Traumatic Brain Injury and Post Concussion Syndrome For traumatic brain injury (TBI) and post concussion syndrome (PCS).


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Old 12-16-2014, 05:29 AM #1
Calmor Calmor is offline
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Calmor Calmor is offline
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Default Excessive sleep need and PCS

Hello!

Cannot find how to edit signature so describe my condition first:
I had concussion, hit to the left side, loss of memory before concussion several minutes and 5 minutes after came to consciousness.

Instead of treating it with rest because of doctors error I studied exams, was passing them, and then applying university exams, all about 2-3 months.
So now 14 years after I have several symptoms of PCS.


One annoying symptom is Excessive sleep need. I need 10 hours to feel good, easy to focus and multi-task. So more I sleep - less time for day work.
**

So could anyone recover from this symptom and what treatment has helped you?


Even change from 10 to 8-9 hour need is great. After treating by Semax 1% and Idebenone now I can easier tolerate if I sleep 8-9 hours. Now head is not shaking when I drink water in the evening and no pain in head but still cognitive problems that become better if I sleep 9,5-10 h.

Last edited by Chemar; 12-16-2014 at 07:51 AM. Reason: no links allowed for new members
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Old 12-16-2014, 06:27 AM #2
Lara Lara is offline
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Lara Lara is offline
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Hello Calmor,

Quote:
Cannot find how to edit signature so describe my condition first:
Here's some info from the FAQ regarding signatures. Hope that helps.
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Calmor (12-16-2014)
Old 12-16-2014, 08:15 AM #3
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Hello Calmor,

When did you get your concussion? Did you get any following concussions?

If you have gotten only one or two concussions, you're most likely to heal and get significantly better. Sadly, it can take months or even years, so it's important that you be patient.

The less concussions you get, the better (the higher your chance to recover is).

Try not to be anxious about your injury and let time do its work. It's important to stop physical activities for at least a month after a concussion (physical activites can worsen your symptoms).

Also, most people that get only one concussion recover extremely well from it. Sadly, multiple concussions might be a different story. You need a lot of sleep for a reason - your brain has injured and it is TIRED.

If we were to use the analogue of computers, we can say that your brain before the injury was probably a very fast computer with an advanced processor. But right now, your brain is working like these 90's computers - slow and not very advanced (cognitively bad in brain terms).

Your brain has a good chance to recover, but it takes time. A lot of sleep is very good - neurons benefit from sleep, and your brain needs that rest. So keep doing that until you feel better.

My personal recommendation is to start taking Omega 3 in high doses daily, because it can help your brain recover - one of the main complications after a brain injury is inflammation inside the brain that leads to damage. Omega 3 contains fats (DHA&EPA) that help reducing inflammation (EPA) and help neurons get back to full power (DHA). Both are very important for supporting recovery after a TBI, so make sure to buy an Omega 3 supplement with similar levels of both. By high doses, I recommend at least 5 grams a day (Omega 3 is non-toxic even in high doses, so don't worry about trying even higher dosages. It might rarely cause bleeding on a high dosage, but it normally is very uncommon, and even if that happens you can reduce the dosage to one where it doesn't happen).

One more thing, and this is from personal experience (got a concussion in October 27 this year) - anxiety is very bad for you. Anxiety is generally bad for everyone and unhealthy, but it's much worse for you because it forces your brain to work much harder, creating a significant delay in improvement and recovery.

If you have any more questions, I would be glad to answer them.

-ProAgonist
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