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#Vestibular disease
gabbagepatch · 2 months
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I need to meet more people with vestibular disorders!! I feel like nobody gets what I'm talking about when I vent lol like I sound ridiculous.
"Someone said something but I couldn't hear because of the Screeching™"
"I bent over and immediately threw up, yeah my ear decided I was actually upside down lol"
"Flashing lights make my ears hurt."
Where are my people?!
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a-lil-perspective · 1 year
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Crosshair having a Problem™ with rides is an interesting take.
Thank ye! He is the problematic one of the bunch.
Like, obviously he’s not afraid of heights at all BUT I like to think that gravity still messes with his system from time to time. I’ve always liked the idea that Crosshair suffers from vertigo to a degree, and so amusement park rides or even Tech’s flying can shake that up in him. I think he probably looks like a drunk stumbling off afterwards LOL. Maybe his tummy gets a lil sick too idk. But it’s mostly neurological/vestibular. That’s how I am! I have a stomach of steel and not afraid of heights, but g-force ignites a really strong episode of vertigo and I have to sit/lie down. XD Worth it though. XD
Anyway don’t tell anyone but Crosshair is holding onto Cyare afterwards. XD
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riverageleis · 1 year
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Having a chronic illness is a wild ride. I was up at 2311 after 3 hours of sleep. I take Klonopin before bed. If I take .5mg I'm dumb all the next day, so I take .25mg and pray to Hypnos. Some days he grants my prayers. On other days he refuses. He's refused this week. No amount of rest has assuaged this bone-deep weariness. No cocktail of my medication regimen has touched the anxiety, aches, dizziness, and migraine. My jaw keeps subluxing in my sleep. I wake up and have to put it back in place manually. My therapist wonders if it's all the stress from the last several months. I was stable for 4 years with my illnesses. All of them. I got covid a year ago and every day has been a Sisyphean effort against the worsening symptoms. I constantly want to give up. Succumbing seems the best option. I just can't seem to, tho. It's always one more breath. One more step. One more sleep. One more meal. How many 'one mores' do I have? That's the question.
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tvdfan23 · 1 year
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The little cat that could
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iheartvmt · 2 years
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We have an inpatient with old dog vestibular disease. The good news is that this is treatable, and these guys usually recover quickly with just supportive care! But as someone who gets vertigo, I always feel so sorry for them because that feeling is the worst @.@
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labsportstherapy · 2 months
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Epley’s Maneuver and Your Vertigo Relief Journey
Your Steady Tomorrow Starts Here As we conclude our exploration of Epley’s Maneuver and Vertigo Relief. Remember that finding balance is not just a hope – it’s a reality. If you’re uncertain about the origin of your dizziness, take the first step toward stability by visiting LAB Sports Therapy in Minnesota.
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ofdinosanddais1 · 2 months
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Like I knew all along even during the roughest parts of my insomnia, I am an early bird. I'm glad that migraines and constant stomach pain are not disrupting my sleep to the point I won't wake up till like 2pm but it is a bizarre experience to wake up at like 9am and feel fully rested.
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goldenmoon888 · 6 months
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taking care of my dog at all hours of the day with no sleep is showing me how even if i wanted to be a parent i am not going to be
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seniordogrevolution · 9 months
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Vestibular Disease Podcast for Dogs
Discover the ultimate guide to senior dog care with Senior Dog Revolution's Vestibular Disease Podcast for Dogs. Join our expert veterinarian, Dr. Monica Tarantino, as they share lifesaving insights on handling vestibular disease in aging dogs. Learn how to support your senior's well-being and happiness through the natural aging process. Don't miss this essential resource for pet parents seeking the best for their beloved senior dogs. Thrive with Senior Dog Revolution's Vestibular Disease Podcast for Dogs today!
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minimaxiads · 1 year
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lelibug · 2 years
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(via In One Very Nutty Shell… It's Just Me.)
DelphineMusic | blog
.a.k.a. LeliBug
• Geek • Goth • Gamer • Coffeeholic • • Techaholic • Unofficial Tech-Support •
• Animal Lover • Singer-Songwriter• • Writer • Blogger • [Former] IT Contractor Data Analyst
• Proudly Autistic • Wheelchair Wheeler  •
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gabbagepatch · 1 month
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Having an illness is feeling like nothing is going right in life and you live in hell until a doctor actually takes you seriously.
