Informal talk about my successful use of LDN – Low Dose Naltrexone – for my MS (Multiple Sclerosis) diagnosis 5 years ago. Also some of the strategies and principles I present in my book “Scary Diagnosis” about how to handle any scary diagnosis – whether yours or a family members or friends. Video Rating: 4 / 5
www.doctordavidclark.com Find out why the popular HPV vaccine has caused cases of multiple sclerosis and other autoimmune conditions. Dr. David Clark THE PLACE FOR ANSWERS™ Functional Neurologist Functional Endocrinologist Vestibular Rehabilitation Specialist Board Certified Chiropractic Neurologist 214-341-3737 ———————— Blog drclark.typepad.com ————————- Twitter www.twitter.com ———————- Facebook: budurl.com
MS Learn Online is the National MS Society’s online educational webcast series. This video features Rosalind Kalb, PhD, who discusses the primary causes of sexual dysfunction for people with multiple sclerosis.
Dr. Edelson discusses the most common types of autoimmune diseases, outlining their symptoms, causes, and risk factors. He describes his own revolutionary program for treating the root of all autoimmune disorders–without drugs–providing readers with new hope for getting back on the road to better health.
Here is part two of learning about and dealing with the invisible symptoms of multiple sclerosis.
MS Learn Online is the National MS Society’s online educational webcast series. This video features part two of a two-part discussion with Rosalind Kalb, PhD, who talks about invisible symptoms in multiple sclerosis. www.nationalmssociety.org
The National MS Society produces excellent videos to help us understand our symptoms. This is about the symptoms that aren’t visible to the rest of the world.
MS Learn Online is the National MS Society’s online educational webcast series. This video features part one of a two-part discussion with Rosalind Kalb, PhD, who talks about invisible symptoms in multiple sclerosis. www.nationalmssociety.org
It is often too embarrassing – both for doctor and for patient – to discuss bowel problems. Both parties need to understand the importance of the dysfunction.
MS Learn Online is the National MS Society’s online educational webcast series. This video features Nancy Holland, EdD, RN, MSCN, who discusses bowel dysfunction associated with multiple sclerosis and strategies for managing the symptoms.
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is an inflammatory disease of the Central Nervous System (CNS) – that’s the brain and spinal cord. Predominantly, it is a disease of the “white matter” tissue. The white matter is made up of nerve fibres which are responsible for transmitting communication signals both internally within the CNS and between the CNS and the nerves supplying rest of the body. In people affected by MS, patches of damage called plaques or lesions appear in seemingly random areas of the CNS white matter. At the site of a lesion, a nerve insulating material, called myelin, is lost. I shall explain this process in more detail later. Clinically, MS is a hard condition to characterise because it is very unpredictable and variable. Depending on which areas of the CNS are affected and how badly they are damaged, the type and severity of symptoms can vary greatly. No two people get MS in exactly the same way and the expression of each individual’s disease is as unique as their fingerprints. However, the different courses of the disease, both within an individual and within the whole population, principally differ in their timing, location and severity. Underneath similar processes (including demyelination and sometimes other forms of nerve degeneration) are going on. Although recent research indicates that the biochemical make-up of lesions may vary between different forms of the disease, this is not the reason why people with MS (PwMS) have such widely differing symptoms …
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is an inflammatory disease of the Central Nervous System (CNS) – that’s the brain and spinal cord. Predominantly, it is a disease of the “white matter” tissue. The white matter is made up of nerve fibres which are responsible for transmitting communication signals both internally within the CNS and between the CNS and the nerves supplying rest of the body. In people affected by MS, patches of damage called plaques or lesions appear in seemingly random areas of the CNS white matter. At the site of a lesion, a nerve insulating material, called myelin, is lost. I shall explain this process in more detail later. Clinically, MS is a hard condition to characterise because it is very unpredictable and variable. Depending on which areas of the CNS are affected and how badly they are damaged, the type and severity of symptoms can vary greatly. No two people get MS in exactly the same way and the expression of each individual’s disease is as unique as their fingerprints. However, the different courses of the disease, both within an individual and within the whole population, principally differ in their timing, location and severity. Underneath similar processes (including demyelination and sometimes other forms of nerve degeneration) are going on. Although recent research indicates that the biochemical make-up of lesions may vary between different forms of the disease, this is not the reason why people with MS (PwMS) have such widely differing symptoms …
MS Learn Online is the National MS Society’s online educational webcast series. This video features Mary Hughes, MD, who answers a viewer’s question about tests for the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis.