I'm 90 and in the last year I've had 4 instances of my nervous system shutting down for a few seconds during which time I lose control of my body and collapse. I don't black out and can see everything that happens. It always happens during some body motion such as putting on a shirt, bending slightly, stooping and never lasts more than a few seconds and I'm normal till the next one. In each case flexing the spine even if only slightly. I hit the floor very hard as I can't put out my arms to stop the fall.

Had 2 MRI's of my spine that indicated bone spurs and calcification. No treatment was recommended and I fell again yesterday.

Anyone suggest a procedure?

My son has had cataplexy for a couple years, and this sounds a lot like his description as well. From what I've read, it's a part of narcolepsy. He says his are triggered by happy, laughing, reminiscing type emotions. He sees a psychiatrist and a neurologist and has gotten some meds that help him not have them, or at least lessen their frequency. Since these docs have helped him, I thought I'd pass it along for what it's worth. I wish you good luck and good health! Karla B


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jenatsky,

VSE. First time I've heard that. Wow.

The only requirement for the attack is that some part of my body must be in motion stretching in scope from while putting my arm in the sleeve of my shirt while standing I immediately shut down and fall to the floor head first to an attack when I was bent over picking up a cell phone and collapse. In each of the four cases I lost total control of my body. The duration is no longer than a second or two and the only after effects are from my falling body impinging with the floor or other objects. My vision remains intact thru the attack. It has never occurred while I'm in a sitting position. I don't like the happening.

I will google it.

Regards,

tadueo

jenatsky,

I think we can rule out VS as during an episode the victim "passes out".

In my episodes I remain conscious and maintain vision and the duration is about a second from which I return with no after effects.

Thanks anyway,

tadueo


i hear you.

My cardiologist says that, healthwise, I'm in the upper 2% of his patient's in my age group. I exercise twice a day with routines provided by my health therapist. I was an athlete, tennis, wrestling, in my younger days and yet I still have CHF, A-fib and high BP .

I think all my Docs are clueless as to what causes my nervous system shut downs.

It's like someone throws a switch and I drop.

tadueo

I have recently experienced several nervous system shutdowns when attempting to bend over the last one last May 21st. It's like someone threw a switch and I drop like a stone. Last time I seriously injured my forehead. I can still see during the shutdown but can do nothing to protect myself. It lasts less than a second. My neurologist says I have severe spinal degeneration with major buildup on the bones. My neurosurgeon says" there is nothing for me to do" although I've heard of operations where these bones are scraped to relieve this situation.

I'd greatly appreciate any relevant info.

@tadueo I can appreciate your concern for the episodes when you are suddenly falling, and in reading some of your other posts, I see that you are 90 years old and have significant spinal degeneration and bone spurring. My question to you is what are you doing to prevent falling?

My dad had a skull fracture and traumatic brain injury that changed his life. He fell and hit his head on concrete when he was outside cutting down some invasive tree growing against the foundation of his house. He was never the same after that although he did live many more years. At 90, you may not do well with spine surgery. It is a major trauma to the body as well as the general anesthesia being hard on the body. Sometimes older patients do not come out of anesthesia so easily. My mom was one and needed oxygen after a parathyroid surgery. With surgery you always have to balance the risk against the benefit. There may not be enough enough benefit to make surgery a good option for you. Surgery can make you worse and cause permanent pain.

I am a spine surgery patient and had a cervical fusion because of spinal cord compression. I also had some issues with muscle spasms that rotated my C1 & C2 that before my spine surgery caused sudden vertigo and loss of balance. That happens because of the vertebral arteries that run along the sides of the cervical vertebrae, and if the vertebrae are twisted, the arteries get stretched. All I had to do was look up at a bird flying over and lost my balance and fell. You could have similar issues if your vertebrae have some slipping out of normal positions and your head movement triggers this.

Have you talked to your doctor about using a wheel chair to prevent falling? It happens so suddenly for you and you say that you cannot prevent it from happening when you bend over. The risk of injury is huge for a person your age if you fall. If you hit your head, it could be fatal. With my dad, he was in the hospital for about 3 months, and the doctors had to drill holes in his skull to relieve the pressure of swelling inside the skull after the injury. Brain injuries are very slow to heal and may never recover completely. My dad had to relearn language and how to swallow food again.

A physical therapist may be able to help some if there are other reasons for falling that are related to loss of strength. Have you talked to your doctor about physical conditioning? Would you consider being proactive and trying a wheelchair? My mom uses one because she has pain in her feet and difficulty walking and has no balance. She lives alone, and if she tried to walk, she would end up falling, so she decided to have a wheelchair to maintain her independence. She has severe osteoporosis and a fall in the past broke her pelvis in 3 places and her foot. She spent 3 months in a nursing home rehab, and then went through foot surgery because all the tendons shortened and her foot twisted. That helped her be able to put her foot flat on the floor again, but she is still severely disabled and walking is painful and very difficult. Prevention could have saved a lot of pain and disability. It also affects the entire family because I've had to live with my parents and take care of them when they could not take care of themselves.

Jennifer,

Thank you for your informative response. After hearing of your families health problems I feel mine are minor in comparison. I haven't had a shutdown episode since May 21 even though I've tried to trigger one by going through all kinds of bending motions. Over a padded floor, of course. I'm very careful to bend over in areas where my falling won't cause injury. Concrete floors are out. I've learned to bend at the knees before bending my back which seems to help.

I presently do two sets of exercise therapy daily as prescribed by a local clinic.

I keep the idea of a wheelchair in my back pocket in case my condition should become worse. My PSP recommended a cane as an interim step.

I haven't ruled out a bone scraping op as I have two associates with successful outcomes although I hear what you say about the severity of these operations and I am 90 .

Me: "Doctor, it only happens when I bend over." Neurosurgeon:"Don't bend over."

Tadueo

The Banta Shut-in can be reached by hiking down Estufa Canyon, the subjectof another virtual field trip, to TornilloCreek ("tornillo" means "screw" in Spanish, named after the screw bean mesquitefound there). Myfirst trip through Estufa Canyon was with my brother, Randy, in late December of2009, and a winter storm was brewing (but only dropped a few cold sprinkles onus during the night). This time I was going it alone in April, while my brotherwas birding in other parts of the park. Although I am known as asort of "desert rat", I failed to take enough water on this trip. The weatherturned out to be much hotter than I anticipated, and I went through the waterfaster than I had projected. Just because it was chilly in Austin doesn't meanthe same would be true for Big Bend. I knew May was reputed to be the hottestmonth in Big Bend (and then the western monsoon should set in), and here itwas, April, just one month earlier.

However, at the time I didn't think water would be much of a problem, becauseI was pretty sure there was water at the Banta Shut-in, through which TornilloCreek flows (sometimes), and I have a filtering system I carry in my backpack.If not, I'd have to cut my visit short without getting to study the geologyaround the shut-in, which was a major reason for doing the hike in the firstplace. Fortunately, there was plenty of water despite it not having rained inthe park for four months. I did learn one thing that I didn't know (but shouldhave figured out). The dried, cracked mud around the pools of stagnant water atthe shut-in has not-so-dry mud beneath it. In fact, it is as slick as aLouisiana used-car salesman. So I got an unexpected bath. The following photoshows the aftermath of that mistake. The water is surprisingly cool andrefreshing. If only I had my swimming suit on. These pools are important forthe wildlife, and I wonder if any were looking at me floundering around in thewater and thinking, "Ugh! How disgusting! I'm not drinking that!" 152ee80cbc

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