Grace, thanks for posting this Sjogrens site.  I have to say, of all the info I 
have read, this is the ONLY place that has actually mentioned Transverse 
Myelitis - up to 1% with Sjogrens!  My doctor explained it to me when I got TM, 
but I had no idea what he was talking about - still sitting there in a fog with 
a totally numb body.  I kind of feel like the doctor explained it to me again 
today, except today I actually know what he was talking about!  I don't know, 
maybe ignorance was bliss at that time...

Regina, did you read the articles and were you a bit surprised?

Linda

----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Grace M.<mailto:[email protected]> 
  To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
  Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
  Sent: Thursday, January 07, 2010 4:23 PM
  Subject: Fwd: [TMIC] Sjogren's (Amended)


  Hi Regina,  

  They've actually identified the autoimmune antibody that is a marker for 
Devic's NMO.  Although one can have a concurrent diagnosis of NMO AND Sjogren's 
(Which is extremely rare.), I don't think that they are related with the 
exception that both are autoimmune diseases, at leat I have not yet read 
anything to that effect in the literature.  

  No Regina, the optic damage that occurs in Devic's NMO is limited to the 
optic nerve and disk.  It is much more destructive that the ON which is 
encountered in MS, and permanent blindness is a relatively common occurence. 

  Did your doctor not explain to you that Sjogren's can affect parts of the 
body other than the eyes?

    
  Sjogren's Subtypes
  Primary Sjogren's Disease VS Sjogren's Syndrome 
  Apr 24, 2006<http://www.suite101.com/daily.cfm/2006-04-24> Elaine 
Moore<http://www.suite101.com/profile.cfm/daisyelaine> 

  This article describes the clinical and diagnostic differences between 
primary and secondary Sjogren's syndrome. 
      


  Sjogren's disease is a chronic autoimmune disease that occurs as a localized 
syndrome primarily causing mouth and eye dryness (sicca syndrome) or as a 
systemic disease affecting multiple organs. Sjogren's is suspected of affecting 
about 2-3 million Americans, 90 percent of them women. Frequently, the 
condition remains unrecognized and untreated, and when treated, the average 
diagnosis is reported to take 3.5 years. Women in their fourth decade of life 
are most likely to be affected. The complaint most often listed at the time of 
diagnosis is mouth dryness. In Sjogren's syndrome, white blood cells known as 
lymphocytes invade the exocrine glands. The exocrine glands produce needed 
moisture for lubricating and bathing the body's organs.

  Continued at:

  
http://autoimmunedisease.suite101.com/article.cfm/sjogrenssubtypes<http://autoimmunedisease.suite101.com/article.cfm/sjogrenssubtypes>

  Grace






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