Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy (RSD and CRPS) Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy (Complex Regional Pain Syndromes Type I) and Causalgia (Complex Regional Pain Syndromes Type II)(RSD and CRPS)


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Old 11-26-2009, 05:05 PM #11
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Thanks Marleen

It's actually healing a lot faster than I expected, I can even use that finger normally now, which is excellent. The swelling isn't constant anymore either.
I've been very lucky, it could have been a lot worse.

And as an added bonus, this gets me out of cooking any dinners for a while
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Old 11-27-2009, 07:54 AM #12
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Cake,
back to the point,
It's the sleepwalking,
I'm starting to wonder about myself (always have a little bit)...

But, I haven't slept correctly for a WEEK!
I either sleep all day and night, or all day, and Not at night, for instance, no sleep last night, at all!
But, slept most of yesterday.
(Thanksgiving and Christmas are two days I'd rather spend alone)...

Anyway,
it's not much different than normal.
And, I can't figure it out.
I'm guessing that what I should do is to move to alaska, or (Siberia) get meself a harnes made, and get some excercise pulling sleds...
At least the dogs might like me!

grrrrRRRR.

Anyhows, I just don't know the answer!

How long has this been going on with you, now?
For me, it seems to go back to '83.
That's too long a time, especially when there's no cure in sight.

Be well!
and
Have Fun!


Pete
asb
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Old 11-27-2009, 04:55 PM #13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cake View Post
This has become a bit of a worrying habit for me and I wondering if it may be related/caused by either my CRPS or by the MS Contin I take (which is 60mg a day at the moment). The first instance of sleepwalking happened when I was at 30mg a day and that was around 3 weeks ago. It may have happened between then and now but these ones I know about for sure, as there was proof of them the next mornings.

Each time it has happened I did three or four worrying things in that night, not just one. For instance, on the first night,I turned the air-conditioning on in the middle of the night when the temperature was already really cold; I boiled the jug numerous times to make 6 cups of coffee; and I woke up wearing clothes that not only did I NOT go to sleep wearing, but they had been in a huge pile of clothes in the laundry room and it would have been almost impossible for me to find them without being awake.

The second time, last night, I boiled the jug twice and poured all the boiling hot water into a bowl of popcorn; my daughter came out of her room in the night to find me holding a box of chocolates and then hiding them from her, like I had been sneaking them even though I know for a fact the box of chocolates was already empty (Matt ate the last chocolate the night before); and when she told me she was going to chuck and needed a chuck bucket, I mumbled something then went back to bed, leaving her in the lounge on her own.

The full details are on this page of my blog: http://thesixofus.wordpress.com/2009...alking-antics/ and there's a link on that page to the first time it happened.

The worrying things with last night's situation is that I boiled the kettle/jug two times and poured it all into a big bowl and I could have easily poured it onto my feet instead and suffered major burns, plus I ignored my daughter when she told me she was going to chuck- which is something I never do, normally if the kids wake me up in the night I'm 100% awake straight away.

The meds I'm on are MS Contin, baclofen and endep. I've been on the baclofen and endep pretty much straight for years. I've been at this dose of MS Contin for about a week, and before that I was on the dose of 30mg for about 3 weeks. But I've been on MS Contin a few times over the years, at varying doses for over 6 months each time, and have never had this happen.

I've lived with insomnia as a part of my RSD for years, averaging between 3-5hours sleep most nights, and I know that's a "symptom" of my RSD, but the sleepwalking is a new thing.

Does anyone else sleepwalk? Does anyone have any insight as to why this keeps happening?

I see my doctor next Thursday and will discuss it with her then but I'm feeling very worried about this as I don't know why it's happening and whether it'll happen again.

Any thoughts on this would be great

x Kate
Hi Kate, I know this is very scary to you and your daughter. I had the reverse-my daughter would sleep walk. She was only maybe 4 years old. One night I caught her going out the front door. She was a very deep sleeper, really from birth on. She would sleep 10 hrs straight away. We both are very deep sleepers and need more sleep than the average person. When she was in school, some Mondays I would keep her home to sleep in-she would sleep 13 hours. Our first trip to Europe, when we got there, I slept 16 hours straight. (All night plane trip) From then on, I booked a trip 2-3 days early just so we could sleep and get our bodies used to time zone change. That's when we would meet up with a group for tours.
I'm so glad you are calling your Dr. and locking your bedroom door. It's very scary about the hot water and so many possibilities of something harmful happening to you or your daughter.
Please let us know what your Dr. says and how things are going. Your friend, loretta with soft hugs
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Old 12-02-2009, 12:03 PM #14
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Hi Kate,

I've recently had one sleepwalking episode, and mostly just episodes of passing out randomly (almost like narcolepsy)... I was hospitalized for a multiple sclerosis exacerbation recently and I am on high doses of oxycontin, zanaflex, neurontin and Cymbalta. Oxycontin is very similar to your MsContin and Zanaflex is very similar to Baclofen. Endep or Amitriptyline acts primarily as a serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor, which Cymbalta does too. So I wonder if the combination of all these drugs does this?

