In the last few months I have been noticing more and more tremors under my skin. Sometimes in specific areas of my torso or limbs. But mostly a full body felling of buzzing tremors. Does anyone have an idea of what can be done to reduce or stop them??
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Just under the skin tremors
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Hi Tracy McK.
I'm not exactly sure what you are experiencing, tremors and buzzing are very different from each other.
Tremors is uncontrollable shaking. This link will explain the different type of tremors and possible treatments:
https://www.nationalmssociety.org/Sy...ymptoms/Tremor
Buzzing/vibrations is a sensation much like a cell phone on vibrate. It's simply an abnormal sensation that is perfectly normal when having MS. It's not a symptom that is treatable but it can come and go. It s possible to ignore abnormal sensations such as vibrations/buzzing, but they can be annoying.Diagnosed 1984
“Lightworkers aren’t here to avoid the darkness…they are here to transform the darkness through the illuminating power of love.” Muses from a mystic
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Hi
I'm not sure what you mean by that ether. Yet I've found yoga and taking turmeric daily seems to help with the tremors (actual shaking of hands etc)
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QUOTE=Tracy McK;1515705]In the last few months I have been noticing more and more tremors under my skin. Sometimes in specific areas of my torso or limbs. But mostly a full body felling of buzzing tremors. Does anyone have an idea of what can be done to reduce or stop them??[/QUOTE]Jen Dx'd 5/11
"Live each day as if it were your last"
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Originally posted by Temagami View PostTry looking up the definition of fasciculations and see if that is what it is. If so, you can thank MS.
However a lot of us experience them, so... Who really knows
There is a type of "twitching" that is related to MS that is called myokymia. It presents as more of a rippling under the skin and has been described as a "bag of worms". (Sorry! I know that's gross but it's how it's described)“I’m pretty and tough, like a diamond. Or beef jerky in a ball gown.” - Titus Andromedon
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Originally posted by IntoDust View PostI was under the impression that fasciculations were not a symptom of MS due to the fact that MS is an upper motor neuron disease and fasciculations were indicative of a lower motor neuron problem.
However a lot of us experience them, so... Who really knows
There is a type of "twitching" that is related to MS that is called myokymia. It presents as more of a rippling under the skin and has been described as a "bag of worms". (Sorry! I know that's gross but it's how it's described)
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1488064
Take CarePPMS for 26 years (dx 1998)
~ Worrying will not take away tomorrow's troubles ~ But it will take away today's peace. ~
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Originally posted by KoKo View PostWhen I was noticing some hand atrophy several years ago, while I was still working, I found this article about MS and lower motor neuron dysfunction, and saved it:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1488064
Take Care
It made me think of this article I found a couple of weeks ago (which I meant to share but I forgot to). It looks into peripheral nerve demyelination in patients with MS which goes against everything we’ve heard about this disease. Is it not just affecting oligodendrocytes in the CNS but also Schwann cells in the PNS?
https://journals.lww.com/neurotodayo...graphic.6.aspx
I thought about posting this in the General forums. You think they’d dig it over there?“I’m pretty and tough, like a diamond. Or beef jerky in a ball gown.” - Titus Andromedon
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Originally posted by IntoDust View PostInteresting read, KoKo. I wish they had taken it further than this initial small sampling of patients and done more studies in the 27 years since it was done - especially since MS patients complain of symptoms like twitching that are considered to be part of a lower motor neuron process. Both the dorsal nerve entry roots and central exit roots are part of the peripheral nervous system and couldn’t possibly be related to MS! Or, could they?
It made me think of this article I found a couple of weeks ago (which I meant to share but I forgot to). It looks into peripheral nerve demyelination in patients with MS which goes against everything we’ve heard about this disease. Is it not just affecting oligodendrocytes in the CNS but also Schwann cells in the PNS?
https://journals.lww.com/neurotodayo...graphic.6.aspx
I thought about posting this in the General forums. You think they’d dig it over there?
Also, saved with that article in my previous post, is this about atrophy and fasciculations:
http://www.neuroanatomy.wisc.edu/sc97/text/P5/intro.htm
Feel free to post in the General - some of us like to 'get into the weeds'.
Take CarePPMS for 26 years (dx 1998)
~ Worrying will not take away tomorrow's troubles ~ But it will take away today's peace. ~
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Originally posted by NoraS View PostTracy, I have little muscle spasms that aren't visible, along with the sensation of bugs crawling under my skin. Sometimes there's a vibration. I just assume it's all part and parcel.
There is a type of "twitching" that is related to MS that is called myokymia. It presents as more of a rippling under the skin and has been described as a "bag of worms".1st sx '89 Dx '99 w/RRMS - SP since 2010
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