Multiple Sclerosis: What is it and How to Live with It

Multiple Sclerosis: What is it and How to Live with It
Hospital — Pexels by Pixabay
0Comments

The month of March is dedicated to Multiple Sclerosis Awareness. Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a potentially disabling disease of the brain and spinal cord (central nervous system).

In MS, the immune system attacks the protective sheath (myelin) that covers nerve fibers and causes communication problems between your brain and the rest of your body. Eventually, the disease can cause permanent damage or deterioration of the nerve fibers.

Signs and symptoms of MS vary widely between patients and depend on the location and severity of nerve fiber damage in the central nervous system. Some people with severe MS may lose the ability to walk independently or ambulate at all. Other individuals may experience long periods of remission without any new symptoms depending on the type of MS they have.

There’s no cure for multiple sclerosis. However, there are treatments to help speed the recovery from attacks, modify the course of the disease, and manage symptoms.

Common symptoms include:

  • Numbness or weakness in one or more limbs that typically occurs on one side of your body at a time

  • Tingling

  • Electric-shock sensations that occur with certain neck movements, especially bending the neck forward (Lhermitte sign)

  • Lack of coordination

  • Unsteady gait or inability to walk

  • Partial or complete loss of vision, usually in one eye at a time, often with pain during eye movement

  • Prolonged double vision

  • Blurry vision

  • Vertigo

  • Problems with sexual, bowel and bladder function

  • Fatigue

  • Slurred speech

  • Cognitive problems

  • Mood disturbances

Talk to your provider if you begin having symptoms linked to MS. They can refer you to our Campbell County Health neurologist, Dr. Thomas Mayer.

There are no specific tests for MS. Instead, a diagnosis of multiple sclerosis often relies on ruling out other conditions that might produce similar signs and symptoms, known as a differential diagnosis. Starting with a thorough medical history and examination, Dr. Mayer will recommend a series of other tests to make a diagnosis. Some of these tests could include:

  • Blood tests

  • Spinal tap

  • MRI

  • Evoked potential tests

Diagnosing MS can be more difficult in people with unusual symptoms or progressive disease. In these cases, further testing with spinal fluid analysis, evoked potentials, and additional imaging may be needed.

 

For more information on when you should be referred to a neurologist, visit our website or call 307.688.3636.

Original source can be found here.



Related

John Lettieri, President and CEO of Economic Innovation Group

Park County: Residents received $102.16 million per capita from Medicare transfers in 2022

In 2022, Medicare transfers made up 5.1% of income in Park County, providing an average of $3,347 per capita to residents.

USCB Chief Office of Program, Performance and Stakeholder Integration

Census Bureau: 1.9% of people in Hot Springs County identified as multiracial in 2021

Of the 4,673 citizens living in Hot Springs County in 2021, 98.1% said they were only one race, while 1.9% said they were two or more races, according to U.S. Census Bureau data obtained in June.

USCB Chief Information Officer Luis J. Cano

Census Bureau: 5.6% of people in Fremont County identified as multiracial in 2021

Of the 39,434 citizens living in Fremont County in 2021, 94.4% said they were only one race, while 5.6% said they were two or more races, according to U.S. Census Bureau data obtained in June.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from NW Wyoming News.