Re: [TMIC] bandingDalton,

I was told by my neuro that once you have TM that you are more susceptible to 
MS.      Your April attack sounds like your typical TM initial attack with the
back pain, but I have not heard of convulsions going along with it.             
 What does your neuro say about it and what meds have been given to you to help
control the convulsions?

Janice



From: Dalton Garis 
Sent: Sunday, June 06, 2010 9:52 PM
To: Kevin Wolfthal ; Patricia Cooley ; [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [TMIC] banding


Friends;

What I pit together is this sequence of events for the onset of TM. 

  1.. I got sick with classical MS symptoms on the 9th of January after 
suffering increasingly with precursors that got stronger before the big attack 
on the 9th.  Banding, or what is termed "the MS hug," began then and has never 
left for more than a few hours. 
  2.. I got this totally new thing on 24th of April. This was preceded the 
night before with back pain of a kind I had never experienced before, intense, 
but not so bad when compared to all the other back pains I have had.  It went 
across the bottom of the back, came on very quickly and only lasted the night.  
The next day after doing my economics lecture at the Institute, I bacan to look 
and feel very sick.  Then I began to convulse.  My back and leg muscles would 
arch me backwards, then my stomach, shoulders and neck muscles would arch me 
the other way.  It wouldn't stop and I was taken by ambulance to the hospital.  
Then the banding got much stronger and went farther on the sides and deeper 
into the tissue. 
  3.. After that TM attack on 24 April the one-side-only MS symptoms almost 
disappeared and I have been dealing with TM both-sides symptoms, plus the 
attacks of muscular convulsions ever since.  Convulsions come every couple of 
days, usually during speech or stress, and the banding never goes away now.


Today I get ready for tomorrow's flight by stocking up on meds, and getting a 
signed note from the doctor explaining to any who may witness it (1) that my 
convulsions are not dangerous, require no medical intervention and that 
therefore, I should be allowed to board the plane; and (2) that the plane need 
not put down if and when these convulsions are witnessed on board.

I hope this helps understanding what happens sometimes.  I believe, although I 
can't prove it, that the MS opened the door for the TM; that the TM combined 
somehow with the MS; so that now I have recurrent transverse symptoms 
facilitated by the presence of the MS.  This leaves me with with these TM 
attacks of convulsions followed by extreme limb weakness.

Dalton Garis
Abu Dhabi/New York.


On 7/6/10 6:10 AM, "Kevin Wolfthal" <[email protected]> wrote:



  Patricia,
  I just started getting the banding in the past year, after 22 years of 
  having tm.

  It's a girdling feeling in my upper torso. When it started I thought I was
  having a heart attack. I had my heart checked a few weeks ago and it's
  fine except for occasional tachycardia which I am treated for.

  The last two years have been extremely stressful. I've lost a lot of weight
  and have great anxiety as a result. I am guessing the banding is related.
  Someone mentioned eating causing banding. I've noticed a relationship
  between eating and banding also, but it seems to be worse when I don't
  eat. TM is a weird animal.

  My tm started with horrible foot pain. Now my feet are mostly numb,
  but I sometimes get the stabbing pain.

  Kevin





  Patricia Cooley wrote:
  > Kevin I guess I am lucky I don't have banding, just horrible neurophy 
  > in my feet which drives me insane.  I sure wish there was something 
  > they could do for all our pain.
  > Patti - Wisconsin
  >
  > On Sat, Jun 5, 2010 at 3:28 PM, Kevin Wolfthal <[email protected] 
  > <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
  >
  >
  >
  >     Does anyone find that the sensation of banding worsens during times of
  >     emotional stress?
  >
  >     Kevin
  >
  >

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