glad you did. since i was told that my attack was low, iasked why was i numb from the top of my head to the bottom of my right foot. coincedent was the answer. i didnt buy that but didnt argue.
--- On Wed, 11/10/10, Louise Croyden <louisecroy...@cogeco.ca> wrote: From: Louise Croyden <louisecroy...@cogeco.ca> Subject: Re: [TMIC] {TMIC}sweating To: rn11...@yahoo.com, "john snodgrass" <jcs...@yahoo.com> Cc: tmic-list@eskimo.com Date: Wednesday, November 10, 2010, 3:19 PM Hi Cheryl, I don't write in often but when you mentioned that you should only be affected below the level of the lesion I thought I should respond. My TM episode hit me 5 years ago at T12/L1. However, the damage from the TM attack left me with neuropathic problems right to the top of my scalp which was numb, an ice cold feeling in my mouth (I called myself an icycle-breathing dragon!), cold on ears and face, torso, arms -- but, of course, everything was and is much worse in my lower body and legs, feet, etc. My left side was affected more than the right with the weakness, stiffness, cold, burning, banding, numbness, screaming skin, crawling nerves and everything else we, who were injured by a TM attack, have to deal with on an ongoing basis. Every exacerbation I have still increases the neuropathic problems in both my upper and lower body to some degree. My neurologist said something to the effect that it was like an explosion in an electrical cord where the explosion that I felt went both down and up but left nothing above the T12/L1 site that was visible to all the MRIs I had. The damage and inflammation was visible at the T12/L1 area. I do at least one hour workout at least 6 days a week in order to keep going and I swear by exercise. My muscles finally seem to be responding better and it helps me keep going -- although not like I could before TM. Anyway, the short answer could have been simply 'Yes, You can be affected above the level of a TM attack.' :-) I just thought my longer version may be more helpful. Best of luck to all of you. Regards. Louise ----- Original Message ----- From: rn11...@yahoo.com To: john snodgrass Cc: tmic-list@eskimo.com Sent: Wednesday, November 10, 2010 11:59 AM Subject: Re: [TMIC] {TMIC}sweating mixed or misunderstood signals from the brain to the body functions due to the nerve damage John, I understand that. But,the lesion being thoracic (chest) means I should only be affected below that level-not anywhere above it. The numbness is still from that level (T4) down,with a few areas of extreme sensitivity scattered around.That's what confused them and me about the sweating. 15 yrs later and still no explanation. cheryl --- On Wed, 11/10/10, john snodgrass <jcs...@yahoo.com> wrote: From: john snodgrass <jcs...@yahoo.com> Subject: Re: [TMIC] {TMIC}sweating To: "transverse myelitis" <tmic-list@eskimo.com> Date: Wednesday, November 10, 2010, 10:10 AM mixed or misunderstood signals from the brain to the body functions due to the nerve damage. kinda odd ,,,,when i flew to fort knox KY i had to fly to PA to catch that flight. if i had missed the PA connection i would not have made it to fort knox. i think the brain works the same way. if theres a connection problem anywhere then it will send signals or block signals trying to resolve the problem and if it cant then it does all kinds of wierd stuff. sometimes i wish mine would stop trying and just turn the lights out and go to sleep but that would be a stroke ,,thats a bad thought. if the Docs understood and could manipulate these things they would make way more than they do. --- On Wed, 11/10/10, rn11...@yahoo.com <rn11...@yahoo.com> wrote: From: rn11...@yahoo.com <rn11...@yahoo.com> Subject: [TMIC] {TMIC}sweating To: tmic-list@eskimo.com Date: Wednesday, November 10, 2010, 9:30 AM Hi Everyone, I got tm at the thoracic level (T4-5),but when I perspire on my face,one side gets red and moist,the other stays pale and dry. No one has ever had an explanation for this.A couple of docs even suggested that maybe I always had this and just noticed it after tm! Cheryl in Easthampton,MA