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


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Old 03-29-2015, 07:20 AM #1
SamG11 SamG11 is offline
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Default 5 months post concussion. When will this be getting any better?

Hi everyone

If you already could not tell I'm brand new here. I'm here to learn, to seek help, and just to overall get support from all different people. Which I hope I'm in the right place for. Anyways, this will be long, but I first want to give some background. I'm 14 years old and hit my head playing football in my friends backyard on October 17 2014.

I will never forget that day. I was having a blast with my friends and just In a few seconds it impacted everything in my life horribly. From depression, to confusion, to all these symptoms that won't go away I feel stumped. I had hope for the first couple weeks then lost everything.

I pretty much have little to no hope now. Now, let me tell you how my life's been since the accident. Every single day I'm in this weird dreamy fog, and I'm tying this right now with it. It's almost like how people explain what being high id like. That's how I feel, everyday. And I have to push through it, in school.

My next symptom is my brain gets to a point in the day where it's heavy and tired that it makes it hard to do anything. And finally, depression. I'm depressed a lot now thinking how I haven't hung out with friends or played a sport in so long because of my symptoms. Well, I guess it could be worse.

That's all for now, if anyone can please reply and just talk to me that would be great. Other info: I go to a concussion specialist every 3 weeks and I'm seeing a neurologist in 4 weeks.
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Old 03-29-2015, 11:00 AM #2
MVTBI MVTBI is offline
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Make sure to talk to people about it, and hang with your friends in a different way , I was super active when I got this and am learning you gotta keep people in your life even if it's a different way, just hanging out or whatever . Sometimes tou may be making strides in the right direction and not even realise it, I was in the same funk, I went back and read some of the notes I had made months ago and that have me hope cuz boy was some of it non sense



Do your best to relax, the more you relax the better it will get make small adjustments to ease the load. Have some fun
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PCS since 07/14 Symptoms: Vision(double,tracking, contrasts) Headache, Motion sensitivity, Psych issues, low stress tolerance, minor tinitus, sensitivity to noise and light, sleep issues.
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Old 03-29-2015, 11:30 AM #3
Mark in Idaho Mark in Idaho is offline
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SamG11,

Welcome to NeuroTalk. I'm sorry to hear you are struggling so.

What has the concussion specialist done to try to help you recover ?
What are you doing to try to recover ?
Are you still taking/attending all your classes at school ?
What do you do when your brain gets tired and heavy ?

Are you taking any meds or consuming energy drinks, etc ?
How is your sleep ?

What is you home life like ? Noisy siblings ? TV or video games blaring ?

The usual protocol for recovery is a low stress life. Minimal screen time. Minimal chaotic sounds and visuals. Moderated physical exertion so there is good blood flow to the brain but not too much physical effort/stress.

We are here to try to help.

My best to you.
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Old 03-29-2015, 01:15 PM #4
SamG11 SamG11 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mark in Idaho View Post
SamG11,

Welcome to NeuroTalk. I'm sorry to hear you are struggling so.

What has the concussion specialist done to try to help you recover ?
What are you doing to try to recover ?
Are you still taking/attending all your classes at school ?
What do you do when your brain gets tired and heavy ?

Are you taking any meds or consuming energy drinks, etc ?
How is your sleep ?

What is you home life like ? Noisy siblings ? TV or video games blaring ?

The usual protocol for recovery is a low stress life. Minimal screen time. Minimal chaotic sounds and visuals. Moderated physical exertion so there is good blood flow to the brain but not too much physical effort/stress.

We are here to try to help.

My best to you.

Hi mark, I'm going to try to answer most of your questions as best as possible.

Well first, I'm taking omega 3 fish oil pills everday of1000mg, and super b 12 complex vitamins of 500 mg per day.
The concussion specialist has done all sorts of things to help, he has tried different medicines (that did not work), gave me tips on taking good care of my brain while it's tryig to heal, and tries to answer most of my questions.

Now for school, oh school. School has been probably the worst part of my pcs experience. It is horrible. All my symptoms increase drastically and I have to push through it day by day. I missed a bunch of school and did half days way back in October but I just missed too much school so I am forced to go. my grades changed from As and Bs to Cs and Ds because of it. And it just makes me more depressed.

My house, no one really besides my parents know actually how bad this is. So whenever my siblings see me crying or complaining about it they just yell at me and tell me to man up. And my house life is very lazy, I just rest all day and play a little bit of video games here and there. Anytime my symptoms get worse I just lie in a dark room and rest.


oh and one more thing I wanted to mention is that my two worst symptoms are: An dreamy/foggy like state in in all the time, and my brain gets so heavy and tired.

Hope I covered everything,
Thanks so much
Sam
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Old 03-29-2015, 01:43 PM #5
Mark in Idaho Mark in Idaho is offline
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Can you be more specific about the things the concussion specialist did ? What meds did he try ? Are you taking any of them now ?

You should not be pushing through until you are fatigued. It will take forever to recover if you are constantly pushing through.

You would be better to miss school and need to repeat than to struggle through almost failing your classes. A reduced class schedule with tutors would be best. Has anybody suggested requesting an IEP (Individualized Education Program) ? You may qualify. Here is a link to information.
https://www.understood.org/en/school...-and-504-plans
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Old 03-29-2015, 03:31 PM #6
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i don't remember the names of the meds, however I know that they were for my eyes and my head at the time because my eyes would burn and I would get headaches. (some symptoms I used to have but now are gone)


And for school, good idea with the missing classes and a tutor. I think next time I go to my specialist I'm going to talk about that and see what he thinks too.


