hi im chris im 24 yars of age i have ben feeling dizziness and shaky for the past 2 weeks now and weak i dunno why this is but its really scaring me now i havnt been to my doctors i didnt think nothing of it till i read it up on it on here its ben really helpful thanks im really tired aswell most ov the time
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Ok, well I've had all these symptoms as well (nausea, stomach pains, headaches, dizziness) and I tried many tests: Stool, blood, ultra sound, etc. None of these came up with anything. However, I have found it helpful to take Antacids, which provide mild relief. The symptoms mostly come after eating, in the morning, and at night. If anyone has anything else to offer, please help!
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Many of you are describing my same symptoms, I have been experiencing nausea, dizziness, hot flashes, cramping, head aches, unusual stools, etc. I am not prego and am only 29, so not menopausal either. This has been going on for quite some time (over a year) and increasingly getting worse as time goes on..... but in all of these posts, I have not found an answer or recommendation. I am having an oposcopy done next week as my pap has come back abnormal..... any thoughts?
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I have some of those symptoms Ive been feeling really dizzy. Hot flashes a lot. cant sleep much. STOMACH ACHE ! . I dont eat much, today I ate one of them microwave soups when I woke up. An I havent eat anything else the rest of the day and im not hungry at all. I have nausea. And feel like throwing up when eating something. Sometimes I feel weak too. I dont know what I have... Please help?
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Wow I thought I was the only one going through this! I got ill about 3 years ago after a bad back injury when dancing. My stomach is constantly on fire n i always feel sick. I'm terrified of being sick so it makes my life a living hell!
The doctors aren't much help either! They told me back then that I would be better within 6 months-1year and i'm still bad. They haven't got a clue how to help me but it's ruling my life!
For the past 3 years I've been sitting up practically all night, feeling extremely uncomfortable, sickly and scared.
Any help on how to stop this would be great!
The doctors aren't much help either! They told me back then that I would be better within 6 months-1year and i'm still bad. They haven't got a clue how to help me but it's ruling my life!
For the past 3 years I've been sitting up practically all night, feeling extremely uncomfortable, sickly and scared.
Any help on how to stop this would be great!
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WOW, I have the same symptoms. I went to my doctor and had blood work done. My symptoms were due to anemia. I've known that I was anemic for some time now but didn't know that all of my sysmptoms were related to that.
I suggest checking your stool to make sure that there isn't any blood in it. Get tested for it because if not treated can cause blood transfusion, etc. There are several types of anemia if this is what's wrong with you, you will need to know what type.
It can also lead to hemmoroaids, pain in the wrist.
Hope I was able to help you all.
I suggest checking your stool to make sure that there isn't any blood in it. Get tested for it because if not treated can cause blood transfusion, etc. There are several types of anemia if this is what's wrong with you, you will need to know what type.
It can also lead to hemmoroaids, pain in the wrist.
Hope I was able to help you all.
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Well I suffer the same symptoms as everyone is describing on here. I have been tested for everything there is with no results, but then I read a blog that explained what I and hundreds of thousands of people around the belive its from. Chem-trails! You see planes spraying the sky no matter where you are the this country, or the world. I'm not talking about contrails which disappear minutes after a planes has passed. I'm talking about the clouds that develop from the spray that is released in the sky in X formations, so as to cover an entire area. Then there is a pollen like substance that lands on everything at times, some days what they spray leaves strange spider like webs on things. Just do some research on Chem-trails, because part of what they spray is Heavy Metals.
Taken from
Heavy metal toxicity is a very general subject and people experience widely varying symptoms in response to heavy metal poisoning.
Please note that it is extremely important to obtain an accurate diagnosis before trying to find a cure. Many diseases and conditions share common symptoms: if you treat yourself for the wrong illness or a specific symptom of a complex disease, you may delay legitimate treatment of a serious underlying problem. In other words, the greatest danger in self-treatment may be self-diagnosis. If you do not know what you really have, you can not treat it!
Knowing how difficult it is to weed out misinformation and piece together countless facts in order to see the "big picture", we now provide simple online access to The Analyst™. Used by doctors and patients alike, The Analyst™ is a computerized diagnostic tool that sits on a vast accumulation of knowledge and research. By combining thousands of connections between signs, symptoms, risk factors, conditions and treatments, The Analyst™ will help to build an accurate picture of your current health status, the risks you are running and courses of action (including appropriate lab testing) that should be considered. Full information is available here.
