Anne Y
Anne was not clear why she started with epilepsy around the time of her menopause. She used to have migraines but these stopped when she started having seizures. She regards the seizures as an inconvenience, and her asthma (diagnosed a few years later) just an irritation.
Anne reports no interactions between her asthma and epilepsy. Although neither condition is serious, she did have a very bad reaction to one epilepsy drug and was admitted to hospital. It was only afterwards that a locum doctor informed her that she’d had septicaemia (blood poisoning). She was angry that it took so long to find out what was wrong, when she had previously presented to her GP with weight loss.
Anne now accepts epilepsy as a part of her life, but couldn’t when first diagnosed: It was just something I had to make myself accept before anyone could really help me. She feels particularly confident with her latest epilepsy consultant. She used to have telephone support from an epilepsy nurse, but they’re no longer in post.
Of her two conditions, Anne considers epilepsy the more serious condition. She feels that epilepsy has affected her mental outlook. She suggests her irritability as possibly being a side effect of one of the many medicines that she takes. When she mentioned this to a doctor, she was told that aggression could be a side-effect.