Mrs Houghton, from Warrington, Cheshire, said: "It's a similar sensation to walking on a mattress or a trampoline. Everything around me is rocking and rolling. Objects sway about and I'm constantly unbalanced. On a good day, it's like being on a calm sea, but when I get a bad day, I can barely stand.
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"When I first got off the boat, we treated it as a bit of a laugh. I went out for dinner and the tables were bobbing about. After a couple of weeks, I started to get seriously worried. My doctor thought I could be suffering from motion sickness, and gave me tablets, but nothing helped. I was referred for an MRI scan. I was petrified that I had a brain tumour, but when the results came back clear, I convinced myself I was going mad, to the point where I started feeling suicidal. My doctor was baffled."
Oddly, the only time she stops feeling seasick is when she is travelling on a boat, plane or train. After months of research, she eventually got a referral to the National Hospital for Neurology in London, where doctors confirmed that she was suffering from her rare condition. Despite spending months carrying out balance exercises, nothing could relieve her of her symptoms, and experts believe her brain may have "locked" itself into thinking it is constantly in motion.
2 comments:
<span>I fest the same during a training program on a fly-boat company. Yes It worked even though I was just in a river, not on open sea. Each time I went off the boat I felt strange for a couple of hours trying to compensate the rolling and only getting aboard again would ease the effect. Fortunatly it was gone after less than a week.
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I used to take the ferry back and forth to university. I can remember lying in bed after those trips and feeling like I was bobbing around on a waterbed (which I didn't have). Luckily, it was usually gone by the next morning. I can't imagine dealing with that sensation for years!
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