Do people with ALS suffer pain?

Does ALS cause pain? The answer is yes, although in most cases it does so indirectly. From what we know at this time, the disease process in ALS only affects the nerve cells controlling strength (motor neurons) in the brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nerves.
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What does ALS pain feel like?

common feature of ALS.1

Joint pain and stiffness can occur because of lack of movement and use of one's limbs. For many, joint pain can be alleviated by moving around and not sitting in the same position for a long length of time. Those who are immobile should have a caretaker assist with movement exercises.
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Does ALS cause widespread pain?

Results. Pain was reported in 78% of ALS patients,79% of DM2 patients, and 54% of controls (P < 0.05). More ALS patients than controls reported moderate to severe pain (42% vs. 20%).
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Is ALS painful at the end?

Benefits Of Hospice Care For Patients With ALS

The most notable benefits of hospice care for ALS patients include: Pain and symptom management – As discussed, the end-stage symptoms of ALS are severe. The patient requires help with daily activities due to symptoms, which hospice teams provide.
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What kind of pain do ALS patients have?

Fasciculations, or muscle twitches, common in ALS, are usually painful as well as distressing to patients. Joint pain by stiffness and scarring is created by capsulitis, commonly referred to as frozen shoulder syndrome. This throbbing pain can affect sleep and limit mobility and activity in patients.
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Is ALS painful?



How do you know when someone with ALS is dying?

ALS Signs of Impending Death

Hands, feet, and limbs are the most common places where ALS death symptoms begin to show before spreading across the body. Most ALS patients succumb to respiratory failure, which occurs when they are unable to obtain enough oxygen from their lungs into their bloodstreams.
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Does ALS have muscle pain?

Muscle cramping with pain presents in 7-12% of ALS patients. Muscle cramps, are not rare in ALS patients, but rarely act as initial symptom without muscle weakness of the ALS patients.
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Is there muscle pain with ALS?

Some with ALS experience painful muscle cramps, which can sometimes be alleviated with medication. Some people with ALS undergo alterations in their thinking or may exhibit uncharacteristic behavior changes, often referred to as frontotemporal dementia, or FTD.
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What does ALS feel like in the legs?

Weakness in your legs, feet or ankles. Hand weakness or clumsiness. Slurred speech or trouble swallowing. Muscle cramps and twitching in your arms, shoulders and tongue.
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What is the most common first symptom of ALS?

The first sign of ALS usually appears in the hand or arm and can show as difficulty with simple tasks such as buttoning a shirt, writing, or turning a key in a lock. In other cases, symptoms initially affect one leg. People experience awkwardness when walking or running, or they may trip or stumble more often.
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How long can ALS go undiagnosed?

And you're right; it takes on average about nine to 12 months for someone to be diagnosed with ALS, from the time they first began to notice symptoms. Getting the proper evaluation in a timely way is important, especially since we have a drug, Rilutek, which has been shown to help delay the progression of ALS.
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Do early ALS symptoms come and go?

With ALS, you may first have weakness in a limb that occurs over a few days or, more often, a few weeks. Then a few weeks or months later, weakness develops in another limb. For other people, the first sign of a problem may be slurred speech or trouble swallowing. As ALS progresses, more and more symptoms are noticed.
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Do you get pins and needles with ALS?

Although some CIDP symptoms may appear similar to those of ALS, ALS does not cause numbness, tingling, or uncomfortable sensations. Also, ALS commonly causes symptoms such as muscle twitching, weight loss, and muscle wasting as well as problems speaking, breathing, and swallowing.
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What happens to your hands with ALS?

The split-hand sign, one of the early physical symptoms of ALS, refers to a loss of the pincer grasp due to weakness and wasting of two hand muscles — the abductor pollicis brevis (APB) and the first dorsal interosseous (FDI) muscles — located on the side of the thumb.
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What muscles are affected first with ALS?

When ALS begins in the bulbar motor neurons, localized in the brainstem, the muscles used for swallowing and speaking are affected first. Rarely, symptoms begin in the respiratory muscles. As ALS progresses, symptoms become more widespread, and some muscles become paralyzed while others are weakened or unaffected.
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What comes first in ALS muscle weakness or twitching?

What are the symptoms? The onset of ALS may be so subtle that the symptoms are overlooked. The earliest symptoms may include fasciculations (muscle twitches), cramps, tight and stiff muscles (spasticity), muscle weakness affecting a hand, arm, leg, or foot, slurred and nasal speech, or difficulty chewing or swallowing.
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Does ALS cause forearm pain?

The neurologist noted in her report that the patient described progressive hand weakness, dysarthria, twitching in the extremities, dysphagia as well as new symptoms including cramping in the left forearm, intermittent blurred vision and difficulty walking.
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What parts of the body are generally not affected by ALS?

ALS does not affect a person's sensory functions or mental faculties. Other, nonmotor neurons, such as sensory neurons that bring information from sense organs to the brain, remain healthy.
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Are leg cramps a symptom of ALS?

Muscle cramps were a common symptom of ALS, occurring in 95% of our cohort at some point during their disease course.
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Does ALS cause stiff neck?

Patients with axial symptoms of ALS present with neck weakness and may complain of posterior neck pain or strain with a gradually worsening tendency of the head to tip forward. These patients often support the chin with one hand.
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Do ALS patients sleep a lot?

Strong feelings of being sleepy during daytime hours are much more common in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) patients than the general public, and appear to be associated with poorer cognitive skills and greater behavioral problems, a study from China reports.
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How do ALS patients go to the bathroom?

Commode chairs, raised seats, safety frames, and portable urinals are used on or in place of toilets. They are designed to help you be safe, comfortable, and more independent.
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What is the longest someone has lived with ALS?

Astrophysicist Stephen Hawking, whose ALS was diagnosed in 1963, had the disease for 55 years, the longest recorded time one had the disease. He died at the age of 76 in 2018.
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Does ALS make your hands cold?

However, someone with ALS, even at an advanced stage, can still see, hear, smell, and feel touch. The nerves that carry feelings of hot, cold, pain, pressure, or even being tickled, are not affected by Lou Gehrig's disease.
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Where do ALS muscle twitches start?

To diagnosis ALS, a physician needs to see signs of progressive muscle weakness. What causes fasciculations? They originate at the very tips of the nerves, called axons, as they come close to being in contact with the muscle.
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