We are talking about  the need for a neurologist.  I just saw mine 
yesterday.  For my pain  he recommended a pain pump.  I'm going to have a trial 
pump 
put in to see  if it will work for me.  If it does, they will implant a 
permanent one in  my body, next to the spine with a catheter leading out to my 
abdomen where the  pump can be refilled periodically.  The medication last 
about six months  before it must be refilled.
 
I have so much pain  because I have a broken leg that is not healing.  It's 
been almost 1  & 1/2 years.  The pain is intense on top of my TM pain.  I'm 
 taking strong medication to just get by.
 
Guess I 'talked' your  ears off.  Will go for now.
 
Judy in  Michigan
 
 
In a message dated 1/16/2013 8:16:47 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
[email protected] writes:

The description you gave sounds familiar. I didn't and could not have  gone 
back to my banking job. My biggest anxiety in the early days of TM was my  
inability to think.  It took four months before i could read And longer  to 
comprehend. I got stuck or stumbled on words when trying to talk and  
literally sounded drunk.  Had a hard time between left and right.  Couldn't 
follow 
directions. Got lost in buildings, because I always turned the  wrong way. 
Did things backwards. I had to have a note for  everything. 

I worked hard to overcome those issues.  I sat  for hours reading tmic and 
the TM forum.  Typed with two fingers to write  my posts, tried for days to 
make a flow-chart, and even had a nine year old  come after school two days 
a week to play kids games and build items with  Legos.


I felt like the steroids fried my brain.  I'm much, much better and  thank 
God everyday for the improvements.  


Patti V - Michigan 



Sent from my iPad

On Jan 15, 2013, at 10:44 PM, Dalton Garis <[email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected]) >  wrote:




 
Cognitive problems, did you say???


Please elaborate.  I was a high-flying associate professor  economist in an 
engineering school when getting TM in 2010.  Then I  began to experience 
the unthinkable—literally.  I could go into class  and do the entire lecture 
from my head.  But after TM I would get to a  point in the delivery when it 
was time to pull out some element from my head  and, it wouldn't be there!  
It had always been there, but now I  couldn't recall it.  It was shocking and 
humiliating to say the least.  It finally did me in.


Please tell me about these cognitive problems you mentioned.


DG



From: <[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) >
Date: Tuesday, 15 January 2013 9:53  PM
To: tmic <[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) >
Subject: [TMIC] need for a  neuroloist
Resent-From: <[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) >
Resent-Date: Tue, 15 Jan 2013 18:53:27  -0800



I had the same neurologist for first five years of TM.  I  had several 
MRI's and he was satisfied that I didn't have MS (TM left me  with cognitive 
problems).  I had been on the same medications for two  years, my primary said 
he would renew my rx when needed, and I didn't feel  the need to contnue 
seeing my neuro (140 mile round trip).

That worked for another two years until my primary moved and his  
replacement refused to write my rx for the Lyrica and Baclofen.  She  referred 
me to 
her neuro buddy, but I made an appointment with another neuro  whom I had 
heard was "the best" from one of his MS patients.   

The new Neuro agreed with my med regime, agreed that there was  no need for 
MRI's, and agreed that I didn't need to see him oftener than  annually 
unless I had neurological changes.  The new neuro also  understood my 
frustraton 
with a primary who would not renew my Lyrica and  Baclofen rx.  

I never went back to that primary and have since seen a  Physicians 
Assistant for my regular illnesses.

I didn't think I needed a neurologist.  However, I realize  that as long as 
I need Baclofen and Lyrica and it is wise to have one  available.

Patti V. -  Michigan


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