When I was at Baylor they first gave me an MRI which indicated the 
Transverse Myelitis (I had already been diagnosed in Arkansas); anyway while I 
was sent over to the Baylor Rehab; right before I left my pain was so severe; 
she said most people w/ TM don't have that degree of pain, so anyways, the dr. 
ordered another MRI to see if I had a MS; but it was ruled out negative.  She 
said you do not have MS.  She told me about the possible reccurence of TM which 
was slight, but she never told me I would later get MS.  I am surprised to see 
so many saying it will go into that.  I haven't read that anywhere but here.  
Anyway hope everyone pain is better today, Natalie      
  

Louise Croyden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:           Hi Everyone,
   
  I have been reading all the e-mails about TM and MS, etc., and I have also 
been confused about it since I was struck by TM in October 2005.
   
  According to what I've been told and have read since my TM episode, TM isn't 
a disease but is a condition caused by an inflammatory response to an 
underlying disease such as MS, Lupus, an infection....  
   
  As I understand it, some of us will later be diagnosed with MS but TM doesn't 
turn into MS.  The TM episode was actually the first demylinating hit of 
relapsing-remitting MS but there was not enough evidence to diagnose MS at the 
time.  That is why they continue to do tests such as Evoked Potentials and 
further MRI's in order to rule out or confirm the MS diagnosis.  If there is 
evidence that we actually have MS, then they would start the proper treatment.  
My Opthamologist told me not to be surprised if they diagnosed me with MS 
sometime in the future.
   
  On the website of the John's Hopkins Transverse Myelitis Centre at 
http://www.hopkinsneuro.org/tm/disease_and_condition_detail.cfm?condition_id=8  
they say that "Several diseases may lead to transverse myelitis, and should be 
investigated at the time TM presents itself".  Click on Diseases & conditions 
on the home page for the three sections of information: Transverse Myelitis; 
Transverse Myelitis Care and Transverse Myelitis Associated Diseases.
   
  Under the list of  underlying diseases that cause TM, they include some 
possible infectious diseases such as hepatitis A,B or C, Lyme disease or 
Mycoplasma pnuemonia.  There are also separate headings for Lupus, MS and 
Vascular Disease.
   
  If anyone hasn't yet checked out the information from the John's Hopkins TM 
Center or hasn't looked at it for a long time, it has been updated with more 
information since I first read it in early 2006 and has answered more of my 
questions.
   
  I hope this helps.  I just keep hoping for a minor miracle to help all of us 
whose lives have been changed so dramatically by whatever disease caused our TM 
and keep looking for ways to cope in the meantime.
   
  Regards to everyone,
   
  Louise
   
  ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; [email protected] 
  Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2007 10:22 PM
  Subject: Re: [TMIC] Re: Who's got what?
  

  Patti,
   
  My doctors told me that someone with TM will only have a re-occurrence if 
they had underlying illness such as, MS, Sarcoidosis or some other autoimmune 
disease.  I can't imagine going back through what I went through(total 
paralysis from neck down).  It was hard enough to survive the first time.  I 
would just give up the second time.     
  Naomi
C-4 quad since July 2, 2005





    
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