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-   -   Concussion without head moving? (https://www.neurotalk.org/traumatic-brain-injury-and-post-concussion-syndrome/258660-concussion-head-moving.html)

jakedavid 04-11-2024 11:24 PM

Concussion without head moving?
 
Hello All,

Its been some time since I last posted.

2 weeks ago I was moving an item down a set of stairs weighing roughly 100kg with 3 other people (one on each corner). Each person including myself was using a strap on each corner to hold the item. Each step of the stairs is roughly 15cm deep. As we went to the first step, the object unexpectedly dropped (while we were holding it) from the top of the stairs and landed on the step below it (15cm fall). My head remained stationary but at the moment of impact I felt my vision shake (or buzz) for a second. Shortly after this I began to experience a dissociated feeling and felt tired.

Since then I've been struggling with a return of my previous visual processing issues along with short term memory issues.

Could the impact have possibly caused enough force to vibrate through my arm to my brain to cause a concussion while my head didn't move? Is it possible that my brain is just overly cautious of jolts and bumps that its causing me to feel like this?

Many thanks,
-Jake

andyMunich 04-12-2024 04:20 PM

As someone who is quite anxious myself, I am certain that you haven‘t injured yourself. Without an impact, you cannot have the trauma in traumatic brain injury.

I often fall victim to the fatalistic images that my brain conjures up, they are very lifelike and to be honest to some extend it is just the mode of being that is most familiar to my everyday experience.

For example on Sunday I took an (american) football, that was deflected, to the temple. I would never play an actual game involving tackling, but I was throwing with my brother and I tried to catch the ball awkwardly, so that it came down and struck my temple. I startled by the impact, but I was not aware of any immediate symptoms , so my first thought was how lucky I was. A direct hit with a football hurts, a indirekt one you still feel the weight of the ball). When trying to search my glasses immediately afterwards I felt off, on Monday I could not concentrate on simple tasks and Tuesday and Wednesday I felt feverish.

I am honestly unsure whether I could have injured myself, but I was very sure that the most important thing for me was to avoid stress either way. Of course I still replayed the incident in my mind a thousand times (heck, I am obsessing over it right now), but I am proud that it didn’t make me question my whole life all over again.

As an anxious person, it sometimes almost feels like it’s a responsibility towards myself and others to be worried. So I can make the right decisions and do the right thing. But concerning my brain health, I am learning slowly that exactly the contrary is my responsibility towards myself: not to constantly agonize over it.

jakedavid 04-14-2024 11:54 PM

I also struggle with over analyzing any bumps or jolts I sustain. I've replayed this most recent jolt over and over in my head about 50 times at this point. I agree that regardless of severity its important to avoid stress. If anyone had tips on down regulating the anxiety response from such incidents I'd be very interested.

davOD 04-15-2024 09:01 AM

Meditation would help. Finding a place where you can calm the mind. All meditation is not the same and there are many ways of doing it.

Jomar 04-15-2024 11:46 AM

Explore the sticky threads at top of the page-
here is one that might be helpful.
Anxiety, bumps, symptoms , treatment info links

randomwordsfornot 04-27-2024 08:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jakedavid (Post 1304340)
Hello All,

Its been some time since I last posted.

2 weeks ago I was moving an item down a set of stairs weighing roughly 100kg with 3 other people (one on each corner). Each person including myself was using a strap on each corner to hold the item. Each step of the stairs is roughly 15cm deep. As we went to the first step, the object unexpectedly dropped (while we were holding it) from the top of the stairs and landed on the step below it (15cm fall). My head remained stationary but at the moment of impact I felt my vision shake (or buzz) for a second. Shortly after this I began to experience a dissociated feeling and felt tired.

Since then I've been struggling with a return of my previous visual processing issues along with short term memory issues.

Could the impact have possibly caused enough force to vibrate through my arm to my brain to cause a concussion while my head didn't move? Is it possible that my brain is just overly cautious of jolts and bumps that its causing me to feel like this?

Many thanks,
-Jake

I'm not a dr, but good news, it's not a "concussion." A "concussion" requires a lot of force, it's a mechanical thing. Based on your symptoms, it's more likely to be a migraine disorder where you're super sensitive to something, maybe vibrations and your brain just goes haywire and it FEELS like a concussion. I recommend Dr Kutcher in Utah/Michigan, only neuro that helped me with something similar.


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