[TMIC] try it this way

2012-01-25 Thread bobberino


- Original Message - 
From: Gary Thomas

To: john snodgrass ; transverse myelitis
Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2012 9:58 PM
Subject: Re: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about TM


 John. This is a good list.  I would like to have it to copy without 
re-typing it .  It came out (at least in my email) scrunched together.  Is 
there a way to resend it in a better form.  Thanks. Gary
- Original Message - 
From: john snodgrass

To: transverse myelitis
Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2012 10:47 PM
Subject: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about TM


seen this on facebook and didnt know if it was passed to this group or not. 
A list to share with Dr's and family to help inform them about our 
condition.

john



---
35 Things you probably don't know about TM

1. It is a cousin disorder to Multiple Sclerosis. 
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/neurology_neurosurgery/specialty_areas/project_restore/conditions/


2. Fairly rare disorder, only 2-5 people per million get it.

3. Approx. 1400 new cases a year in the U.S. 
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm


4. Roughly 33,000 people with TM in U.S. 
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm


5. Transverse myelitis occurs in adults and children, in both genders, and 
in all
races. 
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm


6. Can be Acute (happening within hours) or Subacute (happening within days
or weeks)

7. The inflammation that causes such extensive damage to nerve fibers of the
spinal cord may result from viral infections, abnormal immune reactions, or
insufficient blood flow through the blood vessels located in the spinal 
cord.

Transverse myelitis also may occur as a complication of syphilis, measles,
Lyme disease, and some vaccinations, including those for chickenpox and
rabies.

8. Can be Idiopathic (no known cause)

9. Typically a one time occurrence but there are some that have recurrent 
TM.


10. 10% or better possibility of developing Multiple Sclerosis but the 
possibility is fairly low if there is a normal brain MRI at TM 
onset...http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18080852


11.Most symptoms of TM are identical to MS

12.Prevailing difference between TM and MS is that lesions are on spinal 
nerve in

TM and on Brain in MS.

13.Transverse myelitis is a neurological disorder caused by inflammation 
across

both sides of one level, or segment, of the spinal cord. This damage causes
nervous system scars that interrupt communications between the nerves in
the spinal cord and the rest of the body.

14. The inflammation and lesion created, is caused by the bodies own immune
system attacking the myelin coating of the spinal nerve.

15.The segment of the spinal cord at which the damage occurs determines 
which

parts of the body are affected. Nerves in the cervical (neck) region control
signals to the neck, arms, hands, and muscles of breathing (the diaphragm).
Nerves in the thoracic (upper back) region relay signals to the torso and 
some
parts of the arms. Nerves at the lumbar (mid-back) level control signals to 
the
hips and legs. Finally, sacral nerves, located within the lowest segment of 
the
spinal cord, relay signals to the groin, toes, and some parts of the legs. 
Damage
at one segment will affect function at that segment and segments below it. 
In
patients with transverse myelitis, demyelination usually occurs at the 
thoracic

level, causing problems with leg movement and bowel and bladder control,
which require signals from the lower segments of the spinal cord. 
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm


16.About one-third of people affected with transverse myelitis experience 
good or

full recovery from their symptoms; they regain the ability to walk normally
and experience minimal urinary or bowel effects and paresthesias. Another
one-third show only fair recovery and are left with significant deficits 
such as

spastic gait, sensory dysfunction, and prominent urinary urgency or
incontinence. The remaining one-third show no recovery at all, remaining
wheelchair-bound or bedridden with marked dependence on others for basic
functions of daily living. 
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm


17. Four classic features of transverse myelitis emerge: (1) weakness of the 
legs

and arms, (2) pain, (3) sensory alteration, and (4) bowel and bladder
dysfunction. 
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm


18. Pain is the primary presenting symptom of transverse myelitis in
approximately one-third to one-half of all patients. The pain may be 
localized

in the lower back or may consist of sharp, shooting sensations that radiate
down the legs or arms or around the torso. 

