Do you get pins and needles with ALS?

Although some CIDP
CIDP
The most common symptoms of CIDP are weakness, numbness, and tingling in the legs, arms, fingers, and hands. Other symptoms include fatigue, pain, balance issues, and impairment of your ability to walk. Some people have described feeling as if there were an electrical storm in their arms or legs.
https://www.doihavecidp.com › cidp-symptoms
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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Does ALS start with tingling?

Early symptoms of ALS

Initial signs of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis will vary depending on the person. Common early symptoms of ALS include: Muscle weakness and tingling in the arms, legs, or neck. Muscle twitches in the arms, legs, shoulder or tongue.
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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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Can ALS start with neuropathy?

Besides muscle cramps that may cause discomfort, some individuals with ALS may develop painful neuropathy (nerve disease or damage).
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Does ALS have sensory symptoms?

Although subjective sensory symptoms are common in ALS, objective sensory signs are seen less frequently. In a series of 111 ALS patients, up to 50% had sensory symptoms whereas 10% were documented to have sensory signs.
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ALS - Part 1 of 2: Overview



What were your first ALS symptoms?

Bulbar onset usually affects voice and swallowing first. The majority of ALS patients have limb onset. For these individuals, early symptoms may include dropping things, tripping, fatigue of the arms and legs, slurred speech and muscle cramps and twitches.
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Is neuropathy like ALS?

However, a rare nerve disorder called multifocal motor neuropathy (MMN) only affects strength. Due to its gradual onset and lack of sensory symptoms, this condition is sometimes initially mistaken for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a nervous system disorder commonly referred to as Lou Gehrig's disease.
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Is there nerve pain with ALS?

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 do to your hands?

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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How do you rule out ALS?

Electromyography: EMG is one of the most important tests used to diagnose ALS. Small electric shocks are sent through your nerves. Your doctor measures how fast they conduct electricity and whether they're damaged. A second part of the test also checks the electrical activity of your muscles.
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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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What are ALS twitches like?

Fasciculations are a common symptom of ALS. These persistent muscle twitches are generally not painful but can interfere with sleep. They are the result of the ongoing disruption of signals from the nerves to the muscles that occurs in ALS.
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What comes first in ALS weakness or twitching?

Early symptoms of ALS are usually characterized by muscle weakness, tightness (spasticity), cramping, or twitching (fasciculations). This stage is also associated with muscle loss or atrophy.
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Does ALS cause prickling?

Sensory Symptoms

Some people with ALS report tingling sensations. However, this is not common and it usually goes away. Tingling or sensory discomfort in ALS is caused by pressure and prolonged immobility rather than by the disease itself.
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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 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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Does ALS cause shaky hands?

Some ALS patients use the term "tremor" when they are actually having muscle failure. When people push their muscles to the limit, they can see their muscles react. It can look like a tremor because the muscle cannot generate any more force.
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Does ALS show up in blood work?

Blood test: Blood tests can look for early signs of ALS and rule out other conditions.
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Is numbness part of ALS?

ALS doesn't cause numbness, tingling, or loss of feeling.
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Does ALS feel like carpal tunnel?

ALS symptoms usually start with painless weakness developing in a hand or foot and can be mistaken for more common problems, such as carpal tunnel syndrome or a pinched nerve. The muscle weakness slowly gets worse.
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Does ALS make your feet hurt?

But those conditions are commonly associated with pain—ALS is not generally a painful disease. The weakness typically progresses—slowly over many years in some patients, or rapidly over a few months in others—progressing from one hand to the other, from hand to foot, or foot to hand.
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Do you get burning sensations with ALS?

More than 60 per cent of people living with ALS will admit to experiencing significant pain, varying in terms of intensity and etiology. Neuropathic pain: arising as a direct consequence of a lesion or disease affecting the somatosensory system, resulting in tingling, burning, numbness or shooting pains.
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Does ALS affect sensation?

In late-stage ALS, most voluntary muscles are paralyzed. The involuntary muscles, such as those that control the heartbeat, gastrointestinal tract and bowel, bladder, and sexual functions are not directly affected in ALS. Sensations, such as vision, hearing, and touch, are also unaffected.
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How fast do ALS symptoms progress?

Typically, the disease will progress over 2 to 5 years after diagnosis. However, 20% of patients live for more than 5 years, and about 5% live for 20 years or more. The name describes the condition. Amyotrophic comes from the Greek.
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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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