Friday, September 28, 2012

Give em something to Talk About - Advocacy

I was watching a college football game a few weekends ago and I was AMAZED at what I saw...I have NEVER seen this before... It was an COMMERCIAL  for MS by the National Multiple Sclerosis Society


SecureACure4MS.org, National Multiple Sclerosis Society, Nancy Davis Foundation


I wear an Orange Cure MS bracelet proudly

Some paint their nails Orange

A few weeks ago a slew of MS patients painted the Tampa Bay Rays stadium Orange by wearing Orange MS tshits

Wearing Orange Ribbons on World MS Day

Participating in Walk MS, Bike MS, Challenge MS or other events

talking to family, friends, or anyone about MS

What does all of this mean?




Thats right - these are Groups that Advocate or are ways YOU can or have shown advocay towards MS

ad·vo·ca·cy (from Bing)
[ ádvəkəssee ]



  1. giving aid to cause: active verbal support for a cause or position 


"Advocacy Is Empowering
Let’s face it. All too often, we sit around and complain about how the system has failed, how the government is making poor choices, how research dollars are going into the wrong pockets, or how accessibility is lacking in our community. Becoming an advocate means having the courage to take action and do something about the many injustices we see in our world. Taking action, whether we do it alone, with others in our community, or with our support group, is empowering. Those of us who have the power to fight must do so for those who are no longer able to fight for themselves. Maybe we won’t see the fruits of our labors – but the next generation will." msfocus.org





 
 

Become an Activist

 Activist - 1 . one who is aggressively active on behalf of a cause


 

  • take charge of this disease
  • educate others
  • lobby your politicians
  • educate employers
  • create awareness

WHY DO I NEED TO BECOME AN ACTIVIST AND ADVOCATE?
 
Multiple Sclerosis is unfortunately not a disease that everyone knows about.  We need to make sure that EVERYONE knows what this disease is and the fact we do not have a CURE yet.  We need you to advocate on behalf of this disease, your fellow MS'ers YOURSELF - when people are donating their dollars each year, we want MS top of mind. 
 
We can be the voice for those who are not able to.
 
without advocay our government won't recognize our needs (SSI, SSDI, Medicaid, Symptom equipment, Plaquards for our car, etc) 
 
 

 COMMUNICATION IS KEY!!!!

The Power of One - One call, one letter, one person you talk to  - it only takes ONE
 
Activists help create CHANGE
 
YOU CAN BE AN ACTIVIST

NMSS has a great toolkit for those with interest


Saturday, September 22, 2012

Play that funky music



MUSIC, Makes the people, come together...
 
The hills are alive, with the sound of Music...
 
 
There's music in the sighing of a reed;
There's music in the gushing of a rill;
There's music in all things, if men had ears:
Their earth is but an echo of the spheres.
~Lord Byron


MS  affects our Central Nervous System - so why are we talking about Music, Music Therapy?

What is music therapy?
.
Music Therapy  uses music and the components of music such as melody, beat to help with many MS symptoms.

IT IS NOT A CURE AND NOT A REPLACEMENT FOR YOUR CURRENT DOCTOR SUPPORTED TREATMENT -this could be an added benefit,


Music Therapy has been used for:

  • stress relief
  • relaxation
  • cognitive issues/memory
  • confidence
  • spasticity
  • hypophonia (soft voice)
  • dysarthria (a motor speech problem
  • depression


You are having a bad day.  Everything and anything is going wrong.  How much more can I take?  My mind is spinning out of control...my head is pounding.... if someone says ONE MORE thing I think I will SCCCCRRREEEAAAMMMM - listening to music an soaking yourself in the melody, the beat of the songs, allows your mind to release all of the tention and allows you to relax.  You stress could reduce

If I say Red, carrot, pony, radio to you.  10 minutes later I ask you to repeat those words.  I CANNOT REMEMBER THEM - is this you?  Did you ever notice that you cant remeber what you had for breakfast but when a song comes on the radio you know exactly where you were when it played - what you were wearing - who you were with - what you were doing - and this was 10/20 years ago? 

Music plays such a BIG role in our life



May people who learn the English language, learn it through music.

