magid: (Default)
[personal profile] magid
Last night included a visit to the nurse-practitioner, and an a cappella show.

I'd made the appointment because the double vision I was getting, on top of the month and a half of headaches, scared me. Hypochondriac that I can be, I thought about brain tumors and all sorts of scary possibilities.

Happily, this is unlikely.

The nurse listened to my timeline of events, then started tests. Ears, eyes, and throat had lights shined in them (so bright my eyes had strangely-shaped and colored after-images for quite some time). Then she tested my reflexes. I had to alternate touching index fingers to my nose with my eyes shut, and touch fingers and thumbs in a pattern with eyes shut. She bonked me by the knees, and my legs shot out. What surprised me was that she went on to hit near my elbow, and on the back of my foot. Nothing happened, but apparently as long as both sides do the same thing, and don't do whatever particular wrong thing, it's fine. I took off shoes and socks, and she ran the tip of some scissors in a curve along the bottom of each foot; she was surprised there wasn't a reflex reaction to that, but in the end, all my reflexes are ok, so it's unlikely I have major brain damage or anything. Hooray.

Instead, I apparently have a vision migraine (?). I now have drugs (well, drug, a Midrin-substitute) to take. If I still have problems in a couple of weeks, I get a CAT scan. Oh, and I need to see an opthamologist.

I walked to the All Asia Cafe to meet Bitty (and, as it turned out, a recently-returned Bubblebabble) for an a cappella performance.

I'd not been to this place before. The name made me thing of something like the Middle East, but apparently it's more bar than cafe. There are small booths along the wall, some high tables with stools, and the bar in the middle of the room. Some interesting art on the walls, too.

Apparently the food is mediocre. I tried a mango pearl (tapioca) drink. It was interesting. I like tapioca, but was surprised to see that they were brown in this drink, looking like bits of date lurking at the bottom of the glass. They were large, so the straw that came with was wider than usual, which made it look rather... medical.

Turns out there was a cover charge. In another small-world moment, the guy taking the covers was someone I know slightly from work.

I hadn't realized there would be two groups. The first was the Harvard Callbacks, and they were quite good. The corner area that was the stage was far from an ideal place to perform, with some speakers casting strange shadows, the acoustics a bit strange, and some posts in the way of sight lines. Still, they did a good job. I was surprised that they left one song into the other group's set, though.
The other group, Soundstage 7, was a hextet (is that really a word?) including Bitty's friend Hyounpark. They used microphones, which were a mixed blessing. At times they seemed to work fine, while at others, not at all. I missed some of the banter between songs, for instance, and there were some microphone sounds at times, too. The music was a lot of fun. I knew only one or two of the songs, and enjoyed the lot of them. Picachu definitely stood out, and the "in *these* shoes" song, too, for fun lyrics. I think I'd like to hear them in a better venue.
Oh, and I have to mention Hyounpark's shoes, clunky thick-soled black shoes he could do en pointe in... with three silver stars on each toe.

By the walk home, the drug had knocked out the headache :-), and it felt like if I had just a bit more mental energy to focus, I might've forced the double vision away, too. I hoped a good night's sleep would help, and I think it has, some, but it's not quite over yet. I hope it ends soon...
F

Date: 2003-03-12 06:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] surrealestate.livejournal.com
Before medical attention:
*holds up one finger* "How many fingers do you see?"
"Two"
*holds up two fingers* "How many fingers do you see?"
"Two"

After medical attention:
*holds up one finger* "How many fingers do you see?"
"One"
*holds up two fingers* "How many fingers do you see?"
"One"

I'm glad the headache is gone, and I hope you're soon back to seeing everything once.

Longest lasting migraine I've ever heard of

Date: 2003-03-12 07:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hrafn.livejournal.com
Wow. Glad it's nothing worse, and that the achey parts haven't been so terrible. I've had migraines accompanied by funky blind spots, but they were very short-lived.

Date: 2003-03-12 08:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] magid.livejournal.com
Well, actually, the headache was back this morning, but the meds seem to have worked again, and the vision seems a bit better, too. So perhaps it's a bit more of a process for getting rid of it, but I think (hope) I'm on the road towards an unpained brain, and single vision (hrm. Something about that last sounds metaphorically unpleasant, "but a single thought"-ish. Ah, well.)
s

Re: Longest lasting migraine I've ever heard of

Date: 2003-03-12 08:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] magid.livejournal.com
Yeah, it's a big weight that isn't there anymore, knowing it's "just a headache."

Funky blind spots doesn't sound good; that would definitely freak me out. The nurse mentioned that her husband sometimes gets migraines that make him completely blind in one eye. At least it's temporary.
"

Re: Longest lasting migraine I've ever heard of

Date: 2003-03-12 08:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hrafn.livejournal.com
The first time it happened I was 16, and my parents did a bit of a freak-out, until the opthamologist ensured them it wasn't anything to worry about. I've recognized it the other times it's happened, so it doesn't weird me out; it's kind of cool - all shimmery with rainbow colors and jagged edges, blocking various areas of vision (it's always been only on one side, and it changes position and size) and the headache comes later, so I have some warning.

Re: Longest lasting migraine I've ever heard of

Date: 2003-03-12 08:49 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] magid.livejournal.com
Once you get the vision effects, is there any way to head off the headache (um, as it were)?

The vision stuff came far after the headache started for me, which was worrying, since I'd heard about people having visual problems at the start of headaches, like yours, but not later.