Re: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about TM

2012-01-25 Thread rn11...@yahoo.com
Thanks John.
This is a great list for newbies.
Maybe because I've had tm for almost 17 yrs,I knew these facts. I'm just sad 
that I do know these,and that a lot of them pertain to me.
    Cheryl




 From: john snodgrass jcs...@yahoo.com
To: transverse myelitis tmic-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2012 10:47 PM
Subject: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about TM
 

seen this on facebook and didnt know if it was passed to this group or not. A 
list to share with Dr's and family to help inform them about our condition.
john


35 Things you probably don't know about TM
 
1. It is a cousin disorder to Multiple Sclerosis.   
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/neurology_neurosurgery/specialty_areas/project_restore/conditions/
 
2. Fairly rare disorder, only 2-5 people per million get it.
 
3. Approx. 1400 new cases a year in the U.S.  
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm
 
4. Roughly 33,000 people with TM in U.S.  
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm
 
5. Transverse myelitis occurs in adults and children, in both genders, and in 
all
races.  
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm
 
6. Can be Acute (happening within hours) or Subacute (happening within days
or weeks) 
 
7. The inflammation that causes such extensive damage to nerve fibers of the
spinal cord may result from viral infections, abnormal immune reactions, or
insufficient blood flow through the blood vessels located in the spinal cord.
Transverse myelitis also may occur as a complication of syphilis, measles,
Lyme
 disease, and some vaccinations, including those for chickenpox and
rabies.
 
8. Can be Idiopathic (no known cause)
 
9. Typically a one time occurrence but there are some that have recurrent TM.
 
10. 10% or better possibility of developing Multiple Sclerosis but the 
possibility is fairly low if there is a normal brain MRI at TM 
onset...http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18080852
 
11.Most symptoms of TM are identical to MS
 
12.Prevailing difference between TM and MS is that lesions are on spinal nerve 
in
TM and on Brain in MS.
 
13.Transverse myelitis is a neurological disorder caused by inflammation across
both sides of one level, or segment, of the spinal cord. This damage causes
nervous system scars that interrupt communications between
 the nerves in
the spinal cord and the rest of the body.
 
14. The inflammation and lesion created, is caused by the bodies own immune
system attacking the myelin coating of the spinal nerve.
 
15.The segment of the spinal cord at which the damage occurs determines which
parts of the body are affected. Nerves in the cervical (neck) region control
signals to the neck, arms, hands, and muscles of breathing (the diaphragm).
Nerves in the thoracic (upper back) region relay signals to the torso and some
parts of the arms. Nerves at the lumbar (mid-back) level control signals to the
hips and legs. Finally, sacral nerves, located within the lowest segment of the
spinal cord, relay signals to the groin, toes, and some parts of the legs. 
Damage
at one segment will affect function at that segment and segments below it. In
patients with transverse myelitis, demyelination usually occurs at the thoracic
level,
 causing problems with leg movement and bowel and bladder control,
which require signals from the lower segments of the spinal cord.   
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm
 
16.About one-third of people affected with transverse myelitis experience good 
or
full recovery from their symptoms; they regain the ability to walk normally
and experience minimal urinary or bowel effects and paresthesias. Another
one-third show only fair recovery and are left with significant deficits such as
spastic gait, sensory dysfunction, and prominent urinary urgency or
incontinence. The remaining one-third show no recovery at all, remaining
wheelchair-bound or bedridden with marked dependence on others for basic
functions of daily living. 
 
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm
 
17. Four classic features of transverse myelitis emerge: (1) weakness of the 
legs
and arms, (2) pain, (3) sensory alteration, and (4) bowel and bladder
dysfunction.  
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm
 
18. Pain is the primary presenting symptom of transverse myelitis in
approximately one-third to one-half of all patients. The pain may be localized
in the lower back or may consist of sharp, shooting sensations that radiate
down the legs or arms or around the torso.  
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm
 
19. Patients who experience sensory disturbances often use terms such as
numbness, tingling, coldness, or burning to describe their symptoms.
 