How many of you can hear a song on the radio from the 1980's and remember EVERY word of that song.  Its not just words.  Its sound put to a beat.  that combination helps our brains recollect.  It forms a pattern. 

Music Therapy can be used for those with Soft Voice or motor skill issues.  By singing they learn how to shape their mouth to annunciate each word and how to deliver it to a crowd.

We beat to our drum -I know we have all heard this saying, but how very true that statement is.

Our first introduction to "music" is our beating heart.  Ba dum,,,ba dum...ba dum.... it beats at a steady pace.  when we are run or get excited, it starts racing...it gets faster.  Just as in a song...when there is excitement in the song the beat gets faster. 

Music gets you moving.  Music is being used by MS patients with Walking and Balance issues as well as spasticity.  The beats that MS patients here are assisting patients with steady walking.  MOVING is helping some patients with Spasticity issues





                                                    WE HAVE TO MOVE IT..MOVE IT
 
 
 
Here is a link to check out if you want to know more about Music Therapy
 
 
Sharon and I had the honor of having Michael Ricucci - CEO/Founder of Tera Rising Records on our Radio Show.  In case you missed it here is the show
 
 
 
 
Check our what Michael and his group at doing to showcase Music Therapy at
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Saturday, September 15, 2012

New Oral Med -Aubagio (teriflunomide)



Exciting news launched this week for those in the MS community,,,

Its not the cure that we all want...but its another option that we have in the fight against Multiple Sclerosis

Aubagio (teriflunomide) was Approved For Multiple Sclerosis Treatment by the US FDA.


So what is Aubagio anyways?


Aubagio (teriflunomide), is a daily oral medication for those with relapsing forms of MS

This is the 2nd Oral Medication that has become available for Relapsing MS.  (Gilenya being the first).



FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said
"In a clinical trial, the relapse rate for patients using Aubagio was about 30 percent lower than the rate for those taking a placebo. Multiple sclerosis can impair movement, sensation, and thinking, so it is important to have a variety of treatment options available to patients." FDA

From Genzyme website  www.aubagio.com

AUBAGIO has shown significant efficacy across key measures of MS disease activity, including reducing relapses, slowing the progression of physical disability, and reducing the number of brain lesions as detected by MRI.


Potential Risks/Side Effects


  • Aubagio could cause Birth Defects (teratogenicity)

  • You should not get pregnant on this medication, You should be on effective birth control while on this medication.  This can stay in your system for up to 2 years after stopping drug (consult your doctor)

  • If you are a male - your partner should take effective birth control

  • AUBAGIO may decrease your white blood cell count, which may mean you could have more frequent infections 

  • AUBAGIO may cause serious liver problems, which can be life-threatening (hapatotoxicity)

  • Renal Failure

The most common side effects:
  • abnormal liver test results
  • hair thinning
  • diarrhea
  • flu
  • nausea
  • a burning or prickling feeling in your skin.


SO IS AUBAGIO RIGHT FOR ME?

RESEARCH!!!!! 




Before you start ANY medication you should know the pro's and con's.  You MUST know all the potential risks.  I myself is on Gilenya, the other Oral Medication and it too comes with a library of potential side effects.

Should I switch?  Only you can answer that.  But I like the saying "If it aint broken, dont try to fix it"

If your current DMD is working, why change?  Yes this could mean no more injections.  But as with EVERY medication out there - they don't all work the same with with everyone.  If what you are on is working, you probably should stick with it.  TALK to your MS Specialist if you are considering this drug.


Friday, August 31, 2012

A Journey with Multiple Sclerosis

A Journey with Multiple Sclerosis

By Sharon Bosch

 

I’m embarking on the arduous undertaking of describing the last 13 years of my life so that others might gain insight, understanding, and hope from my journey.

 

I married my best friend and husband in 1998 and became the proud mom to our beautiful son in 2003. I’m a stay at home mom, but not by choice – by circumstance. On June 4, 1999, my physician diagnosed me with multiple sclerosis (MS). MS affects people in varying degrees. Some can continue to work, but for others, the ravages of the disease make working and a career impossible.

 

In the past, prior to diagnosis, I never just sat around idly, burning up daylight and wasting time. I truly enjoyed working. But – after diagnosis, I simply couldn’t work. I became a new Sharon – an ill Sharon. I could have balanced family life and a thriving career quite well; at least I think I could have. MS made it impossible for me to even try.

