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Symptoms Seen in MS

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Each individual has different symptoms, and some the same as the next person with MS ... Cannabis, Ultram , oxycodone (OxyContin ), methadone. Treatments for Pain ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Symptoms Seen in MS


1
Symptoms Seen in MS
  • Many different symptoms depending on the
    location of the lesions
  • Each individual has different symptoms, and some
    the same as the next person with MS
  • It is a rare symptom that doesnt have some
    management potential
  • Poor management leads to decreasing function and
    quality of life

2
Nurses Role in Symptom Management
  • Recognize symptom
  • Encourage communication about the symptom
  • With right person
  • At the right time
  • Follow-through with management

3
Symptoms Change
  • Some are intermittent
  • Some are continual
  • Some worsen
  • Therapy has to be geared to what the patient is
    experiencing now but flexible enough to change
    when the symptom does

4
Common Symptoms
  • Fatigue
  • Sensory changes paresthesias, tingling
  • Visual changes
  • Motor dysfunction weakness, spasticity
  • Bowel, bladder, and sexual dysfunction
  • Depression

5
Less Common Symptoms
  • Cognitive dysfunction
  • Speech and swallowing problems
  • Neuropathic pain
  • Tremor and decreased coordination
  • Lhermittes sign
  • Vertigo

6
Rare Symptoms
  • Seizures
  • Hearing loss, tinnitus
  • Paralysis

7
Nursing Issues in MS Care
  • Educate patients and families
  • Manage symptoms
  • Coordinate services
  • Promote health and well-being
  • Inspire hope

8
Heat Sensitivity
  • Many people affected, but not all
  • Heat can be external or internal
  • Symptoms occurring in the presence of heat are
    not an exacerbation of MS but a reaction to heat
    (pseudoexacerbation)

9
Fatigue
  • What is fatigue?
  • A feeling of physical tiredness or lack of energy
    that many people experience from time to time
  • A subjective lack of physical and/or mental
    energy that is perceived by the individual or
    caregiver to interfere with usual and desired
    activities

10
MS Fatigue (Lassitude)
  • Comes on easily, without warning
  • Prevents sustained physical functioning
  • Is worsened by heat
  • Makes it difficult to work productively
  • May appear early in the disease

11
MS Fatigue
  • Is not related to level of disability
  • May affect motor function
  • May affect cognitive function

12
Fatigue May Be Caused by Other Factors
  • Sleep deprivation or interruption
  • Insomnia/sleep apnea
  • Restless leg syndrome
  • Spasms and spasticity
  • Urinary problems
  • Medications

13
Fatigue May Be Caused by Other Factors
  • Deconditioning
  • Fatigue of handicap
  • Depression
  • Muscle fatigue
  • Short-circuiting fatigue
  • Increased weakness in muscle with fatigue
  • Worsens if muscle is repeatedly asked to perform

14
Fatigue May Be Caused by Other Factors
  • Systemic disease
  • Thyroid
  • Anemia
  • Cardiovascular disease
  • Renal disease
  • Liver disease

15
Fatigue
  • May accompany relapses. Sudden onset or worsening
    of fatigue is often associated with other
    neurologic problems.

16
Management
  • Depends on sources of fatigue
  • Sleep problems need evaluation
  • If bladder related, need bladder work-up
  • Spasticity and spasms need evaluation and
    management
  • Restless legs respond well to medical treatment
  • Decrease caffeine

17
Management
  • Deconditioning
  • Physical therapy to provide exercise program
    suitable for MS
  • As patients increase endurance, fatigue should
    decrease

18
Muscle Fatigue
  • Patients need to understand that some exercise is
    good, but overuse will worsen fatigue.

19
Fatigue of Handicap
  • Physical and occupational therapy to evaluate
    gait, transfers, movement, and equipment.

20
Nutrition
  • Evaluate current dietboth content and timing
  • Eating smaller amounts more often usually helps
  • Following the pyramid is essential

21
Depression
  • Manage pharmacologically and with professional
    therapy
  • Exercise will help
  • Support groups

22
Cognitive Problems That Worsen With Fatigue
  • Evaluate cognitive problems
  • Learn compensatory techniques to help with
    fatigue or ones that will prevent getting fatigue

