Rafiki Rafiki Rafiki
<font color=peach>I took matters into my own hands
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2000
- Messages
- 4,130
These questions are for people who either have MS or know people who suffer from MS. These aren't really questions about the info you find on WebMD or some other site.
Have you known anyone who went from having no symptoms to severe disability over a period of a month or two?
My sister-in-law is telling us that she has MS, but she really appears to be prescription drug-addicted instead. I don't know how to tell the difference.
Here is the case of something that happened during the late fall. I was visiting at my mother's house and was getting ready to leave with my family for lunch when she showed up at my mother's house. She couldn't really walk, her speech was slurred, and she couldn't make a coherent thought come out of her mouth. I didn't know what was going on, but I put her in my car with us to go have lunch when she told us she would have to pickup my nephew at school about an hour later. She passed out in my car but came to when we roused her at the restaurant. She then collapsed in the parking lot.
I called my brother who told me to just bring her to him. We stopped and got my nephew at school, and she started to perk up. She acted completely fine by the time we got to my brother's office about an hour later...and she didn't want us to tell my brother what happened.
I chose not to meddle in their affairs on that occasion, but she still has a car and is still driving...even when she shouldn't be driving. I've heard through the grapevine that police have found her on the side of the road passed out, mothers on the playground have refused to let her get back into her car when she acts this way, and people have found her laying on the floor of a department store.
She chooses not to open up to me about whatever is going on, but man, I'm concerned! If she wants to live recklessly with her disease or addiction, I can't change her. But I want my neice and nephew to live!
Are these episodes typical of newly-diagnosed MS?
Have you known anyone who went from having no symptoms to severe disability over a period of a month or two?
My sister-in-law is telling us that she has MS, but she really appears to be prescription drug-addicted instead. I don't know how to tell the difference.
Here is the case of something that happened during the late fall. I was visiting at my mother's house and was getting ready to leave with my family for lunch when she showed up at my mother's house. She couldn't really walk, her speech was slurred, and she couldn't make a coherent thought come out of her mouth. I didn't know what was going on, but I put her in my car with us to go have lunch when she told us she would have to pickup my nephew at school about an hour later. She passed out in my car but came to when we roused her at the restaurant. She then collapsed in the parking lot.
I called my brother who told me to just bring her to him. We stopped and got my nephew at school, and she started to perk up. She acted completely fine by the time we got to my brother's office about an hour later...and she didn't want us to tell my brother what happened.
I chose not to meddle in their affairs on that occasion, but she still has a car and is still driving...even when she shouldn't be driving. I've heard through the grapevine that police have found her on the side of the road passed out, mothers on the playground have refused to let her get back into her car when she acts this way, and people have found her laying on the floor of a department store.
She chooses not to open up to me about whatever is going on, but man, I'm concerned! If she wants to live recklessly with her disease or addiction, I can't change her. But I want my neice and nephew to live!
Are these episodes typical of newly-diagnosed MS?


I think I would try to talk to your brother about it.