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Old 06-20-2011, 06:26 PM
res5562965 res5562965 is offline
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Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Georgia
Posts: 44
10 yr Member
res5562965 res5562965 is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Georgia
Posts: 44
10 yr Member
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Quote:
Originally Posted by freezerdoor View Post
I hear a lot of you talking about headaches from PCS. The way you describe them, they come and go. Mine has been there since the moment I hit my head and has not lessened or gotten worse. Does anyone have this?

I have to admit, it did change a bit in the beginning. It moved around and my head tingled, etc... but this one pain that has lasted, has been there since the beginning and has not changed. It's a constant grating feeling on the very top of my head. Right around the area of the corpus collasum (or however you spell it!) I sometimes feel pressure in the back of my skull but not as much as the pain at the top which is constant. Constantly there for 3 months now.

Thanks.
I have never had headaches until Jan 2010 and it started with the clicking noise in my head. Then, It was a continuous pain in a specific place in my head, a pressure pain like someone had their fist inside my head pushing to the top of my head, mine on the left top.I also experienced numbness in the left side of my face. I was diagnosed with Chiari I Malformation 11/2010. I then had a MRI with a study of the flow of Spinal Fluid and that is when I was also diagnosed with Arnold's Chiari 11/2010. My Chiari was causing my spinal fluid not to flow and causing the pressure in my head (Arnold's Chiari) Immediately 11/2010 they put a shunt in my head to let the fluid flow instead of being trapped in my head (immediate relief). It took almost a year to get the correct diagnosis and a different doctor to diagnosis it correctly. The shunt relieved the pressure pain but did not relieve all my symptons. Pain when I sneezed, coughed, or gagged. That was from the Chiari where my "brain tonsils" were pushed through the opening in the base of my skull due to my skull being too small for my brain. I then had Chiari decompression surgery 2/2011 where they make the opening @ base of skull larger and removed a part of my vertebrae to give my brain more room. This surgery helped with the remaining pain I was experiencing. I still have to have the shunt because the aquaducts that allow flow are small and have evidently gotten smaller with age. I was 48 when all this began. It usually effects people earlier since it's a congenital condition (born with it). The doctors have o idea why it affected me at such late age since I don't remember any injury to my head.
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