A CCSVI Patient Log: All About Steve
Within a few days of my last comment, Steve began to improve and has stayed consistently in better shape---stronger, more energy, and clearer head. Yesterday, he mowed a small yard with a push-type power mower while I was at work (against my strong discouragement). He would not have been able to do that a month ago, and frankly, I had thought he would never be able to do it again. His mood has risen a few pegs, and I'm encouraged. When he called me on the phone to announce his accomplishment, his voice was loud and full of energy like a kid who has just come in from playing outside or like an athlete after the game.
By the way, it's been almost 6 months since Steve's 3 stents were placed in his jugulars (plus one angioplasty). Dovechick and others, keep your chins up.
By the way, it's been almost 6 months since Steve's 3 stents were placed in his jugulars (plus one angioplasty). Dovechick and others, keep your chins up.
Joyce (aka cypriane)~caregiver and advocate in Dallas for Steve (SPMS)----"Enter through the narrowgate..."
- Ruthless67
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Hi There,
Loved the positive slant of your post on Steve. It's been an uphill battle for you and Steve and your not at the summit yet, but he sound like he's finally making some real progress.
I loved your statement "his voice was loud and full of energy like a kid who has just come in from playing outside" we know he's not a kid, but oh to truly feel like one again, lol!
I wish Steve and you many, many more days and years of improved health and continued exuberance for life!
Lora
Loved the positive slant of your post on Steve. It's been an uphill battle for you and Steve and your not at the summit yet, but he sound like he's finally making some real progress.
I loved your statement "his voice was loud and full of energy like a kid who has just come in from playing outside" we know he's not a kid, but oh to truly feel like one again, lol!
I wish Steve and you many, many more days and years of improved health and continued exuberance for life!
Lora
- ozarkcanoer
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I am so happy for Steve. How wonderful after the winter of cold and flu he has been through. Mowing the grass is no small feat.
awsome! I would not attempt it myself.
And wow, 45 YEARS of MS! holy cow, I thought I was a veteran at 19....
I think a reunion thread is a nice idea

And wow, 45 YEARS of MS! holy cow, I thought I was a veteran at 19....
I think a reunion thread is a nice idea

I'm not offering medical advice, I am just a patient too! Talk to your doctor about what is best for you...
http://www.thisisms.com/ftopic-7318-0.html This is my regimen thread
http://www.ccsvibook.com Read my book published by McFarland Health topics
http://www.thisisms.com/ftopic-7318-0.html This is my regimen thread
http://www.ccsvibook.com Read my book published by McFarland Health topics
- Vhoenecke
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- Location: Rosetown, Canada
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Joyce,
Thanks so much for sharing with us. Any change for the better at a 45+ year SPMS is huge! I am so happy for you and Steve. To tell you the truth I have RRMS and the way I feel now I don't think I could cut the grass. These improvements will take a long time and be very well received. All the best to you and Steve and thanks for the continued updates.
Val
Thanks so much for sharing with us. Any change for the better at a 45+ year SPMS is huge! I am so happy for you and Steve. To tell you the truth I have RRMS and the way I feel now I don't think I could cut the grass. These improvements will take a long time and be very well received. All the best to you and Steve and thanks for the continued updates.
Val
Excellent news, and it brings a lot of hope for SPMS and PPMS, I would think.
Go Steve!
I am at year 17, and I can't imagine 28 years on top of that. I have been lamenting that it has been over 1/3 of my life...mrhodes40
And wow, 45 YEARS of MS! holy cow, I thought I was a veteran at 19....
Go Steve!
My name is not really Johnson. MSed up since 1993
Thanks guys! Fortunately, Steve's MS was very slow in progression till he was middle-aged...and he didn't know he had MS until 2005...didn't know why he had urinary urgency, ED, chronic clumsiness, chronic constipation, why he was sleepy all the time, why he had increasing balance problems, nervous ticks, increasing difficulty learning and remembering, etc. He simply accepted all these symptoms as part of life and focused on working hard. I date Steve's MS back to age 10 when he spent a week in the hospital with fever, weakness, and malaise. At the time, rheumatic fever was suspected, but there was never any conclusive diagnosis. The urinary urgency started in his late teens, and the occasional ED showed up in his early twenties. The other symptoms crept in over time, but they all worsensed only very slowly until middle-age when they all began to accelerate.
Joyce (aka cypriane)~caregiver and advocate in Dallas for Steve (SPMS)----"Enter through the narrowgate..."