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My MS Symptoms

I’ve had 4 attacks, and brain scans after the 2nd and 4th. Lesions on the brain is the primary test for MS and the MRI scans are non-intrusive (but pricey). For certainty I wanted the results to show lesions, because otherwise there is no prognosis for:

  • unsteady on my feet
  • general fatigue
  • sometimes extreme fatigue
  • sometimes passing out when urinating standing up
  • tingling in fingers and toes

After two failed scans, my doctor and I concluded that the more likely possibility, as unlikely as it seems, is the coincidence of chronic fatigue returning, and alcoholic neuropathy. Even so, it doesn’t not account for the MS-like attacks, and alcoholic neuropathy never improves.

I no longer have the tingling, even though it lasted a year beforehand. The unsteadiness has mostly gone. I credit this to completely changing my diet, and followed the advice of some experts who believe MS revolves around vitamin D and saturated fats.

I decided to get more sunlight and take large doses of vitamin D. That aspect made sense because I am pale and I had low levels. Two months in Turkiye and Egypt without sunscreen seems to have helped as well.

These are things I removed from my diet. As it happens I had never been consuming so much saturated fat in my life – and I had been enjoying it so, so much!

  • yoghurt
  • cheese
  • ice cream
  • chocolate
  • milkshakes
  • milk in coffee (oat milk is better anyway, I reckon)
  • lamb and pork
  • steak
  • bacon
  • pies and sausage rolls
  • Hungry Jack’s burgers (=Burger King in Australia)
  • hot chips cooked in beef fat (unusual but I had it regularly)
  • margarine or butter

The guidelines from the books I read suggested a max of 20ml of saturated fat per day. Some days I have none, and 10ml in a day is rare for me.

The myelin that protects your nerves from damage is directly created from the fat you eat. Saturated fat creates a brittle coating that is more easily damaged. The good fats provide a flexible coating that is stronger. So I started having:

  • more fish than ever before (I’ve always had a good amount), especially salmon, tuna and mackerel, most days
  • Flax oil tablets, 4500mg on days I do not eat fish
  • using more olive oil in my cooking

While I still get fatigued regularly, the other symptoms have gone and I think if I stick to the above I have it beat. I can only call “it” MS symptoms, because I am not diagnosed and perhaps never will be.

And then today this was reported:

The review published in Acta Neuropathologica  synthesized findings from recent neuropathology  and imaging studies, concluding that diffuse alterations in tissue that looks unaffected on routine scans represent a “clinically relevant, pathological entity distinct from demyelinating lesions.”

Yep, good timing. The study says you can have MS symptoms and not have lesions show up in a regular MS scan. So while I am unable to be certain, I feel reasonably confident that I had early-stage MS, it is still there to some degree, and my fighting it is working.

Which leads me to wonder if early intervention with diet and vitamin D is all so many sufferers needed. And if that is the case, it saddens me that the focus is on horrible, expensive medications that barely make a difference, instead of just sunshine and better food.

Published in Health