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originally posted by: IgnoranceIsntBlisss
My understanding is that after seizures people can seem normal like nothing happened?
originally posted by: IgnoranceIsntBlisss
originally posted by: scojak
Looks like she's feeling better. They even had a little girl cued up and ready to hug her when she came out.
They are going with the "she was overheated" story.
Seizures are classified into two groups.
Generalized seizures affect both sides of the brain.
Absence seizures, sometimes called petit mal seizures, can cause rapid blinking or a few seconds of staring into space.
Tonic-clonic seizures, also called grand mal seizures, can make a person:
Cry out
Lose consciousness
Fall to the ground
Have muscle jerks or spasms.
The person may feel tired after a tonic-clonic seizure.
Focal seizures are located in just one area of the brain. These seizures are also called partial seizures.
Simple focal seizures affect a small part of the brain. These seizures can cause twitching or a change in sensation, such as a strange taste or smell.
Complex focal seizures can make a person with epilepsy confused or dazed. The person will be unable to respond to questions or direction for up to a few minutes.
Secondary generalized seizures begin in one part of the brain but then spread to both sides of the brain. In other words, the person first has a focal seizure, followed by a generalized seizure.
www.cdc.gov...
originally posted by: ketsuko
a reply to: imthegoat
Even so, it was not caused by heat alone as they want you to think. They are implying simple heat exhaustion, not overheating triggered my seizure condition.
Everyone gets heat exhaustion, but not all of us have secondary health conditions that can be triggered by it.
originally posted by: DJW001
a reply to: Sublimecraft
The video shows Clinton being comforted as she leaves the ceremony, possibly because she is grief stricken. No stumble shown. Is it possible that the tweets were mistaken? Or possibly even lies?
rescue drug (Parkinson’s disease) An anti-parkinson’s medication taken to provide immediate relief from motor symptoms such as severe bradykinesia, rigidity, or freezing when the regular medication regimen cannot control them. Such off-state episodes can occur in the disease’s later stages when conventional anti-Parkinson’s medications are no longer effective in meeting the brain’s dopamine needs. Extra oral doses of regular release Levodopa, as levodopa/carbidopa (Sinemet) or levodopa/benser-azide (Madopar), often can act as rescue drugs, al though they can take 45 minutes to an hour to become effective. Extended release formulas such as Sinemet CR, which many people with Parkinson’s take because the effect lasts longer between doses, do not work well as rescue drugs because they are designed to enter the bloodstream slowly over a controlled period. For extreme symptoms, subcutaneous injection of the drug apomorphine, a potent dopamine agonist medication chemically similar to morphine that is not a narcotic and acts on different receptors in the brain, can provide relief within five to 15 minutes.other dopamine agonists, because of their receptor activations, tend to be less effective than apomorphine when taken as rescue drugs. The primary drawback of apomorphine is that at present it is available only in injectable form and it almost invariably causes moderate to severe nausea and vomiting in most people. For this reason, rescue drug doses are almost always taken with an antiemetic medication such as trimethobenzamide (Tigan). Also the risk of unde-sired side effects, particularly dyskinesia (fidgety movements) dystonia (extreme muscle rigidity) is quite high when rescue drugs are added to one’s usual dose of medications. It can be a fine balance between relieving one set of symptoms and causing another.
originally posted by: carewemust
a reply to: burntheships
A nice clear vid. She's suffering from low blood sugar. My diabetic dad used to buckle and drop in the same manner. And recover less than an hour later. But he was 90.
originally posted by: Bone75
originally posted by: ketsuko
a reply to: imthegoat
Even so, it was not caused by heat alone as they want you to think. They are implying simple heat exhaustion, not overheating triggered my seizure condition.
Everyone gets heat exhaustion, but not all of us have secondary health conditions that can be triggered by it.
Certain medications and alcohol can render someone more susceptible to heat exhaustion as well.