Yup, that's me who contacted you, Sylvia, if anyone in the forum had still any doubts
Well, it has always been and it will always be a lone and desperate fight.
The prevalence of CPT II deficiency in Poland is fewer than 10 cases per 40 million people (40 million people live in Poland).
The prevalence of Beta Thallassemia is not much greater. A hundred cases maybe and most of them majors.
So (most of) doctors do not recognise these conditions and they have no idea how to treat them.
That's why I have to do everything on my own, often contradicting specific doctors orders (like: Your blood is quite OK, there is no need to get hemoglobin test, your microcytosis is idiopathic. But then the results came positive for beta thallassemia minor...)
Add to that a complete failure of Polish health services, and you have the full picture.
But I'll do what it gets to cure myself, i'll even go to the medical university.
My belief is that every effect has to have it's cause.
Like one MD Gregory House said, "idiopathic" means that the doctors are "idiots", and they can't figgure out the cause. Well, I agree with him, although I wouldn't express it in such a rude way.
Hopefully, I will overcome not knowing doctors, bureaucracy and Polish health services...
Then my aim will be to launch an informational campaign for people in Poland about metabolic diseases and make the government do something about these.
Sylvia, thank you for your interest in my case.