Amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis (ALS) . . . Lou Gehrig’s Disease
Overview
Amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis (a-my-o-TROE-fik LAT-ur-ul skluh-ROE-sis), or ALS, is a progressive
nervous system disease that affects nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord,
causing loss of muscle control.
ALS is often called Lou
Gehrig's disease, and he died from it, after the baseball player who was
diagnosed with it. Doctors usually don't know why ALS occurs. Some cases are
inherited.
ALS often begins with muscle
twitching and weakness in a limb, or slurred speech. Eventually, ALS affects
control of the muscles needed to move, speak, eat and breathe. There is no cure
for this fatal disease.
Symptoms
Signs and symptoms of ALS
vary greatly from person to person, depending on which neurons are affected. It
generally begins with muscle weakness that spreads and gets worse over time.
Signs and symptoms might include:
Difficulty walking or doing
normal daily activities
Tripping and falling
Weakness in your legs, feet
or ankles
Hand weakness or clumsiness
Slurred speech or trouble
swallowing
Muscle cramps and twitching
in your arms, shoulders or tongue
Inappropriate crying,
laughing or yawning
Cognitive and behavioral
changes
ALS often starts in the
hands, feet or limbs, and then spreads to other parts of your body. As the
disease advances and nerve cells are destroyed, your muscles get weaker. This
eventually affects chewing, swallowing, speaking and breathing.
There's generally no pain in
the early stages of ALS, and pain is uncommon in the later stages. ALS doesn't
usually affect your bladder control or your senses.
Causes
ALS affects the nerve cells
that control voluntary muscle movements such as walking and talking (motor neurons).
ALS causes the motor neurons to gradually deteriorate, and then die. Motor
neurons extend from the brain to the spinal cord to muscles throughout the
body. When motor neurons are damaged, they stop sending messages to the
muscles, so the muscles can't function.
ALS is inherited in 5% to
10% of people. For the rest, the cause isn't known.
Researchers continue to
study possible causes of ALS. Most theories center on a complex interaction
between genetic and environmental factors.
Risk factors
Established risk factors for
ALS include:
Heredity.
Five to 10 percent of the people with ALS inherited it (familial ALS). In most
people with familial ALS, their children have a 50-50 chance of developing the
disease.
Age.
ALS risk increases with age, and is most common between the ages of 40 and the
mid-60s.
Sex.
Before the age of 65, slightly more men than women develop ALS. This sex
difference disappears after age 70.
Genetics.
Some studies examining the entire human genome found many similarities in the
genetic variations of people with familial ALS and some people with
noninherited ALS. These genetic variations might make people more susceptible
to ALS.
Environmental factors, such
as the following, might trigger ALS.
Smoking.
Smoking is the only likely environmental risk factor for ALS. The risk seems to
be greatest for women, particularly after menopause.
Environmental toxin
exposure. Some evidence suggests that exposure to
lead or other substances in the workplace or at home might be linked to ALS.
Much study has been done, but no single agent or chemical has been consistently
associated with ALS.
Military service.
Studies indicate that people who have served in the military are at higher risk
of ALS. It's unclear what about military service might trigger the development
of ALS. It might include exposure to certain metals or chemicals, traumatic
injuries, viral infections, and intense exertion.
Complications
As the disease progresses,
ALS causes complications, such as:
Breathing problems
Over time, ALS paralyzes the
muscles you use to breathe. You might need a device to help you breathe at
night, similar to what someone with sleep apnea might wear. For example, you
may be given a bilevel positive airway pressure (BiPAP) device to help with
your breathing at night. This type of device supports your breathing through a
mask worn over your nose, your mouth or both.
Some people with advanced
ALS choose to have a tracheostomy — a surgically created hole at the front of
the neck leading to the windpipe (trachea) — for full-time use of a respirator
that inflates and deflates their lungs.
The most common cause of
death for people with ALS is respiratory failure. On average, death occurs
within 3 to 5 years after symptoms begin. However, some people with ALS live 10
or more years.
Speaking problems
Most people with ALS develop
trouble speaking. This usually starts as occasional, mild slurring of words,
but becomes more severe. Speech eventually becomes difficult for others to
understand, and people with ALS often rely on other communication technologies
to communicate.
Eating problems
People with ALS can develop
malnutrition and dehydration from damage to the muscles that control
swallowing. They are also at higher risk of getting food, liquids or saliva
into the lungs, which can cause pneumonia. A feeding tube can reduce these
risks and ensure proper hydration and nutrition.
Dementia
Some people with ALS have
problems with memory and decision-making, and some are eventually diagnosed
with a form of dementia called frontotemporal dementia.
Jan Ricks Jennings, MHA,
LFACHE
Senior Consultant
Senior Management
Services, LLC
JanJenningsBlog.Blogspot.com
412.913.0636 Cell
724.733.0509 Office
June 21,2022
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