Best Treatments To Help ALS Patients Live Longer, Easier: New Guidelines
Main Category: Muscular Dystrophy / ALSArticle Date: 13 Oct 2009 - 3:00 PDT
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New guidelines from the American Academy of Neurology identify the most effective treatments for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), often called Lou Gehrig's disease. The guidelines are published in the October 13, 2009, issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
"While we are waiting for a cure, people need to know that a lot can be done to make life easier and longer for people with ALS," said lead guidelines author Robert G. Miller, MD, with the Department of Neurology at California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco and Fellow of the American Academy of Neurology.
ALS is a rapidly progressive and fatal neurologic disease that attacks the nerve cells that control voluntary muscles. Eventually people with ALS are not able to stand or walk, or use their hands and arms, and they have difficulty breathing and swallowing. Most people with ALS die within three to five years from the onset of symptoms. However, about 10 percent survive for 10 or more years.
According to the guidelines, the drug riluzole should be offered to people with ALS to slow the rate at which the disease progresses. Riluzole is the only drug approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat ALS and has a modest effect on prolonging survival.
The guidelines also state that life expectancy will likely increase and quality of life may increase for people with ALS who use an assisted-breathing device. Longer life expectancy is also likely for people with ALS who use a feeding tube known as a PEG tube, since nutrition plays a critical role in prolonging survival. The guidelines also recommend doctors consider offering their patients botulinum toxin B to treat sialorrhea, also known as drooling, if oral medications do not help. Moreover, doctors should consider screening their patients for behavioral or thinking problems because studies show many people with ALS have these problems. Such problems might affect some patients' willingness to accept suggested treatments.
"Important treatments available for people with ALS are often not suggested by doctors and not used by patients," said Miller. "It's important that people with ALS know that more treatments are now available to ease the burden of the disease and that they should see neurologists who are aware of these new guidelines and follow them."
In addition, the guidelines recommend people with ALS enroll early in a specialized multidisciplinary ALS clinic to optimize care. "Attending a multidisciplinary clinic will likely increase survival and access to treatments, and may improve quality of life," said Miller.
The cause of ALS is not known, and it's not yet known why ALS strikes some people and not others.
Source:
Rachel Seroka
American Academy of Neurology
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MLA
13 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/167150.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/167150.php.
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (1)
Whole World Beyond This
posted by Marty Murray on 13 Oct 2009 at 1:12 pmThis article, while providing some useful tips, misses a whole world of effective methods for dealing with als that is available.
While as far as I am aware there is no effective medical intervention for als, there are ways available for people to solve the problem and become healthier.
Solving als starts with understanding this premise. Contrary to what is stated in the article, there is a clear cause of als known to many of us who are involved with solving it. Als is a creation that develops when factors and patterns in a person's life come together in a certain way. These factors and patterns include environental influences, the way a person thinks, the way a person and others around the person handle emotions, how a person responds to trauma and other behavior patterns or ways of living. The sum effect of these factors and patterns, which varies from person to person, is the cause.
Given that, the problem can be solved by finding and doing something to change what is going on with those factors and patterns.
Dr. Miller touches on this when he says that people with als can have thinking problems and that addressing those problems can help the person do better.
The thing that more people need to realize is that by continuing on that type of path, discovering and dealing with those types of problems, one can not just improve the quality of life of a person diagnosed with als, but rather completely solve als.
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