The term "multiple sclerosis" means "many scars." This is because multiple sclerosis is a chronic condition characterized by scars or lesions in the spinal cord and the brain.
People with multiple sclerosis are diagnosed in the prime of their lives, which adds to the fear and anxiety often felt in the wake of a diagnosis.
Multiple sclerosis is a central nervous system disease, meaning it affects the brain, the spinal cord and the optic nerve. Multiple sclerosis symptoms occur because the connections between the brain and the body's nerves are damaged. The effects of the disease are often compared to the way faulty electrical wiring can lead lights to flicker. In a similar way, multiple sclerosis causes problems in signaling throughout the nervous system, which lead to symptoms such as tingling, numbness, blurred vision, and walking problems.
Learn more about what causes MS, who gets MS, and how MS affects your body.
The immune system is a complex network of cells that helps our bodies fight off infection. Crucial to the normal functioning of the immune system is the ability of immune system cells to recognize the difference between healthy cells that are part of the body and unhealthy invaders such as bacteria and viruses. In autoimmune diseases, the immune system loses this ability to distinguish between host and invader. Certain cells in the immune system start attacking healthy tissue as if it were an infection. This is what scientists believe happens in multiple sclerosis. Cells that normally fight infection start attacking the myelin around nerve fibers as if it were an invader.
Though multiple sclerosis has been recognized as a disease since the mid 1800's, its cause still remains a mystery. Scientists are working with several theories about the cause of multiple sclerosis as their foundation for efforts toward a cure.
Multiple sclerosis is not directly inherited, but it is clear that genetic factors play a role in who gets the disease. Children and siblings of people with MS are at higher risk of getting the disease. Non-identical twins have the same risk as that of any other sibling, but the identical twin of a patient with MS has a much higher risk of getting the disease. Even though genetics are clearly involved, the fact that the identical twin of a person with MS does not always get the disease tells us that more than genetics is involved.
Scientists suspect that multiple sclerosis may be indirectly linked to a virus or bacteria. Researchers are currently studying if genetically predisposed individuals have a inappropriate immune response to a virus or bacteria, and this immune response leads to MS. Recently, some viruses have been linked to a potential for developing MS. However, there is no evidence that MS is contagious.
The place where you grew up also plays a role in determining who is more likely to get multiple sclerosis. Multiple sclerosis is more common in cooler areas of the globe. In the United States, Northern states have higher rates of MS than Southern states, and Canada has a rate of MS double that of the US. However, the geographical effect only seems to apply to the first fifteen years of life. If you grew up in a Northern state and then moved to a Southern state at 25 years old, your risk of MS would be the same as for anyone who never left Minnesota. Moving to a warmer climate after age 15 confers no protection.
While multiple sclerosis symptoms and course of illness can vary from person to person, there are four forms of the disease-relapsing-remitting MS, secondary progressive MS, primary progressive MS, and relapsing progressive
You may have heard that multiple sclerosis involves something called demyelination. Demyelination is damage that occurs to the protective sheath, called myelin, which surrounds nerve fibers.
Nerve fibers, called axons, connect the muscles and sensory fibers to the brain and the spinal cord. Electrical impulses travel along these axons, bringing information back and forth across the brain, the spinal cord and the nerves. This communication over the axons is vital to everything your body does.
Surrounding these axons at regular intervals is a sheath made of fat and protein called myelin. Myelin protects the axons and also helps speed up the signals traveling along the spinal cord and in the brain. For example, when you decide to take a walk, myelin helps ensure that the signal from your brain that tells your leg to move gets there immediately and intact.
Symptoms of multiple sclerosis occurs when this myelin is damaged, which slows down and interrupts the electrical impulses traveling to and from the brain and the spinal cord. When these electrical impulses can't get to their destination efficiently or can't get there at all, symptoms develop.
Multiple sclerosis can damage the myelin in many places throughout the central nervous system. This is why people with MS have symptoms in various places throughout their bodies.
Many people with multiple sclerosis wonder why their symptoms may suddenly appear, last a few weeks, and then clear up completely. The reason for this is that damaged myelin can often heal itself. However, with multiple sclerosis, though the myelin may heal enough to alleviate symptoms, scars and lesions are often left behind indicating where the damage was done. These scars can build up and themselves interfere with the electrical impulses traveling across the central nervous system. In addition, in places where the myelin does not heal, the axon itself can become damaged.
When working with your healthcare provider to choose the best multiple sclerosis treatment for you, consider AVONEX. AVONEX is the only once-weekly MS treatment that delays progression of physical disability, reduces the number of flare-ups, and is effective after the first attack.