![]() |
Concussed
I took a spill last night and conked my head really good. My helmet cracked and I received 6 stitches on the left side of my head. I don't remember anything about the ride, not even starting it. The accident happened about 4 miles into the ride. I remember putting some chicken in the oven, and then nothing until being in the neuro unit at the hospital. My wife said that I was asking questions repeatedly and was very disoriented, and I don't remember any of that. The MRI was negative for any bleeds and xrays were negative for any fractures. I have road rash on the L side of my body and arm. I'm still having a lot of memory issues, but the doctor said that this was common for a severe concussion and should resolve in time. They kept me overnight for observation and sent me home today. I have no clue as to what happened. Someone called the paramedics, there were no witnesses, and I'm left wondering. Luckily there was a carry out on the corner and they secured my bike for me (supposedly it looks undamaged).This is scary folks....wear your helmet. I'd probably be dead now if I didn't. Sorry about the fragmented post. Anyone else experience something similar?
|
I'm very happy that you are still with us to post.
An aquaintance had a similar episode. He called his wife and said, "I'm on the side of the road lying down. I'm tired." and could not tell her where he was except that he was lying on the side of the road somewhere. Doesn't remember a thing. |
Glad you're doing reasonably well all things considered. Be sure you have a family member or friend to check on you at least once a day for the next week. Concussion effects are often delayed. Ask them to watch for sudden bouts of confusion, mood swings, etc. Those can be symptoms of underlying physical complications.
Even without additional physical complications you may experience PTSD. If you suddenly feel depressed, unusually angry, anything out of the ordinary, don't hesitate to talk with a psychiatrist or psychologist about therapy. After my car was t-boned in 2001, breaking my back and neck (no unconsciousness or memory loss, but probably some concussion), as I recovered physically from the shock and early pain I began experiencing tunnel vision in traffic and, worse, road rage over minor stuff. After two incidents in which family members were passengers while I was driving and chasing down other drivers, I realized I needed help. I went into one on one therapy for a couple of years, took the psych meds prescribed by a really good psychiatrist, and avoided unnecessary driving until I got myself under control. After five years I weaned myself off the meds (fairly typical stuff - depakote, Wellbutrin - which also reduced my migraines). Made a huge difference in improving my life, and I still practice the same techniques when riding my bike. Before each ride I go through a mental prep, reminders to stay alert, stay calm, ignore unintentional close calls, react appropriately to threats only when absolutely necessary and always defensively rather than aggressively. I'll walk away rather than fight. Traffic tiffs aren't important enough for anyone to get hurt. And most importantly to smile and acknowledge every courtesy shown by drivers. And the same method worked last month when I was struck by an inattentive driver. No tantrums, everything was handled as well as possible under the circumstances, and nobody was alienated or verbally abused in public. And absolutely yes regarding the helmet. In years of riding bikes and many crashes I'd never struck my head... until last month. Even as I was falling I was telling myself to fall a certain way, keep my head up, etc. But my shoulder hit hard and snapped audibly. And in the instant I tried to avoid hitting my head, it smacked the pavement moderately hard but not enough to crack the shell. Helmet did its job, no loss of consciousness, no symptoms of concussion. Other than the indoor trainer I've been off the bike since. But last night I started shopping for a new helmet. I knew if I ordered one sooner I'd be too tempted to ride outdoors before my ortho doc cleared me. Another week or so and I'll be ready. |
Scary stuff, yeah! Did anybody see the fall and so was able to tell you how it happened?
|
Don't hesitate to follow up with a healthcare provider if you have issues in the near future. Or to assess your recovery progress.
I have wasted a lot of money on helmets since 1976 - have never struck pavement, car, light post, etc. with one - but will continue to wear one always when riding. |
I went down a few years ago. Riding with one other cyclist, had a vague recollection of clearing his rear wheel but nothing after that. Was knocked out for a minute, asked the same questions repeatedly, got a ride home from a nearby railway worker. Didn't remember the ride home but was cognizant enough to give him directions to my place. Not too coordinated in the shower and still asking same questions of my wife. Went to a movie (near a hospital) that afternoon with the family and they kept an eye on me. Didn't have any further symptoms but memory of the incident never came back. To this day I have no idea what happened. Took the next day off and then rode again. Don't recall how I felt but checked my diary and noticed I took 4 days off the bike which is unusual.
|
Way back in high school I was riding my BMX down a nice steep hill, (we used to chase and pass cars on it) and I ran into my football coach who was coming up the hill in his little Honda Civic. I remember nothing from about 5 minutes before the wreck till I woke up the next morning with a cast on my arm.
Back in grammar school I went head first into a fence post holding up the chain link fence playing touch football and lost the whole school day, my memory started working again at some point during football practice after school. I haven't had any concussions with long periods of memory loss as an adult although I've had a couple where I lost a few minutes. |
About 7 years ago, I had the same exact problem, except my memory is clear up till the crash. I recall waking up in an ambulance, and later asking the ER Dr. "Did a car hit me?" He said, "You keep asking me that". Concussion, broken arm, compound wrist fracture, stitches in face. They put a plate in my arm, and I went home the next day. I clearly remember riding on a windy day, seeing tree trimmers across the street ...then...nothing, till the ambulance ride. A cop found me laying in the traffic lane of a busy 4 lane street. He said I was on my stomach in a push up position, and talking to him. He brought my bike home and gave my wife a business card. I later tracked down the fire dept EMTs and thanked them, and sent the cop a letter of appreciation, copied to the police chief. Spooky, having this black hole in my ride. Was told it is common with concussion. I was wearing a helmet. My Carrera wire frame sun glasses did a number on my face. I wear plastic frames now. One wierd thing, for several months later I had trouble processing speed during high speed descents. The crash I had was low speed, under 15mph, slightly uphill. I was told I hit a hard green pine cone, while looking left to set up for a left turn. It's all good now. At no time was I aware of pain. They had me on good drugs, and had my arm splinted and set before I knew anything. Wierd, but it gets better. I was hit by a car in 2002, no real injuries, and the entire incident is crystal clear, and I can play it frame by frame in my head. This one, no idea, and wierd as it sounds, I like that better. Both crashes happened on the same street, a couple of miles apart. I got hurt in late April, and was back on the bike July 4, with an arm brace.
Wear your helmet. Stupid not to. My bro in law had a very similar low speed crash, concussion, brain bleed, broken shoulder, lacerations. He doesn't wear, or even own a helmet. He was so out of it, he checked himself out of ICU at 1am and caught a cab home. That's really dumb, but luckily he survived. Its coming up on a year for him, and he hasn't been on his bike since. I love riding too much and am thankful to be ridng again. Take care and get better. |
Speedy recovery to you. Maybe these stories will shake some common sense into the anti-helmeters. I know because I was once one. A concussion can change your mind quickly, if you have one left to change.
|
In April a 93 year old lady hit me with her car. I have no memory of it. I remember riding down a rural road on a peaceful Sat morning, then my next memory is laying on a stretcher being loaded into an ambulance. Then my next memory is walking out of the hospital with my daughter to go home. I spent about 3 hours in the hospital I don't remember. Bad concussion that messed me up for about 3 weeks. The lady claimed her side mirror hit me and knocked me off my bike but my rear wheel was toast so I think she just rear ended me. Aside from my concussion I broke a rib and a few other minor owies. I would say my helmet very possibly saved my life. This was the first time in 31 years of road cycling that I ever went down for any reason. I never even had an accidental solo crash before.
|
I've had several gnarly crashes, and while I didnt hit my head in any of them, I was really glad I had a helmet on every time. Only truly clueless people think they wont need one and can ''roll with it'' if they get go down for some reason.
Glad you're ok, OP. |
As a young kid I was riding down my parents steep road probably doing about 30 / 35mph on the pavement without a helmet, Ian Stewart of The Rolling Stones had a young lad who was cycling around the circular driveway and out onto the pavement and hit me side on.
Earlier in the day I'd been out shopping with my mum and had absolutely no recollection to this day of the clothes I'd bought in the morning and when I was in hospital apparently just kept saying the same thing again and again and again .... I do remember there was a picture of a Lamborghini on the wall and I think I said to my dad about 10 times ... how about that for your next car. In only started wearing a helmet a couple of years ago after a few people we know had close shaves and were largely saved by their helmet, now I'd never cycle without one. |
Originally Posted by canklecat
(Post 20410558)
Be sure you have a family member or friend to check on you at least once a day for the next week.
My father-in-law tripped and hit his head. Four or five months later he began having cognitive issues. He had a subdural hematoma...or a "slow leak" as he called it. |
Originally Posted by BobbyG
(Post 20411026)
...or longer.
My father-in-law tripped and hit his head. Four or five months later he began having cognitive issues. He had a subdural hematoma...or a "slow leak" as he called it. I suffered a subdural hematoma from a blow to the head. The blow occurred on April 2016. Symptoms like nausea and vomiting did not appear until July. It was not until December that symptons got bad enough for me to finally see a doctor and get an MRI. I went from the MRI to emergency surgery to stem the very slow bleeding. Moral of the story: any blow to the head, especially as one gets older, is potentially dangerous. |
First, I am glad that you are fundamentally alright.
