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Old 05-22-2012, 10:53 PM
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Margarite Margarite is offline
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Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: USA
Posts: 162
10 yr Member
Margarite Margarite is offline
Member
Margarite's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: USA
Posts: 162
10 yr Member
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I can't help you any, but I can say that I can relate at least somewhat.
I fell off of a horse in March of my Freshman year at college in 2009 and I have been hitting my head ever since. I have hit my head noticeably about 13 times and as you say each time different symptoms become more prominent or dominate. It was not until my 6th or 9th (I hit my head 4 times in one day ) that the nausea really came on and that was in January of 2011 (I think). But each concussion since that time has had a different effect. With that one in Jan '11 I was nauseated for 5 months and then went back to the just normal headaches. With the last couple that I have had I have been so sick for about a week that I can barely leave my bed and can't swallow any food during that week (good news is that I lose a little weight ). With the last one I got, my ability to follow a coherent story and my ability to focus have been so hurt.
Anyways, need to go to bed.
Just wanted to say, we need to avoid any more head hitting, because it is hitting us too hard (pun intended)
Good Luck!
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Fell off a horse in late winter of 2009 blacked out for a couple seconds, had amnesia for 10 hours (still don't remember this time), had 2 CT scans, 2 MRI's, 1 MRA all negative. Since the first concussion I have continually knocked my head into different things purely by accident or from being stupid. These many concussions over a short period of time have caused
constant migraines, nausea, and dizziness/lack of balance.
Migraine triggers are:
light sensitivity (especially to florescent or bright lights)
sound sensitivity (especially to high pitched or loud sounds)
temperature sensitivity (especially to cold or extreme heat)
activity (especially if breathing increases or head is jostled)
pressure on head (sinuses, hats, headbands, sunglasses, pony-tails)
lacks or quality (food, sleep, water)
tension (stress, tight muscles, tired eyes, sickness)
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