My doctor has me on drops (I’m 71) and advises I take them once a week since this vitamin is slowly absorbed. Be sure your doctor is taking into account your blood results, your age, and is also up on the latest guidelines. So you may want to suggest this to your doctor or straightaway see a neurologist.Ībout vitamin D, the dosage is critical. Because of those two phenomena I thought to mention neuropathy to you in the first place. In between I too have had the feeling of muscles moving under the skin of my thigh or ants crawling on it. The latest sensation I have there-all of these sensations being mercifully brief-is a very strong burning sensation. The first sign of it was a distinct feeling that I’d spilled ice water on my thigh! This morphed into the (again) distinct feeling that a large adhesive bandage was being pulled off the top of my thigh. Hasn’t anyone suggested that to you? I have had a neuropathic right thigh muscle for three years now. ![]() Having said that, your muscle problems sound a lot like neuropathies. Once on the correct magnesium regimen you may find your muscle twitches are reduced, killing two birds with one stone. You need the advice of a doctor who is really up on magnesium supplements. Magnesium is important for maintaining a steady heart rhythm, so possibly you haven’t been taking the right form of it and/or the correct dose. ![]() ![]() Doctors say they can't do anything about it, but they didn't really think of checking my nerves - maybe there's a pressed nerve, or something? Other minor problems I have that might be related to this are heart rhythm problems in the evening and inability to stay in a bent-down position for more than a few minutes (gives me a terrible headache and dizzyness), I also suffer from obsessive thoughts, really often (I mention this since I have heard that psychological health matters a lot when it comes to muscle twitching) If someone could comment on this I would be really grateful. Exercise doesn't seem to alter it that much. In the meantime, the muscle twitching has subsided to a few times a day, however, the "running ants feeling" became more frequent. They also prescribed going to a physiotherapist, which is a pretty expensive procedure to me, so I am still hesitating. They said I should try exercising a bit more - it should exhaust the muscles so they don't have the energy to twitch. That doctor stated that my neck is very stiff and asked if I suffer from migraine, which I don't think I do. I moved to another country, so went to another doctor there. I so much wish it would just stop.ĭoctor said it was a lack of magnesium, but a few months later the problem persisted, and a new sensation developed in my left shoulder blade - the warm buzzy "running ants feeling". In the thigh, in the leg, in the finger, in the neck. It's pretty unplesant when there's muscles moving under your skin all the time. ![]() It continued for a month, until I finally went to doctor about it, no fun when your fingers get all jumpy when you sit still, or your muscles twitch so much it wakes you from your sleep. It will soon be a year since this problem of mine started and nobody has yet found a solution to it, so I thought I have nothing to lose by asking here.Īround April last year I started getting muscle twitches.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |