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How come no one warns you about vestibular neuritis vertigo! :eek:



Kind of the short version is that the vestibular system helps translate all the info you get from your eyes and ears into information your brain can use and puts "position stamps" (balance) on it and links it together for continuity, predictability and even time passage. Kind of like
There is a car over there and you are standing like this, now the car is closer and you are turned slightly to the left, I The Vestibular, predict that in an equal amount of time the car will be X amount closer and you will be turned even more to the left
But it does it with everything and all the time so you don't notice it, and everything just . . . flows. When it hit I still got ALL of the information, just without all the helpful metadata, like "You have seen that car, it was over there just a bit ago and you were sitting upright turned slightly to left of midline" now it's just a car that you have no idea where it came from or where it is going AND IF THAT WASN'T ENOUGH, because you are lacking positional context your eyes became independent agents and you see the same car twice with zero ability to tell what it's actual position relative to you is and just all of the info from your eyes and ears gets dumped on your brain which has zero experience dealing with raw data
Oh, and you lose your sense of time passage because a lot of that is linked to balance / position visual clues like knowing how fast a car moves or even the sound of wind compared to leaves moving on a tree.
AND EVEN MORE IF THAT WASN'T ENOUGH!!!!!
This isn't your brain, as in the voice in your head that you think of as "you" this is just the firewall filter that allows you to understand and process the all that information between you and the outside world failing, so behind all of this (at least until you start vomiting uncontrollably ;) ) The You Inside Your Head is fully aware and functioning but has no idea what is going on and it pretty literally felt like the world was melting away.

And did I mention I was driving at the time! I was headed to a job site in Forest Grove when it hit and at one point it wasn't "Jesus take the wheel" it was "Oh, !@#$, I really hope the Subaru collision avoidance system works like they say it does!" I managed to make it to the urgent(sic) care in FG, 0/10 would not recommend, and despite presenting as suffering a stroke after 2 hours all they did was take my insurance info before anything else, give me a shot of anti nausea goop and wash the wax out of my ears :mad:
Our daughter drove me to St Vincent's and despite losing consciousness a few times I still managed to tell her she was driving too fast :s0114:
Got to St V's and they started to yell at her for her parking, than they saw me falling out of the passenger seat, vomiting and sweating so much my wife debated just trashing the clothes I had on, they got me in a chair, in and out of admitting in under 2 min and in back where they called Code Stroke. I spent a couple days in the hospital with neurologists checking on me a couple times a day and got 2 CT Scans and an MRI, clean bill of health no stroke signs at all :)
I would give St Vincent's an 8/10 and really it was the pizza that tasted like it had been wrapped in foil and cooked in a dishwasher that brought their score down the most, but the french toast and bacon were pretty good

Recovery for me will be rest, some anti nausea meds and eye tracking exercises to help my brain relearn how to keep my eyes working together and get my body balance recalibrated

So what causes it? A virus that just hangs out on your vestibular nerves that gets tapped just the wrong way by another virus or bacteria or . . . something?
What can you do to prevent it? Nothing
Can you test for it or predict it? Nope
Could it happen again? Yes, but the good news with that is that the odds don't change after getting it, they just reset

And on the chance that you missed this part . . .

vomit everywhere.jpg
 
Yikes! That sounds horrific. Here's hoping for a full recovery. And never happening again. Hang in there.
 
Yup! I've had that. All what VinnieBoomBah said is true.
The first time I had it I just stood up from breakfast, turned around, fell on the floor and lost everything I just ate. I lost ALL my balance!
No cure. It will diminish with time. But can reoccur without notice and in my case, not as bad.
Lots of tests. Meds didn't help. Just made me sleepy.
They called it positional vertigo at that time.
What I've read is it's caused by the little hairs in your inner ear getting crossed up and sending mixed signals about balance.
It REALLY sucks to be up high when a reoccurrence happens.
 
They called it positional vertigo at that time.
The same but different I think, there are a couple other things like ear crystals that can cause it as well, they listed them as they ruled them out in my case but I wasn't really all that into listening at the moment
:s0170:


But can reoccur without notice
Two Dr's, my PT and a nurse all told me in no uncertain terms that if it happened again just get my butt to the ER ASAP!! because it *might* be reoccurrence, but it might also be a stroke and they get folks in every year that thought it was the same as last time and just lay down for a day or so after having a stroke and by the time they do go in to get checked it's too late for the stroke meds to be of any help :(

It REALLY sucks to be up high when a reoccurrence happens.
:eek: OK, new level of terror unlocked!!!
 
The same but different I think, there are a couple other things like ear crystals that can cause it as well, they listed them as they ruled them out in my case but I wasn't really all that into listening at the moment


:eek: OK, new level of terror unlocked!!!
You're right. Yours sounds different than mine.
My scariest episode was 15 feet in the air on top a 4'x8' flat steal surface.
I laid flat spread eagle and dug my nails in for what seamed and hour, but actually about 2 minutes.
Sweating profusely all the while.
 
I had a bad upper respiratory infection and cough in November that didn't go away after 8 days .
Woke up at 1:30 am with these symptoms , finally went away after 12 hrs ...... not fun .

  • Sensation of spinning or whirling: This is the hallmark symptom.

    • Loss of balance: Can make it difficult to stand or walk.
    • Nausea and vomiting: Often accompany severe vertigo.
    • Vision problems: May include blurred vision or difficulty focusing.

    • Nystagmus: Involuntary, rapid eye movements left to right that can occur during vertigo episodes.
 
Hope you're recovering fast and strong and sounds like no auto accident thankful to hear...
 
Damn that is crazy!
I can't imagine what all that would feel like all at once, glad you are alright. I had no idea a particular virus could do that!

And that urgent care.. I hear you.. worthless!
Just want payment and offer minimal service in return, often misdiagnosed.
 
Hope you're recovering fast and strong and sounds like no auto accident thankful to hear...
Yeah, I was stupid luckey with the driving part Still a bit of a floating brain cloud* but it getting a bit better day by day



* Shout out to one of my all time favorite movies!
 
I had full on vertigo once. Had no idea where my body was in space. Sucked balls bubblegum and dong.

I sometimes get mini vertigo when going down long flights of stairs. I start to feel like my feet are moving on their own and i am not in control. I never fall, it is just unsettling. Going up is fine.
 
All's well that ends OK? Let us hope so!
Turns out we are über-complicated and inexplicable creatures.
I sense that Meniere's disease (inner ear) may have a similar cause. DW has it. It leads to the equilibrium/nausea situation and is the reason why Huey Lewis stopped public concerts.
Or it may be that the Vagus nerve is also involved. I have that. It can produce all manner of perceptive strangeness, such as vision that flips vertically like old TVs with the vertical hold adjusted poorly. That and instant projectile vomiting, sudden extreme thirst and what is known as "lights out" syndrome.
Sometime, somewhere, when we least expect it, Candid Neurology shows up.
 

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