(I am using my on-screen keyboard, as my keyboard is broken, so please forgive any typos I may miss. Thanks)
okay, my friends(well, the whole one I can confide in) and family think I tilt at the proverbial windmill when it comes to my health, so I have ceased discussing things with them. To be fair to me, I almost died from a perforated appendix as a teenager because my mother thought I was faking and went undiagnosed as hyperthyoid (for which they have yet to find an underlying cause) because I was asymptomatic (and in fact am symptomatically hypo) for years. I do admit I obsess about my health. I believe I do so because no one else will, and my health has never felt 100%.
The beginning of May I fell while working for the US Census Bureau. When I fell, I hit the bottom half of my face on the side of my car hard enough to break the door handle. When I was taken to the ER, I informed them 3 times that I had hit my face, but my knee was so badly swollen, he neglected to run any tests on my head. (they also negleced to give me antibiotics for the deep abrasion on my other knee, but that's another story). When I went to industrial medicine, I started getting horrible headaches, seeing auras as though I had been staring at the sun, got unbearable tinitus, double vision, and worst of all started feeling spatially distorted, as though my brain were not in my body. The doctor ordered a CT scan 2 weeks after the accident, but it only showed that I had a brain (still inside my skull, thankfully!)... She hadn't thought it would show anything that long after the accident anyway if it was only a mild or moderate traumatic brain injury. She has since diagnosed me with post concussion syndrome (PCS) and referred me to a neuroloist (whom I meet with tomorow)
True to form, I immediately went home and Googled PCS (doctors must hate Google) devouring all the information I could find. I read all the common reasons certain people are more prone to PCS, and at the time I assumed it was because I am a woman and suffer the occasional migraine. Now, I am no longer sure.
I just finished reading "Second Opinion" by Michael Palmer (a superb book, by the way, with a somewhat ironic name, considering this post) and as I read, I started to see a lot of myself and my little brother (who passed away from a medulablastoma last year) in the characters. And I recalled that one of the articles I read on PCS linked Asperger's to an increased probabilty of suffering its effects. So again I returned to my old friend Google. The more I read, the more I began to feel that this was no windmill.
So I took the Aspie-Quiz just to satisfy myself. My aspie score was 127/200 and my neurotypical was 67/200. It said I am very likely aspie, which at my age terrifies me. I really have no one I can talk to in the real world, and don't know if I should mention it to the neuro. Has anyone had an adulthood diagnosis? Am I just being paranoid and having at a poor helpless windmill? I am going to write a blog about the characteristics I think my brother had and I have. (Also, I had a second cousin who seemed to have normal development, but shut down at 4 when his parents had another baby. He was diagnosed with severe autism.)
Last edited by MysteryChild on 01 Jun 2009, 8:00 am, edited 1 time in total.