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Yes and No. Often MS is wrongly diagnosed and it is really Antiphospholipid Antibody Syndrome (APS). Have you been tested for APS? But if your doctors are 100% sure you do have MS, then you have the added benefit of getting migraines too. :(

See below for some of my citations. I have more, but you will get the idea.

2006-07-26 13:13:06 · answer #1 · answered by hello 4 · 2 0

Sorry there is no link between vitamin intakes and MS and vitamin supplements are of no benefit in the disease. Believe me that have been tried! There was a fad a few years back for giving high dose B12. It came from nowhere with no evidence, but took a large study to disprove it and stop MS patients trooping in and demanding it. MS is very much a relapsing remitting disease, this means that all symptoms can disappear for a while, sometimes even permanently, even if you do nothing. This has always made it one of the top diseases for alternative therapists and quacks to make wild unsubstantiated claims.Even affected individuals who remit tend to broadcast so called cures. The only way one can tell if something actually helps is to do a large, statistically valid, double blind cross over trial. Individuals who recover are mostly undergoing spontaneous remission which has always been a feature of this disease. These studies are extremely difficult to carry out and also sometimes have ethical issues as well. Interferon, which does appear to have a modest effect on the rate of relapse in the rapidly progressive group of patients, struggled for a long time, with many intelligent neurologists questioning its efficacy. This was probably because it was difficult, with only low level advantage to get a large enough group of patients into a valid study to prove any advantage was statistically significant.

2016-03-16 06:03:57 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well, that's a medical question I can't answer. I simply know a method you get rid of the migraine - and it should help (a bit) against MS as well.

Go for a manual one-time treatment called Atlasprofilax. The effect on the self-healing power of your body is simply amazing, so I'd expect the MS symptoms to get less anyway.

I have experienced the treatment myself about 15 months ago, and I'm really convinced. :-)

At present, the treatment is available in California and Europe only, costing around 200 Dollars. Good luck!

2006-07-30 02:02:27 · answer #3 · answered by swissnick 7 · 0 0

Multiple sclerosis is one of the most debilitating and discouraging conditions anyone can have. Waking up day after day knowing you are stricken with MS that gradually drags you, healthy young person, toward chronic illness and maybe shorter life. Suddenly you no longer expect to enjoy many of life's greatest experiences. The inside story on Dr. Gary remarkable Multiple Sclerosis cure

Read on to discover what really causes your multiple sclerosis!

2016-05-14 16:22:40 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

MS is like the insulation coming off a wire (nerve). Bare wires short out when they touch. Doesn't it sound possible?

2006-07-26 13:13:37 · answer #5 · answered by palaver 3 · 0 0

No. . .not that I know of, but I do know that exacerbations of both are linked to stress.

2006-07-26 13:06:01 · answer #6 · answered by Razzy 3 · 0 0

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