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Old 06-26-2012, 05:23 PM
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Meggie Meggie is offline
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Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Maine
Posts: 7
10 yr Member
Meggie Meggie is offline
Junior Member
Meggie's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Maine
Posts: 7
10 yr Member
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Quote:
Originally Posted by muddogjones View Post
Hi all,
new here to neurotalk. Im looking for some help from people who know what's going on hopefully better than me.
so, ten years ago when I was 14 I had a chiari decompression complete with c1 and c2 being removed. After surgery it took 2 months for the symptoms to come back. At the time, the research I found was simply an answer of "too bad soo sad" nothing left to do. So after getting about the same response from my neuro, that at the time there was no alternatives except wasting away on painkiller, I decided id just live with it.
living with it is hard but I think we all know we are capable of getting past the joys of discomfort from chiari when there is no other choice. Comes with being a pre zipperhead or a zipperhead.

Here's where things are changing, where I can't seem to ignore it. Over the last two years, a few things have started happening.
1.) My insomnia is going nutts. Even when my headaches are so bad im puking and curled in a ball, I just can't sleep.
2.) My swallowing issue has shifted... oddly. It almost feels like a bone is out of place in the front of my throat preventing me from swallowing. Weird I know. I can even pop it in and out of place. Research says there is a bone there, the hyroid bone, over the thyroid, but it shouldn't ever "pop"
3) **** post chiari people, id love your input here. If I lay or move my head/neck/shoulders wrong, I can literally feel my presure in my head rise. So badly I have passed out! Anyone else?
4.) General clumsiness/perception being screwy, extreme debilitating headaches/neck aches, you name it chiari is back and badder than ever.
HELP!!!!!
Hi Muddogjones

I wanted to reach out to you with a small glimmer of hope. I have heard of what is called "failed decompressions" over and over in my research to understand my own disorder (idiopathic syringomyelia). There is reference to the symptoms returning almost immediately or not leaving the sufferer at all. There is a specialty center I myself am trying to raise funds to find a causative agent for my syringomyelia at, called The Chiari Institute in Great Neck New York. They are a center devoted to just us. They claim a large number of their decompressions are re-decompressions after failed surgeries elsewhere. They have a great website if you Google the center.
Your pain sounds severe to put it mildly, I have a pain management specialist to help keep my pain as tolerable as possible. Even though our pain sounds like it comes from different origins, I would highly recommend one if you are able to do so. I have gone through the series of pain meds but unfortunately my liver will not tolerate most of them anymore so I am now on Lyrica for the neuropathic pain and the myofascial pain syndrome symptoms and it keeps me able to at-least get out of bed and most days get my physical therapy done. Quality of life is so important.
As for your clumsiness, I can relate quite a bit. I have vast proprioception damage after my syrinx became active and more-so after the syringo-subarachnoid shunt insertion. I have developed progressive acquired pes cavus (my ankles are turning out from the nerve damage being uneven in my legs) and have taken one nasty fall so far resulting in multiple breaks in my left sinus and upper jaw. The nerve damage in many people affects the proprioceptive nerves which are in charge of knowing say...where a limb is without looking at it. This can make normal gate and navigation a formidable task in the afflicted.
I hope some of this information might help, and please know you have others that understand to lean on.

Meggie
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