Suggest Treatment For Symptoms Of Lesions Related To Trauma In The Brain
Wed, 2 Sep 2015
Answered on
Fri, 25 Sep 2015
Last reviewed on
Your conclusions are premature.
Detailed Answer:
I read your question carefully and I understand your concern, but you are going too far.
From your description some of the factors which worry you so much actually indicate me that there is no reason to panic, at least no reason to fear for your life.
The fact that you feel it on tapping in the area actually is an indicator that it is not related to your brain. The brain is inside the skull which is a thick bone, with a layer of soft tissue above. So any swelling or inflammation in the brain is not manifested in the surface as it would be happening behind a bony wall.
Also the fact that the pain has been coming and going, has happened in the past also excludes that as stroke, tumors, infections etc do not have such pain fluctuations.
So please try to relax and stop thinking there is something to fear for your life.
Those childhood factors could play a role. There may be lesions related to the trauma in the brain, however they are not progressing, if there has been a damage it is over now it is not an active process, whether there has been permanent damage to any are brain imaging can tell, but it's not evolving so since you can't not afford it is no emergency.
Also these hits might have cause damage to your neck. Neck trauma is a predisposing factor for arthritis, degenerative spinal disease. Such inflammation or neck spasms at the upper cervical levels can cause pain which usually radiates in the back of the head. Also such neck changes can compress nerves exiting the upper neck to supply the posterior superficial part of the head, causing occipital neuralgia which is short lasting sharp pain like in your case, so that I would consider a probable cause. It is not threatening though only bothering.
I remain at your disposal for other questions.
Never encountered that association
Detailed Answer:
Hello again and thank you for that update.
I am pleased that the pain has subsided now, hopefully it won't repeat in the future.
Regarding your question about apple cider vinegar, the answer is no, I have no knowledge of that. I can't exclude it, headache disorders are of so many types and so variable, there are patients in whom certain foods trigger headaches, commonly spicy foods, chocolate. Never encountered apple cider vinegar but can't dismiss it either. However one isolated episode can be a coincidence, one can reach that conclusion when the relationship reoccurs regularly, meaning the headache reoccurs if you take apple cider vinegar again.
A couple of comments on your remarks. I understand you felt the pain to come from under the skull, but perception is very subjective, what reassured me was the fact it was affected by tapping superficially, there is no reason for the brain, located inside the skull to be affected by that.
Also by bothering I wasn't rating the pain severity, didn't mean the pain to be mild. I meant to say that it was not life threatening, caused suffering but not indicating a threatening condition like stroke, infection or tumor. Perhaps the word bothering wasn't the best choice, English is not my native language and I guess that shows at times.
Wishing you good health.
Answered by
Get personalised answers from verified doctor in minutes across 80+ specialties
