kehorner
11-27-2006, 11:59 PM
Is it possible to have a traumatic brain injury that nobody noticed?
I seem to have pretty much all of the symptoms, but no major brain injuries in my history. I did take a header out of a shopping cart when I was young, plus fell down the stairs in my youth. But my mom says that I never lost consciousness, never vomited, wasn't confused, and after I was done crying (as most 3-year-olds will after getting hurt), I went on about my business with no trouble.
I have memory problems, migraines, get overloaded easily in loud/crowded/overstimulating environments, have never slept well, definitely have fatigue, have been depressed since early childhood, have word-finding issues (either can't find the word or will say the wrong word without even noticing), and I have seizures. That's pretty much every symptom that goes with a brain injury. Plus, I have prosopagnosia (face-blindness), which can be congenital, but can also be caused by brain injury or stroke.
There's just not been anything else that I can find that would explain so many of my symptoms. But I don't have a history of any one major traumatic injury. Is it possible to get a cumulative effect, or to have so many symptoms from a small injury?
I've had a head CT, MRI, and MRA, which were all completely normal. My eeg was slightly abnormal.
I'm currently getting accomodations in school for reading, memory, and attention problems. I'm not sure exactly what they put it through under. I originally registered with depression, but then registered with my seizures to try to get help with reading. The disability coordinator seemed like she wasn't sure if she could do much for me until she read my chart from the neuro, which documented my history of hitting my head as a child. Plus, the coordinator that I'm seeing is the one who handles both chronic health issues and brain injuries.
Am I just grasping at straws and trying to make a whole bunch of random stuff into a single problem? Or is this reasonable? Is there anything that can be done?
I seem to have pretty much all of the symptoms, but no major brain injuries in my history. I did take a header out of a shopping cart when I was young, plus fell down the stairs in my youth. But my mom says that I never lost consciousness, never vomited, wasn't confused, and after I was done crying (as most 3-year-olds will after getting hurt), I went on about my business with no trouble.
I have memory problems, migraines, get overloaded easily in loud/crowded/overstimulating environments, have never slept well, definitely have fatigue, have been depressed since early childhood, have word-finding issues (either can't find the word or will say the wrong word without even noticing), and I have seizures. That's pretty much every symptom that goes with a brain injury. Plus, I have prosopagnosia (face-blindness), which can be congenital, but can also be caused by brain injury or stroke.
There's just not been anything else that I can find that would explain so many of my symptoms. But I don't have a history of any one major traumatic injury. Is it possible to get a cumulative effect, or to have so many symptoms from a small injury?
I've had a head CT, MRI, and MRA, which were all completely normal. My eeg was slightly abnormal.
I'm currently getting accomodations in school for reading, memory, and attention problems. I'm not sure exactly what they put it through under. I originally registered with depression, but then registered with my seizures to try to get help with reading. The disability coordinator seemed like she wasn't sure if she could do much for me until she read my chart from the neuro, which documented my history of hitting my head as a child. Plus, the coordinator that I'm seeing is the one who handles both chronic health issues and brain injuries.
Am I just grasping at straws and trying to make a whole bunch of random stuff into a single problem? Or is this reasonable? Is there anything that can be done?