At first I tried cutting out the Zanaflex yesterday, but hadn't realized I also cut out the Neurontin and Cymbalta on accident. After I took the Neurontin and Cymbalta yesterday, I noticed that I started getting unreasonably drowsy for 4 o'clock in the afternoon. So, I don't think the opiate and the muscle relaxer are doing it to me alone. Today, I'm not taking the neurontin (I don't think it's helping anyways), we'll see where that goes.

I took the Cymbalta today. I'm crazy, so don't try this at home

Definitely talk to your doctor. I just left a message for my neurologist and I see him on Monday. This stuff is really scary. I do admire your sense of humour though. We have to have one when faced with these chronic, incurable diseases.

Cheers,

Charley
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Old 12-04-2009, 01:31 AM #15
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Hi Kate!
I think that it is important to remember that a lot of people do sleepwalk, and usually it has nothing to do with meds or even a condition. It's kind of normal. (Although I would hide your pots and pans!) But, a lot of the times it can be exacerbated by stress. So I wonder if something was really stressing you out around the time that you started doing this?

My boyfriend sleep walks and talks in his sleep when he's stressed out a lot. He does this thing where he literally jumps straight up so that he's standing on the bed. All of the sudden he goes from laying down to standing up on the bed. I have problems sleeping, so I'll be up reading, and all of the sudden he's standing there. I'll just talk him down, so to speak and he goes right back to sleep. One of my cousins, who shall not be named, used to go downstairs when she was little, pee in the closet and then go back to bed.

So try to think about the stress angle- it doesn't sound like much, but stress can do crazy things to a person! Hope this helps a bit. Or at least makes you laugh!

Lynns
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Old 09-08-2010, 03:14 PM #16
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Hi, I am new to this forum. I have crps . I was reading some posts and I came across someone who was sleepwalking. I have been having this problem for a few months. Last night was severe. I woke up just as I began to bash my head into the bathroom wall! Scared the hell out of me. A while later I had a knife in my hand and I was cutting my finger. Please believe that I have always been a normal person. What the hell is happening to me?

I have also been exhibiting some symptoms of narcolepsy, like falling asleep sitting up or standing.
Does anyone know if this is related to crps. It has to be. I was a normal person once. Then a student dropped a chair on my foot last October and I have become this crazy person. They have to be related?
ANY THOUGHTS?
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Old 09-08-2010, 03:43 PM #17
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That has to be very frightening, Lanie.

I would think it might be due to medications.

Ambien will do this.

Neurontin sometimes in susceptible people. But not everyone.

Opiates rarely but possible.
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Old 09-08-2010, 04:04 PM #18
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OK Mrs. D...

Now I am worried about this, my Lindsay was just started on Ambian CR...do you have a link I can read? I better put a bell on her door.


Lanie, what meds are you taking now?

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Originally Posted by mrsD View Post
That has to be very frightening, Lanie.

I would think it might be due to medications.

Ambien will do this.

Neurontin sometimes in susceptible people. But not everyone.

Opiates rarely but possible.
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Old 09-08-2010, 04:09 PM #19
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Ambien is well known for causing eating while asleep, driving cars, walking around. There has even been an attempt to blame it on a murder...even. (that was extreme and failed).

But it does affect something in our consciousness controlling areas of the brain.

http://www.lawyerseek.com/Practice/P...1/Ambien-P121/

It doesn't do this in everyone however. Just some.
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Old 09-08-2010, 07:06 PM #20
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Thank you Mrs D...for the information. Wow, it is amazing how they prescribe these drugs and never let you know. Lindsay's pm would not prescribe her a sleeping pill because she said she had a patient drive to the grocery store and buy 12 loaves of bread, also one overdosed on their pain meds. Thought it was weird. She was against it, but, neurologist at the hospital put her on it. Does lunesta also cause the same affects?

Thank you for sending the link. I appreciate your time.

Sandy


Quote:
Originally Posted by mrsD View Post
Ambien is well known for causing eating while asleep, driving cars, walking around. There has even been an attempt to blame it on a murder...even. (that was extreme and failed).

But it does affect something in our consciousness controlling areas of the brain.

http://www.lawyerseek.com/Practice/P...1/Ambien-P121/

It doesn't do this in everyone however. Just some.
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