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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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Junior Member
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About a month after my injury I started having very strange dreams/nightmares. Some were extremely violent, others extremely sexual, and sometimes both. Recently I've noticed that I don't get too many violent nightmares anymore but I still have all these very vivid sexual dreams. Has anybody else gotten this? Is there a reason for it? I'm very curious.
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"Thanks for this!" says: | anon062314 (04-29-2014) |
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#2 | ||
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Junior Member
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However, I do notice a difference in my dreams after a concussion. Before concussions, my dreams would at least follow a narrative. After a head bump, my dreams feel scrambled and jumbled; they do not follow a narrative. It can feel disconcerting in a strange way. |
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#3 | ||
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Legendary
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I have stressful dreams when I am not breathing right during sleep. I don't know about sexual dreams. They may be tied to hormonal issues.
__________________
Mark in Idaho "Be still and know that I am God" Psalm 46:10 |
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#4 | |||
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I had odd dreams the first month or so after my injury, but I was still in the hospital and the psychologist indicated they were either false memories related to the TBI itself (psychologists call these confabulations) or due to or enhanced by medication I was given at the time. Mine weren't violent or particularly sexual, but did include things like floating around he hospital and imagining conversations and interactions that didn't actually happen.
Dreams aren't well understood by neuroscientists or psychologists. Some theories are that dreams are tools our brain uses to process ideas or thoughts in a "safe" environment (sleep), or they may be involved in memory processing. Any insult to the brain, which would include the injury or current medications can alter the way your brain is processing your dreams. If you are still taking Zoloft, it can cause sexual dysfunction so speculation here might be you body is trying to find it's normal sexual rhythm. Wishing you well in your continued recovery.
__________________
What Happened: On November 29, 2010, I was walking across the street and was hit by a light rail commuter train. Result was a severe traumatic brain injury and multiple fractures (skull, pelvis, ribs). Total hospital stay was two months, one in ICU followed by an additional month in neuro-rehab. Upon hospital discharge, neurological testing revealed deficits in short term memory, executive functioning, and spatial recognition. Today: Neuropsychological examination five months post-accident indicated a return to normal cognitive functioning, and I returned to work approximately 6 months after the accident. I am grateful to be alive and am looking forward to enjoying the rest of my life. |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | anon062314 (04-29-2014) |
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#5 | ||
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Junior Member
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I've had my hormones checked a few times during hospital visits and I believe they were fine. And the dreams started before the Zoloft. It's strange. Most of them lately are just me being incredibly obsessed with sex.
Thanks for the replies, I was just curious. |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | anon1028 (09-26-2014), Lightrail11 (04-15-2014) |
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#6 | |||
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![]() Best to you. ![]()
__________________
What Happened: On November 29, 2010, I was walking across the street and was hit by a light rail commuter train. Result was a severe traumatic brain injury and multiple fractures (skull, pelvis, ribs). Total hospital stay was two months, one in ICU followed by an additional month in neuro-rehab. Upon hospital discharge, neurological testing revealed deficits in short term memory, executive functioning, and spatial recognition. Today: Neuropsychological examination five months post-accident indicated a return to normal cognitive functioning, and I returned to work approximately 6 months after the accident. I am grateful to be alive and am looking forward to enjoying the rest of my life. |
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#7 | ||
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Member
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Are you taking Vitamin B? I started having crazy dreams after I added that to my daily supplement regime. I Googled it, and it looks like B is linked to strange, vivid dreams.
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It is what it is. . |
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#8 | ||
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Junior Member
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I'm not taking any supplements, but I've been drinking that "blue goodness" drink from Bolthouse with all the B vitamins, and eating blueberries here and there
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#9 | ||
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#10 | ||
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I had a weird dream this morning, unusually today I managed to get back to sleep after lying awake for a long while and had a very vivid dream. It was like an episode of Doctor Who with mutant people in it, at first I thought they were handicapped or injured, it was more disturbing than frightening. When I woke I felt sleepy and relaxed where usually I feel wide awake so it must have been beneficial in some sort of way lol.
You're right about vit B, I once had a bad dream after taking it!
__________________
Concussion 28-02-2014 head butted a door edge. . Symptoms overcome: Nausea, head pressure, debilitating fatigue, jelly legs, raised pulse rate, night sweats, restlessness, depersonalisation, anxiety, neck ache, depression. Symptoms left: Disturbed sleep, some residual tinnitus. |
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