Another think I wanted talk about more is about treatment for my symptoms. Do you know if there is any medicene or treatment for my dreamy/foginess feeling, and brain fatigue and heaviness?
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Old 03-29-2015, 04:25 PM #7
Mark in Idaho Mark in Idaho is offline
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Your symptoms will reduce when you heal more. Fatigue is because your brain is doing too much. Healing happens best when you are able to extend your minimal symptom days. Activity to a point of fatigue or an increase in symptoms is counter to recovery. You must avoid activities that cause an increase in symptoms. You siblings need to cooperate with this.

Your parents need to advocate for you. Check out the Vitamins sticky at the top. At the bottom of the first post are some links to check out. The YouTube and BrainLine links are great.

My eyes start to burn when I have done too much. My head aches also.

Recovery is more about what you don't do than what you do.
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Old 03-30-2015, 08:55 AM #8
AndromedaJulie AndromedaJulie is offline
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Hi Sam,

Welcome to the forum. A lot of us have been through similar experiences and know how hard this is. It can feel as though you're losing your life and no one understands. It will get easier.

The first thing I would like to say is that things are going to be okay even though they are going to be different for now. I have had to accept a lot of things being different. But I still have to say "accept, accept, accept" to myself over and over sometimes, about things that are changing.

It sounds like you were on a pretty good recovery plan, but that you were forced to return to school before you were ready. I know you, your parents, and your teachers are all worrying about your grades and life. What I am learning, especially with support on this forum, is that we have to address what is happening with our health right now, before we can start planning for next year.

So here are some thoughts, some of which have already been mentioned:

1. Your parents need to advocate for you between the doctor and the school. You should not be pushing so hard at school that you develop symptoms to the point of suffering or you will not get better. The doctors should have a detailed "Return to School" type of plan that the school must follow (something similar to http://www.chop.edu/pages/return-lea...n#.VRlOj0Kpn48). Try not to worry about missed time. Have your parents talk with the doctor and the school about any options regarding medical accommodations. Half days, tutor, half workload, limited makeup work, no tests or take home tests, at most, I would think.

2. We all wish it were different - boy, do we - but there is no magic cure but rest. You must rest. You are not "lazy" at home. Don't give yourself that negative label. This is recovery. It is your job to rest. If you feel like you need to do something, try listening to audiobooks rather than playing video games - or there are other posts on here that have good ideas of restful things to do.

3. Maybe your parents could talk with your siblings about being a little more supportive. Everyone can be more educated about brain injury and what kind of environment can help you recover.

4. Depression is a common effect of concussions. Don't be embarrassed about talking about it. It's not just a symptom, but it can also continue because of stress and life changes. This is a big ongoing problem for me. I see a therapist regularly and I remind myself that yeah, this is hard and sucks and I feel bad and it's okay to be where I am and tomorrow is a new day.

Hang in there.
Be well
Julie
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About me: Married 45yo mother of two girls. In July 2014, I hit my head on the side of the pool; since then I've had 3 lesser concussions, one of which was due to MVA.

For the 5-10 years prior to that I’ve had what I now realize were possibly 20+ undiagnosed concussions or sub-concussions. Likely most of these result from Duane's Syndrome, for which I now have prism glasses. Have successfully done vestibular therapy and plan to start vision therapy.

Current companions: Significant depression, anxiety, hyperacusis, difficulty with verbal expression (recall & word mixups), mild spacial/vestibular issues. Feelings of disconnect in relationships.
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Old 04-01-2015, 01:40 PM #9
SamG11 SamG11 is offline
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Hi Julie!

Thanks so much for replying. i really do appreciate all the support and tips that you gave me it truly means a lot. anyways, what I also wanted to say was is that I don't want to take more time off from school cause it's just embarrassing now. all the kids at school look at me like I'm weird or have a problem because I've had a concussion for so long and I just hate the attention. I just tell the kids at my school that I don't have it anymore. (All the staff know that I lie about this because it just takes less pressure off me)

And they understand that I don't want to show as week to all the other kids. I'm going to have to figure something out soon or I'll just end up never getting better. Besides that, I just need these symptoms out of my life. I need some sort of medication to hold me to when I get freed from this concussion. My 3 biggest symptoms are this dreamy/foggy feeling, and my body is almost 75% percent numb. And my other one is my "concussion fatigue" is what I like to call it. It's just that my brain gets too tired from doing schoolwork and stuff and it gets heavy. Oh And the last one is sensitivy to light. (Forgot to mention this in my other posts)

The sensitivy to light is awful. In school or at a store those horrible big lights make my head super heavy. And make my dreamy feeling worse. I just need to know if there are medications for these type of symptoms.

Do you know? If not it is totally fine and maybe someone else can answer that for me. Meanwhile, I'll try to research it myself while in waiting for a reply.

Thanks so much!
Sam
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Old 04-01-2015, 01:58 PM #10
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Sam,

There is no 'concussion' medication. There are meds that help with some symptoms, like head aches. There is not a medication for the fogginess.

The best way to help with recovery is to avoid activities that cause a return or increase in symptoms. Pushing through will slow or stop your recovery.

You and your parents have a decision to make. Are you going to become informed about concussions and how best to recover, or are you going to push forward for the sake of image and staying on schedule and flounder for months or even years ?

Have you had a full neurological exam ? Your numbness could be from a neck injury. Do you have any, even slight stiffness or tenderness in or around your neck or behind your ears ?
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