![]() ![]() I am afraid of driving, of going to the store, and even being home alone. My question is, has anybody had any sort of aura (if that is what you want to call it) like this? Where they dream they are going to have a seizure somewhere, and a day or so later acutally HAVE the seizure? This has never EVER happend to me before and I am quite afraid now. The only thing that was strange was the guard, as it is a small pharmacy and they have no need for a guard. The parking lot, bus stop, roads, and even the aisles in the store were almost a 100% correct match to the pharmacy down the road where I usually go. My dreams almost never make sense, so when they do it scares me. The part that scared me most was not the seizure, but the fact that everything was so real. When I hit the ground I woke up, and I knew that in my dream I had a tonic-clonic seizure (or is it secondarily generalized seizure?). As I hit the ground I remember thinking "this is it". ![]() Just a few seconds later I fell and eveything was in slow motion, but I knew I didn't trip on anything. I couldn't go, so I turned around to walk towards the bus stop with my friend and I just had this feeling that something was going to happen in the next few minutes. ![]() Do you have seizures?" I said "no" because my friend was there, but the guard wanted me to go to the hospital. ![]() The guard looked at me and said "he only does this when someone is about to have a seizure. He jumped and put his paws on my shoulders, looked into my eyes, and started licking me. I thought the guard was going to think I had stolen something, but the dog was barking and whining. When we exited the building there was a guard there with a dog and the dog just jumped on me. Well, we went inside the store, got our stuff, and walked, out, me going slower and slower. Of course I never told my friend because I didn't want to seem crazy in case nothing ever did happen. Inside my head I was scared because I had the feeling I was going to have a seizure, even though I have never had anything like that happen. Not tired, but heavy, and I was having a hard time keeping up, physically and mentally. I remember my friend kept looking at me weird and asking what was wrong because I would keep asking the same questions over and over because I kept forgetting the answers. We were down by the pharmacy and I had the impression that I had been feeling off the whole day, not just at the store. Last night I dreamed I was hanging out with one of my friends. “We’d like him to have one by tomorrow,” Wilson said.Hi all! I had a very alarming dream last night and I thought I would share it here. But that day, three patients got to go home after having the several needed to produce data. Two days after he was admitted, Moore still hadn’t had a seizure. “She was shocked that she could get the same care right here in Mississippi.” “If we didn’t have the EMU, there would be a lot of either undiagnosed patients, or patients with a prolonged delay in diagnosis,” Sharma said.īowman “told me that she always thought she had to go to the Mayo Clinic or Cleveland Clinic to get good neuro or heart care,” Willis said. Providers can make a direct referral to UMMC Neurosciences and the EMU by calling (601) 984-5500 and selecting option 1. The EMU provides state-of-the-art treatment close to home, Willis said. “They worked together and found that I needed a pacemaker. In the room next door, neurophysiology technologist Tara Mays used her computer to analyze and document the constant stream of data.īowman, who divides her residency between Vicksburg and Greenwood, is feeling much better, and she and her family are relieved that she finally has a diagnosis and treatment. She watched and listened for signs that Moore and the other five patients were about to have, or were having, a seizure. McClendon sat at a desk in a room down the fourth-floor hall with a large video monitor mounted on a wall with windows bearing a stream for each bed in the adult unit. Since being admitted on a Tuesday, Moore’s every move was being watched by team members including Yvette McClendon, a neurodiagnostic assistant. “Once their doctor feels they have enough data, they are put back on their medications and prepared for discharge,” Wilson said. How long the patient stays varies according to the severity of their disease and how long it takes to have episodes or seizures. Sameer Sharma, assistant professor of neurology and medical director of the Neuroscience ICU. And if a patient is found to have received an earlier epilepsy misdiagnosis, they can immediately be taken off seizure medications that can harm them, said Dr. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |