Multiple Sclerosis Case Study

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Every time she runs, Kayla Montgomery falls in her coach’s arms crying for help because she can’t feel her legs. Kayla Montgomery was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis at the young age of fourteen after a fall in a soccer game. After the game, Kayla felt numbness in her legs and was heartbroken when the doctor diagnosed her with multiple sclerosis, knowing that playing soccer would never be an option. Montgomery was never a good runner until the day she decided that she was not giving up on being an athlete and tried out for the cross country team. Before being diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis, Montgomery was not known for being the fastest runner on the soccer field but after her dedication to continue being an athlete even despite her disease, …show more content…

Relapsing-Remitting MS, also known as RRMS, is the most common form of the disease and is called relapsing-remitting because the body will relapse with the symptoms flaring up and then follow a time of recovery with no symptoms. A relapse normally takes twenty-four hours and could take as long as thirty days for another relapse to occur. RRMS is the most common and easiest to see in an MRI scan because the lesions are brain lesions instead of spinal and are more inflamed. RRMS is the most common but most patients will end up transitioning to Secondary Progressive MS a few years after their diagnostic, for an unknown reason. Secondary Progressive MS is an extension of RRMS and instead of recovering right after a relapse; most patients will never fully recover. Doctors identify that a patient has developed SPMS after the “disability starts advancing much quicker than it did during RRMS, though the progress can still be quite slow in some individuals” (Jones …show more content…

MS is a “chronic autoimmune disorder affecting movement and bodily functions caused by the destruction of myelin insulation covering nerve fibers (neurons) in the central nervous system (brain and spinal cord)” (Kraft and Catanzaro 2000). The disease normally affects ages twenty to thirty and can cause symptoms like numbness, vision loss, slurred speech and many

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