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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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Hello,
Going on 9 months with PCS after injury last November. Over the past month I have noticed marked improvements in my cognition. I am thinking more clearly, remembering more, and capable of more activity before cognitive fatigue sets in. But one recurrent experience has been really troubling me, and left me wondering if it will ever go away. Last night one such experience manifested, and so I kept a log of what went down. First of all, during my nightly walk, a car full of thuggish kids (or maybe young adults) began threatening me and following me down the street. My adrenaline kicked into gear, and I spent the next few hours very anxious after I got home. I did some meditation and relaxation work, and decided I was not particularly anxious anymore, and should try to get to sleep. As I was in bed, my body suddenly got very hot. I felt a "zap" or shock in my head. My heart began to race, vision blurred (more than my PCS blurry vision), head felt numb, and so on— this usually happens with anxiety, I reminded myself. I tried to focus on my breath and remain relaxed. It was at this point that my thoughts became very frenzied. Images flashed before my eyes in addition to sounds/voices. Sounds included loud bangs, explosions, lightning, and conversations. After some time experiencing these images and sounds, I became unaware of what was strictly in my head and what was in the room with me, or if there was any difference. I would open my eyes and remind myself that I was alone in bed. When I lay back, the sounds and images continued. Suddenly I woke up gasping for air. The thing is, I couldn't recall falling asleep. It seemed to me like my consciousness had just cut out for what I figured were a few moments. This sudden waking sensation occurred again at least 3 more times. Frantic at this point, I decided to get out of bed. I looked at the clock and, much to my chagrin, what felt like 30 minutes had been 3 hours! I went for a walk outside, feeling like I was in a dream. When I returned to bed, I passed out instantly, and woke up today very sore and fatigued. This nocturnal nightmare has occurred at least every other week for months and months. It seems to occur on days that something especially stressful happens. I remind myself that these are just panic attacks. But as someone who's had panic attacks for many years, I consider these ones to be panic on steroids! Especially the auditory hallucinations. It's exhausting and like nothing I've ever dreamed of, and I wish my brain would cut the crap.
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-First TBI in 2011. Iron cellar door closed on my head. Undiagnosed PCS, and was unaware of anything regarding TBI at the time. -2nd TBI in August, 2014. Fell skateboarding and hit head on pavement. -3rd TBI in November, 2014. Hit in the head at work with a dish rack with full strength by a large employee. CT scan normal. Diagnosed mTBI, PCS, PTSD, migraine with aura, and chronic depression. Symptoms have included: quite severe visual disorders, hearing loss in left ear, lethargy, brain fog, dizziness, disordered sleep, hallucinations and "exploding head syndrome", neck and shoulder pain, migraines, headaches, loss of emotions, all forms of cognitive deficiency, loss of reading/verbal ability, sound/light sensitivity, anxiety, panic attacks. Most notably are a general loss of identity and the disillusionment with the world accompanying trauma. But on the other hand, a new and heightened awareness of the nature of self, others, and of suffering itself. -As of December, 2015, am still experiencing visual disturbances, memory and speech problems, balance, sensitivity and overstimulation issues, along with the trickier to pinpoint cognitive changes, but feel that I am no longer clawing my way through a waking hell, so feel much better about being alive. Hallucinations and panic attacks are gone (thank God!), getting much better at reading and writing, and remembering/planning my daily tasks. Hopeful for further recovery, but thankful to be at least at 50%. Last edited by Beelzebore92; 08-02-2015 at 10:33 AM. |
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#2 | ||
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Legendary
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This sounds like a PTSD triggered anxiety attack.
I suggest you talk to your doctor about having a quick acting med for such events. It can be a benzo (Xanax or such) or a beta blocker (propranolol). I have propranolol and atenolol in the cabinet for such events. It works faster and is out of the system faster so it just treats the individual event. You might need something stronger like Zyprexa if the others don't help. |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | Beelzebore92 (08-02-2015), Hockey (08-02-2015) |
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#3 | ||
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Junior Member
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Quote:
__________________
-First TBI in 2011. Iron cellar door closed on my head. Undiagnosed PCS, and was unaware of anything regarding TBI at the time. -2nd TBI in August, 2014. Fell skateboarding and hit head on pavement. -3rd TBI in November, 2014. Hit in the head at work with a dish rack with full strength by a large employee. CT scan normal. Diagnosed mTBI, PCS, PTSD, migraine with aura, and chronic depression. Symptoms have included: quite severe visual disorders, hearing loss in left ear, lethargy, brain fog, dizziness, disordered sleep, hallucinations and "exploding head syndrome", neck and shoulder pain, migraines, headaches, loss of emotions, all forms of cognitive deficiency, loss of reading/verbal ability, sound/light sensitivity, anxiety, panic attacks. Most notably are a general loss of identity and the disillusionment with the world accompanying trauma. But on the other hand, a new and heightened awareness of the nature of self, others, and of suffering itself. -As of December, 2015, am still experiencing visual disturbances, memory and speech problems, balance, sensitivity and overstimulation issues, along with the trickier to pinpoint cognitive changes, but feel that I am no longer clawing my way through a waking hell, so feel much better about being alive. Hallucinations and panic attacks are gone (thank God!), getting much better at reading and writing, and remembering/planning my daily tasks. Hopeful for further recovery, but thankful to be at least at 50%. |
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