Hi everybody
Anyone out there have any advice for dealing with cognitive problems associated with AN. Heres my story....I am 1 year post- FSR for a 1.8 cm tumor. Even before the treatment I began to have both "balance" problems and difficulty concentrating/focusing for school. I put balance in quotes because I never fall over (in fact I can lift weights - run around etc.), but my head moves on its own unless I manually force it not to. I also feel what everyone call 'wonky head' in this forum. Its like i'm aware of all the muscles around my head and those which control my eyes. What adds to it all is that, since I was a kid, my eyes are sort of messed up so my left eye is very dominant and the right is legally blind which makes me believe that this ocular compensation is compounding the problem. Also my vision drifts and I have to conscoiusly correct for it which saps my energy. Now one year after treatment these problems are worse. So......the balance problems are there because the tumor is messing up the nerve signal on one side, not because of the radiation treatment (since this all started prior to it) - but treatment may have exaserbated these problems. I liked the idea that this was all in my head which is what my neuro told me, because that would me mean a little psychologic work would fix it, however that didn't pan out. It did help a great deal to remove the axiety component which certainly aggrivates the symptoms but now I am in a good place mentally, looking at the situation realistically and trying to come up with the best solution and explore all options. Also what helps is vest. rehap therapy which I credit to bringing me back to funcioning socially at nearly full capacity. But what remains is the ablitily to focus, concentrate, problem solve, read, spell (as you can likely see), and remain on task without either getting extremely fatigued or just bugging out because things don't come to me like they used to.
Heres the best part.. I'm 25 - just finished my work for my master's degree (while haveing all these symptoms - the only way I got through it was because my advisor's son had an AN and he went easy on me) in medical physics and now I find myself unable to do complex math or read complex journal articles, solve problems, in serious college loan and credit card debt. and pretty sure I cannot handle the workload of the demanding though well-paying career I set out do. How do you cope with going from being extremely smart to becoming ... lets say slightly below average.
sorry about the length!
Any advice or similar experiences, or potential solutions would be greatly appreciated.
Justin