My computer diagnosed me

I am happy that you might have found a solution to what is going on with you.
Dr. Google solves another one.
Basically, the search engine verified the doctor's suspensions are reasonable. Hopefully, they will rule out a brain lesion, but it was pretty cool to see why the doc suspects what he suspects. And he's "just an eye-doctor", who didn't look it up, so Kudos to him.
 

My mother used to have the Mayo Clinic handbook. She never warmed up to the internet, but she got good information from that handbook.

@Murrmurr (Frank), I hope you have the best possible outcome with your medical situation. 🤗
There is a Mayo Clinic has a website where you can look up symptoms, get info about various treatment options etc. I usually use their site or the WebMD. However, keep some perspective, know that the same symptom depending on other ones, your age and other symptoms can indicate some minor issue or a major one.
 

I'm not under the delusion that my computer can replace a doctor, but I found this interesting...

I entered these weird symptoms I've had lately in my search engine. I literally wrote, "symptoms: whooshing and banging sounds when I move my head" and some really good information and links came up, including problems my eye-doctor suspects COULD be causing the symptoms, and the tests and imaging that the specialists want done.

Those symptoms plus the occasional vertigo I'm suddenly having can be caused by a bleed or lesion in the brain. But also, my left eye has been constantly painful and burning for about 5 weeks, which could mean there's a lesion on the optic nerve. The burning eye pain is what I originally went to see the eye doctor for.

And the bleed or lesion, if there is one, could be caused by severe head trauma. I had severe head trauma about 30 years ago but the Mayo Clinic website said even an old head injury can cause a bleed years later. Other causes of those symptoms can be poor drainage of spinal fluid in the brain or poor blood supply to the retina or optic nerve. It's important to rule out the most serious problems first, though.

It's so interesting that you can just enter a bunch of symptoms, and voila.

I'm not advocating diagnosing yourself via your computer, I just thought it was interesting.
With a touch of witchcraft. 😲
Do take care of yourself. Hoping it has a good resolution.
 
Try gently rolling onto your belly, arms out from your sides, then curl up and get into Cow and hold there for a couple minutes, then suck in your ab muscles and slowly sit back onto your legs and stay there for a few, then slowly stand when your head is still and clear.

If you need to, while sitting on your legs, turn your head slowly left and hold for a few seconds, then slowly right and hold, and then center and hold for up to 30 seconds before you stand up. And breathe, of course. I'm sure you'll know when.
@Nathan

I misunderstood your post, obviously. When you wrote "ya have to scrape me off the mat with a spatula!" I took it too literally. 🤪

😂
 
I am one of those migraine people, it drives me crazy. I did not start these until I was 52. After 5 years of treatment they sent me for an MRI which shows some problems in my cervical spine and they seem to think that is not the problem. I think is totally related I am still trying to find a doctor that confirms that is what is causing the headaches. I have severe bilateral narrowing of the formalin and bulging disks how could that not be causing pinching of the nerves of my neck? You just get tried of trying to doctors to listen. Just because it is not true in most cases it does not mean it can not happen
 
Years ago I dated a very nice lady who had migraines. They made her so miserable. It's pretty hard on the people around a person with migraines, too. Way, way worse for the person who has them, of course, but sometimes there was just no way I could be quiet enough, and her only recourse was to go home, sometimes for days. And I didn't realize that even a little movement nearby could be horrible for her. Like, sometimes me just walking through the room would hurt her.
You are very right, Murr. Migraines are not the same as tension or regular headaches. Since my aneurysm surgery I have never had a headache again. However the aneurysm is still there and will act up every now and then. Since then I have had 2 more episodes that required surgery. It still bothers me to know that I walk around everyday with a time bomb in my head. But we all live with something as you know so well.
 
I am one of those migraine people, it drives me crazy. I did not start these until I was 52. After 5 years of treatment they sent me for an MRI which shows some problems in my cervical spine and they seem to think that is not the problem. I think is totally related I am still trying to find a doctor that confirms that is what is causing the headaches. I have severe bilateral narrowing of the formalin and bulging disks how could that not be causing pinching of the nerves of my neck? You just get tried of trying to doctors to listen. Just because it is not true in most cases it does not mean it can not happen
Ask to be seen by a neurologist and a spine specialist. Insist on it.

I was convinced the spasms I get in my legs is caused by a deformity in my lumbar spine. The deformity is there, no question about that, and my newest spine doc did surgery on it in 2017. It can't be corrected 100%, but the surgery helped immensely. Now symptoms are back again, so I need another surgery.

Before I started seeing my current spine specialist, doctors didn't think the leg problems were related to my spine because the deformity is extremely rare and infinitesimal. This doc was the first to spot it, and even though he'd never even heard of it before, it made sense to him, so he did what he could to correct it as well as he could.

So, @Blessed , even if a specialist doesn't think your migraines are related to the issues in your cervical spine, ask for surgery to fix the problems they know are there. Your overall health will greatly improve whether it gets rid of the migraines or not. I'm betting it will.
 
All my doctors and my yoga/reiki person know leg pain is usually connected to lower back problems.

Is your spine doc from one of those Spine Institutes?
 
All my doctors and my yoga/reiki person know leg pain is usually connected to lower back problems.

Is your spine doc from one of those Spine Institutes?
All my current doctors and specialists are associated with a medical university here. It's one of the most prestigious medical universities in Calif.

All my previous doctors were located up in the Sierra Foothills, doing the best they could, I suppose. There definitely seems to be a knowledge gap, but it could have more to do with a lack of cutting-edge medical equipment; diagnostic equip, for example, like 3D imaging and stuff.
 
All my doctors and my yoga/reiki person know leg pain is usually connected to lower back problems.
True, but my symptom wasn't leg pain, it was electrical pulses and ticks (the physical kind), excruciating foot cramps, temporary paralysis, extreme burning sensations, restless knee syndrome. That's what stumped my doctors all these years; if I wasn't describing it as "radiating pain" then it had nothing to do with my back.

A lot of specialists get tunnel-vision, you know?
 


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