If you’ve ever had a mystery illness (an unexplained illness) you know how annoying and confusing it can be. I can count on one hand the number of times I’ve had an immune system condition called SAD, which is an unexplained illness that affects the immune system and makes you feel exhausted and run down. It’s one of the reasons I started working with my team at Health Matters to help bring awareness to these illnesses and to change the way people view them.
SAD is caused by a deficiency of some kind in the body’s immune system. Usually it’s due to a genetic mutation that causes the production of antibodies that are unable to function normally in the body. These antibodies attack the cells of the body and produce harmful substances and cellular waste. The most common type of SAD is multiple sclerosis, which is a chronic degenerative brain disease that affects the brain and spinal cord, causing severe pain and mental decline.
Multiple Sclerosis is common in people over fifty years old, but it’s also more common in children, teens, and young adults. So if you’re worried that you might have the symptoms like numbness, loss of vision, and inability to move your legs, it’s worth finding out the truth about this disease.
Multiple Sclerosis, which is the most common form of SAD, is a disease of the nervous system. It can affect a person’s motor skills, and it can cause a person to lose their ability to walk, talk, move, or speak.
The problem is that the symptoms can be just as bad as MS, but you can be diagnosed more easily.
The main symptom of multiple sclerosis is the sudden onset of numbness, weakness, and eventually flulike movement of all four limbs. The neurological disease is characterized by a sudden and sometimes severe loss of vision, muscle weakness, and difficulty with speech. The symptoms of the multiple sclerosis can start within a few days of beginning treatment and last for many years.
Of course, there are many other illnesses that cause similar symptoms, but not all of them have MS as the cause. In the words of the doctors, “MS patients can have other types of neurological illnesses that have similar symptoms.” The MS symptoms can often appear in other parts of the body, such as the brain, too, but the symptoms do not always resemble MS.
What are the symptoms of MS? There are two main ones. One, called “mono-synesthesia,” occurs when one sensory area of the brain becomes more sensitive to certain sounds than to others. In other words, the brain senses a smell, and it’s hard to describe it. The other symptom is called “tremor,” and it is thought to be a result of inflammation of the brain’s motor nerve endings.
The two symptoms can actually be confused. The brain is not always firing the exact same set of nerve impulses. Sometimes, MS comes first, but the tremor can also occur as a side effect of the inflammation.
The two symptoms are also confused in the case of my own brother, who got the first one when he was a baby. He has a condition called epilepsy, which causes seizures when his brain is not functioning correctly. He has never had a seizure, but his seizures are always violent and very unpredictable.