Does MS change your face?

While facial drooping is often a sign of other disorders such as Bell's palsy, Lyme disease, or even stroke, it may be an early sign of MS.
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How does MS affect the face?

Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) - a stabbing pain in the face or jaw area that can occur as an initial symptom of MS or as a relapse. While it can be confused with dental pain, this pain is neuropathic in origin (caused by damage to the trigeminal nerve).
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Does MS make your face feel weird?

People with MS tingling may also notice numbness, feelings of an electrical pulse, or other unusual bodily sensations, especially in the face, hands, and feet. Tingling and numbness can happen on just one side of the body.
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Can MS cause puffy face?

Although demyelination may not directly cause facial swelling, people with MS may find themselves at a higher risk of facial swelling from the development of secondary diseases and the treatments they take to manage their MS.
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Can MS make your face look different?

Research has indicated that flushing often occurs due to medications for multiple sclerosis. There are many other reasons why people with MS experience a flushed face. Some foods can cause the face to flush, as can menopause and certain skin conditions like rosacea.
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Comparing Facial Changes



Does MS change your hair?

Hair loss is also relatively commonly observed in patients with MS who receive immunosuppressive agents,3,4 which is thought to be a consequence of toxicity to the hair follicle.
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What do MS eyes look like?

A common visual symptom of MS is optic neuritis — inflammation of the optic (vision) nerve. Optic neuritis usually occurs in one eye and may cause aching pain with eye movement, blurred vision, dim vision, or loss of color vision. For example, the color red may appear washed out or gray.
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Can MS change your skin?

While MS does not cause skin symptoms, some MS medications can cause skin symptoms, such as hives, rashes, and tingling.
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What are the facial symptoms of multiple sclerosis?

Usually, MS facial twitching affects one side of your face at a time. And you may notice other facial symptoms first, like numbness, tingling, weakness, or other weird sensations. “People will usually say, 'My face feels swollen, but I look in the mirror and it's not swollen,'” Stoll says.
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Does MS make you gain weight?

MS fatigue, steroid therapy, and depression can all lead to unwanted weight in people with MS. Though these factors are not your fault, you owe it to yourself to take control of your weight. Overeating can increase MS symptoms or health conditions, such as: fatigue.
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What are the red flag signs of MS?

There are lots of symptoms that MS can cause, but not everyone will experience all of them.
  • fatigue.
  • numbness and tingling.
  • loss of balance and dizziness.
  • stiffness or spasms.
  • tremor.
  • pain.
  • bladder problems.
  • bowel trouble.
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Does MS make you talk weird?

Some of the more common changes in speech due to dysarthria in MS are: slurred, imprecise or slower speech. low volume or weak voice. difficulty with resonance and pitch control.
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What is the most prominent symptom of MS?

Numbness of the face, body, or extremities (arms and legs) is often the first symptom experienced by those eventually diagnosed as having MS.
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What does early stage MS look like?

Those symptoms include loss of vision in an eye, loss of power in an arm or leg or a rising sense of numbness in the legs. Other common symptoms associated with MS include spasms, fatigue, depression, incontinence issues, sexual dysfunction, and walking difficulties.
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Does MS cause aging?

The age-related decline in physical health is accelerated by 15–30 years in MS patients compared to unaffected peers.
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Can you tell if someone has MS by looking at their eyes?

When your optometrist detects optic nerve inflammation, that can indicate a diagnosis of MS. Patients with MS often also have double vision, blurred vision, or report pain when moving their eyes.
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What are some unusual symptoms of MS?

Here are some of the less common, more surprising symptoms that you might not be aware of.
  • Vertigo. Many people with MS experience dizziness, in which you feel light-headed or off-balance, notes the NMSS. ...
  • Speech Disorders. ...
  • Difficulty Swallowing. ...
  • Itching. ...
  • Hearing Problems. ...
  • Tremors. ...
  • Headache and Migraine. ...
  • Breathing Problems.
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Where does MS usually start?

Here's where MS (typically) starts

Optic neuritis, or inflammation of the optic nerve, is usually the most common, Shoemaker says. You may experience eye pain, blurred vision and headache. It often occurs on one side and can eventually lead to partial or total vision loss.
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Can MS repair itself?

The human body has an amazing natural ability to repair myelin and get nerves working properly again. Myelin is repaired or replaced by special cells in the brain called oligodendrocytes. These cells are made from a type of stem cell found in the brain, called oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs).
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How fast does MS progress?

Most symptoms develop abruptly, within hours or days. These attacks or relapses of MS typically reach their peak within a few days at most and then resolve slowly over the next several days or weeks so that a typical relapse will be symptomatic for about eight weeks from onset to recovery.
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Is MS always terminal?

MS itself is rarely fatal, but complications may arise from severe MS, such as chest or bladder infections, or swallowing difficulties. The average life expectancy for people with MS is around 5 to 10 years lower than average, and this gap appears to be getting smaller all the time.
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How can I test myself for MS?

Some of the most common signs of MS are:
  1. numbness, pain, or tingling.
  2. vision issues such as blurred vision, trouble seeing, or floaters.
  3. weakness.
  4. issues with walking or balance.
  5. bladder or bowel incontinence.
  6. unexplained sexual dysfunction.
  7. mood changes.
  8. brain fog.
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When should you get tested for MS?

People should consider the diagnosis of MS if they have one or more of these symptoms: vision loss in one or both eyes. acute paralysis in the legs or along one side of the body. acute numbness and tingling in a limb.
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Do people with MS become mean?

MS can occasionally cause inappropriate behavior

This type of behavior is thought to result in part from MS-related damage to the normal inhibitory functions of the brain.
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Does MS mess with your hormones?

Testosterone. Some studies have suggested that men with MS may have low levels of testosterone. A study in the US of 96 men with relapsing remitting MS, found that over a third had a condition called hypogonadism, where the body doesn't produce enough testosterone.
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