So Lets Shaft Our Farmers.....
News2 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by maillme. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hi maillme, did you not defend yourself? and tell her about the amount of exercise you're doing.
you've just explained how much exercise you're taking and that you are working very hard towards a personal goal. Losing Weight yes?
Go back to the docs again, and talk to her as an equal, because that is what she is. explain you are not happy and indeed very worried about your head aches. If you are not happy or you think there maybe a personality clash, then see another doctor.
Look up information on blood pressure, and head aches.
what specialist should you be seeing if any? and if you are not under the hospital and a consultant, should you be?
Carry on with the good work and don't ever feel you are being made to feel small, if she made you feel embarrassed, then you should have looked at her in the eye and told her so in a calm and nice manner, and always with a smile :-)
personally i think the ones where you actually listen, rather than it being done digitally are much better ... i work as a nurse, and used to work on a ward where we had to do b/p's every 2 hours. All the drs and nurses preferred the old fashioned way rather that the machine. I would be much more inclined to trust my own ears rather than a computer chip
i think it's not unreasonable for the doctor to assume that the headache is due to raised bp, as most of the people he/she would see with both would have 1 caused by the other, and your blood pressure has gone up. Headaches can creep up on you even at relatively low blood pressures, but having said that, a consultation should be more like a partnership. i think all of us get doctoritis when we are actually sitting in fronmt of one and talking about a subject so important like our bodiliy health. It's not worth stressing over, as this will make your bp go up, so i would just see someone else in the practice next time
I have also noticed that the digital meters can give lower values than the older mercury column type, but most medical persons will tell you that the digital ones especially if it is the wrist cuff type can give unreliable readings and they will usually prefer to accept the mercury column type, so you might be on a loser if you dispute her readings, and the other point is it is better to work on the higher value than the lower just from the logical point of view.
You don't mention if you take vitamin supplements ? but high doses of vitamins can trigger headaches. Vitamins sometimes responsible for head pain include vitamin A in high doses and B vitamins (especially niacin).
just thinking of an easy wat to express the listening part
when your heart beats it spurts blood to your body in a wave or pulse, like you feel in your wrist. When you tighten the cuff up by inflatingg it, when its too tight, you cant hear anything, as the blood is being prevented from pulsing down your arm due to the pressure outside. Then you gently release the pressure, and when you hear the blood thumping again, that presuure is equal on the machine to the pressure your making your blood pump at (measured in mm of mercury ie the amount of upward pressure it would take to hold up a coloumn of say 180 mm of mercury in the tube)
with me so far?
anyway, so you are listening to the blood going thump thump thump in time with your heart, then when you stop hearing it, that is the lower number thus giving you a reading of, say 180/60.
I know i was crap at explaining that, but ho hum!