I've been so depressed and hopeless lately but my PCP actually took me seriously today and is committed to my health. Totally turned my mental state around. I wish all doctor's appreciated how much influence they have over their patient's mental wellbeing. It's not like anything miraculously changed during that appointment, I'm not cured or feeling better. But just knowing that someone actually wants to help made such a world of difference.
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care4dog · 2 years
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Vestibular disease in dogs
Vestibular disease in dogs
Vestibular Disease in Dogs “Old Dog Vestibular Syndrome” is a condition that makes them feel as if everything is moving around them. Vestibular disease commonly causes loss of balance, twitching of the eyes and tilt of the head in the dog. Disease is most common in older dogs. It can be caused by anything that affects the inner ear and the balance centre in the brain.Fortunately, most dogs begin…
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kicktwine · 2 months
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no one asked me to do a specbio post on garleans but im gonna!!!! the fact that no one asked means no one can stop me!!
garlean people and hyur share a very recent common ancestor, but it’s far enough back that they should be considered distinct from like a different kind of hyur like midland or highland. They kind of adopted their place name into their “species name”. the fact is they used to be called something else, but both internally rejected the use of anything but a locator and externally so deeply associated themselves with garlemald that any notion of the name is gone. and they weren’t incredibly populous to begin with, so no one had a chance to set something else.
anyways! What’s this thing about
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THIS is a small organ that has a hard keratin protrusion and is very loosely connected to the skull. most notably this eye is used for spatial recognition. The external part of it is rumored as being used for distance recognition, being able to sense better how far away something is, but Lucia asserts it doesn’t matter so. It might not matter. But the internal organ is used for proprioception! Very similar to the otolithic organ in your ears! While that will tell you if you’re accelerating or which way you’re moving, the “third eye” addition to the vestibular system tells you which way is down. The heavier calcium deposit on the inside of the organ always orients the brain to where down is and where it is in reference to you and where you’re angled in reference to Down, as long as you’re not shaking your head around like crazy to disorient yourself. If you’ve ever been on a big rollercoaster and closed your eyes the whole time, you’ll notice you can sort of tell when you’re on the loop because of the pull of gravity, but it’s hard to tell exactly where you are on the loop or if you’re tilting. Someone with the Garlean third eye will know exactly where they are in the loop, and also not get dizzy, hardly ever! Even if their ears are sending confused signals to the brain, the more rigid horn organ says no we’re fine we’re standing.
so where did this come from. Not a lot of documentation remains on the subject — some controversial studies claim it evolved for swimming. You’ll notice I called it a horn earlier, though it’s very very uncommon to actually see it grow into horn shape anymore. in 95% of people it stays a little nub shape, but sometimes can grow out or up in odd ways and maintenance is as important as cutting your nails. Some very few people out in the world are able and willing to let it grow out, where it kind of turns into a unicorn type thing? In even fewer people, funny enough more people who were cured of tempering than found naturally, a fasciation disease causes it to constantly grow in many directions, causing possible balance issues and nausea if left untreated (or if it curves back into your head that’s not good!), but it’s not a problem if you keep on top of it. If it’s left to grow it will eventually become vascularized, just like it is in the standard eye shape.
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bullying jullus. Unfortunately, secret stripes are a trait that did not follow them 😔 stripeless. (maidenless voice) stripeless
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covidsafehotties · 22 days
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Abstract
Since the declaration of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) as a pandemic, it remains a widespread infection with a major impact on global resources and health infrastructure. The hallmark of COVID-19 continues to be the well-documented effects it has on the respiratory system. With the passage of time, the involvement of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) virus in other systems has become more apparent, with the increased incidence of thromboembolic events, cardiac involvement as well as gastrointestinal and neurological symptoms secondary to the infection. Our case report demonstrates a presentation of vertigo, hearing loss, tinnitus, and aural fullness. Our patient was diagnosed as positive for COVID-19 by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) nine days prior to developing these symptoms. Her COVID-19 infection was otherwise relatively mild, for which she did not seek any medical intervention. A careful assessment ruled out cerebrovascular causes and led us to the diagnosis of SARS-CoV-2-induced labyrinthitis. Our patient was successfully treated as an outpatient without unnecessary investigations and responded well to standard therapy for viral labyrinthitis as per National Health Service (NHS) guidelines. She eventually reported having made a full recovery within three weeks of the initial encounter. Audio-vestibular consequences of COVID-19 are less reported compared to other symptoms of neurological involvement, such as gustatory or olfactory dysfunction, which have become key indicators aiding in the diagnosis of the infection. Among these disorders, the commonly reported presentation is that of vestibular neuronitis. Our case report demonstrates that labyrinthitis is also among the neurological manifestations to be considered as a result of COVID-19, which can be safely managed in the community with the same strategies as those employed for other viral triggers. It also reveals the need for further research into the effects that COVID-19 may have on the audio-vestibular system.