What Is MS?


 

The term, multiple sclerosis, means many scars or lesions. MS is a demyelinating, autoimmune disease that affects the central nervous system (CNS). I’ll give you a brief overview of the disease without boring you with all the medical jargon. Although researchers aren’t clear on the exact cause, the most common theory is that a gene defect or a virus triggers the physiological process that develops into MS. The disease damages the myelin sheath (demyelization) that surrounds and protects nerve cells. The propagation of nerve signals slows down and even stops in some cases.

 

The nerve damage, or demyelization, is caused by inflammation. Much like your body’s immune system fends off a cold, by attacking the invading virus, the body’s immune cells attack the nervous system, causing the inflammation. The inflammation can crop up anywhere along the CNS (e.g. brain, spinal cord, optic nerve).

The Nature of the Beast


 

As of 2012, approximately 2.1 million people have MS worldwide, making it the most commonly diagnosed demyelinating disease among young adults. Of those, 400,000 of them are Americans. Those numbers tell an astounding story: fully 1/5 of those with MS are US citizens. The average age of diagnosis is between 20 and 40 years of age. Although men can certainly develop MS, most of the MS population is female.

 

Episodes of the disease can last a day to several days or more and can occur at different locations of the body each time and with varying severity. The disease goes into remission for periods of time when patients do not experience symptoms, but can pop up again without warning.

Common Symptoms of MS


 

·         Numbness, tingling, or burning sensations in the hands, feet, or legs. Some people experience these symptoms all over their bodies.

·         Complete loss of sight in one or both eyes, loss of peripheral vision, loss of visual acuity (occurs when the inflammation occurs on and around the optic nerve)

·         Loss of balance, unsteady gait, spasticity

·         Heat intolerance – the core body temperature of those with MS rises quicker than in healthy people, due to issues with the thalamus gland (an organ involved in temperature regulation).

·         L’hermitte Syndrome - feeling of electrical shock that runs down the arms and legs when bending the neck to the chin.

·         General loss of coordination

·         Slurred speech

·         Bladder control issues

·         Bowel control issues

·         Cognitive difficulties

·         MS Hug – a tightening around the mid-section, which can mimic the feeling of a heart attack, or feeling as if your clothing is too tight, when it actually is not.

 

Those represent the most common, basic symptoms of MS, but there are actually a lot more of them – too many to list as I need to get on with my story. At least you get the gist; MS is no picnic.

Simple Girl, Proud Woman, Young Wife


 

I grew up in Gravesend Brooklyn – born, raised, and proud. If you were to hear me speak, I’m sure you’d detect an unmistakable accent. We were a middle class family. I had an Italian mom and a dad of Polish, Irish, and German heritage. Everyone knew everyone else in our tight-knit community. I had the typical childhood illnesses (i.e. strep throat, chicken pox). It seems like I fell ill more often than most kids in my neighborhood, but it is what it is – people just dealt with it and moved on.

 

I did the normal teenage things; perhaps a little more than some, but overall, I wasn’t a bad kid. We went out, had fun, loved clubbing, etc. I met my husband at a club on Long Island. I was 22 and he was 25. We lived together about six years before marrying. We both worked crazy hours to save money and put our wedding together, while still maintaining a household and paying the bills.

 

About six months before we married, I noticed my left hand went numb while taking a fairly hot shower. I thought it a bit odd, but due to the stress of planning the wedding and all, I chalked it up to nervous bride syndrome. The numbness and tingling only happened in my left hand and went away with time.

 

We married and resumed our lives. I walked to and from work every day, six days a week, which kept me in good shape as did all the running around in the office.

Trembling and Stumbling


 

Suddenly, I began having issues with walking. I walked like a drunken woman – swaying side to side, tripping over my own two feet. I even had trouble remembering how to perform my work duties; duties I had done day in and day out for years. The numbness returned too. This time, it never went away. I felt exhausted constantly. Regardless of how much sleep I got, it was never enough.

 

I visited my family doctor and I explained my symptoms to him. He suggested that I see a neurological specialist. A week later, I met with my neurologist. After the typical battery of tests, he ordered a blood panel to rule out Lyme disease, Lupus, and other diseases detectable in the blood.