23
If Felt to Be MS Fatigue
  • Work with occupational therapist to learn fatigue
    management and energy conservation techniques
  • REST!!!!!!
  • Pharmacological intervention

24
Pharmacological Intervention
  • Modafinil
  • Amantadine
  • Fluoxetine
  • Pemoline

25
Motor Symptoms
  • Weakness
  • Physical therapy
  • Encourage adaptive equipment
  • Decreases fatigue
  • Increases safety
  • Increases activity in community
  • Strengthening exercises

26
Motor Symptoms
  • Spasticity
  • 60 of people with MS have cortical spinal
    involvement with some degree of spasticity
    accompanying this process
  • Occurs commonly in the quadriceps, hamstrings,
    and gastrocnemius muscles

27
Spasticity Impacts
  • Gait
  • Seating
  • Hygiene
  • Comfort
  • Energy level
  • Sexual activity
  • ADLs
  • Skin health

28
Spasticity, If Present, May Worsen With
  • Infection
  • Relapse
  • Constipation
  • Some medications

29
Management of Spasticity
  • Stretching, movement
  • Physical therapy intervention
  • Stretching program
  • Evaluation and recommendations for AFO, adaptive
    equipment

30
Oral Pharmacologic Intervention
  • Baclofen
  • Tizanidine
  • Neurontin
  • Valium
  • Clonidine
  • Dantrium

31
Injections
  • Botox Local paralysis to muscles lasting 3
    months. Allows injected muscles to go through
    rigorous stretching program while maximally
    effective. May need re-injection.
  • Phenol Local obliteration of nerves in a given
    area. May need re-injection as nerves regenerate.

32
Surgical Interventions
  • Insertion of intrathecal baclofen pump
  • Surgery may be needed if contracture has occurred

33
Spasticity Conclusion
  • Spasticity, if managed from onset, generally does
    not reach contraction stage.

34
Cerebellar
  • Tremor
  • Physical therapy, occupational therapy
  • Pharmacologic
  • Klonopin, Neurontin, surgical interventions
  • Ataxia/dysmetria
  • Physical therapy, occupational therapy
  • Adaptive equipment
  • Balance and coordination exercises

35
Visual
  • Decreased acuity
  • Scotoma
  • Pain
  • Color desaturation
  • Diplopia
  • Nystagmus

36
Sensory
  • Numbness, hypersensitivity
  • Other sensory phenomena
  • Dysesthesias (mild to severe)

37
Pain
  • Pain does occur in MS
  • Pain is what individual says it is
  • Pain is an individual, learned, social, and
    cultural response

38
Pain
  • Pain Sources
  • Mechanical problems
  • Standing
  • Walking, sitting, lying
  • Equipment problems
  • Canes, walkers
  • Beds
  • Skin problems
  • Other Medical Problems
  • Osteoarthritis
  • Back problems
  • Contractures
  • Frozen shoulders
  • Compression fractures
  • Avascular necrosis

39
Pain Classifications
  • Paroxysmal onset (acute pain syndrome)
  • Nonacute or secondary pain (related to relapse)
  • Iatrogenic pain (caused by treatment)
  • Insidious onset (chronic pain syndrome)
  • Mechanical, musculoskeletal, greater than 6 months

40
Neuropathic Pain
  • Demyelinated nerve fibers
  • Described as burning, tingling, shooting,
    stabbing, electric shocklike, searing, worse at
    night
  • Responds poorly to standard treatment

41
Neuropathic Pain
  • Trigeminal neuralgia
  • Tonic spasms
  • Zingers (electric shocklike pain)
  • Back pain
  • Headaches
  • Extremity dysesthesias

42
Treatments for Pain
  • Tricyclic antidepressants inhibit reuptake of
    serotonin and norepinephrine
  • Imipramine, amitriptyline, nortriptyline,
    desipramine
  • Anti-epileptics act to block sodium channels
  • Dilantin, Tegretol, Neurontin, Lamictal,
    Topamax

