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Does the tingling ever stop?

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  • freedom1
    replied
    I have numbness and tingling every day. In the beginning it would go away for awhile and now I have it all of the time. It seems to be at its worst in the morning and at night. Maybe I have just lived with it long enough that I notice it more at those times because I am less active then.

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  • dpmich
    replied
    I wish the neurontin worked for me that way. I have found nothing to make the tingling go away. And it can get B A D.

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  • Daisy Mae
    replied
    Thank you so much for all of your replies!! It really helps to know that I am not alone in this scary MS thing!

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  • Shiela
    replied
    I have had tingling from my feet all the way up to my knees. As long as I take Gabapentin as prescribed I don't have the tingling.

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  • SNOOPY
    replied
    Originally posted by MarkLavelle View Post
    Really? What's the secret?
    There is no secret.

    When you live with abnormal sensations long enough you learn to "tune out" and go about your daily living, at least I do. I have had vibrations/buzzing sensations from the waist down since my first exacerbation 27 years ago.

    I simply find abnormal sensations not important.

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  • MarkLavelle
    replied
    Originally posted by SNOOPY View Post
    If they don't go away it is possible to ignore them to the point you really don't notice.
    Really? What's the secret?

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  • LuNell71
    replied
    The last 2 flares (Dec 08 & May 09) I had resulted in constant tingling/buzzing in both legs, both arms, & my face. Guess it could be permanent . I take 300mgs of gabapentine every 2-3 hours & it really helps! How are you able to get use to it, does everyone take something??

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  • Rich Marcell
    replied
    Maybe, maybe not

    As with everything else with this disease, the answer is maybe. For some people tingling is a temporary symptom. I was originally diagnosed in 1990 and my tingling (feet, legs, hands) has never gone away though the severity varies from time to time. You get used to it (not too many other choices).

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  • SNOOPY
    replied
    Originally posted by muse_7 View Post
    It was the nerves reconnecting and healing.

    This is just my unscientific way of saying that tingling might not be a bad thing.
    Tingling, Vibrations/buzzing, numbness is known as Paresthesia or abnormal sensations. In the case of MS it does not mean nerves are reconnecting and/or healing. It does indicate damage done by this disease.

    Note: There can be other causes for someone to experience Paresthesia and it is not unique to MS.

    Daisy Mae,

    The abnormal sensations you are experiencing may or may not go away. If they don't go away it is possible to ignore them to the point you really don't notice.

    It is perfectly normal to have abnormal sensations when you have MS

    Leave a comment:


  • muse_7
    replied
    Immediately after my 2 c-sections my abdomen was numb and felt dead. After a few months it started to tingle, then eventually became normal again. It was the nerves reconnecting and healing.

    This is just my unscientific way of saying that tingling might not be a bad thing.

    Leave a comment:


  • Tinkerbell65
    replied
    For me it starts out on the left side and is just kind of background noise in the morning. Gets worse as the day progresses. If I do too much, it progresses to the right side. Some days are just better than others- I guess I've just accepted that this is my normal- at least for now. I'm just going with it- takes too much energy to fight it

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  • Kraheera
    replied
    It's been constant in my left leg, knee down, since a few months ago. Well, actually "constant" is on the bottom of my left foot, but it happens so much from knee down that I consider it constant.

    It could very well be that your nerve was damaged in a flare, or it could just be nerves firing and healing themselves. Time will tell.

    Leave a comment:


  • apple19
    replied
    Yes I have the tingling, buzzing, and vibrating sensations in my hands, feet, arms, legs and now my face. It feels like I have baseball mitts on my feet and hands. This all started when I had a relapse in Dec 2009. It never lets up. I don't know what "normal" feels like anymore.

    I hope you find relief.

    Leave a comment:


  • Thinkimjob
    replied
    Well, it's never gone away from the last two fingers on my right hand. Only 13 years.

    I've had it at times from feet to chest, but most of that has gone, except in the feet.

    Earlier on, it was caused by flares, and went when the flares died down

    Now, I fear it is nerve damage, and won't be going anywhere.

    Leave a comment:


  • momto3girls
    replied
    Originally posted by Daisy Mae View Post
    Hi, I am new to this site and sorta new to MS. I was diagnosed April 2011 after having a pretty major flare which ended up with lesions in my spine. No brain lesions yet...(or since my last MRI in June 2011). I am on Avonex.

    I have constant, it never stops, tingling, buzzing, vibrating sensations in my feet, legs, arms, hands, and face. This has been the same since I got diagnosed. So I was wondering if this happens to anyone else or if the tingling should go away. It really drives me crazy!!
    Excellent question! I would love to hear the answer to this one too. My tingling is in my left leg and never goes away. Some days are better than others but it's always there.

    Leave a comment:

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