Justy
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
two years ago i had my first episode of uncontrollable laughing. It was incredibly embarrassing. I was playing a game with grown up children and found the thing i had to say disproportionately funny and couldn't stop laughing.
I had to leave the room and was gasping for breath. It was like being tortured and i totally lost control of myself. It was really horrible. Afterwards everyone begged me to show them what had been so funny and when i showed them, it just wasn't funny at all, even to me.
A few months later it happened again and it was actually frightening and has made me try very hard to control myself and not laugh too much since then (it causes PEM anyway so best avoided for me).
Then last year i went to see a film (i know, lucky right?). The ending of the film was quite sad, people were sniffling all around, even my son had a tear in his eye. I didn't just cry, i felt absolutely devastated and started sobbing uncontrollably in the cinema. I literally felt like i could just throw myself on the floor and sob for ever. I had to go to the disabled toilet to try and get a grip, but then couldn't stop sobbing and the horrible feeling of being tortured came back.
A couple of months after this the crying thing happened again after a very minor disagreement with my husband. I was so beside myself that i honestly wondered if i needed an ambulance. I know that sounds crazy, but i couldn't stop crying hysterically, however hard i tried and it was very frightening.
I've just discovered Pseudobulbar affect - apparently people with MS and ALS can have it, or stroke victims and it sounds like what i experienced, although mine does need a trigger, the emotion is then out of all proportion to that trigger and in most cases i certainly haven't wanted to laugh or cry that much.
Does anyone else with M.E think they might have this? if so then it must point to some kind of neurological damage surely? despite having had seizure like episodes, severe cognitive issues etc i've never seen a neurologist.
https://www.pbainfo.org/about-pba
I had to leave the room and was gasping for breath. It was like being tortured and i totally lost control of myself. It was really horrible. Afterwards everyone begged me to show them what had been so funny and when i showed them, it just wasn't funny at all, even to me.
A few months later it happened again and it was actually frightening and has made me try very hard to control myself and not laugh too much since then (it causes PEM anyway so best avoided for me).
Then last year i went to see a film (i know, lucky right?). The ending of the film was quite sad, people were sniffling all around, even my son had a tear in his eye. I didn't just cry, i felt absolutely devastated and started sobbing uncontrollably in the cinema. I literally felt like i could just throw myself on the floor and sob for ever. I had to go to the disabled toilet to try and get a grip, but then couldn't stop sobbing and the horrible feeling of being tortured came back.
A couple of months after this the crying thing happened again after a very minor disagreement with my husband. I was so beside myself that i honestly wondered if i needed an ambulance. I know that sounds crazy, but i couldn't stop crying hysterically, however hard i tried and it was very frightening.
I've just discovered Pseudobulbar affect - apparently people with MS and ALS can have it, or stroke victims and it sounds like what i experienced, although mine does need a trigger, the emotion is then out of all proportion to that trigger and in most cases i certainly haven't wanted to laugh or cry that much.
Does anyone else with M.E think they might have this? if so then it must point to some kind of neurological damage surely? despite having had seizure like episodes, severe cognitive issues etc i've never seen a neurologist.
https://www.pbainfo.org/about-pba