43
Treatments for Pain
  • Topical agents
  • Capsaicin, lidocaine, heat and cold
  • Nonnarcotic and narcotic opioids
  • Cannabis, Ultram, oxycodone (OxyContin),
    methadone

44
Treatments for Pain
  • Pain from other sources
  • Treat the source
  • Look at walking, seating, chair position, bed
    position
  • Look at skin
  • Look at spasticity
  • Rule out arthritis, musculoskeletal problems

45
Speech and Swallowing Impairment
  • Dysphasia
  • Articulation
  • Speed of delivery
  • Decreased breath support
  • Dysphagia
  • Mechanism of swallow may be uncoordinated
  • Often see silent aspiration

46
Dysphagia
  • At risk for aspiration
  • At risk for poor nutrition and weight loss
  • Diagnosis
  • Bed-side evaluation
  • Modified barium swallow
  • Safe swallowing techniques
  • PEG
  • Dietary modifications

47
Cognition
Reprinted with permission from Tribune Media
Services, Inc.
48
What Is Cognition?
  • Thinking skills
  • Understanding language and expression of thoughts
    and ideas
  • Concentrating, shifting attention, multitasking
  • Learning and remembering new information
  • Planning and performing complex tasks
  • Solving problems

49
Cognitive Dysfunction in MS
  • May be experienced by 4570 of people with MS
  • Not related to physical disability
  • May occur early in disease

50
Cognitive Dysfunction in MS Is
  • Under recognized
  • Under diagnosed
  • Misdiagnosed

51
Cognitive Dysfunction
  • Often correlates with findings on MRI
  • Number of lesions
  • Location of lesions
  • Presence of atrophy

52
Effects of Cognitive Dysfunction
  • ADL
  • Household management
  • Personal care, family care
  • Employment
  • Recreational activities
  • Relationships
  • Social interactions

53
Areas Affected
  • Information processing
  • Verbal and visual memory
  • Attention/concentration
  • Word retrieval
  • Reasoning/problem solving
  • Visual/spatial abilities
  • Executive functioning

54
Patterns of Cognitive Deficit
  • Cognitively intact 2436
  • 1 domain affected 4356
  • Multiple domains affected 2022

55
Signs of Cognitive Dysfunction
  • Trouble remembering
  • Word-finding problems
  • Slowness in or inability to understand what is
    heard or written
  • Difficulty with following directions
  • Trouble with decision making
  • Emotional changes
  • Forgetting your thought mid-sentence

56
Signs of Cognitive Dysfunction
  • Poor performance reviews at work
  • More hours to accomplish the same job
  • Difficulty starting a project
  • Difficulty finishing a project
  • Problems with balancing the checkbook
  • Problems with following a recipe
  • Car accidents

57
Other Causes of Cognitive Dysfunction in MS
  • Fatigue
  • Mental fatigue
  • Slows speed of processing information, accuracy,
    and reaction time
  • Depression
  • Working memory
  • Stress

58
Diagnosis
  • Neuropsychologist
  • Speech/language pathologist
  • Occupational therapist

59
Emotional Issues in MS
  • Grief
  • Depression
  • Bipolar disorder
  • Mood swings
  • Emotional incontinence

60
Depression
  • Occurs in 35 of general population
  • May occur in approximately 60 of people with MS
  • Under recognized, under diagnosed

61
Depression and MS
  • Psychological basis dealing with the disease
  • Pathophysiological mechanism related to
    demyelination in the brain and immune
    dysregulation
  • See less in purely spinal cord disease
  • See more in patients with brain atrophy

62
Signs of Depression
  • Loss of appetite
  • Increased appetite
  • Increased sleep
  • Decreased sleep
  • Irritability
  • Altered personal relationships
  • Sadness
  • Less pleasure in activities

63
Management
  • Medications
  • Psychotherapy
  • Both
  • Exercise
  • Support groups
  • Spirituality

64
Emotional Lability
  • Pathologic crying and/or laughing
  • Inability to control
  • Usually out of proportion to amount of sadness or
    happiness
  • Usually a sign of emotional distress
  • Usually responds well to antidepressants
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