View Single Post
Old 02-27-2012, 06:04 PM
rbwalton rbwalton is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 57
10 yr Member
rbwalton rbwalton is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 57
10 yr Member
Default

Hi JP
Well, there are other things to think about that may be part of what is happening to you. You mentioned brachial plexopathy. Related to that, there is something called Parsonage Turner Syndrome, or a better term may be Neuralgic Amyotrophy, which takes into account most of the symptoms you mentioned- except maybe the bladder issues. As this goes on, you can develop numbness, weakness or periods of not being able to move certain things depending on which nerves are impacted at the time. Some twitches are possible. It can impact balance, so dizziness is also possible. Headaches and neck pain are part of it. It can impact about every plexus site from lower cranial nerves to lumbar-sacral plexus. Have you had any very intense pain other than headaches? It is something else to consider. Jerks you describe could also be related to restless leg syndrome. I find that taking supplements of magnesium and DHEA help tremendously with my muscle jerks.




Quote:
Originally Posted by JPGuinness View Post
First of all, I'm new here so I wanted to introduce myself and say that I really believe in patient-to-patient forums and the support they can provide.

Please read this and respond if anyone can provide any good info or, more so, some good news to calm my nerves.

Basically, I am a 32 yr/old male who has suffered from headaches, neuralgic pain and neck pain for the past 8 years or so. I learned to deal with it and pretty much get on w/ life. However, in October of last years, I started having very rare myoclonic jerks (muscle jerks similar to the ones you get before you doze off) and strange dizzy sensations when lying down (it felt like I was in a space shuttle going straight up when I was just lying upright in the bed watching TV.
I also had an episode of "brachial plexopathy" in October. I woke up and my right arm was completley paralyzed, only having movement in my hands and forearm. Within one month, full movement and strength came back, but I am having episodes of waking up in the middle of the night with my arm completely dead; I panic, beat it against the wall, shake it about, and it comes back to life within 10 minutes. I also have my hands and feet go tingly and numb ever day (and I've had this symptom for over a year, actually)

In December, the dizziness stopped, but the myoclonic jerking got much much worse - up to 20-30 jerks per day. These jerks are generalized and diffuse throughout my whole body -small finger jerks to full-body jerks. Numbness/tingling continued during this month.

For the last few weeks, it seems I have lost control of my bladder. I either have to pee 13 times a day, or I have really bad urinary retention and can't seem to empty my bladder at all. These symptoms shift back and forth, and I'd say I've had maybe 4-5 days in the past three weeks where my bladder seems to be at optimal/normal function.

I've had an EEG, a 24-hour ambulatory EEG, an MRI of my brain, cervical spine and lumbar spine. All came back only showing minor degenerative disc buldging with minimal foramenal (sp?) narrowing. There were no lesions or anything they could see that could account for my symptoms. My Neuro referred my to the Mayo Clinic and they took me right away (appt is in 3 weeks).

I'm in a state of complete panic and could really use some comfort here. I've read that urogenital symptoms are usually the first symptom of Multiple System Atrophy. Also, the MSA info states that small amplitude myoclonic jerks are also a hallmark of the disease in it's early state. The one thing I have going for me is that there has never been a pathologically proven case of MSA in a patient under 30, and I'm only 32 (average onset is 54)

I would like to ask all of you if this sounds like it could be MS (without lesions showing on MRI), or if this definitely looks like MSA? If I have MSA at this young age, it would be totally devastating and basically mean my life is over. This formidable prospect has me in a state of near complete incessant panic. Are there other conditions that can account for these symptoms? What can cause neurogenic bladder symptoms? At this point I'm praying for MS, as the alternatives are too scary to even think about.

I've read that people are very often misdiagnosed with idiopathic Parkinson's Disease when they actually have MSA; especially when urogenital symptoms predominate in early stages.

Are there other conditions that could account for my symptoms that are not quite so foreboding?

Any help is greatly appreciated. I hope everyone here has received some form of comfort from such great online resources as this.

TIA

J.P.
rbwalton is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote