loss of memory, ability to say or think of common words/attention problems
Answered by
Kevin Pho, MD
Boston - MA
Questions in the Family Medicine forum are answered by Dr. J.M. Keyes. Topics covered include general health issues, adolescence, babies, child health, eating disorders, fitness, immunizations and vaccines, infectious diseases, medical tests and procedures, and senior health.
1. How old are you?
2. When you had your head injury, did you lose consciousness for an extended period of time or have post-traumatic amnesia for an extended period of time? Besides the lesions, did the MRI show anything else at that time?
This is important information that you left out....
About 11 years ago I woke up one morning with my eyes filled with blood. I felt exhaused and just basically foggy. I could see a blood vessel on my left neck area, just above where it meets my shoulder, that was extremely big and blue. (apparently it way my "exterior Jugular"?? The doctors here didn't know what to do with me so the sent me to an algerist, a ear-nose and throat dr, and then to an oncologist who adventually had a surgeon fix a rupture of the exterior jugular in my neck. They had no idea what the cause was, but I felt unbelievably better the morning after the surgery. They said my heart probably wasn't getting enought oxigen until the fixed it???? I appreciate any insite you may be able to give me.
In addition, there is a correlation between moderate and severe head injuries sustained in early adulthood and Alzheimer's disease later in life, but your head injury would not qualify as moderate or severe, so I do not think that this is a factor (although you should nevertheless mention it to your doctor).
Another question is your alcohol consumption over the last decade or so....if you've abused alcohol that could be a contributing or causal factor, especially if you are deficient in other vitamins. What are your drinking habits?
As well, have you ever had a transient ischemic attack (small stroke)? An MRI would help exclude this as a possibility as well. Mini-strokes, or TIA's, go unnoticed by the patient, but full-blown strokes do not. If you've had numerous TIA's, that could explain your symptoms as well....
So, therefore, I would go to your primary care doctor and get the complete bloodwork done. Also get a referral to a neurologist, who will order further tests, including an MRI of the brain. The neurologist will also perform what's called a Mini-Mental Status Exam as part of his or her work-up. How you score on that test will help to shed light on your symptoms.
In the meantime, abstain from drinking, since that contributes to memory loss, take a multivitamin, and ask your doctor whether the herbal supplement Ginkgo Biloba may be of help, as I'm aware of some studies where this herb has helped people with their memory.
Again, the two questions I have are:
1. Have you ever had or been told you've had a TIA?
2. What (if any) are your drinking habits?
do you by chance live near any electromagnetic fields? These are sources of very high levels of radiation, and often found in smaller, rural towns like the one you described you are in. If you're close to one, that could also be a contributing or causal factor, especially if it's been 12 years.