This is my blog about living with MS. This is My Story. Sometimes it's not pretty and other times it's even embarassing. But, I thank God for His strength, because without it, I'd be literally nothing! 2 Corinthians 7:9. MS is a nightmare, a mystery, a vicious medical mess that bears a much greater need to understand because we can't SEE it.

Like other diseases that act this way, folks don't respect it or recognize it and patients are left feeling discounted. My goal here is to educate my friends and family and anyone else who comes along. I don't LOOK like I've got and with a high pain threshold, I don't often show it. But it's always there... and it's always nagging me. Please forgive the graphic nature of the picture but it's real: we never know when a part will fail. That's MS.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

There are Hugs and Then there are MS HUGS!


Hugs are such wonderful things shared between people who care about each other. But when MS "hugs" you, it's spasticity in the wrong place! It's a phenomenon doctors have only recently truly recognized and realized it really does happen. And believe me, when I say drs are just realizing these things. MY neuro is up to date but hospitals, ER's, nurses, and drs in those areas are really lost. I am their educator then. And then they won't listen still.

I've been hospitalized twice just this year already. Both times "heart related," with the first time for the hug. The hug is around the torso, when the muscles that criss-cross your chest, your diaphragm and stomach area, tighten up and then don't release. Imagine exhaling and then not being able to take another breath. That's a hug.

Well when spasticity sets in, your muscles can't fully expand so your lungs can't get a full deep breath and then your heart begins to stress. then all the symptoms of a heart attack set in... then you wonder do I decide this is a hug and risk a heart attack? or go in? It's a mess to figure out but you do it once, figure all the signs out and verify your heart and then next time you know better...

But the hug doesn't let up... so it just hurts alot... til finally the right muscle relaxant is found and it breaks the hug's grip. In my case it was an old regular, Skelaxin. Sweeeeeeeeet relief! What a relief... here's a picture that expressed the hug nicely... from Mother Nature but you get the idea. :)

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