A friend of ours developed MS for no particular reason. He didn't have
any injuries, etc. He just woke up one morning and was blind. The
blindness lasted about 2 weeks and during that time frame they found out
he had MS. He was fine for about a year and then all of a sudden, he
woke up blind again. It took him a few weeks to get his sight back and
then one morning he woke up and had issues with his legs. He now gives
himself a shot every day to keep the symptoms under control and to my
knowledge he hasn't had any worse symptoms.
 
Tracey L. Black
Certified Insurance Service Representative
Hockley & O'Donnell Insurance Agency
Phone - 717-334-6741, x 29
Fax - 717-334-3414
 

Thank you for providing information to us. Please beware that no
coverage is bound and no change to your insurance program is confirmed
until verified by a licensed agent during regular business hours. If you
do not hear from us within 1 business day, please re-contact us in case
your information has not been retained.

 

________________________________

From: Gunny [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2007 9:33 AM
To: Tracey L. Black
Subject: RE: [TMIC] Re: Who's got what?


Your right in your assesment. TM could turn into MS if there were an
exacerbation, and you developed another lesion/scar. All Sclerosis means
is scar. If there are two or more lesions/scars, then you have multiple
lesions, hence Multiple Sclerosis. But, there are different kninds of
MS. There are those that have one attack, and then there are those that
have recurring attacks called relapsing remitting MS. 




        -----Original Message----- 
        From: "Tracey L. Black" 
        Sent: May 15, 2007 9:18 AM 
        To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[email protected] 
        Subject: RE: [TMIC] Re: Who's got what? 
        
        
        We were told that TM could very easily turn to MS later in life.
I don't know remember what the % was but I think it was about 14% of
people who have TM go on later to be diagnosed with MS. My understanding
is that TM works backwards compared to MS. TM starts bad and gets
better, MS starts slow and progressively gets worse. Has anyone else
been told about this??
         
        Tracey L. Black
        Certified Insurance Service Representative
        Hockley & O'Donnell Insurance Agency
        Phone - 717-334-6741, x 29
        Fax - 717-334-3414
         

        Thank you for providing information to us. Please beware that no
coverage is bound and no change to your insurance program is confirmed
until verified by a licensed agent during regular business hours. If you
do not hear from us within 1 business day, please re-contact us in case
your information has not been retained.

         

________________________________

        From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
        Sent: Monday, May 14, 2007 9:51 PM
        To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected]
        Subject: Re: [TMIC] Re: Who's got what?
        
        
        
        In a message dated 5/13/2007 7:10:29 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

                .  I'm always worried that my TM will come back OR
progress to MS?

        This is the type of email that I was alluding to...does TM
progress to MS?  Does TM affect other organs the way that MS does?  I
get a lot of questions like this, and there seems also to be confusion
regarding medications between the two illnesses.  If they are related,
it seems like what works on one disease would work for the other.  
         
        Thank you,
        Jude



        
________________________________

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<http://www.aol.com?ncid=AOLAOF00020000000503> . 


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