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girlactionfigure · 1 year
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Immense pride, tinged with sadness. 
For those who would like to read the full list:
1908 MECHNIKOV, ELIE 
FOR THEIR WORK ON IMMUNITY
1908 EHRLICH, PAUL
FOR THEIR WORK ON IMMUNITY
1914 BARANY, ROBERT
FOR HIS WORK ON THE PHYSIOLOGY AND PATHOLOGY OF THE VESTIBULAR APPARATUS
1922 MEYERHOF, OTTO FRITZ 
FOR HIS DISCOVERY OF THE FIXED RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE CONSUMPTION OF 
OXYGEN AND THE METABOLISM OF LACTIC ACID IN THE MUSCLE
1930 LANDSTEINER, KARL 
FOR HIS DISCOVERY OF HUMAN BLOOD GROUPS
1936 LOEWI, OTTO 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES RELATING TO CHEMICAL TRANSMISSION OF NERVE IMPULSES
1944 ERLANGER, JOSEPH 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES RELATING TO THE HIGHLY DIFFERENTIATED FUNCTIONS OF SINGLE NERVE FIBRES
1945 CHAIN, ERNST BORIS 
FOR THE DISCOVERY OF PENICILLIN AND ITS CURATIVE EFFECT IN VARIOUS INFECTIOUS DISEASES
1946 MULLER, HERMANN J. 
FOR THE DISCOVERY OF THE PRODUCTION OF MUTATIONS BY MEANS OF X-RAY IRRADIATION
1947 CORI, GERTY THERESA, RADNITZ 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERY OF THE COURSE OF THE CATALYTIC CONVERSION OF GLYCOGEN
1950 REICHSTEIN, TADEUS 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES RELATING TO THE HORMONES OF THE ADRENAL CORTEX, THEIR STRUCTURE AND BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS
1952 WAKSMAN, SELMAN A. 
FOR HIS DISCOVERY OF STREPTOMYCIN, THE FIRST ANTIBIOTIC EFFECTIVE AGAINST TUBERCULOSIS
1953 LIPMANN, FRITZ ALBERT 
FOR HIS DISCOVERY OF CO-ENZYME A AND ITS IMPORTANCE FOR INTERMEDIARY METABOLISM
1953 KREBS, HANS ADOLF 
FOR HIS DISCOVERY OF THE CITRIC ACID CYCLE
1958 LEDERBERG, JOSHUA 
FOR HIS DISCOVERIES CONCERNING GENETIC RECOMBINATION AND THE ORGANISATION OF THE GENETIC MATERIAL OF BACTERIA
1959 KORNBERG, ARTHUR 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERY OF THE MECHANISMS IN THE BIOLOGICAL SYNTHESIS OF RIBONUCLEIC ACID AND DEOXYRIBONUCLEIC ACID
1964 BLOCH, KONRAD 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING THE MECHANISM AND REGULATION OF THE CHOLESTEROL AND FATTY ACID METABOLISM
1965 JACOB, FRANCOIS 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING GENETIC CONTROL OF ENZYME AND VIRUS SYNTHESIS
1965 LWOFF, ANDRE
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING GENETIC CONTROL OF ENZYME AND VIRUS SYNTHESIS
1967 WALD, GEORGE 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING THE PRIMARY PHYSIOLOGICAL AND CHEMICAL VISUAL PROCESSES IN THE EYE
1968 NIRENBERG, MARSHALL W. 
FOR THEIR INTERPRETATION OF THE GENETIC CODE AND ITS FUNCTION IN PROTEIN SYNTHESIS
1969 LURIA, SALVADOR E. 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING THE REPLICATION MECHANISM AND THE GENETIC STRUCTURE OF VIRUSES
1970 KATZ, BERNARD
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING THE HUMORAL TRANSMITTERS IN THE NERVE TERMINALS AND THE MECHANISM
FOR THEIR STORAGE, RELEASE AND INACTIVATION
1970 AXELROD, JULIUS 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING THE HUMORAL TRANSMITTERS IN THE NERVE TERMINALS AND THE MECHANISM