There are many individual metals causing varying degrees of illness based on acute and chronic exposures. Heavy metals is the term used for a group of elements that have particular weight characteristics. They are on the "heavier" end of the periodic table of elements. Some heavy metals - such as cobalt, copper, iron, manganese, molybdenum, vanadium, strontium, and zinc - are essential to health in trace amounts. Others are non-essential and can be harmful to health in excessive amounts. These include cadmium, antimony, chromium, mercury, lead, and arsenic - these last three being the most common in cases of heavy metal toxicity.
Causes & Development
Sources of toxicity can include environmental, water supply, industrial, hobbies, and others, thus a full history of the person's work and living habits can help pinpoint potential heavy metal sources.
Causes of arsenic toxicity include ingestion of arsenic (found in insect poisons), skin contact (e.g. some linseed oils) and even drinking water.
Signs & Symptoms As an example of the scope of a heavy metal's toxicity, lead can affect the nervous system, gastrointestinal system, cardiovascular system, blood production, kidneys, and reproductive system.
Symptoms of heavy metal toxicity include mental confusion, pain in muscles and joints, headaches, short-term memory loss, gastrointestinal upsets, food intolerances/allergies, vision problems, chronic fatigue, and others. The symptoms are so vague that it is difficult to diagnose based on symptoms alone.
Arsenic
Symptoms include nausea or vomiting, abdominal pain, diarrhea, garlic odor on breath, excessive salivation, headache, vertigo, fatigue, paresthesia, paralysis, kidney failure, progressive blindness, and mental impairment. Signs include mottled brown skin, hyperkeratosis (increased pigmentation) of palms and soles, cutis edema, transverse striate Leukonychia, perforation of nasal septum, eyelid edema, coryza, limb paralysis and reduced deep tendon reflexes. Mental symptoms include apathy, dementia, and anorexia.
Lead
Signs and Symptoms include combinations of gastrointestinal complaints, hypertension, fatigue, hemolytic anemia, abdominal pain, nausea, constipation, weight loss, peripheral neuropathy, cognitive dysfunction, arthralgias, headache, weakness, convulsions, irritability, impotence, loss of libido, depression, depression of thyroid and adrenal function, chronic renal failure, gout. A patient with lead poisoning may have a combination of symptoms - or no symptoms at all until the condition has progressed. Mental symptoms include restlessness, insomnia, irritability, confusion, excitement, anxiety, delusions, and disturbing dreams.
Mercury
Mercury toxicity has been linked to, among other things, mercury dental fillings, particularly when people have a large number of them. Symptoms include a metallic taste in the mouth, excess salivation, gingivitis, tremors, stomach and kidney troubles. Mental symptoms include shyness, irritability, apathy and depression, psychosis, mental deterioration, and anorexia.
Diagnosis & Tests If a specific diagnosis cannot be made, a general approach to metal toxicity may be beneficial. The list of heavy metals includes mercury, lead, aluminum, antimony, arsenic, bismuth, cadmium, chromium, cobalt, copper, silver, zinc and tin. Mercury poisoning will be dealt with separately as "Mercury Poisoning (Amalgam Illness)".
Arsenic
Useful lab tests include Urinalysis ( Oliguria,Hematuria, Hemoglobinuria); Complete Blood Count and Peripheral Smear (Macrocytic Anemia); Tissue Exam (reveals arsenic deposits - urine, nails, hair) and Serum Arsenic levels.
Treatment & Prevention The first step in treating any heavy metal toxicity is to identify the toxic elements and begin the removal process. The easiest screening process is a Hair Analysis. Additional testing involves the use of chelating drugs along with a 24-hour urine collection to determine levels of heavy metals. From here, treatment is based on the individual and will usually involve the use of metal chelating drugs or intravenous EDTA chelation. For many patients, intravenous Vitamin C and replacement mineral infusions are also recommended to support the body through the metal removal process. Once laboratory tests indicate that the heavy metals are undetectable, treatment is considered complete. Often many - if not all - symptoms previously experienced will have resolved, though some may linger, indicating residual damage to organ systems. Therapies can then be targeted to these systems and any specific problems remaining.
