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Old 02-26-2014, 03:06 PM
berkeleybrain berkeleybrain is offline
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 205
10 yr Member
berkeleybrain berkeleybrain is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 205
10 yr Member
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Vision therapy will definitely help the brain re-train itself to see correctly. There are various exercises that are done at home or at the clinic.

Having said that, it is very painful and exhausting when done. There may be a time of rest and testing and then beginning the therapy.

Although, I am sure your daughter is ready to get back to her life!
__________________
The event: Rear ended on freeway with son when I was at a stop in stop and go traffic July 2012. Lost consciousness.

Post-event: Diagnosed with post-concussion syndrome, ptsd, whiplash, peripheral and central vestibular dysfunction and convergence insufficiency. MRI/CT scans fine.

Symptoms: daily headaches, dizziness/vertigo, nausea, cognitive fog, light/noise sensitivities, anxiety/irritability, fatigued, convergence insufficiency, tinnitus and numbness in arms/legs.

Therapies: Now topamax 50mg daily; Propanolol and Tramadol when migraine. Off nortryptiline and trazodone. Accupuncture. Vitamin regime. Prism glasses/vision therapy. Vestibular therapy 3month. Gluten free diet. Dairy free diet. On sick leave from teaching until Sept. 2014.
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