Diagnosed with "a seizure disorder" in 1980, I refused to go on medication until I absolutely had to the following year when I was hospitalized after a seizure. I could not call it "epilepsy" for 20 years; I was too embarrassed to admit it. Dilantin controlled the seizures but I would occasionally have a breakthrough seizure during the night. I was switched to Tegretol when I was diagnosed with osteoporosis and my neurologist at that time believed it was due to the Dilantin I had been on for about 18 years.
I only have nocturnal seizures since being on medication. I married in 1999 and my husband will tell me in the morning if I had a seizure during the night, usually occurring in the early morning hours. I typically will know before he tells me because of the headache, aching muscles and confusion. The more serious seizures have left me feeling out-of-touch for a week afterward. Food doesn't taste the same; I lose my appetite, sometimes have a metal taste in my mouth (blood? amalgam fillings?) I have the feeling of being outside my body watching myself. Of course, no one will understand what I'm going through so to them I just say, "Just not myself today."
I don't care for my neurologist, but I am limited in my area. However, I do have D.O. that is trying to help me with nutrition and supplements and I am reading 'Treating Epilepsy Naturally' and 'Epilepsy: A New Approach'.
I'll be 60 next year and I'm grateful after so long to have someone to 'talk to' about my epilepsy. I'm already understanding so much more about this just from reading various threads and books and have hopes of at least cutting back on meds, if not cutting out altogether. Thanks.
I only have nocturnal seizures since being on medication. I married in 1999 and my husband will tell me in the morning if I had a seizure during the night, usually occurring in the early morning hours. I typically will know before he tells me because of the headache, aching muscles and confusion. The more serious seizures have left me feeling out-of-touch for a week afterward. Food doesn't taste the same; I lose my appetite, sometimes have a metal taste in my mouth (blood? amalgam fillings?) I have the feeling of being outside my body watching myself. Of course, no one will understand what I'm going through so to them I just say, "Just not myself today."
I don't care for my neurologist, but I am limited in my area. However, I do have D.O. that is trying to help me with nutrition and supplements and I am reading 'Treating Epilepsy Naturally' and 'Epilepsy: A New Approach'.
I'll be 60 next year and I'm grateful after so long to have someone to 'talk to' about my epilepsy. I'm already understanding so much more about this just from reading various threads and books and have hopes of at least cutting back on meds, if not cutting out altogether. Thanks.