Symptoms will often begin to improve within weeks or even days of commencing treatment. Therapy may last from 6 months to 2 years.
Prognosis; Complications Although complete cure is possible, many people suffer the effects of toxicity for extended periods. Some of the damage, for instance to the liver or brain, may not be fully reversible. Others find that their food intolerances will not be completely remedied. Only time will answer that question.
Cadmium may promote skeletal demineralization and increase bone fragility and fracture risk.
The Government has admitted now that they do use Chem-Trails to provide radar protection for our planes.
An hour and a half video explain the subject called Aerosol Crimes first edition.
I hope this helps most of you, and you can began to protect yourself from the air you breathe each day. Feel free to email me if you have any questions regarding the subject. I have done a ton of research on it over the last ten years.............
***edited by moderator*** web addresses not allowed
Taken from
Heavy metal toxicity is a very general subject and people experience widely varying symptoms in response to heavy metal poisoning.
Please note that it is extremely important to obtain an accurate diagnosis before trying to find a cure. Many diseases and conditions share common symptoms: if you treat yourself for the wrong illness or a specific symptom of a complex disease, you may delay legitimate treatment of a serious underlying problem. In other words, the greatest danger in self-treatment may be self-diagnosis. If you do not know what you really have, you can not treat it!
Knowing how difficult it is to weed out misinformation and piece together countless facts in order to see the "big picture", we now provide simple online access to The Analyst™. Used by doctors and patients alike, The Analyst™ is a computerized diagnostic tool that sits on a vast accumulation of knowledge and research. By combining thousands of connections between signs, symptoms, risk factors, conditions and treatments, The Analyst™ will help to build an accurate picture of your current health status, the risks you are running and courses of action (including appropriate lab testing) that should be considered. Full information is available here.
There are many individual metals causing varying degrees of illness based on acute and chronic exposures. Heavy metals is the term used for a group of elements that have particular weight characteristics. They are on the "heavier" end of the periodic table of elements. Some heavy metals - such as cobalt, copper, iron, manganese, molybdenum, vanadium, strontium, and zinc - are essential to health in trace amounts. Others are non-essential and can be harmful to health in excessive amounts. These include cadmium, antimony, chromium, mercury, lead, and arsenic - these last three being the most common in cases of heavy metal toxicity.
Causes & Development
Sources of toxicity can include environmental, water supply, industrial, hobbies, and others, thus a full history of the person's work and living habits can help pinpoint potential heavy metal sources.
Causes of arsenic toxicity include ingestion of arsenic (found in insect poisons), skin contact (e.g. some linseed oils) and even drinking water.
Signs & Symptoms As an example of the scope of a heavy metal's toxicity, lead can affect the nervous system, gastrointestinal system, cardiovascular system, blood production, kidneys, and reproductive system.
Symptoms of heavy metal toxicity include mental confusion, pain in muscles and joints, headaches, short-term memory loss, gastrointestinal upsets, food intolerances/allergies, vision problems, chronic fatigue, and others. The symptoms are so vague that it is difficult to diagnose based on symptoms alone.
Arsenic
Symptoms include nausea or vomiting, abdominal pain, diarrhea, garlic odor on breath, excessive salivation, headache, vertigo, fatigue, paresthesia, paralysis, kidney failure, progressive blindness, and mental impairment. Signs include mottled brown skin, hyperkeratosis (increased pigmentation) of palms and soles, cutis edema, transverse striate Leukonychia, perforation of nasal septum, eyelid edema, coryza, limb paralysis and reduced deep tendon reflexes. Mental symptoms include apathy, dementia, and anorexia.
Lead
Signs and Symptoms include combinations of gastrointestinal complaints, hypertension, fatigue, hemolytic anemia, abdominal pain, nausea, constipation, weight loss, peripheral neuropathy, cognitive dysfunction, arthralgias, headache, weakness, convulsions, irritability, impotence, loss of libido, depression, depression of thyroid and adrenal function, chronic renal failure, gout. A patient with lead poisoning may have a combination of symptoms - or no symptoms at all until the condition has progressed. Mental symptoms include restlessness, insomnia, irritability, confusion, excitement, anxiety, delusions, and disturbing dreams.
Mercury
Mercury toxicity has been linked to, among other things, mercury dental fillings, particularly when people have a large number of them. Symptoms include a metallic taste in the mouth, excess salivation, gingivitis, tremors, stomach and kidney troubles. Mental symptoms include shyness, irritability, apathy and depression, psychosis, mental deterioration, and anorexia.
Diagnosis & Tests If a specific diagnosis cannot be made, a general approach to metal toxicity may be beneficial. The list of heavy metals includes mercury, lead, aluminum, antimony, arsenic, bismuth, cadmium, chromium, cobalt, copper, silver, zinc and tin. Mercury poisoning will be dealt with separately as "Mercury Poisoning (Amalgam Illness)".
Arsenic
Useful lab tests include Urinalysis ( Oliguria,Hematuria, Hemoglobinuria); Complete Blood Count and Peripheral Smear (Macrocytic Anemia); Tissue Exam (reveals arsenic deposits - urine, nails, hair) and Serum Arsenic levels.
Treatment & Prevention The first step in treating any heavy metal toxicity is to identify the toxic elements and begin the removal process. The easiest screening process is a Hair Analysis. Additional testing involves the use of chelating drugs along with a 24-hour urine collection to determine levels of heavy metals. From here, treatment is based on the individual and will usually involve the use of metal chelating drugs or intravenous EDTA chelation. For many patients, intravenous Vitamin C and replacement mineral infusions are also recommended to support the body through the metal removal process. Once laboratory tests indicate that the heavy metals are undetectable, treatment is considered complete. Often many - if not all - symptoms previously experienced will have resolved, though some may linger, indicating residual damage to organ systems. Therapies can then be targeted to these systems and any specific problems remaining.
Symptoms will often begin to improve within weeks or even days of commencing treatment. Therapy may last from 6 months to 2 years.
Prognosis; Complications Although complete cure is possible, many people suffer the effects of toxicity for extended periods. Some of the damage, for instance to the liver or brain, may not be fully reversible. Others find that their food intolerances will not be completely remedied. Only time will answer that question.
Cadmium may promote skeletal demineralization and increase bone fragility and fracture risk.
The Government has admitted now that they do use Chem-Trails to provide radar protection for our planes.
An hour and a half video explain the subject called Aerosol Crimes first edition.
I hope this helps most of you, and you can began to protect yourself from the air you breathe each day. Feel free to email me if you have any questions regarding the subject. I have done a ton of research on it over the last ten years.............
***edited by moderator*** web addresses not allowed
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NMan the problem is that the symptoms can be of other issues that are not heavy metal poinsoning that are more common than that. Do you think that you could have a different issue as well?
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I just started these systoms over the weekend. Never go weeks with pain. There are clinics named "minute clinics" located al over the U.S. mainly in CVS drug stores. There is a doctor on duty in a offfice in certain CVS's. It costs 100.00 to see them. It's worth it. You can never pay to much for your life. Go get checked up all of you with these symtoms. If I can find my way back to this site I'll post what the Dr. tells me. 30/F/ FL
~Rosie
~Rosie
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I'm 15 years old and I've been having similar problems for almost a year now. But I am usually nauseous in the morning. At first i just felt sick but then my symptoms worsened and I started actually throwing up. I have had multiple tests done (blood work, x-rays, ultra sound, stool samples etc.) but every time I get them done they turn up negative. My pediatrician told me i had a sensitive bowel and that was my problem but I didn't think it was. Then my dentist told me my wisdom teeth had an infection and I had to get them removed and my mom asked if that could be whats causing my problems and they said it could be. When I was younger every time I would have a tooth grow in I would get sick so my mom figured okay, the tooth thing makes sense. Couple months later I get my teeth out, I feel a little bit better but then about 2 weeks after that I get my symptoms back again, nausea, dizziness, weight loss, headaches, fatigue. And that was back in February. I went to my Doctor about 2 weeks ago and he thought I may have an ulcer or liver problems so he ordered more blood tests and I am waiting for the results and he got me an appointment with a specialist but that's not for another two months. Since I was always so sick I was constantly absent from school, now I am un able to go to school (without feeling sick) so now I do most of my classes online. I still have one course at school in the afternoons but I still do not feel well. I've tried everything, not eating breakfast, to eating breakfast, healthy breakfast, nausea medicine (which did not make a difference what so ever) and I've tried eating just crackers and so much more. Someone had asked me if maybe I was pregnant but I can't be pregnant so that was ruled out. We've tried everything and still no answers. If you have any ideas please let me know, thanks,
Katherine.
