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Same thing here Glenn and Greggg,
As a matter of fact, I described it to my PM exactly like lifesaver described it...a cell phone vibrating in my left leg. But I KNOW it is coming from my lumbar spine since the left side is the worst. When I receive a block and calm down the nerve root...it stops. Anyway, it was doing it last night and it is hard to sleep. I just think my spine is getting worse anyway so it is time for another MRI. The last one was done two year ago. |
Vibrating cell phone - good description.
I suffered nerve damage in a serious car accident. In addition to pins and needles, spasms, intense shocks and burning sensations, I get nerve pulses (cell phones) that can actually make my skin visibly vibrate. Pressure and/or compression on nerves can cause this. My doctor's "solution" to dampen down my symptoms is limited to immobilization of the area where the damage occured and massive doses of anti-spasms drugs. :( Cheers |
Nerve vibrating and magnetic resonance
Hi,
I have that reaction (nerve vibrating) after I did a Tui ná Massage and after I did my two MRI. Strange.... |
Hi--amazing to have so many repsonses. It is horrid that so many people have this symptom. But if we have to have it, at least we have people who understand.
The more active I am, the more the nerves in my feet act up. I was just diagnosed with sensory-motor polyneuropathy. I am having more tests and seeing another neurologist who specializes in neuropathy and dysautonomia. Now the doctors are looking for the cause. I am having another MRI of the brain. I think the neuro who did my EMG/NCV/blink test suspects a problem in my brain, most likely the brain stem and related structures. lifesaver54 |
I have dysautonomia as well as sensory, and I have a blink issue, no blink issue I guess. And also, cell phones vibrating too. Good way to describe it. I also used to have a strange oscillation in my spine, but that has stopped lately, since I just sit around and don't do much to traumatize my nerves.
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Have they found a cause for your symptoms? I don't have diabetes or smoke, or have high blood pressure, never did street drugs or abused prescription drugs--lived as healthy as possible all my life. It seems nerve damage does not care about lifestyles--it comes as it wants. I wish I could turn the vibrating off tonight--it is making me nuts. |
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I too had a very healthy lifestyle. You are correct. Neuropathy does not discriminate. Any one can get it. I was utterly shocked when they told me I had it. |
I've been a bit worried about the vibrating sensations and I'd really appreciate some feedback from you.
I've got an idiopathic full-body sensory neuropathy. Whether it's autoimmune or not I don't know, although I do suffer from an undifferentiated connective tissue disease as well. I've led a very healthy lifestyle, by the way, and have no inflammations or infections. Half a year ago the vibrations started, continuing for several weeks or a few hours at a time. I wake up, sometimes physically trembling in my hands, or my head is trembling discreetly but very distinctly – and fast. This was also the onset for two new symptoms. The sudden spasms I've had before but not like this. When I've gone to bed they start after a few minutes, one spasm after another with around 30 seconds inbetween; a leg, an arm – I've been throwing my arm in the wall several times with a force that might have brought the walls of Jericho tumbling down – the torso itself. This also includes unvolontary movements while I'm still fully awake: one of my hands closing very slowly into a fist, a big toe turning slowly upwards until it hurts, things like that. And the last symptom, very strange: everything that I lean against seems to be moving to and fro. It's like lying in a waterbed. Slowly the mattrass is moving in waves under me, as if I were lying in the water at a mediterranean beach. Sometimes the bed under my torso begins moving sideways, from one side to another without a break (I mean, that's how it feels like). When I'm sitting in a chair and leaning back, the back of the chair is almost wriggling. My GP ordained Sifrol, a med given to people with Parkinson's disease, that reduced the number of spasms considerably, but the other symptoms persist. They make my life more interesting than I'd care for. My rheumatologist and my neurologist wash their hands, so to speak, and suggest that it seems as if the autonomic system is being involved. Am I the only one experiencing this, apart from the vibrations? |
i was trying to describe the vibration to a neurologist yesterday and i said it was "like one of those small dogs that tremble all the time". he looked at me like i was mad. vibrating cell phone is much better. i get it in my torso. usually only when i wake up in the morning. sometimes subtle. sometimes really strong. and sometimes not at all.
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