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Author Topic:   Just want to say before I give up...........
Lexxigramer
Moderator

Posts: 8539
From: Here since March 24th.2005/..& Have been Lexagramming going on 2/3 of a century to date! LEXIGRAMMING.♥is my Passion!
Registered: Feb 2012

posted August 19, 2022 07:23 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Lexxigramer     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Eternal Energy:
I have just returned from this open-air cinema that is near here. Now that I am on holidays I go and watch every movie that is on, as I rarely have time to go to the cinema during the year. I mean I go and watch every movie! Haha! Tonight was "Minions: The Rise of Gru" on! Fantastic??? I'm telling you I was laughing so hard, those kids that were sitting near were looking at me! I enjoyed it so much! First of all, I was among children, something that I simply love! Then, at some time, they couldn't sit on their seats any longer and they started moving around, standing in front of me, I couldn't see the screen, thank God I know some basic English, they were changing seats, shrieking with laughter and throwing pop corn to one another! Haha! Absolutely marvellous I'm telling you!

COVID here has pretty much roached
such outdoor experiences as that👽😢
We called the drive in movies and we use to make them everywhere😎❤️
I know exactly what you are talking about😎😎
I use to love going to them😎❤️
On the other hand I did not enjoy
rude noises and rude children and smoking adults and food in my hair and even
pee and worse on the ground😢🤬
Maybe despite the rukus
and food messes the people there
where were are not as revolting and
dirty and loud as here⁉️👽
And too much drug use too👽
I do Netflix at home on computer screens😎
I go see movies when I was able to do so
tomsee the movies and not to socialize👽
Just not my thing these days and I would be unable to do such no matter what nowadays 👽😢
Mostly into certain science fiction and
Detective movies and serious movies😎
With rare exceptions I do not do comedies
I shall Google the titles you listed to see what they are about😎

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Lexxigramer
Moderator

Posts: 8539
From: Here since March 24th.2005/..& Have been Lexagramming going on 2/3 of a century to date! LEXIGRAMMING.♥is my Passion!
Registered: Feb 2012

posted August 19, 2022 07:25 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Lexxigramer     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Eternal Energy:
"Top Gun" is on next week and then "The Crawdads Sing"??? Something like that, I don't quite remember the title of this one. I'm really excited!
I shall Google those titles after I eat😎

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Lexxigramer
Moderator

Posts: 8539
From: Here since March 24th.2005/..& Have been Lexagramming going on 2/3 of a century to date! LEXIGRAMMING.♥is my Passion!
Registered: Feb 2012

posted August 19, 2022 07:34 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Lexxigramer     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Eternal Energy:
Now, as far as agony is concerned. First of all, and of course I know you already know it, it is a Greek word deriving from the noun agon. In ancient Greece, an agon is a contest and a contest is considered to be a celebration, a gathering of people, a prize, a winner! Not only an agon is a physical competition, for example, the Olympic Games, but it is also a contest of tragedy and poetry, of politics and philosophy, of rhetoric and lawsuit. I have to make a parenthesis here and clarify that of course we all know what the word means, at least what it means nowadays, but if you ask me, I always try to find the good, the positive, the loving things in everything, hence all of the above. So, for me, agon, first and foremost, means a victory. A celebration. A triumph. And I’m sure that if you search more through dictionaries, you will definitely find somewhere that agony is also a demonstration of happiness and joy besides the definition we all know today. Moving along with the flow of time, we reach the Garden of Gethsemane where Jesus is struggling with agony. There, in that orchard of those ancient olive trees he feels for the first time troubled. His soul is very sorrowful, even to death. This anguish of his mind will be much later, in the 14th century, embraced by the French who will add a new meaning in the word, that of the extreme pain of the body, and the mind, and the last moments before Death. Here in Greece the word does not denote the certainty of dying, but the fear, the anxiety, and the waiting. Two classic examples following. “I'm in great agony right now. It’s 2:00 in the morning and my daughter hasn’t returned home yet.” Or “I have great agony for tomorrow’s final exams. I don’t think I have studied very well and I’m afraid I will fail.”

