dr. zephyr

Aug. 10th, 2006 08:46 pm
firstfrost: (Default)
[personal profile] firstfrost
I love google, and I love -c help. For many reasons, but today's reason is Dr. Zephyr. (Why does my foot hurt in the morning? Google told me that...). Anyway, this afternoon, I was sitting at my desk answering questions, when I started to get these flashing colored triangles in my vision. (If this were a computer game, my HUD would be trying to tell me something like "incoming enemies!", but alas, I don't have one in real life). The small mob of flashing colored triangles formed up, and started marching outward in a line, expanding their perimeter sideways. This was really rather alarming. I've never had flashing triangles before, and so all sorts of perilous, fatal, or just blindness-inducing things started leaping to mind.

So I asked zephyr class help, which, as it knows everything, thought this was "visual migraine", and then, slightly later, "shimmering scotoma". Now, these I can look up on Google in a way that "flashing triangles" is not so helpful. Yes. That. Whew. "Migraine" is just an annoying word, not a terrifying word. And then after that I got a headache, extra-confirming the diagnosis. I've never been so happy to get a headache.

Someone's flash animation of a visual migraine. Mine wasn't this bad. :) http://www.knownjohnson.com/?p=73

Opthamologist

Date: 2006-08-11 01:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mjperson.livejournal.com
So did you go to the opthamologist?

Re: Opthamologist

Date: 2006-08-11 01:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] firstfrost.livejournal.com
Yup, I did. She confirmed from the symptom description that it sounded like a migraine, but since I was there and due for an eye exam not long from now anyway, it wouldn't hurt to check. So she dilated my eyes and confirmed that my retina was still all attached where it ought to be.

Re: Opthamologist

Date: 2006-08-11 01:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ricedog.livejournal.com
What kind of doctor do you go to for migraines? Neurologist?

Re: Opthamologist

Date: 2006-08-11 02:00 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] firstfrost.livejournal.com
Reading up on them, there seems to be a ton of different things that they can be correlated with, or caused by, or mollified by, and then a variety of drugs and painkillers that people use. For this one, neither the visual aura nor the headache was debilitating, and advil made it go away, so unless they come back bigger and worser, I'm not going to worry too much.

Re: Opthamologist

Date: 2006-08-11 01:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jaedian.livejournal.com
Neurologist is the specialist for that, but unless you have some weirdness going on, or you are getting them super intense or frequently your primary care can handle it. (I went to the neurologist for an MRI as mine are always in the exact same place- behind my left eye and I guess they wanted to make sure I didn't have an aneurism or something.)

There are lots of splefty meds for it now, and you don't even have to inject them anymore! If advil works though, go for it. (Sitting/resting in a dark quiet room can help too.) If it stops working then talk to your primary care Dr. as there are a lot of good choices now. (as opposed to all the bad choices 15-20 years ago)

Re: Opthamologist

Date: 2006-08-11 03:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] greenlily.livejournal.com
Your PCP, for starters. My mom's PCP wound up referring her to a neurologist because her headaches were very localized. Mine, though, just asked me a bunch of common-sense lifestyle-type questions, gave me a list of possible trigger factors and another list of danger symptoms, and told me to come back if I had any of them or if the headaches stopped responding to OTC painkillers. I got the impression that this is standard practice for folks who present with migraine symptoms.

Re: Opthamologist

Date: 2006-08-11 01:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jaedian.livejournal.com
A wise visit though. My impression from my opthamologist is that if you do get a detatched retina you want to be seen within24 hours or less so thaey can repair it. And those can have all sorts of visual symptoms.

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