Can you have mild MS all your life?

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a condition that can affect the brain and spinal cord, causing a wide range of potential symptoms, including problems with vision, arm or leg movement, sensation or balance. It's a lifelong condition that can sometimes cause serious disability, although it can occasionally be mild.
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Can you have a very mild form of MS?

People who have benign MS have the mildest form of the disease. They may experience symptoms, but their disabilities may not accumulate and an MRI may not show an increase in disease activity. However, symptoms can worsen over time.
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Can MS be mild your whole life?

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a long-term condition that affects the central nervous system. Medical advances have meant that in many cases, a person with MS can live as long as someone without MS. The symptoms can vary in severity from mild to debilitating, but treatments and strategies can help.
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Can you have MS and live a normal life?

You may have to adapt your daily life if you're diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS), but with the right care and support many people can lead long, active and healthy lives.
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Do you have MS your whole life?

MS isn't a fatal condition in most cases, and most people with MS have a close-to-normal life expectancy. But since the disease varies so much from person to person, it can be difficult for doctors to predict whether their condition will worsen or improve.
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Can MS go into remission forever?

A remission can last for weeks, months, or, in some cases, years. But remission doesn't mean you no longer have MS. MS medications can help reduce the chances of developing new symptoms, but you still have MS. Symptoms will likely return at some point.
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Do MS lesions go away?

Can Lesions Heal Once They Appear? “Absolutely,” says Dr. Hua. “It's not specific to MS, but in any process where there's some sort of brain injury, there will always be healing, as well.
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Is MS treatable if caught early?

Faced with few symptoms and the prospect of side effects from medication, many people choose to delay medical intervention. However, MS is a lifelong condition. Starting treatment early can have a positive impact by potentially slowing the progression of the disease.
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How close is a cure for MS?

Although there is no cure for MS, we can see a future where people can live free from its effects and not worry about their MS getting worse. There are now a number of health conditions - like rheumatoid arthritis or Type 1 diabetes – where there are no cures.
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What is living with MS like?

Symptoms of MS are unpredictable and vary greatly from person to person, and from time to time in the same person. Multiple Sclerosis can cause symptoms such as extreme fatigue, lack of coordination, weakness, tingling, impaired sensation, vision problems, bladder problems, cognitive impairment and mood changes.
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What is the most mild form of MS?

There's no cure for multiple sclerosis, but benign MS is the mildest form of the condition.
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What does mild MS feel like?

MS can make you feel lightheaded or off-balance, usually when you're standing up and moving around. If you're dizzy and nauseous when you're lying down, or if you stumble to one side, it could be a problem with your inner ear, which controls your balance.
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Can MS stop progressing?

MS is a chronic (long-term) condition. There's no cure, but effective treatments are available. Treatments for relapsing remitting MS can lengthen the time between relapses. They can also prevent or delay progression to another stage of MS.
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Can MS stay benign?

The outlook for benign MS isn't clear. Some people who are diagnosed with it never go on to have a more serious disease progression, while others do. Remember, just because you have mild symptoms when you're first diagnosed with MS doesn't mean that they'll stay that way.
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Does all MS become progressive?

Most people with relapsing-remitting MS -- about 80% -- eventually get secondary progressive MS. The relapses and remissions that used to come and go change into symptoms that steadily get worse. The shift typically begins 15 to 20 years after you're first diagnosed with MS.
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Can you have MS without weakness?

Many MS patients also experience muscle weakness along with spasticity, but it is possible to have spasticity without weakness or to have weakness without spasticity.
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Can MS be misdiagnosed?

The misdiagnosis of multiple sclerosis (MS) is a problem with significant consequences for patients as well as the healthcare system. There are nearly 1 million people in the United States living with the disease. And researchers now say nearly 20 percent of them are misdiagnosed.
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What famous person has multiple sclerosis?

Selma Blair

Blair is a famous actress who hasn't let her diagnosis keep her stuck in one place.
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Is there any hope for MS sufferers?

There is no cure for multiple sclerosis (MS), but there has been much progress in developing new drugs to treat it. Research is ongoing to develop new and better disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) for this disease of the central nervous system. DMTs are designed to reduce the frequency and severity of MS attacks.
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How many lesions is alot for MS?

According to the team, patients with a combination of more than 13 lesions, with a maximal lesion diameter greater than 0.75 cm, and lesions perpendicular to the corpus callosum, had a 19 times greater chance of progressing to MS during the following year.
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What were your first signs of MS?

Common early signs of multiple sclerosis (MS) include:
  • vision problems.
  • tingling and numbness.
  • pains and spasms.
  • weakness or fatigue.
  • balance problems or dizziness.
  • bladder issues.
  • sexual dysfunction.
  • cognitive problems.
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Does MS improve with age?

FRIDAY, Sept. 28, 2018 (HealthDay News) -- Living with a potentially disabling condition like multiple sclerosis (MS) can be difficult, but new research suggests patients get better at dealing with it over time.
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Do all MS patients have brain lesions?

About 5 percent of people who are confirmed to have MS do not initially have brain lesions evidenced by MRI. However, the longer a person goes without brain or spinal cord lesions on MRI, the more important it becomes to look for other possible diagnoses.
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How often should you have MRI with MS?

New lesions might occur in patients with progressive MS and adjusting therapy can be considered. Patients with untreated CIS should be scanned every 1–3 months for the initial 6 months and if stable repeating MRIs every 6–12 months is recommended, unless new clinical symptoms occur.
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Can you feel brain lesions?

Typical symptoms may include: Headaches are usually the first symptom to appear with brain lesions. The pain appears suddenly and worsens as time passes. Over-the-counter medicine usually offers no relief for the pain.
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