(Hrm. Pointless thought: if I'd had more pain, maybe it would've been a shorter headache?)
l

other tests I'd forgotten

Date: 2003-03-12 08:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] magid.livejournal.com
Walking around on my toes, then on my heels.
Trying to stick my tongue out flat.

Re: Longest lasting migraine I've ever heard of

Date: 2003-03-12 09:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hrafn.livejournal.com
I've never really tried to head off the achey part, just to get somewhere dark where I can nap. They're not that bad, as far as headaches go. Perhaps if I took something, or escaped into sleep sooner . . . though once I couldn't; I was trapped at work. That sucked.

Date: 2003-03-12 09:38 am (UTC)
cellio: (tulips)
From: [personal profile] cellio
I'm glad to hear that it's probably not a tumor or the like. I've never heard of that kind of headache; I hope the drugs can make it stop.

Seeing an opthamologist sounds like a good idea. It's something I think people should do at least every few years anyway, because the "puff test" for glaucoma that your optometrist does is highly variable in accuracy. You need the scary glowing-blue touch-the-eyeball test every now and hten just to make sure.

Glaucoma test

Date: 2003-03-12 09:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] magid.livejournal.com
I think I've only ever had the puff test. "Glowing-blue touch-the-eyeball test" does sound scary, or at least squicky.
7

Re: Glaucoma test

Date: 2003-03-12 10:21 am (UTC)
cellio: (Monica)
From: [personal profile] cellio
It's actually not bad; you don't feel anything because they give you a topical anesthetic in eyedrop form first. But it looks scary, because you can't just close your eyes or look away the way you can for other scary medical procedures (like needles, in my case).

So they give you the eyedrops and then you rest your chin and forehead in a brace to help you hold still, and they touch your eye to take a pressure reading. It's over in a few seconds. I'm not sure what's with the blue light; I guess they need light so they can see what they're doing, but I don't know why it's blue. At least it doesn't leave after-images the way bright white/yellow lights can.

I have glaucoma, so I get this test a couple times a year. (The puff test isn't accurate enough to be useful for tracking, I'm told. So I haven't had one of those in ages.)

Re: Glaucoma test

Date: 2003-03-12 10:37 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] magid.livejournal.com
Just the description of that gives me shivers. Not that I wouldn't go through with it, but having to watch something come at my eyes...
(I tend not to watch needles going into me either, and tried to avoid seeing the pins in my hand when they were in; that brought me much closer to fainting than I've been before.).

I don't know anything about glaucoma, other than it has to do with pressure in the eye. Is it something that can be treated, or is it more a monitoring to see that things don't get worse?

Re: Glaucoma test

Date: 2003-03-12 10:53 am (UTC)
cellio: (Monica)
From: [personal profile] cellio
It's weird in the way that putting contact lenses into your eye is weird. It takes a while to get past that "ack! something is coming RIGHT AT MY EYE" stage, but it's possible. I'm pretty easy to squick when it comes to medical stuff, and I'm ok with it.

Glaucoma is high pressure of the fluids within your eyeball. Untreated, this puts pressure on your optic nerve, which slowly gets crushed. I'm not sure exactly what causes the high pressure; I imagine that it's vaguely like having high blood pressure, maybe. (No direct relation that I'm aware of, though; my BP is just fine.)

Glaucoma can be treated but not cured. So unless something changes, I'll be taking medicine for it for the rest of my life. Oh well. Things could be much worse. Untreated it can lead to blindness, so people who have it or who are at risk for it or who just haven't had it checked in a while should get it checked. Mine was diagnosed when I was 11, before it had a chance to do any real damage. Treatment for me has consisted of eyedrops; my father (who also has it) also takes oral meds. But the treatment hasn't been more invasive than that.

One symptom connected with glaucoma is seing rainbow halos around bright lights (like headlights at night). I don't know what other clues there are that one might be at risk; I was getting tested regularly because I inherited all my father's eye problems, so we figured I'd get this one too. I get the impression that even absent any predisposition toward it, one should get checked every few years just to be safe.

I am, of course, not a doctor or other person with actual credentials...

Re: Glaucoma test

Date: 2003-03-12 10:59 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] magid.livejournal.com
Well, I had contacts for years and managed to put them in/take them out (holding my eyelids, I admit), so this doesn't sound too bad.

Thanks for the explanation of glaucoma.

At first I read it and thought, "but I see rainbow halos sometimes!" Then I realized that that's when I'm looking at things without my glasses on (I'm extremely nearsighted), so of course they look strange...

Still, it sounds like it's time for me to get my eyes checked.
s

Date: 2003-03-13 12:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hyounpark.livejournal.com
I'm glad you liked Pikachu. That's one of my favorites, too, since we're all 3rd graders at heart. We also like Fatso because we all like food! I wish the mikes hadn't acted up so much; the All Asia main system was turned up really high and it made everything hyper-sensitive. Oh, and I think we're a sextet because we're so sexy. ;)

Oh, and I thought it was weird that they offered to sell CDs, then left before they had a chance to do so. However, they did come over at the last minute to open and did it for free and they're in the middle of midterms, so it's not as bad as it seemed.

But I'm glad you're feeling better and not suffering from any rare diseases. Hypochondria is only fun when you don't actually have any of the ailments that you fear.

Thankfully,
Hyoun

Date: 2003-03-13 04:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] magid.livejournal.com
I think the Callbacks might've thought that since they gave people the chance to buy CDs during their break, no one was likely to buy later. Or something.

When will your sexy sextet be performing (in metro Boston) next?

And I'm still waiting for the vision to clear... so there's still much for the hypochondriac to work with... *wry grin*

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