Ahhh I understsnd😎
I may need to find and use a more
appropriate word to describe my state
of pain etcetera👽😳
Hmmm
I shall search for the best word to use
as it seems that the word agony has
many deep ancient and diverse connotations
that are not relevant to my situations👽

Let me ponder this issue.
Langiages often fail us and do not always
make clear EXACTLY
what was and is meant
by our words😎😢👽

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Lexxigramer
Moderator

Posts: 8539
From: Here since March 24th.2005/..& Have been Lexagramming going on 2/3 of a century to date! LEXIGRAMMING.♥is my Passion!
Registered: Feb 2012

posted August 19, 2022 07:45 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Lexxigramer     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Snake Lady:
I didn't have the option to send a friend request on FB so my message probably went to your "message requests" section which you can get to if you go to your messages page there, not just the pop up in the corner.
I sent it to your personal FB.

I just saw your post here😎😳
Sorry that I missed seeing it until now and
did not immediately,reply to you😢💙
I shall try and find it at fb which being
often still too much a computer tech idiot
I need to figure out where the message
area is for such messages😳👽please bear
with me just had chemotherapy today and
very tired at the moment💙
Again pardon any weird typos and or strange autofills
and better yet point such wtfs? so
that I may fish the issues😎😁✍️

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Eternal Energy
Knowflake

Posts: 1750
From:
Registered: May 2020

posted August 20, 2022 03:50 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Eternal Energy     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Lexxigramer:

I used to love going to them😎❤️
On the other hand, I did not enjoy
rude noises and rude children and smoking adults and food in my hair and even
pee and worse on the ground😢🤬
Maybe despite the ruckus
and food messes, the people there
are not as revolting and
dirty and loud as here⁉️👽
And too much drug use too👽


Oh, no, no! Nothing like that! Definitely nothing like that! It was like a kids' party! Pure happiness and enjoyment... Exactly as it should be...

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Lexxigramer
Moderator

Posts: 8539
From: Here since March 24th.2005/..& Have been Lexagramming going on 2/3 of a century to date! LEXIGRAMMING.♥is my Passion!
Registered: Feb 2012

posted August 20, 2022 12:45 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Lexxigramer     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Eternal Energy:
Oh, no, no! Nothing like that! Definitely nothing like that! It was like a kids' party! Pure happiness and enjoyment... Exactly as it should be...



Oh wonderful❤️😎
A kid's party🎈🥳🧁🎂🎉🤾🤸
That makes all the difference😎❤️
The right time and place for such a
Time of happiness and childlike joy even for the adults😎❤️
I thought you were referring to the things we call drive in that was which were in huge parking
Ots and feilds with 1 to 3 huge screens
100 feet across or so.
Done had space in fridge not for
walk in people to sit n the ground
and the rest was for vehicles which
one would park and then turn nnther
radio and get the sound for the movie
through their radio😎
And for the trucks and car roof sitters watching they space was in back for
them so that they could sit high up
and not block the view of other folks😎

Those places were great unless people got all obnoxious and rude and stupid.
Heh heh heh,
Often were called
PAssion Pits
because of folks having sex in their
vehicles😳😁
Of course back then the more sexual
movies were restricted and no one
under was allowed entry to those movies😳

By the way last night !ost of my hair
fell out👽😳
Then this morning the rest of my 4 and 1/2
long thick Auburn hair
fell it Al ng with my eyebrows eyelashes
and my bodily other hair👽
I knew that was going to happen so it doesn't n my new chemotherapy hat😎😁
However a tooth came out and at least 5 more are now loose👽😳
I knew that could happen from chemotherapy
but was hoping that
I would be spared turning into
a baldheaded gaunt old toothless bird👽😢

Oh well miss the teeth more than the hair
and cannot get that issue fixed they
say whilst fighting the cancers👽😢

The hair gone
sigh
I really don miss having it 😢👽
Never had my hair short since I was like a child after it fell out from illnesses back then and such
so as an adult this is very freaky
to say the least👽😳
I also feel beyond naked
and my hairless skin feels
smooth and more numb now😳👽
I was never into hair shaving my body hair except for the beard and mustache😁

Okay off to try and eat😎
Hoping to
get outside today😎❤️
Very hot for Ohio today🌡️🥵
95*F
and the heat and uv index and humidity
makes it feel like it is 100"F or higher👽😳

Yesterday I was too out of it to
venture out for more than chemotherapy
after having a bad morning
and then an overlong chemotherapy session
in the afternoon
because the infusion pump kept
screwing up like 30 times or more👽😳😢
in the afternoon👽


------------------
Take a look at my
LexIgramming/LexAgramming Biography

Nearly 2/3 of a century to date of
LexAgramming
Lexperience!🔠✍️

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Eternal Energy
Knowflake

Posts: 1750
From:
Registered: May 2020

posted August 20, 2022 03:02 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Eternal Energy     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Ohhh, you must be so cute now! Just like little babies!


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Lexxigramer
Moderator

Posts: 8539
From: Here since March 24th.2005/..& Have been Lexagramming going on 2/3 of a century to date! LEXIGRAMMING.♥is my Passion!
Registered: Feb 2012

posted August 20, 2022 03:11 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Lexxigramer     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Eternal Energy:
Ohhh, you must be so cute now! Just like little babies!

http://imgur.com/a/P76PxS3


closer to
strange alien person👽😎❤️😃😎

The I do in an odd way
find being bald rather interesting
because I had wondered from since I I had gone bald when I was a child a couple of times,
what it would be like to be
a bald adult😎😃👽

Just wish it was by choice and not
cancer being the cause👽😢

Would love to have my entire scalp
tattooed👽❤️
Unfortunately that would be
bad be ause if I needed an MRI done
they could not do it on a
tattooed head👽😢

Seems the metallic salts in tattoo
inks would cause serious thermal
burns during an MRI😳👽😢

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Lexxigramer
Moderator

Posts: 8539
From: Here since March 24th.2005/..& Have been Lexagramming going on 2/3 of a century to date! LEXIGRAMMING.♥is my Passion!
Registered: Feb 2012

posted August 20, 2022 03:16 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Lexxigramer     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
PS
Actually I think most babies are
rather ugly😳😁
I got lucky😎😁
I was actually a cute baby once
I got past the worse part of my
being a premmie stage😎

I was often very fragile looking
until I passed through my first 7
years or so😳😎

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Eternal Energy
Knowflake

Posts: 1750
From:
Registered: May 2020

posted August 20, 2022 03:17 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Eternal Energy     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
You are definitely more beautiful than all the hair of the world... These little things don't make up of who you are. Other things truly matter in life as time goes by...

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Eternal Energy
Knowflake

Posts: 1750
From:
Registered: May 2020

posted August 20, 2022 03:22 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Eternal Energy     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Ohhh, I simply adore tattoos! I don't have any, though! I don't like needles at all!

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Eternal Energy
Knowflake

Posts: 1750
From:
Registered: May 2020

posted August 20, 2022 03:28 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Eternal Energy     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Well, to be honest, I do have some certain tattoos on my body from time to time. You know, those temporary ones, and I wear them only in very special occasions.

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Eternal Energy
Knowflake

Posts: 1750
From:
Registered: May 2020

posted August 20, 2022 03:32 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Eternal Energy     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Eternal Energy:
Other things truly matter in life as time goes by...


And as time goes by, my dear friend, we have nothing else, but the fundamental things applying...

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Eternal Energy
Knowflake

Posts: 1750
From:
Registered: May 2020

posted August 20, 2022 03:34 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Eternal Energy     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Right?...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d22CiKMPpaY

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teasel
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Posts: 22749
From:
Registered: Apr 2009

posted August 21, 2022 01:14 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for teasel     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
I've been to the drive-in once this summer. I was hoping we might go again, but only if we can get there early, and not on an opening weekend for a movie.

I do miss going to the movies, but I just had covid, and I don't want it again. I didn't want it at all.

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Eternal Energy
Knowflake

Posts: 1750
From:
Registered: May 2020

posted August 21, 2022 03:30 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Eternal Energy     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by teasel:
I've been to the drive-in once this summer. I was hoping we might go again, but only if we can get there early, and not on an opening weekend for a movie.

Which movie did you watch?...

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Lexxigramer
Moderator

Posts: 8539
From: Here since March 24th.2005/..& Have been Lexagramming going on 2/3 of a century to date! LEXIGRAMMING.♥is my Passion!
Registered: Feb 2012

posted August 21, 2022 04:24 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Lexxigramer     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Exhauston after chemothetapy edemas
all day etcetera 😢
15 pound weight gain from it
in less than a day👽😢
Love all the replies
Eternal Energy and teasel😎
but am simply not
up to replying more
at this moment💙
I shall reply to all
after I rest up some more❤️
💤

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Lexxigramer
Moderator

Posts: 8539
From: Here since March 24th.2005/..& Have been Lexagramming going on 2/3 of a century to date! LEXIGRAMMING.♥is my Passion!
Registered: Feb 2012

posted August 24, 2022 11:03 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Lexxigramer     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Update on my damn cancers👽🤬
Chemotherapy for the
5 rare cancers update😢👽
Tooth snapped off at gum line😢
Abscesses in some others starting 😢
Freaking TMJ intense pain😢
Chemo not going well😢
Numbers say that things have
become 20% and 50% and 150% worse
depending on which tests😢

I am scared to say the least😢

Sorry about the gloomies and doomies😢


The thought of suicide
is a great consolation:
by means of it
one gets through
many a dark night.💙😎

Edit to add important information
about TMJ😢
Please go to this link http://www.aans.org/Patients/Neurosurgical-Conditions-and-Treatments/Trigeminal-Neuralgia
for
more links and more information
and pictures etcetera 💙
It is known as the suicide disease
and I have been riding the edge
when it flares up
and on top of the cancers and
over a dozen other rare diseases
and syndromes that I am afflicted
with
Andrew now 5 rare cancers added to
the night!are mix;
Let me just say that I seriously
do not know how much more
I can handle😢👽
It is bad beyond bad and too many things stacking not just one bad illness👽😢
I cannot help but be having greatest difficulty coping with all the agonies😢
Most drugs I am unable to take😢👽
That leaves me with surgery to cut
the facial nerves and more.😢👽
Yippie Skippy do dah my
screwed up body😢👽

quote:

AANS

MENU
AANS Patients Neurosurgical Conditions and Treatments Trigeminal Neuralgia
Trigeminal Neuralgia
Trigeminal neuralgia (TN),
also known as tic douloureux,
is sometimes
described as bithe most excruciating pain known to humanity.
The pain typically involves the lower face and jaw, although sometimes it affects the area around the nose and above the eye. This intense, stabbing, electric shock-like pain is caused by irritation of the trigeminal nerve, which sends branches to the forehead, cheek and lower jaw. It usually is limited to one side of the face. The pain can be triggered by an action as routine and minor as brushing your teeth, eating or the wind. Attacks may begin mild and short, but if left untreated, trigeminal neuralgia can progressively worsen.


Although trigeminal neuralgia cannot always be cured, there are treatments available to alleviate the debilitating pain. Normally, anticonvulsive medications are the first treatment choice. Surgery can be an effective option for those who become unresponsive to medications or for those who suffer serious side effects from the medications.

The Trigeminal Nerve
The trigeminal nerve is one set of the cranial nerves in the head. It is the nerve responsible for providing sensation to the face. One trigeminal nerve runs to the right side of the head, while the other runs to the left. Each of these nerves has three distinct branches. "Trigeminal" derives from the Latin word "tria," which means three, and "geminus," which means twin. After the trigeminal nerve leaves the brain and travels inside the skull, it divides into three smaller branches, controlling sensations throughout the face:

Ophthalmic Nerve (V1): The first branch controls sensation in a person's eye, upper eyelid and forehead.
Maxillary Nerve (V2): The second branch controls sensation in the lower eyelid, cheek, nostril, upper lip and upper gum.
Mandibular Nerve (V3): The third branch controls sensations in the jaw, lower lip, lower gum and some of the muscles used for chewing.
Prevalence and Incidence
It is reported that 150,000 people are diagnosed with trigeminal neuralgia (TN) every year. While the disorder can occur at any age, it is most common in people over the age of 50. The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) notes that TN is twice as common in women than in men. A form of TN is associated with multiple sclerosis (MS).

Causes
There are two types of TN — primary and secondary. The exact cause of TN is still unknown, but the pain associated with it represents an irritation of the nerve. Primary trigeminal neuralgia has been linked to the compression of the nerve, typically in the base of the head where the brain meets the spinal cord. This is usually due to contact between a healthy artery or vein and the trigeminal nerve at the base of the brain. This places pressure on the nerve as it enters the brain and causes the nerve to misfire. Secondary TN is caused by pressure on the nerve from a tumor, MS, a cyst, facial injury or another medical condition that damages the myelin sheaths.

Symptoms
Most patients report that their pain begins spontaneously and seemingly out of nowhere. Other patients say their pain follows a car accident, a blow to the face or dental work. In the cases of dental work, it is more likely that the disorder was already developing and then caused the initial symptoms to be triggered. Pain often is first experienced along the upper or lower jaw, so many patients assume they have a dental abscess. Some patients see their dentists and actually have a root canal performed, which inevitably brings no relief. When the pain persists, patients realize the problem is not dental-related.

The pain of TN is defined as either type 1 (TN1) or type 2 (TN2). TN1 is characterized by intensely sharp, throbbing, sporadic, burning or shock-like pain around the eyes, lips, nose, jaw, forehead and scalp. TN1 can get worse resulting in more pain spells that last longer. TN2 pain often is present as a constant, burning, aching and may also have stabbing less intense than TN1.

TN tends to run in cycles. Patients often suffer long stretches of frequent attacks, followed by weeks, months or even years of little or no pain. The usual pattern, however, is for the attacks to intensify over time with shorter pain-free periods. Some patients suffer less than one attack a day, while others experience a dozen or more every hour. The pain typically begins with a sensation of electrical shocks that culminates in an excruciating stabbing pain within less than 20 seconds. The pain often leaves patients with uncontrollable facial twitching, which is why the disorder is also known as tic douloureux.

Pain can be focused in one spot or it can spread throughout the face. Typically, it is only on one side of the face; however, in rare occasions and sometimes when associated with multiple sclerosis, patients may feel pain in both sides of their face. Pain areas include the cheeks, jaw, teeth, gums, lips, eyes and forehead.

Attacks of TN may be triggered by the following:

Touching the skin lightly
Washing
Shaving
Brushing teeth
Blowing the nose
Drinking hot or cold beverages
Encountering a light breeze
Applying makeup
Smiling
Talking
The symptoms of several pain disorders are similar to those of trigeminal neuralgia. The most common mimicker of TN is trigeminal neuropathic pain (TNP). TNP results from an injury or damage to the trigeminal nerve. TNP pain is generally described as being constant, dull and burning. Attacks of sharp pain can also occur, commonly triggered by touch. Additional mimickers include:

Temporal tendinitis
Ernest syndrome (injury of the stylomandibular ligament
Occipital neuralgia
Cluster headaches/ migraines
Giant cell arteritis
Dental pain
Post-herpetic neuralgia
Glossopharyngeal neuralgia
Sinus infection
Ear infection
Temporomandibular joint syndrome (TMJ)
Diagnosis
TN can be very difficult to diagnose, because there are no specific diagnostic tests and symptoms are very similar to other facial pain disorders. Therefore, it is important to seek medical care when feeling unusual, sharp pain around the eyes, lips, nose, jaw, forehead and scalp, especially if you have not had dental or other facial surgery recently. The patient should begin by addressing the problem with their primary care physician. They may refer the patient to a specialist later.

Testing
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can detect if a tumor or MS is affecting the trigeminal nerve. A high-resolution, thin-slice or three-dimensional MRI can reveal if there is compression caused by a blood vessel. Newer scanning techniques can show if a vessel is pressing on the nerve and may even show the degree of compression. Compression due to veins is not as easily identified on these scans. Tests can help rule out other causes of facial disorders. TN usually is diagnosed based on the description of the symptoms provided by the patient, detailed patient history and clinical evaluation. There are no specific diagnostic tests for TN, so physicians must rely heavily on symptoms and history. Physicians base their diagnosis on the type pain (sudden, quick and shock-like), the location of the pain and things that trigger the pain. Physical and neurological examinations may also be done in which the doctor will touch and examine parts of your face to better understand where the pain is located.

Treatment
Non-Surgical Treatments
There are several effective ways to alleviate the pain, including a variety of medications. Medications are generally started at low doses and increased gradually based on patient’s response to the drug.

Carbamazepine, an anticonvulsant drug, is the most common medication that doctors use to treat TN. In the early stages of the disease, carbamazepine controls pain for most people. When a patient shows no relief from this medication, a physician has cause to doubt whether TN is present. However, the effectiveness of carbamazepine decreases over time. Possible side effects include dizziness, double vision, drowsiness and nausea.
Gabapentin, an anticonvulsant drug, which is most commonly used to treat epilepsy or migraines can also treat TN. Side effects of this drug are minor and include dizziness and/or drowsiness which go away on their own.
Oxcarbazepine, a newer medication, has been used more recently as the first line of treatment. It is structurally related to carbamazepine and may be preferred, because it generally has fewer side effects. Possible side effects include dizziness and double vision.
Other medications include: baclofen, amitriptyline, nortriptyline, pregabalin, phenytoin, valproic acid, clonazepam, sodium valporate, lamotrigine, topiramate, phenytoin and opioids.

There are drawbacks to these medications, other than side effects. Some patients may need relatively high doses to alleviate the pain, and the side effects can become more pronounced at higher doses. Anticonvulsant drugs may lose their effectiveness over time. Some patients may need a higher dose to reduce the pain or a second anticonvulsant, which can lead to adverse drug reactions. Many of these drugs can have a toxic effect on some patients, particularly people with a history of bone marrow suppression and kidney and liver toxicity. These patients must have their blood monitored to ensure their safety.

Surgery
If medications have proven ineffective in treating TN, several surgical procedures may help control the pain. Surgical treatment is divided into two categories: 1) open cranial surgery or 2) lesioning procedures. In general, open surgery is performed for patients found to have pressure on the trigeminal nerve from a nearby blood vessel, which can be diagnosed with imaging of the brain, such as a special MRI. This surgery is thought to take away the underlying problem causing the TN. In contrast, lesioning procedures include interventions that injure the trigeminal nerve on purpose, in order to prevent the nerve from delivering pain to the face. The effects of lesioning may be shorter lasting and in some keys may result in numbness to the face.

Open Surgery
Microvascular decompression involves microsurgical exposure of the trigeminal nerve root, identification of a blood vessel that may be compressing the nerve and gentle movement of the blood vessel away from the point of compression. Decompression may reduce sensitivity and allow the trigeminal nerve to recover and return to a more normal, pain-free condition. While this generally is the most effective surgery, it also is the most invasive, because it requires opening the skull through a craniotomy. There is a small risk of decreased hearing, facial weakness, facial numbness, double vision, stroke or death.

Lesioning Procedures
Percutaneous radiofrequency rhizotomy treats TN through the use of electrocoagulation (heat). It can relieve nerve pain by destroying the part of the nerve that causes pain and suppressing the pain signal to the brain. The surgeon passes a hollow needle through the cheek into the trigeminal nerve. A heating current, which is passed through an electrode, destroys some of the nerve fibers.

Percutaneous balloon compression utilizes a needle that is passed through the cheek to the trigeminal nerve. The neurosurgeon places a balloon in the trigeminal nerve through a catheter. The balloon is inflated where fibers produce pain. The balloon compresses the nerve, injuring the pain-causing fibers, and is then removed.

Percutaneous glycerol rhizotomy utilizes glycerol injected through a needle into the area where the nerve divides into three main branches. The goal is to damage the nerve selectively in order to interfere with the transmission of the pain signals to the brain.

Stereotactic radiosurgery (through such procedures as Gamma Knife, Cyberknife, Linear Accelerator (LINAC) delivers a single highly concentrated dose of ionizing radiation to a small, precise target at the trigeminal nerve root. This treatment is noninvasive and avoids many of the risks and complications of open surgery and other treatments. Over a period of time and as a result of radiation exposure, the slow formation of a lesion in the nerve interrupts transmission of pain signals to the brain.

Overall, the benefits of surgery or lesioning techniques should always be weighed carefully against its risks. Although a large percentage of TN patients report pain relief after procedures, there is no guarantee that they will help every individual.

Neuromodulation
For patients with TNP, another surgical procedure can be done that includes placement of one or more electrodes in the soft tissue near the nerves, under the skull on the covering of the brain and sometimes deeper into the brain, to deliver electrical stimulation to the part of the brain responsible for sensation of the face. In peripheral nerve stimulation, the leads are placed under the skin on branches of the trigeminal nerve. In motor cortex stimulation (MCS), the area which innervates the face is stimulated. In deep brain stimulation (DBS), regions that affect sensation pathways to the face may be stimulated.

How to Prepare for a Neurosurgical Appointment
Write down symptoms. This should include: What the pain feels like (for example, is it sharp, shooting, aching, burning or other), where exactly the pain is located (lower jaw, cheek, eye/forehead), if it is accompanied by other symptoms (headache, numbness, facial spasms), duration of pain (weeks, months, years), pain-free intervals (longest period of time without pain or in between episodes), severity of pain (0=no pain, 10=worst pain)
Note any triggers of pain (e.g. brushing teeth, touching face, cold air)
Make a list of medications and surgeries related to the face pain (prior medications, did they work, were there side effects), current medications (duration and dose)
Write down questions in advance
Understand that the diagnosis and treatment process for TN is not simple. Having realistic expectations can greatly improve overall outcomes.
Follow-up
Patients should follow-up with their primary care providers and specialists regularly to maintain their treatment. Typically, neuromodulation surgical patients are asked to return to the clinic every few months in the year following the surgery. During these visits, they may adjust the stimulation settings and assess the patient’s recovery from surgery. Routinely following-up with a doctor ensures that the care is correct and effective. Patients who undergo any form of neurostimulation surgery will also follow-up with a device representative who will adjust the device settings and parameters as needed alongside their doctors.


Yes it is this bad😢👽
I have already tried ALL
The drugs used to treat it and the
Only drugs that are left for me
but barely touch the pain
are Methadone and Morphine😢
With the so called opioid crisis
as it is called these days because
too many folks abuse opioids
and do not actually need them🤬
Well because no doctor tells me
no to them
that gives you all a huge indicator
of just how bad off I am😢👽

I keep posting about my health
issues because I want folks
to realize that is why I make
too many typos at times and do
not always reply in a timely fashion😢
Please feel free to remind me and
bump any threads that anybody you
feel that I should have replied to
any of you on these threads💙
Also presenting this information for
the benefit of anyone who may also suffer from TMJ with or without any other health troubles💙

When I get done with the chemothetapy and radiation and invasive extensive surgies for the 5 rare cancers;
When I survive
I will need to have my facial nerves
etcetera cut and also knee replacements
and more😢👽

Maybe I should just give up⁉️👽😢

Many people
And I seriously mean many
Including many doctors
have said if they were me that
they would commit suicide👽😢

So am I trying to hard to survive⁉️👽😢
When is it time to say fffruck it all
bye bye⁉️⁉️⁉️

Going to go have a scream fit and
try to collapse into some semblance
of sleep.
The morphine is wearing off and I
dare not take more because it can
suppress breathing too much
and lead to coma and death😢👽

Hope you all have happy
and healthy lives💙❤️😎
Thank you all for reading
PS pardon any tos or strange autofills please👽

IP: Logged


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