Multiple Sclerosis is a harmful, bodily disease that can affect the person who it acquires in many different ways. The cause of MS is still unknown, although scientists are continuing their research with multiple experiments to figure out what causes it so that they can make a cure easier, which can save many patients’ bodily functions and health. Some theories of causes include geography, …show more content…
The first signs of having this particular type of MS come to people around the age of twenty. Soon after, from time to time, they have attacks of their symptoms, which are referred to as relapses. Remissions, which are the times of recovery, are followed shortly after. The effected nerves, the severity of the attacks, how long it takes for a person with MS to overcome the symptoms an return to normal, and time between relapses, all vary from person to person. Eventually, most people with RRMS will move on to a secondary progressive stage of MS. About ten percent of people with MS have Primary-Progressive Multiple Sclerosis. With this type of MS, the disease gradually gets worse over time. With this type, there are no well-defined attacks of symptoms. There is often little or no recovery from PPMS. PPMS does not cooperate well with MS treatments. Usually, people who get PPMS are older when they are diagnosed. The average age is around the age of forty. Roughly, the same number of men and women get this type of disease. In other types of diseases in MS, women outnumber men three to one. PPMS usually leads to disability earlier than Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis, which is the most common type of MS. After having RRMS for many years, most people with the disease will get Secondary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis. With SPMS, symptoms begin steady …show more content…
Symptoms are unpredictable, and vary in type and severity in different people. The symptoms people with MS receive may disappear completely, or may continue and may worsen over time. Sometimes, symptoms are temporary and resolve over a certain amount of time, while others are permanent and do not. Some people with MS, start out with mild symptoms that take years and years to progress, while others experience brisk progression of symptoms from the onset. Most patients fall somewhere in the middle. Some patients have mild cases of Multiple Sclerosis with little or no disability over the course of the disease. Other patients have more severe types of Multiple Sclerosis, causing them to need a wheelchair or bed. Life expectancy for patients with MS has increased over time most likely because of the breakthroughs with treatments, improved healthcare, and changes in the patients’ lifestyles. Research shows that people with MS may live an average of seven years less than people who do not have it because of disease complications or other medical conditions. Although, many of these complications are preventable or manageable. The majority of people with MS do not become severely disabled. Two thirds of people who have MS remain able to walk, although many will need an aid, such as a cane,