NeuroTalk Support Groups

NeuroTalk Support Groups (https://www.neurotalk.org/)
-   Traumatic Brain Injury and Post Concussion Syndrome (https://www.neurotalk.org/traumatic-brain-injury-and-post-concussion-syndrome/)
-   -   Stuttering (https://www.neurotalk.org/traumatic-brain-injury-and-post-concussion-syndrome/184068-stuttering.html)

cyclecrash 02-18-2013 07:31 PM

That sounds horribly frustrating msRrio! I have it where i can't think of words and stutter a little when stressed or having a bad day but not like that.

I don't understand why doctors or people don't believe us or our symptoms but yet we all have the same ones! Each of us has our own unique grouping of issues but most of the main symptoms are very common. How can we all be making it up/exaggerating/lying?

Its obviously real.

CC

Mark in Idaho 02-18-2013 08:25 PM

MsRrio,

You might ask your doctor for a prescription of an anti-seizure med. Neurontin (gabapentin) or some of the old standbys like phenobarbital or phenytoin (Dilantin). I was on both in high school (1971-2) and they settled my brain down. It sounds like your brain gets caught struggling and loses control of the timing processes needed to control a natural flow of information and speech.

The added stress of your son's struggles likely makes this brain stress much worse.

My best to you.

Brain patch 02-20-2013 10:02 PM

Speech problems
 
Ms rio,
I have major speech slurring and some stuttering or like a shaky voice when I get real nervous. Looks like it is normal for all of us. No worries. I know it is embarrassing though.
:hug:

MsRriO 02-20-2013 11:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark in Idaho (Post 958330)
MsRrio,

You might ask your doctor for a prescription of an anti-seizure med. Neurontin (gabapentin) or some of the old standbys like phenobarbital or phenytoin (Dilantin). I was on both in high school (1971-2) and they settled my brain down. It sounds like your brain gets caught struggling and loses control of the timing processes needed to control a natural flow of information and speech.

The added stress of your son's struggles likely makes this brain stress much worse.

My best to you.


Thanks Mark. I'm interested in what you think of the other symptom that accompanies the stutter sometimes. It's a very strong pressure in the middle of my forehead, sort of down into my sinuses almost, like a strong painful pulling sensation.

Wondering if this is related or just concurrent pain from trying to process speech. Probably just coincidence?

You're right about stress. The week since the neuro psych day has been torturous and a very disheartening setback. I feel consistently worse than I did even at two months post injury. Month three and four have sucked.

Next appt to see GP is Friday, will bring up meds again. Will try to remember.

GillianGillian 02-21-2013 11:55 PM

My speech therapist specializes in traumatic brain injury. When I first started the therapy, she said that I should expect to have more problems when I am stressed, tired, or under cognitive strain. Being relaxed, explaining something that I have said repeatedly (like how the injury happened) made my speech almost like it was before the accident.

I was really amazed at how much the speech therapy really helped. The breathing techniques and learning transitions from one syllable to another and easy onset of words made a huge difference. After a while I was able to self-correct. Now, unless I am exhausted or have not planned what I want to say, no one suspects that I ever had a stutter.

I wouldn't be concerned if the neurologist is not familiar with this, but your speech therapist says something different, I would look for a new speech therapist -- one with experience treating patients with TBI.

GillianGillian 02-21-2013 11:58 PM

By the way, I found that "trying harder" almost always made the stuttering worse. Learning to relax and learning the techniques to deal with the aspects of speech I found difficult were key to getting past the stuttering.

Mbolin 06-05-2015 06:55 PM

Describes me perfectly
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by MsRriO (Post 958252)
Thanks everybody. Helps me feel validated. The neuro psych did not.

My stutter is a legit stutter that "sounds" like I'm faking it or something because its so acute when it hits.

It's "I I I I I I I can't nnnnnremember if if nnnnnnn if if if I I I I nnnnnn locked the nnnnnndoor" for example.

And then other times I have no stutter at all. Sometimes slowed annunciation (slight slurring) but not very often.

These symptoms describe me perfectly! Does it get better? How long does it take?

Mark in Idaho 06-05-2015 09:50 PM

Mbolin,

MsRio has not been around in quite some time. It took a while but she did improve.

One of the common problems with stuttering after a concussion is the more we stress out about the symptoms, the worse that symptom becomes. The brain gets overloaded with stress chemicals and goes haywire.

Many of us have learned relaxation skills to help our body and mind settle down so we can perform a little better. For me, it usually starts with taking a slow deep breath. Then, I rehearse what i want to say in mind. It helps but does not always solve the problem. It may just take time to heal.

My best to you.

DudeWhoHitHisHead 06-11-2015 01:32 PM

Yep me too.

How do they not know this?

You overload a computer with work and it won't be very responsive will it?

To further the analogy, you drop your computer on the floor, and then overload it with work, it's going to be even less responsive :)

Bud 06-12-2015 02:40 PM

MsR,

I thought I was all done stuttering at one point then it reappeared. Now when stressed or overloaded it starts up again. Stressor is gone and stuttering is gone.

Happens all the time again so your doc as seems to be the case with many is clueless.

Bud


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:49 PM.

Powered by vBulletin • Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

vBulletin Optimisation provided by vB Optimise (Lite) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.