Countrygirl
Senior Member
- Messages
- 5,670
- Location
- UK
The condition your work colleague developed may be post-concussion syndrome (PCS), which has ME/CFS-like symptoms. Most cases of PCS will resolve within six months, but 1 in 10 cases will persist for more than a year.
I don't think there are any specific treatments for PCS, but I certainly think it would be very interesting for researchers to examine PCS patients and try to figure out what is driving their symptoms, because that could well throw some light on what is causing the symptoms in ME/CFS.
This very much interests me.
As some of you know I have developed what has been diagnosed in A&E as bouts of Malignant Hypertension.
The first one I actually caught on my blood pressure machine. My BP was very low, but abruptly tripled from about 85/60 to 250/180 in a couple of seconds or so. It gives a horribe sensation (not to mention a sense of impending death) and produces the symptoms of a stroke, sometimes leaving permananent damage and, on one occasion, I was unconscious on the floor for several hours.
(And I will add my beef of the day here
Anyway...........it feels as though one has had a powerful blow to the head.......but from the inside. Following each attack I am left with what seems like a very severe ME...............there are only two added features: marked air hunger in the day which I only ever experienced at night with ME, and resolved by hanging out an open winndow, while this doesn't resolve and am too breathless to walk three steps.............the other is the only non-ME symptoms..........visual and auditory hallucinations within 24 hours of each attack...................
Apart from the hallucinations, I have been curious why a blow to the head should trigger severe ME symptoms. I had been wondering if this is actaully post-concussion syndrome, but if it is, I cannot differentuate between severe ME and PCS.
Last edited: