AubanBird
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hmm... this thread has me wondering just how much of the constant shadows i am experiencing are from the verapamil...
i am an airborne infantryman in the US army, on deployement. since there is very little i can take with me on long patrols, i tend to stick with pills that i can put in a small pill bottle and store in a pouch in my kit. i am currently taking taurine pills, guarana pills, and verapamil with me on patrols.
the guarana and taurine get crushed up, mixed with a bottle of water, and used as an abort at the first sign of ramping. i take the verapamil every day as a prevent. i also carry trex injections in my calf pocket, just in case nothing else works.
what i have been experiencing over the last few months is an almost constant shadow that fluctuates in intensity. its like a hit that is constantly trying to ramp up. sometimes it does, and usualy i can abort it before it gets bad enough to affect my performance. if i think the guarana and taurine arent going to work, i use the trex, which, thankfully, doesnt happen often.
the thing that gets me is that i was diagnosed only a month before i deployed. i count my blessings that i had a very young, very new, and very knowledgable PA refer me to a very good neuro. that was when i started taking the verapamil, and that is when things started changing. at first i attributed it to the change in environment: the heat, the constant changes in sleep schedule, the overall infantry life... now i am wondering if the verapamil is what caused the changes.
i have suffered cluster headaches for about 9 years now, at first they were episodic, only hit at night, and were generally low kip levels. a few years ago i almost died from a bad muscle/heat injury that caused my liver and kidneys to nearly fail, after which i started getting hit almost every day, usually several times a day, whith no telling what the intensity would be. now, however, its a constant lingering shadow that NEVER seems to fully go away. it just fluctuates.
im not going to stop taking the verapamil just yet, as it does seem to greatly reduce the severity and frequency of attacks, but as soon as i redeploy i will certainly investigate all my treatment options. this certainly has given me a lot to think about, and you are certainly not alone in your experience.
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