Member
|
|
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: England, GB
Posts: 194
|
|
Member
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: England, GB
Posts: 194
|
Dear Storm,
Welcome, just had a read though. I am sorry you are having difficulties. This struggle between PTSD and BPD is not uncommon. Many on call GP's will give this diagnosis in the UK when they are called to a suicide attempt in the UK. It seems BPD is a standard diagnosis.
PTSD is vastly on the otherhand misunderstood.
Do you know may I ask what triggered your bipolar? Do you feel it is a chemical imbalance or do you feel that something else has culminated in this response in your brain?
Thinking of you
__________________
I am a 36 yr old female who has played football, as a hobby, for 13 yrs. In July 2012, during a game I was slammed to the floor by two angry guys who hit into me so hard that one of them broke their ribs.
This knocked me back onto hard ground leaving me unconscious. I awoke to chronic head and neck pain, sickness and the inability to see or balance.
The paramedics made me walk to the ambulance, instead of placing me on a spinal board, where I was taken to the ER. I was hospitalised with suspected brain hemorrhage for 1 week, then on complete bed rest for 1 month, in a wheelchair for 2 months.
I have been left with PCS, moderate constant head pain, little short term memory, no memory of the accident, balance and sight problems, depression and exhaustion.
The worst problem is collapsing regularly. This has finally been diagnosed as Hemiplegic Migraines , these cause my brain to regularly shut down when I am tired and I then feel the full effects of a stroke (without the bleed on the brain!!) of which the symptoms last 2-4 days.
I have had 6 CT's, 2 MRI's and am under 3 specialists.
I believe everyday is one more towards improvement. Mainly I believe in the power of acceptance not the weakness of complacency or resignation.
|