arms, put them partially down to let the water seep into the grounds, and then lift up and press them all the way down to extract your delicious brew. For perfectly foamy milk, there is a manual frother included, and you only need to submerse it, pump in some air, and add in your espresso. You won’t need any batteries, but you will need to have some measure of hand strength. This will cost you $139.99, and also includes a measuring cup for your grounds and a detachable double-shot spout.

Available for purchase on touchofmodern
[ The ROK Espresso Machine makes a perfectly tailored shot copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

Doctor Who TARDIS Stroller: Younger on the Inside

Doctor Who fans with small drooling humans need a stroller like this to push their offspring around in. I mean, you and your young companion have to travel in style, right?

tardis strollermagnify

This TARDIS stroller is not bigger on the inside, but it is likely wetter after a long stroll. This awesome baby buggy was made by Twitter user Vanja Vinter. It looks great.

tardis stroller1magnify

And here I thought that the Doctor’s companions couldn’t get any younger. I guess they can, because this is literally robbing the cradle. You’ve gone too far this time Doctor. Small children do not want to hang out with you and it really makes you look… a bit creepy. Might as well hang out the TARDIS door and offer kids candy. Hey, isn’t that how you got Rose to come along?

[via Cheezburger via Nerd Approved]

No, your hair and fingernails don't keep growing after you die

No, your hair and fingernails don't keep growing after you die

Ever heard the morbid little Fun Fact™ that your hair and nails keep growing after you die? Well, it’s not true. It may appear that a dead person’s fingernails are still growing, but that’s only because the body is drying up. The skin’s retraction around the nail just makes it look like they’re growing.

Read more…


​Can Inflatable Poles Make Better Tents?

​Can Inflatable Poles Make Better Tents?

Replacing their rigid predecessors, inflatable poles offer advantages like ease of setup — you just pump them up — and increased strength. Disadvantages are weight and complication. Worth it? We spent a week living in an inflatable tent to find out.

Read more…



Robotic Birds Are the (Ridiculously Expensive) Modern-Day Scarecrows

Robotic Birds Are the (Ridiculously Expensive) Modern-Day Scarecrows

At the Sydney Opera House, seagulls are a bigger nuisance than pitchy tenors. Management is desperate to keep the ravenous sky rats away, so much that they’ve installed a large robotic bird of prey as a modern-day scarecrow.

Read more…



​iPhone 6 Plus Review: The Best Tablet I've Ever Used

​iPhone 6 Plus Review: The Best Tablet I've Ever Used

Six years ago, I sat on my girlfriend’s couch, casually flipping her new iPhone 3G end over end. I was pondering why anyone would buy an iPhone over my clearly superior T-Mobile G1 handset. Yes, I was an Android nut, a former Sidekick owner who believed that smartphones should have physical keyboards and be held horizontally for maximum effect. In other words, I wanted a laptop that fit in my pocket, looks be damned. When I realized her iPhone couldn’t even let me type comfortably — hands bunched around its tiny portrait keyboard — I eyed it with disdain.

Read more…



Kevin Mitnick will sell you security exploits, if you have $100,000

Ever since he was released from prison, legendary hacker (and social engineering expert) Kevin Mitnick has spent much of his time helping companies protect against internet attacks. However, his security consulting work recently entered murky…

Manual app brings DSLR-like control to your iPhone snapshots

Thanks to the expanded third-party integration in iOS 8, app developers are able to take advantage of things like extensions for that Photos library. It also allows access to the iPhone’s camera settings, and a new piece of software offers another…

iOS 8.0.1 Has Been Released But Hold Off On The Update

ios 8

We reported yesterday that iOS 8.0.1 will soon be released for all supported devices. This incremental update comes merely a week after Apple’s latest iteration for its mobile platform, iOS 8.0, was released to the public. When the release took place it was confirmed that HealthKit apps had been held back due to some bugs which were supposedly going to be fixed by this latest update. Well iOS 8.0.1 is out now but it would be in your own interest to not update right away.

Soon after iOS 8.0.1 was pushed out over the air popular social networks like Facebook and Twitter were flooded by people who had gone ahead and updated their devices. It appears that the update is killing functionality, rendering some very important features completely useless.

Twitter is particularly blowing up with complaints about iOS 8.0.1 killing cell reception on supported devices, even the new iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus. When the software is updated the iPhone will show “no service” and toggling airplane mode or powering the device on and off doesn’t seem to fix it. The Touch ID fingerprint sensor is also said to stop working after the device has been updated to iOS 8.0.1.

Official release notes for this version state that several bugs have been fixed, including the one due to which HealthKit apps were held off. Looks like for all the bug fixes it brought iOS 8.0.1 has an inherent glitch which actually compels people not to upgrade right away.

No comment from Apple so far.

iOS 8.0.1 Has Been Released But Hold Off On The Update

, original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.