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-- messed up night
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Vertigos suck (not necessarily you, Cale)
i miss one night at sunday school and look what happens......
Didn't know Tony Soprano's got a Chineese Twin!lol J/K
Hope you feel MUCH MUCH better today..
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| Originally posted by Floorwhore i miss one night at sunday school and look what happens...... |
I'm glad you're alright but was it such a good idea to drive yoursef home???
i think i got the same thing once still.....just randomly started feeling dizzy and i fell back onto the floor and passed out for like 5 seconds. Woke up and didn't know what happened....fucken weird.
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| Originally posted by foxyroxy I'm glad you're alright but was it such a good idea to drive yoursef home??? |
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| Originally posted by chinamon they drove my car all the way home for me and they had another car follow so they could get home from here. |
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| Originally posted by chinamon its all your fault!!! but anyways, here is what my doctor said "you are retarded" actually she said i suffer from something called syncapol attacks. there is no treatment for it and there is nothing i can do for it. i tried to google it but couldnt find anything about it. she said it was my blood vessels dilating and causing all my blood to go to my feet and not enough to my head. once i am laying down (passed out) then the blood has the opportunity to flow back into my head and i feel okay. meh. |
Man that sucks...hopefully it's nothing too serious. It just means we need to keep an eye out for random fallings 
Thats crazy man... Im glad youre OK
GO see that doctor... that's a scary occurrence! 
Re: messed up night
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| Originally posted by chinamon wow what a messed up night i had. this has nothing to do with the venue or music or crowd. i went to state theatre because the vinyl junkies were playing. i had about 2.5 beers and everything was cool. i was leaning against the stage near the bar when my vision started blacking out. everything went blurry and i started stumbling. i managed to not fall over and a couple guys asked if i was okay and whatever. a few seconds later i totally blacked out and fell over. luckily those guys were there and broke my fall. i was laying on the ground in a daze. police, firefighters and paramedics came to check on me. i didnt do any drugs. they tested my blood pressure and said that was good. they also checked my blood sugar levels and said that was 3.8 (they look for a 4.0). guess i gotta see a doctor and see wtf is wrong with me. i felt so embarassed when i went back into the club. the club manager was really nice and she took care of me. im forever thankful to the guy that broke my fall. i would've smashed my head on the ground if it wasnt for him. a few of my friends took care of me after the incident. i felt another blackout coming about 30 minutes after the paramedics left but that went away. they drove my car all the way home for me and they had another car follow so they could get home from here. thanks katherine, lerna, gian & hope. i dont know what i would've done without you guys. you guys fucking rock! good friends are hard to come by... anyway, thats my little rant. |
Neurocardiogenic Syncope
Neurocardiogenic syncope (Vasovagal Syncope)
Neurocardiogenic syncope, also known as Vasovagal syncope, may present for the first time at any age. It often occurs when upright, though can occur when sitting. It will never occur when lying. There often are no precipitating circumstances though attacks are more likely to occur in certain situations, for example during a large meal in a warm restaurant, when watching a production in a hot theatre, when flying or after prolonged standing.
The onset may be abrupt or associated with prodromal fatigue, weakness, nausea, sweating, pallor, visual disturbance, abdominal discomfort, headache, pins-and-needles, light-headedness or vertigo. Presyncope may last for seconds or minutes. This prodromal phase may be absent in older individuals.
If syncope ensues, the individual usually lies still while unconscious, though occasionally s/he may convulse briefly. (Prolonged convulsions, blue face, or tongue biting at the time of collapse, and prolonged confusion and aching muscles afterwards help distinguish a true primary seizure from one secondary to vasovagal syncope. Sleepiness and urinary incontinence are of less value in making the distinction).
On recovery of consciousness following syncope the person may complain of nausea, clamminess, light-headedness, headache and malaise and may be unable to stand up for several minutes. Full recovery may take some hours. There is a significant incidence of injury associated with vasovagal syncope. Interestingly, co-existing heart disease is rare.
Treatment includes reassurance about the benign nature of neurocardiogenic syncope, avoidance of situations likely to induce an attack, and use of simple non-drug counter-measures is often all that is required in the management of the condition.
Re: Neurocardiogenic Syncope
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| Originally posted by ChadVanDyk The onset may be abrupt or associated with prodromal fatigue, weakness, nausea, sweating, pallor, visual disturbance, abdominal discomfort, headache, pins-and-needles, light-headedness or vertigo. Presyncope may last for seconds or minutes. This prodromal phase may be absent in older individuals. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by ChadVanDyk On recovery of consciousness following syncope the person may complain of nausea, clamminess, light-headedness, headache and malaise and may be unable to stand up for several minutes. Full recovery may take some hours. There is a significant incidence of injury associated with vasovagal syncope. Interestingly, co-existing heart disease is rare. |
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