Join Our Community!
Share
Conditions and Diseases > Stroke Forum > TIA's, Small Strokes, memory, cognative, What?
What happens during a stroke? What increases your chances of having a stroke? Stroke basics and info on the two types of stroke here....
Strokes can happen with virtually no warning signs. Learn the symptoms of stroke so that you can take immediate action in case of emergency....
User Profile
Q: TIA's, Small Strokes, memory, cognative, What?
asked by: ShadowWolf on February 9th, 2008
New User
I am experiencing various problems mostly with memory.

History:
I am 49 and was diagnosed a year ago with diabetes. My A1C was 6.5. I was very tired. I could fall asleep at the drop of a hat. All I had to do is sit down and start to relax. My brain was not working so well either. My memory was becoming almost a thing of the past. I was having what I call random access bad sectors. It would strike randomly and I never knew if I would recover what I just forgot. I also did not always know I was experiencing a random bad sector. Then I was diagnosed with diabetes. I was going to school at the time and the first indication was, I went from getting A’s and B’s to getting C’s and D’s. Very disconcerting for a 3.56 gpa career. I had not changed how I study. I thought I had burn out. By January 2007 I was also rather confused at times. People would speak and I would hear bla, bla, bla, bla. I would talk and forget what I was saying, even what the subject was. People would call and I would forget they called and I would forget the contents of conversations. Somewhere in there I also experience weakness on my left side for about 2 months.

As my blood sugar regulated this all got better for the most part. I was still experiencing random bad sectors. Though now they were not quite so bad nor quite so often. Within a few months of starting NPH the random bad sectors calmed down to be what some would call senior moments though I am 49 and mine are worse than my 79 yr old mothers. By this time I was not falling asleep so easily anymore either and my A1C’s were down to 5.6.

Meds:
I have high cholesterol and take lipitor 10mg. I have low blood pressure 100/60 but I take 2.5mg of lisinopril for stage 1 kidney failure. I am on Humulin NPH x 2 a day. 7 units in the am and 4 -5 units at night. Also Advar x2 a day.

My memory has never fully recovered. This all happened very fast, I was seemingly Ok in September 06 and by Dec 06 I was not. I had always thought it was high blood sugar related, however last week I had two days of real bad random bad sectors and my blood sugars were low 81 -130, I was not sick. But man I was dingy and I knew it. I was afraid to drive. I was confused, had trouble finding words, sometimes understanding, it seemed at times I was looking and moving through a fog. A dimness? Early the first day my legs were a little wobbly. I was dingy and I knew it.

Now I am back to, hmm, more normal, though I am still having trouble finding words at times, it is random when it strikes. And my memory is messed up. I can’t always remember what I know I know. I call all this random short circuiting. Since the episode last week this is occurring frequently during the day.

What could be the cause of all of this?
Did you find this post useful?
|
Replies(6)
Avatar
antigone
replied on February 23rd, 2008
Extremely eHealthy
I know this post is old but I will reply anyway. Have you gone to a neurologist? The word finding difficulty and memory problems could be a neuro condition. See a neurologist.
Did you find this post useful?
|
User Profile
ShadowWolf
replied on July 7th, 2008
New User
Yes I did go to a neurologist and we are still trying to track down the problem. It was not TIA. I had a sleep study too and the verdict is not in yet from that.
Did you find this post useful?
|
Avatar
trisha805
replied on July 12th, 2008
New User
numbness in the right arm
my daughter is having numbness in her right arm and tightning, she aklso had 2 dizzy spells last night, is this serious?
Did you find this post useful?
|
User Profile
ShadowWolf
replied on July 14th, 2008
New User
Got me her symptoms are nothing like mine.
Did you find this post useful?
|
User Profile
ShadowWolf
replied on September 25th, 2008
New User
Well after many tests my neurologist has concluded that I am not having TIA's, nor any form of epilepsy and that I do not have sleep apnea. They also eliminated some heart concerns, IE no plack build up and heart looks good from a EKG with Doppler. What he said is they expect this is metabolic, due to my diabetes. He suspects that I am worse with elevated blood sugars though I have charted all episodes and blood sugars associated.

There is evidence to support the conclusion however, so I have to agree. My A1c started as 6.5 I got it down to 5.4, I had the least symptoms then. However over the summer my A1C elevated to 6.6 and I find I am having many of the same TIA symptoms. I have since increased my insulin and have lowered my blood sugars though I have not yet stabilized. I do feel better and symptoms are better. I am not continually experiencing random bad sectors this week as I was last week. I still have them everyday. I expect that all symptoms will calm down as soon as I get stabilized with blood sugars. Which I am diligently working on. I expect my next A1C to be back down in the 5 point range.
Did you find this post useful?
|
User Profile
ShadowWolf
replied on September 25th, 2008
New User
Well after many tests my neurologist has concluded that I am not having TIA's, nor any form of epilepsy and that I do not have sleep apnea. They also eliminated some heart concerns, IE no plack build up and heart looks good from a EKG with Doppler. What he said is they expect this is metabolic, due to my diabetes. He suspects that I am worse with elevated blood sugars though I have charted all episodes and blood sugars associated.

There is evidence to support the conclusion however, so I have to agree. My A1c started as 6.5 I got it down to 5.4, I had the least symptoms then. However over the summer my A1C elevated to 6.6 and I find I am having many of the same TIA symptoms. I have since increased my insulin and have lowered my blood sugars though I have not yet stabilized. I do feel better and symptoms are better. I am not continually experiencing random bad sectors this week as I was last week. I still have them everyday. I expect that all symptoms will calm down as soon as I get stabilized with blood sugars. Which I am diligently working on. I expect my next A1C to be back down in the 5 point range.
Did you find this post useful?
|
Quick Reply
Search