occb
New
- Messages
- 1,190
- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 0
*Long post. You have my deepest apologies and thank you to anyone who wades through it and even more thanks to anyone who could advise me*
It may or may not be appropriate for me to post here, but I have some questions that members of this forum might be able to answer, or guide me in the right direction.
I'm posting on behalf of my boyfriend who was diagnosed last year as "bipolar II with agoraphobia." The problem is even the psychiatrist admits his symptoms don't fit the categories very well -- he had symptoms from many categories, but these areas the doctor was able to check off more of his symptoms. He has exhibited these symptoms since he was a teenager. Lately I've begun to suspect he may suffer from a type of epilepsy (I know it's dangerous to self diagnose, but if his symptoms are familiar to anyone here, it may lend weight to convince him to go to a neurologist).
I began suspecting epilepsy when the other day we were getting out of the car and he went to unbuckle his seatbelt and froze. I called his name several times, but he didn't move. He says he was aware of my calling his name, but couldn't respond.
We began talking about it and here's a list of symptoms he's had on-and-off since adolescence:
Freezing and staring and being unable to "snap out of it"
Body jerks -- once he a had a persistent arm spasm and went to the doctor, but the doctor was unable to help him. It went away after a few hours.
Drops things. It's like his hands go numb and he just lets go.
He falls over for no reason. He says it's almost like he's pushed over because he can't stop himself from falling. I've come home and found mystery bruises which he can't remember getting.
Vivid dreams, night sweats. Sometimes he punches the walls in his sleep, and sometimes he will have full body twitches on and off for the whole night.
He's woken up to his arm straight in the air, and then accidentally punched himself in the face when he couldn't stop it dropping.
He used to see bright flashing lights in the corners of both eyes. So much so that he reacted to them.
He does have mood problems -- extended depression, extended hypomanic moods and aggressive moods (which he keeps under wraps very well)
His panic attacks were the severest kind, and last much longer than they should (hours instead of minutes).
He gets nausea, dizziness and sweats out of the blue. Most recently it was after taking tylenol 3.
He hears phantom sounds. He often asks if I called him, but I haven't said a word.
Sometimes he has problems forming words, or processing what people are saying to him. Sometimes he loses time, or is confused to the day or time.
Running away as a teen. He never knew why he ran, he just felt compelled to.
All this was prompted by him admitting to me that sometimes he smells burnt toast. It'll happen a few times in the day for a few days in a row, and then go away for a while.
He had all these symptoms before ever going to see a psychiatrist -- he first went for depression issues, but all antidepressants except Effexor worsened his panic attacks.
Last year he began lamotrigine, and he was like a different person. He was more aware and energetic, focused and mostly slept soundly. He rarely stared off, fell over less, had fewer jerky movements, his moods stabilized (it's prescribed for bipolar as well) and hasn't had a panic attack since.
Recently, due to a severe back injury, he was prescribed neurontin in conjunction with Elavil (for sleep) and some of the old symptoms came back with a vengeance, like the staring incident in the car. Recently he's been punching the walls again, sweating, grinding his teeth and once woke up to find his arm was in the air, and he couldn't stop it from crashing down on me.
Is it possible the psych got his diagnosis wrong? Has anyone else out there been misdiagnosed with a mental illness, when in fact it was epilesy?
It may or may not be appropriate for me to post here, but I have some questions that members of this forum might be able to answer, or guide me in the right direction.
I'm posting on behalf of my boyfriend who was diagnosed last year as "bipolar II with agoraphobia." The problem is even the psychiatrist admits his symptoms don't fit the categories very well -- he had symptoms from many categories, but these areas the doctor was able to check off more of his symptoms. He has exhibited these symptoms since he was a teenager. Lately I've begun to suspect he may suffer from a type of epilepsy (I know it's dangerous to self diagnose, but if his symptoms are familiar to anyone here, it may lend weight to convince him to go to a neurologist).
I began suspecting epilepsy when the other day we were getting out of the car and he went to unbuckle his seatbelt and froze. I called his name several times, but he didn't move. He says he was aware of my calling his name, but couldn't respond.
We began talking about it and here's a list of symptoms he's had on-and-off since adolescence:
Freezing and staring and being unable to "snap out of it"
Body jerks -- once he a had a persistent arm spasm and went to the doctor, but the doctor was unable to help him. It went away after a few hours.
Drops things. It's like his hands go numb and he just lets go.
He falls over for no reason. He says it's almost like he's pushed over because he can't stop himself from falling. I've come home and found mystery bruises which he can't remember getting.
Vivid dreams, night sweats. Sometimes he punches the walls in his sleep, and sometimes he will have full body twitches on and off for the whole night.
He's woken up to his arm straight in the air, and then accidentally punched himself in the face when he couldn't stop it dropping.
He used to see bright flashing lights in the corners of both eyes. So much so that he reacted to them.
He does have mood problems -- extended depression, extended hypomanic moods and aggressive moods (which he keeps under wraps very well)
His panic attacks were the severest kind, and last much longer than they should (hours instead of minutes).
He gets nausea, dizziness and sweats out of the blue. Most recently it was after taking tylenol 3.
He hears phantom sounds. He often asks if I called him, but I haven't said a word.
Sometimes he has problems forming words, or processing what people are saying to him. Sometimes he loses time, or is confused to the day or time.
Running away as a teen. He never knew why he ran, he just felt compelled to.
All this was prompted by him admitting to me that sometimes he smells burnt toast. It'll happen a few times in the day for a few days in a row, and then go away for a while.
He had all these symptoms before ever going to see a psychiatrist -- he first went for depression issues, but all antidepressants except Effexor worsened his panic attacks.
Last year he began lamotrigine, and he was like a different person. He was more aware and energetic, focused and mostly slept soundly. He rarely stared off, fell over less, had fewer jerky movements, his moods stabilized (it's prescribed for bipolar as well) and hasn't had a panic attack since.
Recently, due to a severe back injury, he was prescribed neurontin in conjunction with Elavil (for sleep) and some of the old symptoms came back with a vengeance, like the staring incident in the car. Recently he's been punching the walls again, sweating, grinding his teeth and once woke up to find his arm was in the air, and he couldn't stop it from crashing down on me.
Is it possible the psych got his diagnosis wrong? Has anyone else out there been misdiagnosed with a mental illness, when in fact it was epilesy?