You think you can handle your symptoms but you don't have the means to. If you want to work things out you need to work, study the matter.
do you know anything about AIDS? it sounds like you don't. it takes years for HIV to become AIDS. even if you did have AIDS it couldn't cause you those symptoms ONLY and nothing else, it would be impossible.
it's typical for a person who is ill to suppose to be responsible in some way for the illness, which is the case sometimes but very often it doesn't have anything to do with what they ate/smoked/touched etc.
moreover your symptoms don't sound like an infection at all, unless you had encefalo-myelitis or something but probably you would have known by now.
take the HIV test, what costs you.
and go on to see another Neurologist. keep calm and try to not to talk nonsense or nobody will take you seriously.
All of your symptoms are listed under magnesium deficiency so this is a possibility. 1% of magnesium is found in blood, and 0.3% is found in blood serum so clinical blood serum testing may not successfully identify magnesium deficiency.
The questionaire below is from Ancient Minerals website. Each sign goes into more detail on the website so this is the short version.
If you answer yes to any of the following questions, you may be at risk for low magnesium intake.
Need More Magnesium? 10 Signs to Watch For >>>
1. Do you drink carbonated beverages on a regular basis?
2. Do you regularly eat pastries, cakes, desserts, candies or other sweet foods?
3. Do you experience a lot of stress in your life, or have you recently had a major medical procedure such as surgery?
4. Do you drink coffee, tea, or other caffeinated drinks daily?
5. Do you take a diuretic, heart medication, asthma medication, birth control pills or estrogen replacement therapy?
6. Do you drink more than seven alcoholic beverages per week?
7. Do you take calcium supplements without magnesium or calcium supplements with magnesium in less than a 1:1 ratio?
8. Do you experience any of the following:
Anxiety?
Times of hyperactivity?
Difficulty getting to sleep?
Difficulty staying asleep?
9. Do you experience any of the following:
Painful muscle spasms?
Muscle cramping?
Fibromyalgia?
Facial tics?
Eye twitches, or involuntary eye movements?
10. Did you answer yes to any of the above questions and are also age 55 or older?
I guess you're right, it's just an average blood work to see that my body is fine and well - and that went by with flying colours. You are correct though that i am panicking badly because i have NO idea what is going on with me. I've been to the neuro who is convinced there isn't anything wrong with me. Should i try another neuro? I'm also seeing a spine specialist who is fixing my back problem..where else/what else should i be doing :(
I feel like another way to calm my nerves is just to get checked for hiv. I mean -- this way i know for sure this is out of it and i can rule it out. Maybe it will cause my panicking to fade in some ways. I'll do this..there isn't any harm anyways..
it could happen for someone to have a physiological problem and be perfectly convinced that it's psychological. in reality though you cannot cause any symptoms at all, you could only eventually be lying about them, if you had a psychological problem.
only the tremors could well be due to psychological agitation.
what do you mean with "full body check" ? there are 10s of radiological and blood tests. The average blood works usually have very little to do with your symptoms...
Keep calm, I guess there's nothing in your symptoms that require an emergency treatment. You cannot manage the symptoms alone, you need to talk about it to another doctor.
A lot of the reason why you are panicking is that
1 you have no idea what is going on to you
2 you are not looked after properly by a specialist.
you can't do much for now about the first point but you can work on the second!
Hi Gio
What do you propose i do now? I feel like i need to calm my nerves and just tell my body everything is ok.
For your info - i did a full body check, blood works etc came out perfect. Just a little bit too much cholestorol from a little too much junk food recently, but nothing major to worry about.
I know it's a tough question - but what should i do now? i cannot keep doing this to myself. I feel like i am causing my own symtoms and looking too deep into each one.
you haven't even started seeing real doctors. it can take even decades to come to a conclusive diagnosis.
you have little experience and little knowledge of medicine, this leads you to make unlikely considerations that can be misinterpreted by the Doctors with a psychological issue.
you have to start from a firm point:
1 it is extremely likely that a physical issue is causing anxiety in you, also considering you've never been sick, and your age.
2 it is very very unlikely that anxiety could give you blurred vision and other symptoms that aren't cardiac or respiratory.
statistically the chances that your problem was anxiety are very low.
AIDS is just something young people are afraid of, and practically the only disease they know... there are another million diseases out there. don't worry about what your friend told you.
yea - im confused myself and don't know what to do. My neuro confirmed that it wouldn't be a thyroid issue or else he would see it right away. So that covers that aspect, my own believe is the anxiety issue as every single symptom i have fits in with anxiety attacks...how do i get rid of this..i feel like i'm sick, but really, it's myself who's making me sick since doctors can't seem to find anything wrong with me (although i have never done an MRI yet). One of my friends i spoke to casually mentioned aids, but i told him that's just insane. Is HIV even a possibility?
this sound like a thyroid case hormones do at times trick us in so many ways the best thing is get check out early before the snapping starts...
You may have anxiety issues you are not recognizing. If you are a thinker and a worrier, that seems most likely. The calf pain may be dehydration and/or electrolyte imbalance. There are many more options to explore with a family doctor rather than a neurologist. Keep us posted with other doc apps and changes.
A Neurologist told you that? I think you'd better get checked by a different one...
I'm not a doctor, only a patient who's having some health issues with a lot of time to be on the internet...
the blurred vision is the most worrying symptom I guess, it's compatible also with neuropathy, muscle weakness, and lower back pain.
Neurologist is definitely your specialist, find one who deals with this type of problems and not psychiatric.
If it happened so suddenly it could be a vascular problem in the brain? also you should have your upper spine and encefalus scanned with MRI. Good Luck!