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The Watercooler
Ended up in the ER last night.
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<blockquote data-quote="gcvmom" data-source="post: 480691" data-attributes="member: 3444"><p>It sounds a little similar to my husband's autonomic seizures, which are classified as simple partial seizures. He feels dizzy, light headed, nauseous, breaks out in a sweat, and feels like he's going to lose his bowels when these occur. He's passed out once from it when he was driving before we knew what this was. Fortunately he was not injured.</p><p></p><p>I would recommend consulting a neurologist who specializes in epilepsy disorders and do some reading at epilepsy.com .</p><p></p><p>husband's seizures are controlled fairly well (as long as he remembers to take his medications!) and he's never again had one severe enough to cause a blackout like before. </p><p></p><p>Here's a link to a chart that helps identify the differences between seizures and syncope/fainting: <a href="http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1186872-overview#a30" target="_blank">Medscape: Medscape Access</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="gcvmom, post: 480691, member: 3444"] It sounds a little similar to my husband's autonomic seizures, which are classified as simple partial seizures. He feels dizzy, light headed, nauseous, breaks out in a sweat, and feels like he's going to lose his bowels when these occur. He's passed out once from it when he was driving before we knew what this was. Fortunately he was not injured. I would recommend consulting a neurologist who specializes in epilepsy disorders and do some reading at epilepsy.com . husband's seizures are controlled fairly well (as long as he remembers to take his medications!) and he's never again had one severe enough to cause a blackout like before. Here's a link to a chart that helps identify the differences between seizures and syncope/fainting: [url=http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1186872-overview#a30]Medscape: Medscape Access[/url] [/QUOTE]
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The Watercooler
Ended up in the ER last night.
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