I'm in Scotland and posting on behalf of my mother who isn't quite computer literate.
I'm hoping that we can both benefit from this forum as this is all very new to us.
My mother hadn't been quite right for a few months, experiencing a sense of dissasociation,memory problems at times, deja vu and smells and tastes and colours seemed to be incredibly intense.
She continued for some time but,in June, went to her doctor who diagnosed her with anaemia,having no explanation for the above symptoms, and gave her iron tablets.
3 days after that visit my mother returned from night shift feeling very unwell and completely exhausted. She slept for far longer than is usual and had what appeared to be an absence seizure,lasting approximately 10 minutes.
A doctor was called who examined her and arranged transport to hospital.
She spent 8 days there and while there a lumbar puncture, ct scan and eeg were carried out. All were clear though the eeg did apparently show a slightly unusual sleep pattern.
She saw a neurologist two weeks ago who said he had no idea what her symptoms were, but that he didn't believe she had epilepsy. He arranged for blood tests, another eeg and an MRI to be carried out between August and September.
She returned home still displaying many of the symptoms, and saw her neurologist a few weeks later.
Then last Thursday she had a grand mal seizure. An ambulance was called and she was admitted to hospital. She had a further absence seizure while in hospital, lasting about 4 minutes, but was discharged in the evening on a low dose of Lamotrigine, after the hospital contacted her neurologist.
Since then she hasn't improved and today has been worst of all. She believes that she took another absence or partial seizure today and felt much more ill and disorientated today, becoming very distressed as a result.
We called the dr out again who is going to speak to her neurologist tomorrow and possibly have her admitted to the hospital that he is based at.
My mother is a support worker, who deals with people who have epilepsy but neither of us ever imagined quite how ill it can make one feel, or the emotional toll of feeling so ill, and of losing the ability to drive, and we're just beginning our journey.
We're both hoping to learn a lot from epilepsy forums about living with, and controlling epilepsy, and to have a place to vent when necessary.
I'm hoping that we can both benefit from this forum as this is all very new to us.
My mother hadn't been quite right for a few months, experiencing a sense of dissasociation,memory problems at times, deja vu and smells and tastes and colours seemed to be incredibly intense.
She continued for some time but,in June, went to her doctor who diagnosed her with anaemia,having no explanation for the above symptoms, and gave her iron tablets.
3 days after that visit my mother returned from night shift feeling very unwell and completely exhausted. She slept for far longer than is usual and had what appeared to be an absence seizure,lasting approximately 10 minutes.
A doctor was called who examined her and arranged transport to hospital.
She spent 8 days there and while there a lumbar puncture, ct scan and eeg were carried out. All were clear though the eeg did apparently show a slightly unusual sleep pattern.
She saw a neurologist two weeks ago who said he had no idea what her symptoms were, but that he didn't believe she had epilepsy. He arranged for blood tests, another eeg and an MRI to be carried out between August and September.
She returned home still displaying many of the symptoms, and saw her neurologist a few weeks later.
Then last Thursday she had a grand mal seizure. An ambulance was called and she was admitted to hospital. She had a further absence seizure while in hospital, lasting about 4 minutes, but was discharged in the evening on a low dose of Lamotrigine, after the hospital contacted her neurologist.
Since then she hasn't improved and today has been worst of all. She believes that she took another absence or partial seizure today and felt much more ill and disorientated today, becoming very distressed as a result.
We called the dr out again who is going to speak to her neurologist tomorrow and possibly have her admitted to the hospital that he is based at.
My mother is a support worker, who deals with people who have epilepsy but neither of us ever imagined quite how ill it can make one feel, or the emotional toll of feeling so ill, and of losing the ability to drive, and we're just beginning our journey.
We're both hoping to learn a lot from epilepsy forums about living with, and controlling epilepsy, and to have a place to vent when necessary.