Why is my house shaking

Overview

Internal vibrations are like tremors that happen inside your body. You can’t see internal vibrations, but you can feel them. They produce a quivering sensation inside your arms, legs, chest, or abdomen.

Internal vibrations aren’t as life-altering as external tremors. For example, you won’t physically shake while trying to pour a cup of tea or write a letter. Internal vibrations also aren’t the same as vertigo, which is another symptom of some neurological conditions. Vertigo feels like the world is spinning around you.

Still, internal tremors can feel unpleasant. And because they aren’t visible, these tremors can be hard to explain to your doctor. Keep reading to learn more about possible causes for your internal tremors and next steps.

Tremors are caused by damage in your brain affecting the nerves that control your muscles. Internal vibrations are thought to stem from the same causes as tremors. The shaking may simply be too subtle to see.

Nervous system conditions such as Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis (MS), and essential tremor can all cause these tremors. One study reported that 33 percent of people with Parkinson’s disease had internal vibrations. Thirty-six percent of people with MS and 55 percent of people with essential tremor also reported feeling internal vibrations. Sometimes, anxiety can cause or worsen the tremors.

Most people with internal tremors also have other sensory symptoms, such as aching, tingling, and burning. The other symptoms you have with the vibrations can give clues to which condition you have.

Symptoms of Parkinson’s disease include:

  • tight muscles that are hard to move
  • slow, shuffling, stiff movements
  • small handwriting
  • quiet or hoarse voice
  • loss of your sense of smell
  • serious look on your face, called a mask
  • trouble sleeping
  • constipation
  • dizziness

Symptoms of essential tremor include:

  • small movements of the arms and legs, especially when you are active
  • head nodding
  • twitching in your eyelids and other parts of your face
  • quivering or shaky voice
  • trouble with balance
  • problems writing

Symptoms of MS include:

  • numbness in your arms, legs, face, and body
  • stiffness
  • weakness
  • fatigue
  • trouble walking
  • dizziness and vertigo
  • blurred vision or other sight problems
  • trouble controlling urination or bowel movements
  • depression

If you’re having internal vibrations, see your primary care doctor for an exam. Also make an appointment if you have symptoms such as:

  • numbness
  • weakness
  • trouble walking
  • dizziness

Your doctor will start by asking about your symptoms and medical history. You’ll have tests done to check for signs of neurologic conditions that can cause tremors. Your doctor will ask you to perform a series of tasks. These can test your:

  • reflexes
  • strength
  • muscle tone
  • feeling
  • movement and walking ability
  • balance and coordination

The doctor may also order one or more of these tests:

  • electromyogram, which measures how well your muscles respond to stimulation
  • evoked potential tests, which use electrodes to measure how well your nervous system responds to stimulation
  • lumbar puncture (spinal tap), which removes a sample of fluid from around your spinal cord to look for signs of MS
  • magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan, which shows lesions in your brain and spinal cord

Your doctor might refer you to a neurologist. A neurologist is a specialist who treats disorders of the nervous system.

Read more: Tests for multiple sclerosis »

To get the right treatment, first you need an accurate diagnosis. Sometimes internal vibrations will improve once you treat the condition that’s causing them. If your doctor can’t figure out the reason for your tremors, you might need to see a specialist for more tests.

Drugs for an underlying condition

Parkinson’s disease is treated with carbidopa-levodopa (Sinemet), pramipexole (Mirapex), and ropinirole (Requip). These drugs increase the amount of dopamine in your brain or they mimic the effects of dopamine. Dopamine is a chemical messenger that helps your body move smoothly.

Essential tremor is treated with a type of blood pressure drug called a beta-blocker. It can also be treated with antiseizure drugs.

MS treatment depends on the type of MS and its progression. It may include steroids to bring down inflammation in the brain and spinal cord. Other treatments include disease-modifying drugs like interferon and glatiramer acetate (Copaxone).

Drugs to control tremors

Certain medications can also specifically help control tremors. These drugs include:

  • anticholinergic drugs like trihexyphenidyl (Artane) and benztropine (Cogentin)
  • botulinum toxin A (Botox)
  • tranquilizers such as alprazolam (Xanax) or clonazepam (Klonopin), if anxiety causes your tremors

Other options

Working with a physical therapist can help you gain better muscle control, which may help with tremors.

If other treatments haven’t worked, your doctor might recommend surgery. In a technique called deep brain stimulation (DBS), the doctor implants electrodes in your brain and a battery-operated generator in your chest. The generator delivers electrical pulses to parts of your brain that control movement.

Internal tremors aren’t dangerous. They can be uncomfortable enough to interfere with your daily life, however. Whether this symptom improves depends on what’s causing the tremors and which treatment you get.

Finding the right treatment might involve some trial and error. If the first medication you take doesn’t work, go back to your doctor. See if you can try something else. The tremor might not go away entirely, but you may be able to control it enough that it no longer bothers you.

A tremor that no one can see can be hard to describe to your doctor. To help you explain this symptom, start keeping a diary of your tremors. Write down:

  • at what time of the day they happen
  • what you were doing when they started
  • what they feel like
  • how long they last
  • what other symptoms you have with them, such as dizziness or weakness

Bring this diary with you to your appointments. Use it as a guide during conversations with your doctor.

I have a 1936 cottage. At some point, the previous owners built a 2nd story in the attic space. They built it on top of the 2x6 ceiling joists instead of putting in the right 2x10 or 2x12 supports.

Last summer/fall, we remodeled the upstairs after the toilet leaked. We replaced 90% of the ceiling joists with 2x12s but left the utility room alone. (why? I don't really know). All was fine until we got a new washing machine. It is a front load, super sonic thing and it spins ultra fast.

Everytime the washer goes into the spin cycle, the whole house shakes. Doors downstairs rattle, pictures on the wall vibrate, etc. I am afraid we are going to shake something lose, but I dont know who to call. My previous contractor is too busy/not interested/etc. (side note - never use a neighbor as your GC)

So, what kind of person do I call?

Thanks.

02-25-2019, 09:05 PM

 

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I am on the 2nd floor of a rent house I have a a decent amount of stuff on the 2nd floor maybe a tiny bit more than should have up here. Every 4 to 7 seconds it feels like a very small earth quake my feet notice it weird things you can not see anything shaking. I thought it might bed cause by one of my 2 computers I have I raised both off the flood and also turn off both for like 30min the floor is still shaking just a little. There are 3 small cracks on the ceiling blow my room could be from the weight or could be the house settling a little. The shaking is like 70% on one side of the house from the other. I think the floor shaking could be caused from something outside the house but I do not hear any running. The the shaking is like 40% to 50% worse at night. Anybody have any idea what could be causing the floor to have mini earth quakes??

02-26-2019, 12:52 AM

 

Location: on the wind

18,273 posts, read 11,869,906 times

Reputation: 59709

Are there other people in this house? Is it near any train tracks?

02-26-2019, 01:17 AM

 

7,333 posts, read 10,839,059 times

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2 other people and they stay mostly on the lower level. There is train tracks just over a mile away. House is located right next to a big power line tower that is like 120ft to 150ft and there is also a gas line that is a few feet under ground right next to the big metal tower. I will say that in the last 10 days the shaking has been 24/7 before it would happen at night for 2 to 4 hrs. the shaking it kinda annoying I need to figure out way it causing it so I can stop it.

02-26-2019, 04:33 AM

 

Location: KY

577 posts, read 373,955 times

Reputation: 1408

Probably no help here, but I recall MANY years ago in our first home that my wife and I would feel a slight "rumble" through the floors at around 4:00 pm Mon-Fri. I finally found out there was a huge rock quarry about 4 miles away from us.

The workers would do their deep, underground tunnel blasting at 4 :00 pm and then go home. Just so the dust would be settled better overnight, right in time for the 7:00 am shift workers to get the newly blasted rocks loaded in to their dump trucks, and drive out of the tunnels with them.

02-26-2019, 05:46 AM

 

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Quote:

Originally Posted by DJboutit

I am on the 2nd floor of a rent house I have a a decent amount of stuff on the 2nd floor maybe a tiny bit more than should have up here. Every 4 to 7 seconds it feels like a very small earth quake my feet notice it weird things you can not see anything shaking. I thought it might bed cause by one of my 2 computers I have I raised both off the flood and also turn off both for like 30min the floor is still shaking just a little. There are 3 small cracks on the ceiling blow my room could be from the weight or could be the house settling a little. The shaking is like 70% on one side of the house from the other. I think the floor shaking could be caused from something outside the house but I do not hear any running. The the shaking is like 40% to 50% worse at night. Anybody have any idea what could be causing the floor to have mini earth quakes??

That doesn't sound normal at all. Are you in sinkhole country? Houses settle but you wouldn't notice it as it happens over years or decades. If you are in fracking country it may be that. There is nothing you could be doing to make your house shake. If you had soft floor and it shook a little when you walked would be the most you could do. I would call the township or ask neighbors about it.

Unless you have a massaging bed you don't know about.

02-26-2019, 10:22 AM

 

21,687 posts, read 64,633,937 times

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Volcanic eruption becoming imminent.

Seriously, I would construct or borrow some crude seismic monitoring equipment.

//myshake.berkeley.edu/

02-26-2019, 10:39 AM

 

Location: Minnesota

2,524 posts, read 1,744,392 times

Reputation: 4769

Where do you live, city, county, state? Call the non emergency fire department phone number. They might know. Maybe the soil in your area is prone to transmitting vibrations from some industry in the area, or trains.

02-26-2019, 11:52 AM

 

Location: Pittsburgh

6,535 posts, read 8,712,116 times

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Graboids.

02-26-2019, 12:28 PM

 

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I am in Houston Tx I am about 1 mile north of a airport I know it is not the planes causing the shaking.

02-26-2019, 02:37 PM

 

Location: on the wind

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Reputation: 59709

Kind of sounds like some heavy industry operation going on that is creating ground vibration. The house foundation could transmit it through the whole structure. Maybe a Google map search for industrial plants nearby? Refineries? Utility pumping plants? I'd bet vibrations would be apparent outside the house too.

Last edited by Parnassia; 02-26-2019 at 03:02 PM..

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