Katherine.
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Hello, I am a doctor (gastroenterologist) and had similar symptoms. I tried Dom-Peridone 10 mg tablet, one tablet daily half an hour before your night meal for 5 days. Secondly, I also took Norfloxacin 400 mg, 1 tablet after breakfast and 1 tablet after night meal, again for 5 days, daily. I advise you try the same regime. Also ensure that you don't have Jaundice. Hope it helps.
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Hello everyone.. I have had similar problems for the past few months. I was diagnosed a few weeks ago with two viruses - Epstein Barr and CMV. I'm on all sorts of medications to treat them during the day and night... well not really treat them but to ease my symptoms since you can't really prescribe medication for a virus. I'm feeling better most days but have been told this could go on for a total of 6 months and then the viruses will go dormant in my system but never really go away. The hot flashes, nausea and dizziness have pretty much stopped.. now I am suffering mainly from pains in and around the stomach - spleen is swollen and also pains in my liver area. I've also got a severe lack of energy.
Just thought I would mention this. My numbers were VERY high for both viruses - you only have to have a 1.4 to be positive for the viruses. My numbers for EB were in the 5 range and for CMV they were in the mid 4 range.
Just thought I would mention this. My numbers were VERY high for both viruses - you only have to have a 1.4 to be positive for the viruses. My numbers for EB were in the 5 range and for CMV they were in the mid 4 range.
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I've been having a lot of the same things too and it's really starting to scare me reading how some people have dealt with this sort of thing their whole lives or just years. I couldn't bear living with it for years. But for 7 months I've had on and off stomach problems like crazy. Back in May I got what I thought was just a stomach bug. I woke up for school and threw up for absolutely no reason. I felt better and went to school, but in the course of the day I just felt horrible. For a few weeks I only ate apple sauce, bread and drank Gatorade. That was it. I went to see my doctor and she prescribed me with Prilosec. Took this for a few weeks and instantly felt better, but if I didn't take it I felt really nauseous and dizzy for days, so I had an endoscopy done with normal results besides mild irritation in the lining. So they said for the next 12 weeks I couldn't have certain foods. I stayed true to the diet and felt a little better.
My first day of college I have a ridiculous panic attack with ridiculous nausea that lasted two weeks. I attributed it to homesickness and the sudden lifestyle change but after two months it still bothered me, so I went off the Prilosec. Felt a little better being off it but then it happened all over again. Unexplained nausea so bad I could hardly eat anything. Went to the nurse and the doctor prescribed me with Flagyl. That also seemed to help, but I never finished the prescription because my schedule was out of whack and I could only take it once or twice a day instead of three times and eventually just stopped (really bad idea, I know). I felt better for a while after and within the past week or so have had horrible nausea, stomach pain, fatigue, the chills and headaches. I've spent more time in the bathroom waiting to throw up than doing things I need to be. I haven't thrown up, I'm scared to eat anything because I feel awful when I do but if I don't I STILL feel nauseous and I've just about had it. Up until 7 months ago I was as healthy as ever, no problems at all. What the heck happened?!
My first day of college I have a ridiculous panic attack with ridiculous nausea that lasted two weeks. I attributed it to homesickness and the sudden lifestyle change but after two months it still bothered me, so I went off the Prilosec. Felt a little better being off it but then it happened all over again. Unexplained nausea so bad I could hardly eat anything. Went to the nurse and the doctor prescribed me with Flagyl. That also seemed to help, but I never finished the prescription because my schedule was out of whack and I could only take it once or twice a day instead of three times and eventually just stopped (really bad idea, I know). I felt better for a while after and within the past week or so have had horrible nausea, stomach pain, fatigue, the chills and headaches. I've spent more time in the bathroom waiting to throw up than doing things I need to be. I haven't thrown up, I'm scared to eat anything because I feel awful when I do but if I don't I STILL feel nauseous and I've just about had it. Up until 7 months ago I was as healthy as ever, no problems at all. What the heck happened?!