 

It all came back clean.

 

Next, he ordered an MRI with contrast. In this procedure, a huge machine takes images of the brain. The contrasting agent illuminates any brain lesions present. My brain lit up like a Christmas tree. Not good!

 

I then had to undergo a spinal tap, also called a lumbar puncture (LP), to check for protein in the cerebrospinal fluid. Ding, ding! Of course, my fluid had protein present, indicating a blood brain barrier breach and multiple sclerosis. I also went in for a Visual Evoke Potential test to see if my optic nerve had suffered any damage. Ironically, I passed that one.

MS Hits Hard


 

Doctors officially diagnosed me on a warm Friday afternoon in June of 1999. That Monday, June 7th, I entered the hospital as an inpatient for my first steroid treatment. The steroid treatments help MS patients recover from the episodic attacks of the disease. My medical team gave me 1,000 cc (milligrams) of intravenous (IV) steroids once a day for three days. They instructed me to taper off my dosage by mouth over a three-week period and slowly recuperate at home. Six weeks after my diagnosis, I went back to work, thinking I could do all the things I did before my illness.

 

Big Mistake!

 

Six weeks after returning to work, another relapse hit me. Hard. I landed in the hospital with optic neuritis (inflammation of the optic nerve) and received 14,000 cc of IV steroids. Doctors then told me I have an aggressive form of MS and that I could no longer work. I quit with a heavy heart and much trepidation.

 

At the time of my diagnosis, MS patients had only three medications available to abate the progression of the disease: Avonex®, Betaseron®, Copaxon®, and symptomatic medications.

 

I started my first interferon medication, Betaseron®. It’s a daily subcutaneous (sub q) injection with a small needle. Side effects include flu-like symptoms, which hit me like a freight train. The purpose of this medication is to slow the progression of the disease. I was still in the throes of relapse and heavy symptoms while on the medication. My body built up antibodies to the drug, so doctors took me off of it within the first year.

A Warrior Emerges


 

Next stop, Copaxone® -- not an interferon, so comes with few side effects, but still a protein-based drug. I did those injections faithfully for about a year or so. Then I became pregnant with my son and stopped immediately.

 

After giving birth – one of the most joyous occasions of my life – I had a relapse. This is par for the course after having a baby. I did at-home IV steroid treatment and didn’t return to using Copaxone®. My son needed his new mom and I did OK.

 

As is my nature, I tempted fate one too many times. I fell, stumbled, tripped, dropped things, and lost some vision in my left eye (again). If you remember, I first felt the numbing in my left hand well before getting a diagnosis. Most MS patients have one side that’s worse than the other. The left side is my bad side.

 

When I visited my neurologist, he chastised me for not taking my medication treatments over the past four years. I had more active lesions than ever and went downhill fast. My doctor started me on Rebif®, another, newer, interferon that’s stronger than Betaseron®. Interferons give me flu-like symptoms, meaning I felt like crap – again.

 

Three years after that, I moved on from my neurologist to an MS specialist and he wants to put me on a newer, highly promising medication. Patients take the medication, called Tysabri®, via an IV infusion once per month.

 

But there’s a catch. Isn’t there always a catch?

 

Not everyone is a candidate. Those who carry the JVC-6 virus cannot take the drug. I’m waiting to see whether I carry this usually harmless virus. Sadly, over 200 people have died using Tysabri®. These people carried the virus and developed an untreatable brain disease called Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy (PML), due to viral interaction with the drug.

 

So, I wait. I wait to find out if I’m a candidate. If I am, I’ll switch very soon. It’s frightening, and I can’t say I’m all that enthused, but MS takes many things out of a person’s control. I’m no different. I’ve got to do what I’ve got to do.

 

That said, many things are in your control as an MS patient. MS cannot take away your identity, your values – your core. You are strong, intelligent, a mom, a dad; you’re anything you want to be. You may need to do things differently, but you can still do them and live life on your terms, your way, to the best of your ability. I say, “Fight the good fight. The warrior’s battle. You don’t have time for anyone or anything that gets in the way of LIVING!”

 

Sharon Bosch

MS Warrior and Survivor