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Traumatic Brain Injury and Post Concussion Syndrome For traumatic brain injury (TBI) and post concussion syndrome (PCS). |
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#1 | ||
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Just finished first week of return to work. Or rather not. Had to leave work early severe headache and sky rocketing BP. Tried to contact nuero but he is out of office. Ended up in ER again.
After several hours nuero finally called me back. Changing med from depakote 500 EC to cymbalta. Another week of no work, as a restriction. On an up note the ER Dr very straight forward said no activity and that means cognitive rest. And he meant it. Wow.
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49, Male Married, PCS since June 2012, headaches, Back pain, neck pain, attention deficit, concentration deficit, processing speed deficit, verbal memory deficit, PTSD, fatigue, tinutitus, tremors. To see the divine in the moment. |
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#2 | ||
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Legendary
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Oooo. Sorry to hear that.
Ask your doctor for a script of Beta-blocker. I have propanolol in the cabinet and glove box, Just in case. Skyrocking BP can cause a stroke. You already have an injured brain. My BP would skyrocket to 195/145. A deadly BP. A dose of propanolol would bring it down within 20 to 30 minutes or less. Having some propanolol can save you an expensive trip to the ER. They can't do anything for you besides help you get your BP down. My best to you.
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Mark in Idaho "Be still and know that I am God" Psalm 46:10 |
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I'm so sorry it didn't get off to a good start, RM. Was that a voluntary return in the end? I'm glad your ER doctor prescribed you something helpful at least. You need to rest and not have this stress.
Mark, Does propranolol help with PCS symtoms? I sometimes wonder if that throbbing pressure I feel in my neck and head is my BP rising. I've been on a low dose of propranolol for years for an unrelated condition. If it would help with that horrible throbbing / head rush / dizziness I will see about increasing the dosage. |
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curious about the high rise in blood pressure and head injury. I know since my accident I have had several high reading when going to doc office etc. I had an elevated bp the night of the accident according to medical records. Often the nurse will wait several minutes and retest it and it seems to come back down. Should I have ever had any concern here? Is there a coorelation with bp and head injury
rmschaver - you must have a really descent employer... I wish I did
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What happened - MVA Multiple injuries - here for support of mtbi, chronic headache and cognitive deficits. |
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#5 | ||
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Legendary
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Yes, there is a connection between concussion and BP. It can be due to the over-stimulation causing a fight or flight action or it can be an injury to the adrenal system causing an adrenal fight or flight reaction from very simple triggers like a startle.
I believe every patient who presents with PCS symptoms and has incidents of high BP should be trained about when to use an emergency supply of BP meds. I know too many people who have had very upsetting and dangerous situations due to these BP spikes. They can be deadly. Strokes and heart attacks.
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Mark in Idaho "Be still and know that I am God" Psalm 46:10 |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | Theta Z (10-06-2012) |
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#6 | ||
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Nuero said GP should address BP. BTW father in law gave me a old BP machine to track months ago. If i graph it there is a slow and steady rise weekly. Not sure why it skyrockets but my wife and I watch for it closely. A severe headache that is not responding to pain meds is a good indicator your BP maybe high. 180/110 is where we seek medical attention.
Thanks all can't spend more than a few mins online.
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49, Male Married, PCS since June 2012, headaches, Back pain, neck pain, attention deficit, concentration deficit, processing speed deficit, verbal memory deficit, PTSD, fatigue, tinutitus, tremors. To see the divine in the moment. |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | Theta Z (10-06-2012) |
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#7 | |||
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Just wanted to drop-in a supportive hello, thinking of you, rmschaver.
It's good to know that you're "taking good care of you" in this your return to work; and mindfully monitoring, tracking, watching your bp. Kudos. Theta
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_____________________________ . 50s Babyboomer; 2008 high-impact rear-ended/totalled-MVC, closed-head injury->pcs ... "Still dealing with it." 1993, Fell on black ice; first closed-head injury; life-altering. // 2014 Now dealing with Peripheral Neuropathy, tremors, shakiness, vestibular disorder, akithesia, anhedonia, yada yada, likely thanks to rx meds // 2014: uprooted to the cold wet gray NW coast, trying to find a way back home ... where it's blue sky and warm! . __________________________________________________ _________ Each and every day I am better and better. I affirm and give thanks that it is so. // 2014-This was still true for me last year, I truly felt this a year ago. Unfortunately it holds no meaning for me now. Odd, it was the Theta mantra for years. Change change change. |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | rmschaver (10-07-2012) |
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