Nathan Kibler ([info]volpane) wrote,
@ 2009-03-13 13:54:00
Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend  Next Entry
Entry tags:eeg, medical, neurology

More News, All Good
Dear friends, it has not been my intention to ignore all your comments to my last post. I have no excuse to give save it was with some surprise this morning that I discovered that I had posted before my EEG appointment and then completely forgot what I had done. I can be absent minded, but this is perhaps more due to all the stress I've been experiencing. It has been my very intention to post about my EEG appointment, but my attention has been focused on such things as completing my 2008 tax forms so that I can apply for more charity assistance in order to cover the unexpected medical bills that have been weighing heavily on my mind since the first of the year.

So onto the EEG. Electroencephalography (EEG) is nothing more than a graphical reading of the firing of neurons in the brain as they are picked up through the scalp with electrodes. It is generally a painless process, although the placement of electrodes with water soluble glue can be uncomfortable, especially if you are sensitive to strangers touching your head.

My technician turned out to be quite personable with a good bedside manner. When she put on the electrodes she began by marking my head at cranial nodes with a grease pencil, covering the entire crown, which tickled a bit. Then as she glued each electrode down she scrubbed the scalp vigorously to minimize oils and maximize adhesion. This actually hurt a little, but didn't last long enough to complain about. Once that was complete she turned off the light in the room and set up a strobe light which is the first test. Successively increasing the frequency of the strobe, she asked me to close my eyes and then shone a flashing light onto my eyelids.

The effect is amazing. I have closed my eyes in a nightclub where there are strobe lights and never saw this particular visual effect. What I experienced was similar to looking down a tube that had a black and white checkerboard projected onto it. In between each strobe, the technician had me open my eyes and then close them again before she increased the strobe frequency. As the frequency increased the visuals gradually changed incorporating color and other effects more difficult to explain. At the highest frequencies the effect was a grainy gray pattern, similar to looking too close at a rough wall.

Many years ago I met a Seattle artist who was inspired by the visuals encountered during an EEG and incorporated the checkerboard effect into her paintings. I have looked for her work online but haven't come up with anything, otherwise I'd include an image for you. But they are very distinctive; swirling checkerboard patterns in blue and white with goldfish and flowers floating between. It never occurred to me how what she painted could be due to an EEG until I experienced it myself.

Anyway, in the next test, I was asked to breath heavy until I hyperventilated. After doing the heavy breathing for several minutes you do experience tingling sensations in your hands and feet and feel light headed, but it isn't as unpleasant as the few times I've actually hyperventilated while exercising. Perhaps because I was lying down already, I didn't experience any queasiness or see lights. Thankfully this test didn't take long.

The final test is done with the lights off and they encourage you to attempt to sleep. In preparation for the EEG, I was asked to limit my sleep the night before to about four hours so I was already feeling groggy that day. I didn't fall unconscious during this last test. It has been several years since I've attempted to sleep in the city and every five minutes or so a siren would sound or a train would whistle or a truck would honk its horn.

My technician did say she was able to collect enough data from my sleeping period. And the good news is that my Neurologist said my results were normal. I am now scheduled for a brain MRI this next Sunday and this will be a defining test. Apparently when my head was scanned at the emergency, they were only looking for internal bleeding, which is called a CT scan. This is all at the grace of Swedish Medical's Access program, which I am very grateful to have qualified for.




(11 comments) - (Post a new comment)


[info]seraphimsigrist
2009-03-13 09:57 pm UTC (link)
Im glad the news is good!
maybe with the bizarre start and
all it will still be a very
good year...anyway here is hoping
and thinking ...
+Seraphim

(Reply to this) (Thread)


[info]volpane
2009-03-14 09:42 pm UTC (link)
Yes, I have had high hopes for this year, being my forty-second and all. I feel I am being challenged for even greater accomplishments. I am certainly learning patience and trust.

(Reply to this) (Parent)


[info]inishglora
2009-03-13 10:30 pm UTC (link)
Wow. I hope the news continues to be good. I've had an MRI and CT scan, as well as sleep apnea testing, and the glue can be annoying as hell. I ended up just snipping off the tufts that would not come clean, as I recall.

(Reply to this) (Thread)


[info]volpane
2009-03-14 09:44 pm UTC (link)
Oh, I have to admit I was so tired when I got home I slept with the glue in my hair. It seemed to wash out the next day. I'm hoping for more positive news. A friend mentioned that someone they knew eventually was diagnose with "weird head syndrome". Who knows what I have?

(Reply to this) (Parent)


[info]squigglequill
2009-03-14 07:24 am UTC (link)
Don't worry about responses, at least to me. Sounds like you got a LOT on your plate at this time and keeping up with LJ is not a priority. I just hope everything is okay. Rough times for a lot of people so you're not alone there.

I did some experimentation with hyperventilating and rhythmic breathing (prana) for a while in my twenties, with some fairly hallucinatory results.

(Reply to this) (Thread)


[info]volpane
2009-03-14 09:46 pm UTC (link)
Really! I am familiar with the practice of prana yoga, but I haven't had much instruction in it. Did you experience anything profound from those hallucinations?

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)


[info]squigglequill
2009-03-15 10:18 am UTC (link)
I had an auditory hallucination once while doing a prana exercise in which you inhale and exhale deeply and symmetrically and with no pause between either, and I had my eyes closed and suddenly felt like I'd been catapulted through some kind of energy barrier, and saw all these light ghosts and then I HEARD a hissing noise, like from a leak in a pipe or tire. It sounded like it was coming from inside the room. The noise became so loud it jarred me out of my visual journey and I opened my eyes and looked around the room. I could still hear the hissing but there was NOTHING in the room or outside of it that could account for it. As I continued looking around my room, the hissing gradually faded away.

(Reply to this) (Parent)


[info]barbarakelley
2009-03-14 07:34 pm UTC (link)
I'm glad the eeg came back normal. I had one of those when I was a kid, but I don't remember the flashing lights. All I remember was being terrified that they'd be able to see my weird thoughts. And of course I couldn't tell anyone that I was worried about it, because I would have to admit that I had weird thoughts!

I suppose now that my thoughts were no weirder than any other kid's thoughts, but I couldn't fathom that, then.

(Reply to this) (Thread)


[info]volpane
2009-03-14 09:48 pm UTC (link)
I'm glad they couldn't read my thoughts, although it is amazing what they can see with these tests.

(Reply to this) (Parent)


[info]sphinx_n_herhat
2009-03-14 08:11 pm UTC (link)
Thanks for the update! Hope you get some answers soon. And, of course, you know I empathize with stressing over taxes.

(Reply to this) (Thread)


[info]volpane
2009-03-14 09:54 pm UTC (link)
Oh, yes. Thankfully I don't owe at this point. It may seem strange to say, but I want this to change. I don't like being poor.

(Reply to this) (Parent)


(11 comments) - (Post a new comment)

Create an Account
Forgot your login or password?
Login w/ OpenID
English • Español • Deutsch • Русский…