March 7, 2024 Columns by Benjamin Hofmeister What do the principles of patrolling have to do with multiple sclerosis? The U.S. military loves abbreviations and acronyms. So many of these are learned during a soldier’s first year that, to civilians, a conversation between service members might sound like a foreign language. It can be amusing, but the intention of this method of condensing words is not to confuse. It’s…
July 31, 2020 News by Patricia Inacio, PhD Mental Fatigue in MS May Be Due to Poorer Brain Response to Tasks The debilitating mental fatigue that people with multiple sclerosis (MS) can feel afterĀ a cognitively demanding task may be due to less efficient use of the brain, a pilot study that mapped brain activity during tasks suggests. The study āNeural mechanisms underlying state mental fatigue in multiple sclerosis: a…
March 26, 2020 Columns by Jennifer (Jenn) Powell A Life Unscripted: Choosing Positivity During a Pandemic Life is unscripted. It is messy and uncertain, with change being the only constant. Much like living with multiple sclerosis, adapting to change is directly correlated to our ability to thrive. We are reminded of this as we adjust to our new reality in the throes of COVID-19. Seemingly…
January 7, 2020 News by Patricia Inacio, PhD Impaired Prospective Memory Affects MS Patients’ Ability to Perform Everyday Tasks, Study Finds Prospective memory ā the ability to remember to carry out a future task ā is significantly impaired in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients, and may contribute to worse cognitive performance for everyday tasks, according to recent research. The study āTime-Based Prospective Memory Is Associated with Functional Performance in Persons…
August 17, 2018 Columns by John Connor I’m Busy Doing Nothing Everything takes so much damn time! I’m strangely working ā or at least doing things I purport as work, such as this column. That’s no different than before MS; I still have the inclination to prevaricate or find something inconsequential to ruminate over, like the state of the Turkish…
October 13, 2017 Columns by John Connor Everything in the Garden Is Now Rosy About 10 years ago, in the days before my MS, I had a whole raft of self-imposed jobs. As a new age man, one of these was doing the washing. Yes, this combated the usual bloke’s role in a heterosexual household, but to counter this, I was very…
September 28, 2015 News by Patricia Silva, PhD Kessler Foundation Researchers Report BICAMS Can Predict Performance of Everyday Life Activities in Multiple Sclerosis Patients Kessler Foundation researchers recently reported that the Brief International Cognitive Assessment for Multiple Sclerosis (BICAMS) is able to predict the performance of normal daily activities. According to the researchers, the BICAMS is a promising tool to predict actual functional performance in participants with multiple sclerosis (MS). MS is a progressive…