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I just had my gallbladder removed. I had a large stone blocking the duct. Of all things, a ceasar salad put me in the hospital. Green vegetables would send me into fits of abdominal pain boring thru my sternum into my back the intensity of childbirth. Now I have read that greens stimulate the digestive glands (which would be why people eat dinner salads before meals) thus triggering the pancreas, gallbladder and liver into motion. My ER doc was so perplexed with my symptoms. He sees a lot of people who eat Kentucky Fried chicken before their attacks. But a salad?? So if you have nausea and pain in the mid or right side of your low rib cage, ask for a Gallbladder ultrasound or ejection fraction!!! Sneaky gallbladder!!
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I have read through this entire thread tonight. I started having similar symptoms about a month ago. First I started feeling shaky and a bit dizzy one morning. I left work, which I never do, and drove home. During the drive I started getting sweaty and numb in my arms and such. I also felt like I was having heart palpitations. I called my wife who was out to meet me at home. I arrived at home and crashed on the bed and curled up trying to relax. I wasn't having chest pains but I was really concerned so I told her to take me to the ER. I felt so agitated and shaky that I thought I was going to faint. My blood pressure was 153/93 or something and my heart rate was in the 115's to 120's. I got to a room in the ER and they did blood tests and chest xrays. Everything came back, normal. They were about to hook me up to an IV but I told them I needed to use the rest room. I had diarrhea and not much longer after that I started feeling fine. About the time I was coming back to the room the doctors told my wife everything was just fine and they started shuffling me out of the room. This was about 2 hours or so after arriving at the ER. It was as if it never happened. I still felt a bit off but I could function again. Ultimately, they sent me home telling me it was likely too much caffiene.
Since then I have had a couple short episodes in the morning up until the past week. I started getting really bad heartburn recently, when i've never had heartburn ever before, so much so that I was belching now I am dry heaving almost every morning, as well as diarrhea almost every morning. I have a horrible taste in my mouth and it seems to be triggering my weakened gag reflex. This sometimes seems to fire off my symptoms of light headedness, dizzyness, weakness and fatigue, to the point where I can't walk or be functional. I have just crashed to bed while rubbing my hands over my face constantly for some reason I seem to do that when im experiencing these feelings. They seem to last an hour or two and lately its been taking me out whole mornings or the entire day.
I started to see a general practitioner. I have had many blood tests, thyroid tests, my blood sugar is fine, I had ekg's, heart ultrasound, im wearing an event monitor for a month, all my tests continue to come back normal which is great but nothing is telling me why this is happening. I just had an EGD to look into my stomach, they said everything looks fine but took 4 biopsy's to test for ciliac. I had quite a bit more blood taken to check for Hepititus and many other things i haven't been checked for as of yet. I have been keeping a log but nothing in particular seems to trigger this. To me it seems random other than consistently occurring in the mornings at most. I am male 31 years, I am in decent shape and jog regularly. I have 3 kids all young boys. This has not gone well for me. I pray that it stops soon.
Since then I have had a couple short episodes in the morning up until the past week. I started getting really bad heartburn recently, when i've never had heartburn ever before, so much so that I was belching now I am dry heaving almost every morning, as well as diarrhea almost every morning. I have a horrible taste in my mouth and it seems to be triggering my weakened gag reflex. This sometimes seems to fire off my symptoms of light headedness, dizzyness, weakness and fatigue, to the point where I can't walk or be functional. I have just crashed to bed while rubbing my hands over my face constantly for some reason I seem to do that when im experiencing these feelings. They seem to last an hour or two and lately its been taking me out whole mornings or the entire day.
I started to see a general practitioner. I have had many blood tests, thyroid tests, my blood sugar is fine, I had ekg's, heart ultrasound, im wearing an event monitor for a month, all my tests continue to come back normal which is great but nothing is telling me why this is happening. I just had an EGD to look into my stomach, they said everything looks fine but took 4 biopsy's to test for ciliac. I had quite a bit more blood taken to check for Hepititus and many other things i haven't been checked for as of yet. I have been keeping a log but nothing in particular seems to trigger this. To me it seems random other than consistently occurring in the mornings at most. I am male 31 years, I am in decent shape and jog regularly. I have 3 kids all young boys. This has not gone well for me. I pray that it stops soon.
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