- Joined
- May 21, 2014
- Messages
- 241
It's been random, intermittent and the first sign I had issues with sinuses at all was when I was pregnant and had rhinitis of pregnancy. That was back in 2011. My first bout of allergies was in 2013. I didn't know what it was at first, but got the sniffles and watering eyes etc and runny nose.
And then randomly, I started getting a bleeding nose. Actually, more like a bleeding nostril. Everything is fine - no snot, no joke and then suddenly, it's like my nose is running. Go to wipe and find it's not mucus, but blood. It doesn't last long. I don't have high blood pressure (in fact, my BP is usually on the lower end of normal), but figuring it's related to whatever is going on the rest of my body. I don't live in a high altitude. I live in a flat land. And while Kansas is supposed to be bad for allergies, so was my home town and lived there for the first 29 years of my life. Never had issues - aside from eczema and dermatitis.
When I was in hospital a month ago, my BP dropped to 79/40 and the machine started freaking out, but before it dropped they did a BP reading and asked if it was normally that low. I said, yeah - that's normal for me. I was fascinated while on morphine as the diastolic? (the lower number) dropped to about 32 and I was wondering...am I still supposed to be conscious at this point?
Does anyone else have low BP and a bleeding snozz for no apparent reason where they never used to get bleeding noses? I should say nose...you only have one nose, but your feet smell and your nose runs so who knows, the foot may in fact be a nose after all. Can a nose get Athletes Foot?
This has happened 3 times today and it's never for very long, but makes me wonder what the heck is going on inside. I know it could be totally unrelated, but as time wears on and things pile up, one gets to realizing most of it's all interconnected somehow. You can't have so many different things wrong with one person and it's all totally random. It's amazing how some people seem to always be healthy. Are they the ones that drop dead suddenly at a younger age and everyone's shocked because the rest of us keep going - apparently used to having our bodies in perpetual battle mode?
And then randomly, I started getting a bleeding nose. Actually, more like a bleeding nostril. Everything is fine - no snot, no joke and then suddenly, it's like my nose is running. Go to wipe and find it's not mucus, but blood. It doesn't last long. I don't have high blood pressure (in fact, my BP is usually on the lower end of normal), but figuring it's related to whatever is going on the rest of my body. I don't live in a high altitude. I live in a flat land. And while Kansas is supposed to be bad for allergies, so was my home town and lived there for the first 29 years of my life. Never had issues - aside from eczema and dermatitis.
When I was in hospital a month ago, my BP dropped to 79/40 and the machine started freaking out, but before it dropped they did a BP reading and asked if it was normally that low. I said, yeah - that's normal for me. I was fascinated while on morphine as the diastolic? (the lower number) dropped to about 32 and I was wondering...am I still supposed to be conscious at this point?
Does anyone else have low BP and a bleeding snozz for no apparent reason where they never used to get bleeding noses? I should say nose...you only have one nose, but your feet smell and your nose runs so who knows, the foot may in fact be a nose after all. Can a nose get Athletes Foot?
This has happened 3 times today and it's never for very long, but makes me wonder what the heck is going on inside. I know it could be totally unrelated, but as time wears on and things pile up, one gets to realizing most of it's all interconnected somehow. You can't have so many different things wrong with one person and it's all totally random. It's amazing how some people seem to always be healthy. Are they the ones that drop dead suddenly at a younger age and everyone's shocked because the rest of us keep going - apparently used to having our bodies in perpetual battle mode?