Can the Diagnosis for MS Which Includes Lesions on the Brain Be Mistaken for Past Cocaine Abuse?
Question by ginger: Can the diagnosis for MS which includes lesions on the brain be mistaken for past cocaine abuse?
I don’t even know if my question makes sense. A relative of mine has been diagnosed with MS five years ago. However she had abused cocaine, alcohol and whatever else for 20 years prior. She hasn’t used since her diagnosis. Sometimes I see her do things, walk better, open something she says she can’t in front of people, etc. She talks about the “lesions on her brain”. From my undesrstanding these are dead brain cells. So, that is why my question if it is reallly MS.
Best answer:
Answer by System Id
I doubt it, a member of my family has MS, and doctors tend to go through every other possibilty before diagnosing it, since there’s no effective treatment. It eats away at the outer lining of the spinal cord, which doesn’t happen through drug use. Other symptoms can include personality changes and extreme physical fatigue that periodically relapses.
Answer by NATIVE NEW YORKER
M.S. IS PROBLEMATIC IN THAT THE SYMPTOMS COME AND GO IN SOME PATIENTS. THIS IS WHY M.S. IS SOMETIMES
HARD TO DIAGNOSE.
DEAD BRAIN CELLS AN LESIONS ARE NOT THE SAME THING.
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Cocaine use is associated with conditions which cause heart attack
Filed under: cocaine treatment brain
Medline Plus has written that cocaine is a powerful drug that stimulates the brain. People who use it can develop a strong addiction. Addicted users may have to use more and more cocaine to get high. This drug is sold on the street as a fine, white powder. Read more on Examiner.com
