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EDSS

Posted: Thu Feb 08, 2007 1:43 pm
by robbie
Your doc just gives u a number and what do they really mean..
http://www.mult-sclerosis.org/expandedd ... scale.html

Posted: Thu Feb 08, 2007 1:56 pm
by gwa
Good chart, robbie. I am a 6.5.

gwa

Posted: Thu Feb 08, 2007 2:06 pm
by Wonderfulworld
Ach, mine give me a 3.5 but they keep discounting my total sudden deafness (during one-sided paralysis and the week of diagnosis of MS) in one ear.

Hmmm.

Nice reference chart

Posted: Fri Feb 09, 2007 2:38 pm
by Grumpster
The chart is a good tool. My neuro has not given me a number, so next time I will ask her to. I found the other info on the linked site related to MRI trending etc also useful. I have an MRI on Wednesday so I may pop that one out when we go over the scan results.

Thanks for the good info.

G

Posted: Sun Feb 11, 2007 8:15 am
by JFH
:evil: :evil: :evil: :evil:

This makes me so angry! How dare they! It is so so bad.

Would anyone here walk up to someone and say, even in a clinical setting, I give your sense of humour a score of 3, or you sex appeal score is only 5, or even you're a thickie your IQ is 100, or you are 4' 6" arent you small, or isnt the colour of your skin very pale/dark how do you live with that? So why do we put up with being defined by this artificial and arbitrary measurement?

Next time a neuro gets on their superior high horse and says "You're a 6!" come back with but I have an empathy score of 1000, a personality score of 10,000 and a life experience score of 100,000!!

Dont be defined by MS! Dont be defined by EDSS!!! :evil:

JFH

Posted: Sun Feb 11, 2007 9:26 am
by gwa
Temper, temper, JFH. Actually I have never been told by a neuro what my "score" was/is. It is simple to look at the chart and determine where I fit into the scale.

I think the EDSS scale is a useful tool to determine how much I have slid during the course of this disease. And if I were a 1 or a 2 again, that would be wonderful.

GWA

Re: JFH

Posted: Sun Feb 11, 2007 10:02 am
by Lyon
gwa wrote:Actually I have never been told by a neuro what my "score" was/is. It is simple to look at the chart and determine where I fit into the scale.
It seems that a lot of neuros don't even put their patients through EDSS testing, possibly to avoid making their patients feel "labeled". I imagine some neuros also have the outlook that EDSS isn't essential because there's only so much that can be done and what is going to be is going to be so why document it?

It's always seemed to me that, at best, EDSS testing is very subjective and therefore not terribly accurate. Clinical trials find EDSS a useful tool and due to the absence of other tools I guess I'd have to agree.

I mentioned earlier that in going through the process of entering the Tovaxin clinical trial my wife went through EDSS testing twice and I found the process enlightening. We thought her EDSS would be zero but like anything else there are "tricks of the trade" involved to expose disability and her EDSS was 3.5. Obviously since a "normal" person's disability is 0 we find any number over that an insult, but after watching the testing and looking at the chart I have to agree with that number.

In one sense I'd liked to have been able to continue thinking her disability was 0, but on the other hand I think it's important for my wife to have gotten that more realistic picture of reality.
Bob

Posted: Sun Feb 11, 2007 10:21 am
by robbie
The numbers tell us how physically disabled we are and how we are progressing, it's a tool for the docs, their not labellig us it's just fact.

Re: EDSS

Posted: Sun Feb 11, 2007 10:46 am
by NHE
JFH wrote:This makes me so angry! How dare they! It is so so bad.
EDSS is just a research tool. If you're going to try to use statistics to show that one treatment helps a patient more than some other treatment, then you need to be able to quantify how well the patients are doing. EDSS is one way to measure and infer treatment efficacy.

NHE

Re: EDSS

Posted: Sun Feb 11, 2007 10:51 am
by Lyon
NHE wrote:EDSS is one way to measure and infer treatment efficacy.
In keeping with that, this link (from the NMSS) http://www.nationalmssociety.org/MUCS_FSS.asp explains and provides other links which go into more detail how, why and when it's beneficial to know EDSS and additional ways that it is determined.
Bob

Posted: Sun Feb 11, 2007 1:46 pm
by Loobie
I agree with Robbie. It's not a label. It's like your weight to them. You are disabled to this degree just like if you were this heavy or that heavy. It doesn't seem useful when you don't have much disability, but it is very useful when some level of disability appears to see the progression objectively. I think they use it as a baseline so they can compare your current state to your old state.

My neuro. (and probably all neuros) didn't really remember who I was each six month visit until I got into the Tovaxin trial and am there more often. I don't think if you don't see your neuro. very much that they would be able to remember your specifics and this gives them a place to start when considering options.