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How is it possible? I also started having neck pain (and an electric sensation going up to my spine) along with the trouble thinking when I used the clipper for the beard the previous time, is it possible for a sound to cause that too? Quote:
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Danielson, I was also in a car accident and sustained neck whip lash without head trauma. I can tell you from my personal experience the shortness of breath and a pressure on your chest can be caused by anxiety. I've had almost every test done you can think of and the results always came back negative for any problems. It's been 2 years since my accident and thankfully my condition hasn't gotten any worse but I have seen an improvement over that time frame even if progress has been minimal.
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If it's not a problem for you, may I know the speed and the mechanics of your accident (it was a front o rear collision, were you wearing a seatbelt etc...) Also, what kind of symptoms have you experienced after the accident and what are your current symptoms? |
It is of no value to try to rate trauma forces and tie them to injury level. The experts have found no direct connection. Every head and neck injury is different. Some tolerate very strong forces and other do not tolerate weak forces.
Over stimulation can cause symptoms to return or just trigger an anxiety reaction that can last. The sensory system can easily overload a compromised brain and leave it exhausted for hours or even days. Sound is the most common sense to over stimulate the brain. From what you have said, your brain is very sensitive to sensory stimulation. |
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I have managed to endure my neighbouring drilling very loud for more than ten minutes (and me simultaneously being extremely anxious and stressed out of fear of the symptoms coming back due to the noise) withouth having any relapse. |
Not every sound causes the same level of stimulation. Sound frequency/pitch and loudness have different impacts. The farther away the sound source is, the more that sound has echoing reverb. This reduces the impact on the ear. Think of it as a fuzzy loud sound. Outdoor sounds are often the easiest to tolerate because of this.
Think of fingers on a chalk board. The wrong frequency can be a struggle. I know that certain frequencies of buzzing are a problem for me while other frequencies that may be louder are not. |
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It's also important to note that right after my accident I continued living my life normally as I didn't experience any symptoms right away. I was going to bars, clubs & drinking hard. I was also practicing kick-boxing 3x a week and working on the computer for 8+ hours a day. I never really gave my brain a chance to heal. |
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15 months is a long time, are you sure that the cause was the car accident and not something else, like a bad hit in kickboxing sparring? (by the way, I also trained MMA and have done a couple of sparring, coupled with partyng and driking, the month after the accident when I still believed that my symptoms were a stress-related psychomatic disorder, so I can emphatize a lot with you, altough my symptoms came right away a day and half after the accident). Also, did you have not cognitive deficit such as trouble thinking, trouble reading, trouble putting your feelings in actual toughts and sentences and/or memory problems? |
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SPNS,
Are you saying that since you never had problems from your kickboxing before the T Bone accident that you don't think kickboxing would be the cause of your symptoms that manifest 15 months after the car wreck? Did you have any other symptoms after the car wreck other than the short lived mental confusion/freeze (that was not physiological shock)? The mental confusion can just be a moment of startle where you brain has had so much stimulation that it has to stop or freeze to sort it out. It is one part of the fight, flight, or freeze response to trauma and startle. Yes, it can be a concussion, too. Concussion is a process that happens over a few days to a few weeks. PCS from a concussion does not develop 15 months later unless there has been additional trauma at the 15 month mark. PCS is when concussion symptoms that first manifested at or closely after the head trauma continue beyond the 6 week to 3 month time frame. Even delayed onset concussion symptoms manifest within a few weeks, usually because of high stress living. |
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