Hi Scott,Scott1 wrote:Hi,
Sounds like a definite correlation between fatigue and heat.
I've had MS diagnosed since the very early 1990s and had more trouble with heat then than I do now. Time does not equal progression as I don't struggle now but I have had big attacks (just to confuse the issue). Progression of what is the question.
Baclofen is a potassium channel blocker. By slowing the exit of potassium from the cell, Sodium entry is slowed. It is the influx of Sodium that triggers the release of calcium from the sarcoplasmic reticulum that triggers muscles to contract. If heat blocks the potassium channel then it should be positive not negative for muscle spasticity. Yet the opposite seems to be a common issue.
Why then, am I different? There oodles of proof of my MS but my path is different. Fatigue was a nightmare for me years ago but it isn't now. If there is a correlation between heat and fatigue then my response is still consistent, as is yours.
Regards
As we know, MS consist of two different mechanisms. The big flares are not the same as the progression. We know why. See e.g. the above thesis MS UNRAVELLED of 10 Aug.
I think the heat effect is particularly pronounced in patients who are progressive. Myself including. It gets worse every year.
The explanation is the ion pump that has ever more difficulty to maintain the equilibrium (of charging on the outside of the cell). If this charging runs down, fatique will be worse, motor functions will detoriate.
In my view the charging of the ion pump is maintained by the mitochondria. These are the main energy producing source in the cell. I think in nerve cells, the mitochiondria must be aligned in some way - I think this is what hundreds of millions of years of evolution has brought us. And when the charged particle inside the mitochondria is exchanged to form H2O - a very powerful electrical reaction, the Ca, K, Na ions must be dragged along the membrane on the outer side. I am an electrical engineer, and electrically, this is the only way I can see that it can work.
If the health of the mitochondria runs down, the heat effect - a natural protective mechanism of the cells that closes the gates or slows down the cells - will become more pronounced. If it gets colder, the mitochondria will work faster. And the pump charges better, and even progression may slow down.
Lots to think about. Not just for us, but also for the professionals.
Leo