mickeyboat
<font color=660099>Nothing like the cream and choc
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2003
- Messages
- 21,318
DD17 has experienced three dizzy spells in the past two weeks. They tend to happen at the end of the school day. Once she was standing, but twice she was sitting in her desk. She has fainted twice in the past three years - once after locking her knees during chorus class and once before dinner when she hadn't eaten much all day. The second time was the day she got her period, and her periods tend to be long and heavy.
She swears that she is eating and drinking, and I don't have any reason to doubt that because she eats and drinks plenty at home, even though she is fairly thin (5'5 3/4" 118 lbs). She has maintained that weight within a couple of pounds for the past two years. I have never seen or heard her vomit
I don't believe she is using drugs, either. She hates spending her money and doesn't socialize much outside of school except at football games and other school events. She spends most of her extra time at home and with us.
I am thinking that if she was doing something like drugs or if she had an eating disorder, she would probably not be telling me about feeling dizzy and asking me to take her to the doctor.
I have taken her to the doctor twice - once after she fainted and again last week. She had blood work done to check her iron, thyroid, liver function and blood sugar and all were normal. Her blood pressure is normal. Her doctor ordered an EKG at her last appointment, and although I have not heard back from the cardiologist who read it, the pediatrician said she didn't see anything abnormal on it. The pediatrician performed a neurological exam, which was normal as well. She does not have headaches, although she does get tired easily. She gets "hangry" when she doesn't eat regularly.
I have recommended she eat something small during each of her blocks at school and to make sure she is drinking a lot of water. I told her today I want her to keep a log of what and when she is eating and drinking, and when she has a dizzy spell. We have an appointment to go back to the doctor in two weeks.
The pediatrician does not seem all that concerned. She told us to have her try eating more salt. She said that if she doesn't have any more dizzy spells, we could cancel the next appointment. I really want to be not all that concerned, too. But I am.
Does anyone have experience with a teen's dizziness and fainting? What was the resolution?
TIA!
Denae
She swears that she is eating and drinking, and I don't have any reason to doubt that because she eats and drinks plenty at home, even though she is fairly thin (5'5 3/4" 118 lbs). She has maintained that weight within a couple of pounds for the past two years. I have never seen or heard her vomit
I don't believe she is using drugs, either. She hates spending her money and doesn't socialize much outside of school except at football games and other school events. She spends most of her extra time at home and with us.
I am thinking that if she was doing something like drugs or if she had an eating disorder, she would probably not be telling me about feeling dizzy and asking me to take her to the doctor.
I have taken her to the doctor twice - once after she fainted and again last week. She had blood work done to check her iron, thyroid, liver function and blood sugar and all were normal. Her blood pressure is normal. Her doctor ordered an EKG at her last appointment, and although I have not heard back from the cardiologist who read it, the pediatrician said she didn't see anything abnormal on it. The pediatrician performed a neurological exam, which was normal as well. She does not have headaches, although she does get tired easily. She gets "hangry" when she doesn't eat regularly.
I have recommended she eat something small during each of her blocks at school and to make sure she is drinking a lot of water. I told her today I want her to keep a log of what and when she is eating and drinking, and when she has a dizzy spell. We have an appointment to go back to the doctor in two weeks.
The pediatrician does not seem all that concerned. She told us to have her try eating more salt. She said that if she doesn't have any more dizzy spells, we could cancel the next appointment. I really want to be not all that concerned, too. But I am.
Does anyone have experience with a teen's dizziness and fainting? What was the resolution?
TIA!
Denae