Genkin neuralgia on a smartphone.I saw the hell of 20 injections
* This article is a reprint of the article released on June 23, 2015.
Headaches have begun a few months ago, and it's not a normal pain.
If the hangover is "cracked", this is a painful pain.I feel like I'm beaten by my head with a burned iron rod, and the pain runs through the whole skull like a lightning.
When I consulted a neurology specialist, I was already prepared for death.It's exaggerated, but I'm serious.Just two years ago, my cousin was just diagnosed with brain cancer (when I had a bad headache and went to see it, it was due to brain tumors).Since then, I've been very sensitive to brain -related things.I thought it was true, but when I was waiting in the waiting room of the New York University Hospital two weeks ago, I was powerful to the fist, assuming the worst situation.
"I understand most of it."At her consultation, I was first asked what kind of pain.She sheds light on her eyes, checks the coordination skill (whether the brain command and the physical movement are linked), let them walk, and ask a lot of questions.When it was over, the doctor opened Google and entered such a terrible word, Occipital Neuralgia.
While showing the images that appeared in Google search, the doctor explained how the head nerve came out of the spine behind the neck and branched throughout the skull.The occipital neuralgia is a condition in which pressure and damage are applied to the root of the nerves, and a chronic burnt headache occurs.Pain may appear locally on the back of the head and the temporal part, and as in my case, it may appear in pain that penetrates the brain.If you scroll down, you will see a picture of the nerves spread throughout the skull, and a photo of a doctor pierced a needle on the patient's skull, and the fist will be strong again.
"What is the cause?" When I picked up with a deep wrinkle in the eyebrows, I was asked, "Is it a laptop or desktop?"I'm using it!).The posture when sleeping is also stretched (the body is stretched straight as much as possible!).It seems that anything that puts a burden on the muscles of the neck can cause anything.If so, of course, there is one thing to come up with.
Dr. Cardiel said:
on second thoughts….You certainly need a dissertation.A recent paper on the local newspaper Sweeting Journal, which warns that the head -to -head terminal will burden the neck after searching for the "Gencho Nostalgic Smartphone".This paper was quoted, and if you lean on your head 60 degrees forward, the pressure on the top and surrounding muscles of the spine will increase by 27 kg!There is no reason not to be damaged by that weight!
The journal introduced such a discourse of Jeremy Poulsen anesthesia.
Not at all.This isn't miserable!
But when you know the smartphone syndrome and the cause, you wonder what to do.It's a job to read.You only have to stop adding a poisonous game like SimCity Buildit, but sometimes you have to reply to the email on the go.Some doctors say they should hold their mobile phones on their eyes.
The courage to do it in a little public ...
Fortunately, there was a way to stop occipital neuralgia (although not treatment).After searching for Google, Dr. Cardiel prepared about six injections, put steroids and painkillers, and explained quietly.From now on, we will inject this into the nerve above from the neck.The back of the head doesn't feel anything, but if the medicine turns on the nerves, the signal that causes the headache will disappear, so it's okay.
I was so painful that I was so painful that I was so painful that I was injected about 20 times.When I became normal on the consultation table, I was told that it would be okay to recover after one day (actually improved in one day).But if you really want to stop headaches, you have to keep your head straight.Yoga and massage were recommended for the pamphlet I got as a way to relax the neck.Both are hundred times better than injections.
No, but once this happens, smartphones cannot be seen again with the same eyes again.I have to try not to see it.The degree of dependence on technology is increasing year by year, and it has only reduced how to use it, so that's it.A few weeks ago, when I saw an anime GIF (bottom) laughing about smartphone addiction on Sploid, I laughed out loud, but now I can't laugh.
Two months later, we will return to the consultation room and will be in the injection needle busbus again.I was relieved, not cancer, but it was a thorny road considering changing smartphone habits in the future.I don't like headaches, but I can't think of living without a smartphone ...