Quizzes & Puzzles9 mins ago
Been feeling lightheaded thought it was low blood pressure
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Been feeling like this for a while, went to the doctors she took my bloodpressure and said that i was fine,then she made me play silly buggars, had me touching my nose and touching her finger then balancing on one leg and turning my hand back and forward what was she testing for?anyway she said i was ok, but i still feel like i am going down in a lift when i reach the edge of the pavement or feel like i am going on a escalator any ideas!!!! thanks
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Doc was testing to see if your co-ordination was affected or your balance or your blood pressure.
If the problem was your ears - like an infection - your eyes would jerk when tracking a finger (left to right), keeping your head still. Healthy follows smoothly.
You could have postural low blood pressure. This means your blood pressure falls suddenly on standing up from lying or sitting.
You could have developed vertigo which has a number of causes. Often side effects from other medicines are to blame! Be precise about how long you have been suffering & at what activities or time of day you are most affected.
As you are still experiencing these symptoms you should go back to your GP. Ask 'why' when you are asked to perform 'tests' - it becomes so routine to doc that they forget to explain to us mere mortals! lol. You should be told what problem each test is excluding.
Explain how this is affecting your life - resticting it - & reducing your confidence to go out alone. Ask how long these symptoms will last & at what point should you become worried or need a referral for further investigations.
Hope you feel better soon.
If the problem was your ears - like an infection - your eyes would jerk when tracking a finger (left to right), keeping your head still. Healthy follows smoothly.
You could have postural low blood pressure. This means your blood pressure falls suddenly on standing up from lying or sitting.
You could have developed vertigo which has a number of causes. Often side effects from other medicines are to blame! Be precise about how long you have been suffering & at what activities or time of day you are most affected.
As you are still experiencing these symptoms you should go back to your GP. Ask 'why' when you are asked to perform 'tests' - it becomes so routine to doc that they forget to explain to us mere mortals! lol. You should be told what problem each test is excluding.
Explain how this is affecting your life - resticting it - & reducing your confidence to go out alone. Ask how long these symptoms will last & at what point should you become worried or need a referral for further investigations.
Hope you feel better soon.
-- answer removed --
They do this to me a lot when I have dizziness and vertigo (I have menieres disease) to see if it seems to have any kind of neurological cause which would indicate certain problems which would need investigating.
I see you get any spinning sensation, like what is around you is moving or you're being pulled to the ground or have you had any problems with your hearing?
My ears also pop all the time which is part of the tinitus I get with meniere's.
Do you get any pressure in your ears as well as the popping?
Did the doctor check your ears or suggest anything like an inner ear infection or labarynthitis?
When you say for a while, how long are you talking?
I see you get any spinning sensation, like what is around you is moving or you're being pulled to the ground or have you had any problems with your hearing?
My ears also pop all the time which is part of the tinitus I get with meniere's.
Do you get any pressure in your ears as well as the popping?
Did the doctor check your ears or suggest anything like an inner ear infection or labarynthitis?
When you say for a while, how long are you talking?
I'd go back to the doctors.
There are medicines for dizziness if it's really affecting you, I have stemetil for the sickness and dizziness part of menieres. I think they can also prescribe buccastem.
I'd press for a cause though and get them to check your ears for any sign of infection or fluid.
Did they check your blood pressure standing up and sitting down?
Do you have a high salt intake prior to the episodes of dizziness?
There are medicines for dizziness if it's really affecting you, I have stemetil for the sickness and dizziness part of menieres. I think they can also prescribe buccastem.
I'd press for a cause though and get them to check your ears for any sign of infection or fluid.
Did they check your blood pressure standing up and sitting down?
Do you have a high salt intake prior to the episodes of dizziness?
Is is a pressure popping or general popping (like Rice Krispies in your ear) without pressure?
If tinnitus (noise), this may be of help including how to approach your doctor...
http://www.tuneouttinnitus.org.uk/home/whatcan ido/
Do you have any tendency to be anaemic?
If tinnitus (noise), this may be of help including how to approach your doctor...
http://www.tuneouttinnitus.org.uk/home/whatcan ido/
Do you have any tendency to be anaemic?
I know it well! I have medication to help ithat, pressure and other symptoms (betahistine and cortico steroids). I
t took me a loooong time to get help for my ear problems via various GP's, ENT, neurology and a specialist neurologist despite having symptoms for nearly 10 years, vertigo drop attacks and a mother with the same disease so it's not always easy going.
You can try and train yourself to distract yourself from the popping, focussing on other sounds for instance.
I find mine worse trying to get to sleep when it's quiet so put Sky News on in the background and tune my ears to that. As it's repetitive I eventally drift off.
I'd go back and be more forceful.
Ask whether it could be related to blood pressure change from standing and sitting and ask her to check, ask if it could be related to anaemia and ask if they can do a blood count (they may not if no other signs but worth asking) and ask them to check your ears for any sign of infection or fluid.
I can't comment on the cardio bit but ask about that as well.
t took me a loooong time to get help for my ear problems via various GP's, ENT, neurology and a specialist neurologist despite having symptoms for nearly 10 years, vertigo drop attacks and a mother with the same disease so it's not always easy going.
You can try and train yourself to distract yourself from the popping, focussing on other sounds for instance.
I find mine worse trying to get to sleep when it's quiet so put Sky News on in the background and tune my ears to that. As it's repetitive I eventally drift off.
I'd go back and be more forceful.
Ask whether it could be related to blood pressure change from standing and sitting and ask her to check, ask if it could be related to anaemia and ask if they can do a blood count (they may not if no other signs but worth asking) and ask them to check your ears for any sign of infection or fluid.
I can't comment on the cardio bit but ask about that as well.
No worries, happy to help :)
Many GP's aren't too good with ears so don't be shy asking for a referral to ENT if you are still suffering and not getting anywhere.
I should have been more forceful and let myself be fobbed off for a long time before I got the help I needed. It wasn't until one of the GP's saw me in the midst of a bad vertigo attack that they realised something needed to be done.
If it helps, make a diary, see if anything triggers it (salt intake affects mine - check sodium levels on packaging) and you can use it to show how much and how often it's affecting you eg hearing on the phone, conversations, TV etc..., trouble sleeping beacuse of it, however it affects you.
Good luck x
Many GP's aren't too good with ears so don't be shy asking for a referral to ENT if you are still suffering and not getting anywhere.
I should have been more forceful and let myself be fobbed off for a long time before I got the help I needed. It wasn't until one of the GP's saw me in the midst of a bad vertigo attack that they realised something needed to be done.
If it helps, make a diary, see if anything triggers it (salt intake affects mine - check sodium levels on packaging) and you can use it to show how much and how often it's affecting you eg hearing on the phone, conversations, TV etc..., trouble sleeping beacuse of it, however it affects you.
Good luck x
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