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Why do I feel dizzy after amusement park rides?

Your brain receives signals from motion-sensing parts of your body: your eyes, inner ears, muscles and joints. When these parts send conflicting information, your brain doesn't know whether you're stationary or moving. Your brain's confused reaction makes you feel sick.



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Lay down, close your eyes, hold still, get in a quiet dark environment if you can and drink plenty of water. rehydrate and that will help.

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Say you're on a ride at the fair, and it's spinning you around and upside down. Your eyes see one thing, your muscles feel another, and your inner ears sense something else. Your brain can't take in all those mixed signals. That's why you end up feeling dizzy and sick.

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These steps can prevent it or relieve the symptoms:
  1. Take motion sickness medicine one to two hours before traveling.
  2. Choose the right seat. ...
  3. Get plenty of air. ...
  4. Avoid things you can't change. ...
  5. Don't read while riding in a car, plane, or boat. ...
  6. Lie down when you feel sick.
  7. Avoid a heavy meal before or during travel.


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A roller coaster's sudden twists and turns can result in a dangerous blood clot or a torn blood vessel. This injury can trigger a stroke in both adults and children. People with high blood pressure or heart conditions are at greater higher risk.

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Serious injuries associated with amusement parks can include:
  • Deadly falls.
  • Carotid artery dissection and stroke (tears to the major artery in the neck)
  • Traumatic brain injury.
  • Brain aneurysms.
  • Paralysis.
  • Drowning.
  • Inflatable ride injuries.
  • Lacerations.


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This sense originates in the fluid-filled semicircular canals in the inner ear. -ex: the fact that the fluid in our middle ear is out of balance would play the biggest role in our feeling dizzy and unbalanced after a thrilling roller coaster ride.

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Support. Another thing you can do throughout this process and at the moment of actually riding a roller coaster for the first time is to surround yourself with people who can support you. Having friends or family with you can be very reassuring and can help you feel less nervous or worried about facing your fear.

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After analyzing acceleration data, it was determined that the front row had the greatest negative acceleration in the z direction and was therefore the “best place” to sit. Most people who enjoy roller coasters have a favorite place to sit when riding, but no quantitative reasons for sitting there.

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Some individuals experience headaches following roller coaster rides. These headaches could result from a subdural hematoma, which means bleeding between the skull and the brain. Some people experience dizziness, motion sickness, head trauma, or concussion.

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Hands Raiser Since rollercoasters are all about speed, velocity, forces, and emulating the sensation of flying, raising your arms can really enhance the experience and increase the feeling that you're flying – but do you dare?

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Fear of roller coasters, also known as veloxrotaphobia, is the extreme fear of roller coasters. It can also be informally referred to as coasterphobia. Such a fear is thought to originate from one or more of three factors: childhood trauma, fear of heights, and parental fears that “rub off” on their children.

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