FOR THEIR STORAGE, RELEASE AND INACTIVATION
1972 EDELMAN, GERALD M. 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING THE CHEMICAL STRUCTURE OF ANTIBODIES
1975 TEMIN, HOWARD M.
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING THE INTERACTION BETWEEN TUMOR VIRUSES AND THE GENETIC MATERIAL OF THE CELL
1975 BALTIMORE, DAVID 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING THE INTERACTION BETWEEN TUMOR VIRUSES AND THE GENETIC MATERIAL OF THE CELL
1976 BLUMBERG, BARUCH S. 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING NEW MECHANISMS FOR THE ORIGIN AND DISSEMINATION OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES
1977 YALOW, ROSALYN 
FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF RADIOIMMUNOASSAYS OF PEPTIDE HORMONES
1977 SCHALLY, ANDREW V. 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING THE PEPTIDE HORMONE PRODUCTION OF THE BRAIN
1978 NATHANS, DANIEL 
FOR THE DISCOVERY OF RESTRICTION ENZYMES AND THEIR APPLICATION TO PROBLEMS OF MOLECULAR GENETICS
1980 BENACERRAF, BARUJ 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING GENETICALLY DETERMINED STRUCTURES ON THE CELL SURFACE THAT
REGULATE IMMUNOLOGICAL REACTIONS
1984 MILSTEIN, CESAR 
FOR THEORIES CONCERNING THE SPECIFICITY IN DEVELOPMENT AND CONTROL OF THE IMMUNE SYSTEM AND THE DISCOVERY OF THE
PRINCIPLE FOR PRODUCTION OF MONOCLONAL ANTIBODIES
1985 BROWN, MICHAEL S. 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING THE REGULATION OF CHOLESTEROL METABOLISM
1985 GOLDSTEIN, JOSEPH L. 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING THE REGULATION OF CHOLESTEROL METABOLISM
1986 COHEN, STANLEY 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES OF GROWTH FACTORS
1986 LEVI-MONTALCINI, RITA 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES OF GROWTH FACTORS
1988 ELION, GERTRUDE B. 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES OF IMPORTANT PRINCIPLES FOR DRUG TREATMENT
1989 VARMUS, HAROLD E. 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERY OF THE CELLULAR ORIGIN OF RETROVIRAL ONCOGENES
1994 RODBELL, MARTIN 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERY OF G-PROTEINS AND THE ROLE OF THESE PROTEINS IN SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION IN CELLS
1994 GILMAN, ALFRED G. 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERY OF G-PROTEINS AND THE ROLE OF THESE PROTEINS IN SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION IN CELLS
1997 PRUSINER, STANLEY B. 
FOR HIS DISCOVERY OF PRIONS - A NEW BIOLOGICAL PRINCIPLE OF INFECTION
1998 FURCHGOTT, ROBERT F. 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING NITRIC OXIDE AS A SIGNALING MOLECULE IN THE CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM
2000 GREENGARD, PAUL 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION IN THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
2000 KANDEL, ERIC R. 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION IN THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
2002 BRENNER, SYDNEY 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING GENETIC REGULATION OF ORGAN DEVELOPMENT AND PROGRAMMED CELL DEATH
2002 HORVITZ, H. ROBERT 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING GENETIC REGULATION OF ORGAN DEVELOPMENT AND PROGRAMMED CELL DEATH
2004 AXEL, RICHARD
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES OF ODORANT RECEPTORS AND THE ORGANIZATION OF THE OLFACTORY SYSTEM
2006 FIRE, ANDREW Z. 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERY OF RNA INTERFERENCE - GENE SILENCING BY DOUBLE-STRANDED RNA
2011 STEINMAN, RALPH M. 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING THE ACTIVATION OF INNATE IMMUNITY
2011 BEUTLER, BRUCE A. 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES CONCERNING THE ACTIVATION OF INNATE IMMUNITY
2013 SCHEKMAN, RANDY W.
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES OF MACHINERY REGULATING VESICLE TRAFFIC, A MAJOR TRANSPORT SYSTEM IN OUR CELLS
2013 ROTHMAN, JAMES E. 
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES OF MACHINERY REGULATING VESICLE TRAFFIC, A MAJOR TRANSPORT SYSTEM IN OUR CELLS
2017 ROSBASH, MICHAEL
FOR THEIR DISCOVERIES OF MOLECULAR MECHANISMS CONTROLLING THE CIRCADIAN RHYTHM
Likud Herut UK
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