Second, your symptoms are pretty consistent with a concussion - it's common to not remember anything from the event, and even from a significant period before and after the event. Third, I appreciate your reminder about helmets. I try to not get too casual, and even put on a helmet to take a spin around the block. Follow medical advice, heal up, and get back on the bike! Oh, but buy a new helmet first. :) |
I posted above but with all the helmet reminders, thought I'd add this. I was working on my bike the other day. I wanted to take a spin around the block to check things out, but was too lazy to go get my shoes on, so I jumped on the bike wearing flip flops. I went back and grabbed my helmet. Must have been quite a sight, flip flops and a helmet. Safety first.
|
First, I hope you can have your wife read these postings to you--follow your physician's advice, which generally is no screen time or reading for a week or so.
Second, you will be back in the saddle again, but not for a little while. I had a similar incident--winged by a wing mirror, ~15-20 minutes of missing memory, cracked helmet and busted wrist. Apparently, I kept asking the first responders if my bike was okay! No memory until I arrived at hospital. Recovery took a few weeks. Some symptoms were slow to develop but eventually resolved. These included fatigue after minimal exertion (first couple of weeks) and a bit of vertigo. Take it easy, and get back to us in a few weeks when you start assessing your bike! |
Glad you are relatively OK! Take your time and recover and relax and get better soon!
|
I was knocked out in a motorcycle accident, taking a blow to the based of the neck and back of head that would have killed me without a full helm.
Had weird moments when someone would mention something, and a flood of lost memory would come back in a rush. The most significant was a friend of mine that thought I was mad at him. We worked together for 8 years and we went on a week long fishing trip for my 40th birthday. Did not recognize him from Adam until he called me and asked me why I never called/emailed and was I mad at him for something. Felt like getting hit again when all the memories came rushing back, triggered a massive migraine. Anyway, be prepared for weird shtuff like that. |
Originally Posted by exmechanic89
(Post 20410913)
I've had several gnarly crashes, and while I didnt hit my head in any of them, I was really glad I had a helmet on every time. Only truly clueless people think they wont need one and can ''roll with it'' if they get go down for some reason.
|
Originally Posted by Slightspeed
(Post 20411331)
I posted above but with all the helmet reminders, thought I'd add this. I was working on my bike the other day. I wanted to take a spin around the block to check things out, but was too lazy to go get my shoes on, so I jumped on the bike wearing flip flops. I went back and grabbed my helmet. Must have been quite a sight, flip flops and a helmet. Safety first.
Originally Posted by Milton Keynes
(Post 20411864)
And the really clueless think they'll never get into an accident because they ride safely.
I had a single rider accident just about two years ago, tagged a curb and went down a gravel embankment. Would have cracked my skull on some of the larger rocks for sure. Helmet probably didn't save my life but it saved me a ton of trouble. Separated shoulder, bleeding all over the right side of my body from road rash but my noggin was intact. :) The law in California requires kids under 18 to wear a helmet when cycling. I do so enjoy seeing families out cycling, kids in helmets, parents bare-headed. SMH. |
Originally Posted by Milton Keynes
(Post 20411864)
And the really clueless think they'll never get into an accident because they ride safely.
|
Originally Posted by TrojanHorse
(Post 20412124)
That's why it's called an accident, yo. :innocent:
I had a single rider accident just about two years ago, tagged a curb and went down a gravel embankment. Would have cracked my skull on some of the larger rocks for sure. Helmet probably didn't save my life but it saved me a ton of trouble. Separated shoulder, bleeding all over the right side of my body from road rash but my noggin was intact. :) The law in California requires kids under 18 to wear a helmet when cycling. I do so enjoy seeing families out cycling, kids in helmets, parents bare-headed. SMH. I like to see people walking to get mail, but bare-headed? SMH |
Race car accident when I was 19 sent me into a coma for 2 weeks. I am extremely fortunate to have staged a 98% recovery. I even went back to racing cars about 4 months later. I initially couldn’t remember the last week before the car crash. Eventually I was able to recall everything up to the beginning of the race. Fast forward to 2 years ago when I was 60. Took a bike spill and received a concussion with symptoms almost exactly as you describe. I can’t remember the fall at all. I was told the memory might come back and it might not. So far it hasn’t. YMMV...Your Memory May Vary! I am very diligent about wearing my helmet. Since this bike fall, I have stopped the banzai downhill runs as a safety measure and always ride well within my limits. I’ll still have a bit of a go, but the Tour de France guys def have nothing to worry about. |
Obligatory Jose Jimenez routine.
"Jose, is that your crash helmet?" "Oh, I hope not." |
| All times are GMT -6. The time now is 03:01 AM. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.