I was examined by a neurologist this morning in the presence of a neurosurgeon.
During the exam, I was asked to stare for a long time at a fixed point on the wall in front of me. During that time, the neurologist told the neurosurgeon a couple of times: "did you see that one?" and one in particular "that was a big one, wasn't it"...
I asked him what it meant, but he wouldn't say. It worries me...
Does anyone have a clue what it means?
Thanks all
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Parkie-
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I would have stayed till I got an explanation. I am sure their comments were very upsetting especially since they did not explain anything to you. If your neurologist has a portal, I suggest you send him a message requesting an explanation for their comments. If not call and speak with a nurse explaining your concern. Keep asking nicely but firmly till you are satisfied.
It is unacceptable for doctors to keep their patients in the dark. Also illegal not to inform the patient in most countries.call your doctor and insist on knowing what the heck they were talking about . What a stupid way to treat a patient Bubee
Are your eyes movement normal? Can you follow the doctor's fingers from left to right and right to left? Can you follow the doctor's finger moving it up and down? If yes, there is nothing to be concerned about.
There's got to be a reason for that staring at the fix point test... I am going to wait for a week or two and ask the hospital archives for that visit's report in my patient file.
Balance issues WITH FREQUENT FALLS? Second symptom is the distinctive one. If you don't have frequent falls, don't worry.
Check your symptoms on line for various neurodegenerative conditions so you have an idea of what it could be. However, many symptoms in neuro conditions overlap. Best that you ask your neurologist.
In a video on atypical parkinsonism, other conditions can affect the eyes, preventing normal eye motion. Can your eyes follow a hand horizontally but not vertically?
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