Why does physical activity make your concussion symptoms worse?

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июн 2024
  • In this video, Dr. Mark breaks down recent research that explains (at least in part) why symptoms flare with exercise and physical activity. He also discusses the Buffalo Concussion Treadmill Test, and how it helps to minimize symptoms during concussion recovery.
    Read the original research here: n.neurology.org/content/97/22...
    If you're in Arizona or Washington, schedule a consult: www.drheisig.com/schedule
    If you're anywhere else in the world, join the Concussion Reset program and community: concussion-reset-program.teac...
    #physicalactivities #concussion #concussionsymptoms #postconcussionsyndrome #exerciseismedicine

Комментарии • 44

  • @gloing
    @gloing 2 года назад +5

    This really helps thank you!

  • @2809thalia
    @2809thalia 2 года назад +1

    just THANK YOU

  • @kaygibson1842
    @kaygibson1842 Месяц назад +2

    This is good to know.. Thank you soo much.. 8 concussions later and I struggle. No memory of what happened to me. others were from a vagus faint. One strange thing is my brain now works in imperial. Not metrics.. I'm just going to go with that as I'm now able to sew again and my machine stitches are getting straighter.. Last concussion, few mths ago hasn't altered that and I'm growing more confident.. So i think I'm doing pretty damn good.. Just don't want to damage my head anymore.. Scarey stuff.. Own and work on our own farm and so accidents happen.. Not matter how careful we are.. Seems always to be my head..thank you for this. Will check out your other vids..

    • @drmarkheisig
      @drmarkheisig  24 дня назад

      Farm life definitely comes with its own obstacles. One thing I would be curious to chat with you about is if you were sustaining true concussions or if you were experiencing whiplash injuries. Symptomatically, these are identical. The only reason I bring that up is when patients aren't in contact with athletes (e.g., collegiate football /hockey/LAX or MMA), I usually find more cervical injuries than true concussions. We still progress through rehab, but there's comfort and ease in patients knowing that their brain was not being jostled as much as they thought.

  • @smca7271
    @smca7271 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thats interesting,I've found interval training seems to help....had a tbi for 3 yrs,trying to improve.

    • @drmarkheisig
      @drmarkheisig  8 месяцев назад +1

      If you can tolerate intervals, you're doing well in the "autonomic bucket" of concussion.

  • @kennethmoore3783
    @kennethmoore3783 Месяц назад

    Dr. Mark Heisig is a naturopathic doctor (ND) in Scottsdale, AZ. He completed his “medical education” at Bastyr University in Seattle, Washington.

    • @drmarkheisig
      @drmarkheisig  Месяц назад

      Nice to meet you 🤝 Where are you located and where did you receive your accredited, regulated, and licensable medical training?

    • @kennethmoore3783
      @kennethmoore3783 Месяц назад +1

      @@drmarkheisig
      University of Chicago

  • @siobhanmulvey
    @siobhanmulvey 2 дня назад

    Yes yes yes

  • @angelatrudeau739
    @angelatrudeau739 Год назад +2

    Not disagreeing with you, I used a different model for understanding that impact of exercise induced symptoms, and regulating my exercise. Goal to get good blood flow, oxygen to the tissues, necessary for healing. But especially in early months, it Was very difficult to monitor myself.
    thinking of physical change, that brain inflammation resulted in narrowed blood vessels, as measured by spect scan.
    so with exercise, increased blood flow / heart rate, hit this lower throughput capacity (like having a section of 1/2 inch diameter hose in a 3/4 inch pipe) and resulted in physical stress on those tissues.
    I used Fitbit to get a visual indication of rate/duration that resulted in symptoms and to monitor heart rate to keep just below the rate which triggered symptoms. Allowed me to walk, do housework, etc. and stay just below the point of triggering symptoms. I could pull back, rest enough to let the heart rate settle back a bit, and then continue. It was such a delicate balance point to be aware of. When everything felt like too much.

    • @drmarkheisig
      @drmarkheisig  Год назад +2

      Hi Angela! That's awesome you found that on your own. It's actually not different from what I do at all (check out my video on exercise testing). It turns out that a SPECT scan does not actually change the treatment plan at all in 99% of cases. In all cases, we're looking to improve autonomic tolerance through sub-symptom aerobic exercise. Inflammation is also VERY important to address, though it's not the primary driver of blood flow dysregulation in concussion/PCS. 🙏❤️🧠

    • @bruceelliot1503
      @bruceelliot1503 11 месяцев назад

      @@drmarkheisigis it possible to gradually increase your exercise tolerance?

  • @RaneBane
    @RaneBane 2 года назад +1

    Have you experience with anyone who held their concussion off for a few weeks while continuing to work a very physically demanding job? I mean I was having driving issues and pressure right away. The more debilitating symptoms came when I finally cracked and stopped working. Its like it hit me all at once. Workers comp says its impossible.

    • @drmarkheisig
      @drmarkheisig  2 года назад

      Yes, I have had folks push on and hit a "breaking point."

  • @2809thalia
    @2809thalia 2 года назад +4

    for a follow up video? Why some ppl (inc me) get symptoms the NEXT day after exercise?? thanks again!!

    • @drmarkheisig
      @drmarkheisig  2 года назад +2

      I can try and make a video for this, for sure. But quick here, delayed symptoms often point us to a cervical or vestibular dysfunction leading to these symptoms.

    • @2809thalia
      @2809thalia 2 года назад +1

      @@drmarkheisig thank you 🙏 A video would be so helpful and appreciated!!

    • @andytitcombe8834
      @andytitcombe8834 2 года назад +3

      @@drmarkheisig like Thalia I suffer post exercise. The best way that I can describe the symptoms is that of a hangover, headache, nausea, lethargy etc. Symptoms can last for maybe 48hours. I now also seem to have an intolerance to alcohol.

    • @angelatrudeau739
      @angelatrudeau739 Год назад +1

      Yes, I would get knocked back the next day, or 2 or 3. Imo, when brain is jangled, nothing works according to rules. I found cumulative load mattered also, I.e. visual tasks, sound, stress, thinking hard, plus physical activity

    • @angelatrudeau739
      @angelatrudeau739 Год назад

      And for me alcohol, caffeine gave me trouble. Remembering to drink water was challenge. I lined up glasses of water on kitchen counter in the morning because I’d forget.

  • @Lemoncare
    @Lemoncare 5 месяцев назад +4

    Stress intolerance. It’s real.

  • @scentsbda
    @scentsbda 5 месяцев назад +1

    🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾

  • @danielsykes7558
    @danielsykes7558 4 месяца назад

    This is very helpful for me. I just went on a walk for about 20 minutes, but the treadmill was set to about 3.3 by the end and I do have a headache now.
    I have long had a rough relationship with cardio, usually opting for weights, but now I understand that my concussion from a couple months back has likely been making exercise more difficult

    • @drmarkheisig
      @drmarkheisig  24 дня назад

      I'm glad this was helpful! Aerobic exercise is still something that we'd eventually like to get you back to some sort of baseline with (e.g., passing a BCTT), but opting for any form of activity is great!

  • @reginaldwilliams617
    @reginaldwilliams617 11 месяцев назад +2

    Sex makes me feel like I have a fresh concussion every time... 6 months later, I still have sex problems... makes sense now, thanks

    • @Asfgxff
      @Asfgxff 9 месяцев назад +1

      Same situation here brother.

    • @reginaldwilliams617
      @reginaldwilliams617 9 месяцев назад +1

      @mr.ibfsfviyhudvbueribviuebru the struggle is real...

    • @drmarkheisig
      @drmarkheisig  9 месяцев назад +2

      Sex is a miraculous symphony/interaction between sympathetic and parasympathetic activity. The altered autonomic function from a TBI can make this whole situation wonky. With rehab, we can make progress - but there usually isn't a cookie cutter solution here.

    • @chickenwingsranch2995
      @chickenwingsranch2995 4 месяца назад +1

      No sex drive ?

    • @reginaldwilliams617
      @reginaldwilliams617 4 месяца назад

      @chickenwingsranch2995 it's not sex drive. The drive is there. It's the feeling afterward that makes you not want sex.... I don't know if you had a concussion before, but that's the feeling I get after sex.. it's like a hit, my head dizzy feeling that leads to a real bad headache for several days after sex..

  • @angieguss5556
    @angieguss5556 Месяц назад

    I have debikitating headaches and eye pain from lifting light weight. Hiw do i fix this? They just want to thriw meds at it and ive tried everything. Im so depressed.

    • @drmarkheisig
      @drmarkheisig  24 дня назад

      If it's during your exercise/lifts, it could be autonomic and related to your ability to distribute blood during changing HR and BP demands. It could also be neck-related. Or it could be both. We'd need to do a proper physical exam to determine the cause.

  • @angieguss5556
    @angieguss5556 2 месяца назад

    So I have this issue. I cannot weight lift even though i started back very slowly. I feel hopeless. The problem is that I experienced no symptoms on the buffalo test at all. I experience symptoms from weight lifting only and these symptims happen several hours afterward. I have tried si many tjingsvto no avail. Why is my blood vessels still so sensitive after a year out?

    • @drmarkheisig
      @drmarkheisig  2 месяца назад

      While impossible to tell via a comment section, it's unlikely that you'll pass a Buffalo Concussion Treadmill Test and still have autonomic (blood flow) issues. When we see delayed symptoms, as you describe, we often have to look deeper into the neck and its relationship with our eyes and "ears."

    • @angieguss5556
      @angieguss5556 2 месяца назад

      I have looked into those things comprehensively but to no avail. I have no symptoms with cardio at all. Weight lifting causes more pressure built up in the head than walking does...for me at least.

    • @angieguss5556
      @angieguss5556 2 месяца назад

      I have gone to vision and vestibular therapy, atlas chiro and I hold very well, regular chirio, neck strength exercises, stretching. I'm not dizzy either.

  • @jimkragelund7517
    @jimkragelund7517 3 месяца назад

    You have no clue as to real and true tbi damage! I have lived with issues 44 yrs. And can honestly tell you that you are full of it!

    • @drmarkheisig
      @drmarkheisig  2 месяца назад

      Hi there! I'm sorry that this video describing one particular study doesn't resonate with your experience. After a concussion (mild TBI-only one form of TBI. It sounds like you may have had moderate or severe), we see altered cerebrovascular reactivity, cerebral autoregulation, neurovascular coupling, and neuroautonomic regulation. This was a study looking at cerebrovascular reactivity aspect (e.g., CO2 tolerance).

  • @user-mk8ei4tm2f
    @user-mk8ei4tm2f Месяц назад

    I had a heavy concussion and I healed…this is all bull

    • @drmarkheisig
      @drmarkheisig  24 дня назад +2

      Glad you healed! To clarify - there's no such thing as grading in concussion. You have a concussion or not - there's no mild, Grade II, etc... Physical activity does not impair recovery, but in many patients can provoke symptoms. This video explained one mechanism about why we think that is. That said, physical activity (i.e., aerobic exercise) is a mainstay treatment modality following a Buffalo Concussion Treadmill Test (BCTT). So, while I'm glad you had a healthy recovery - this, my friend, is not bull.