20. Up to 80 percent of 

Re: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about TM

2012-01-25 Thread Janice Nichols
Thanks, Gary.THis is great to be able to keep on hand.   When people want 
to know about it, I am sure I forget a lot of this.I will keep it in my 
purse!
Janice


From: Roger  Terese Pratt 
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2012 9:42 AM
To: 'Gary Thomas' ; 'john snodgrass' ; 'transverse myelitis' 
Subject: RE: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about TM

I just did select all, then copy, and pasted it into a word document. – Roger 
in Kennewick, WA

 

 




From: Gary Thomas [mailto:gbthomas8...@sbcglobal.net] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2012 7:59 PM
To: john snodgrass; transverse myelitis
Subject: Re: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about TM

 

  John. This is a good list.  I would like to have it to copy without re-typing 
it .  It came out (at least in my email) scrunched together.  Is there a way 
to resend it in a better form.  Thanks. Gary

  - Original Message - 

  From: john snodgrass 

  To: transverse myelitis 

  Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2012 10:47 PM

  Subject: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about TM

   

  seen this on facebook and didnt know if it was passed to this group or not. A 
list to share with Dr's and family to help inform them about our condition.

  john

   

   

  35 Things you probably don't know about TM
   
  1. It is a cousin disorder to Multiple Sclerosis.   
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/neurology_neurosurgery/specialty_areas/project_restore/conditions/
   
  2. Fairly rare disorder, only 2-5 people per million get it.
   
  3. Approx. 1400 new cases a year in the U.S.  
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm
   
  4. Roughly 33,000 people with TM in U.S.  
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm
   
  5. Transverse myelitis occurs in adults and children, in both genders, and in 
all
  races.  
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm
   
  6. Can be Acute (happening within hours) or Subacute (happening within days
  or weeks) 
   
  7. The inflammation that causes such extensive damage to nerve fibers of the
  spinal cord may result from viral infections, abnormal immune reactions, or
  insufficient blood flow through the blood vessels located in the spinal cord.
  Transverse myelitis also may occur as a complication of syphilis, measles,
  Lyme disease, and some vaccinations, including those for chickenpox and
  rabies.
   
  8. Can be Idiopathic (no known cause)
   
  9. Typically a one time occurrence but there are some that have recurrent TM.
   
  10. 10% or better possibility of developing Multiple Sclerosis but the 
possibility is fairly low if there is a normal brain MRI at TM 
onset...http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18080852
   
  11.Most symptoms of TM are identical to MS
   
  12.Prevailing difference between TM and MS is that lesions are on spinal 
nerve in
  TM and on Brain in MS.
   
  13.Transverse myelitis is a neurological disorder caused by inflammation 
across
  both sides of one level, or segment, of the spinal cord. This damage causes
  nervous system scars that interrupt communications between the nerves in
  the spinal cord and the rest of the body.
   
  14. The inflammation and lesion created, is caused by the bodies own immune
  system attacking the myelin coating of the spinal nerve.
   
  15.The segment of the spinal cord at which the damage occurs determines which
  parts of the body are affected. Nerves in the cervical (neck) region control
  signals to the neck, arms, hands, and muscles of breathing (the diaphragm).
  Nerves in the thoracic (upper back) region relay signals to the torso and some
  parts of the arms. Nerves at the lumbar (mid-back) level control signals to 
the
  hips and legs. Finally, sacral nerves, located within the lowest segment of 
the
  spinal cord, relay signals to the groin, toes, and some parts of the legs. 
Damage
  at one segment will affect function at that segment and segments below it. In
  patients with transverse myelitis, demyelination usually occurs at the 
thoracic
  level, causing problems with leg movement and bowel and bladder control,
  which require signals from the lower segments of the spinal cord.   
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/transversemyelitis/detail_transversemyelitis.htm
   
  16.About one-third of people affected with transverse myelitis experience 
good or
  full recovery from their symptoms; they regain the ability to walk normally
  and experience minimal urinary or bowel effects and paresthesias. Another
  one-third show only fair recovery and are left with significant deficits such 
as
  spastic gait, sensory dysfunction, and prominent urinary urgency or
  incontinence. The remaining one-third show no recovery at all, remaining
  wheelchair-bound or bedridden with marked dependence on others for basic
  functions of daily 

Re: [TMIC] Re:

2012-01-25 Thread Leslie Ballard
PLEASE REMOVE ME FROM ALL E-MAILS CONCERNING THIS SUBJECT I HAVE 
ALREADY ASKED ONCE, I WOULD APPRECIATE YOUR IMEDIATE ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER.  
THANK YOU

--- On Wed, 1/25/12, Linda limoga43...@yahoo.com wrote:


From: Linda limoga43...@yahoo.com
Subject: [TMIC] Re:
To: tmic-list@eskimo.com, sjmoreho...@hotmail.com, grace...@alltel.net, 
fr...@franksheldon.com, howa...@bellsouth.net, eeyore4...@hotmail.com, 
donmcel...@excite.com
Date: Wednesday, January 25, 2012, 10:35 PM



Things are improving, thank you!
http://mediamodedesign.com/httpmoneytracking263937622.php?sytusubpage61


            Wed, 25 Jan 2012 23:35:39

It isnt a diffWhats try-angleation? Mr. (c) Ralina wxya3a7



Re: [TMIC] Squeezes

2012-01-25 Thread john snodgrass
thats a new one on me!

in other words,,,never heard of it.

being different sounds strange,sure hope it is nothing additional other than 
different



 From: James Berg molokai...@gmail.com
To: transverse myelitis tmic-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2012 3:55 PM
Subject: [TMIC] Squeezes
 

Recently I have been experiencing full body squeezes when I am stretched out in 
bed.  Has anyone else had such a thing happen?  Pretty scary! 

Re: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about TM

2012-01-25 Thread john snodgrass
made me dizzy just reading! lol



 From: Lezli a...@artfarm.com
To: tmic-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2012 4:53 PM
Subject: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about TM
 
Thank you ver much , John!

While far from a newbie, sadly, there are things I forgot and forget about ™. 
It was comforting to be reminded that my lack of energy may be part of it. I 
used to live 20 action packed hours a day and I was berating myself for not 
getting enough done of late. On reflection, both the desire to create and the 
overextension ( living a 20 hour day one day on fire and then sleeping for 12 
hours for the next two) are good signs.

Re: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about TM

2012-01-25 Thread kevin weilacher
Hey everyone...
I'm the one that put this list togetherand if anyone wants a good copy of 
it...I have it in a PDF file that is nice and easy to print out...

I had never thought about posting it here because I don't post on here much and 
I stay pretty busy with my Facebook group...




 From: Janice Nichols jan...@centurytel.net
To: Roger  Terese Pratt r.c.pr...@frontier.com; 'Gary Thomas' 
gbthomas8...@sbcglobal.net; 'john snodgrass' jcs...@yahoo.com; 'transverse 
myelitis' tmic-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2012 10:56 AM
Subject: Re: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about TM
 

   
Thanks, Gary.    THis is great to be able to 
keep on hand.   When people want to know about it, I am sure I forget 
a lot of this.    I will keep it in my purse!
Janice
  
From: Roger  Terese Pratt 
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2012 9:42 AM
To: 'Gary Thomas' ; 'john snodgrass' ; 'transverse 
myelitis' 
Subject: RE: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about 
TM
  I just did select all, 
then copy, and pasted it into a word document. – Roger in Kennewick , WA
  
  


 
From:Gary 
Thomas [mailto:gbthomas8...@sbcglobal.net] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2012 7:59 
PM
To: john snodgrass; 
transverse myelitis
Subject: Re: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about 
TM
  
  John. This is a good 
list.  I would like to have it to copy without re-typing it .  It came 
out (at least in my email) scrunched together.  Is there a way to resend 
it in a better form.  Thanks. Gary
- Original Message - 
From:john snodgrass 
To:transverse  myelitis 
Sent:Tuesday,  January 24, 2012 10:47 PM
Subject:[TMIC] 35  Things you probably don't know about TM
  
seen this  on facebook and didnt know if it was passed to this group or not. A 
list to  share with Dr's and family to help inform them about our  condition.
john
  
  
35 Things you  probably don't know about TM
 
1. It is a cousin disorder to 
  Multiple Sclerosis.   http:// www.hopkinsmedicine.org/ 
neurology_neurosurgery/ specialty_areas/ project_restore/conditions/
 
2. 
  Fairly rare disorder, only 2-5 people per million get it.
 
3. Approx.  1400 new cases a year in the U.S.    http://www.ninds.nih.gov/ 
disorders/transversemyelitis/ detail_transversemyelitis.htm
 
4. Roughly  33,000 people with TM in U.S.    http://www.ninds.nih.gov/ 
disorders/transversemyelitis/ detail_transversemyelitis.htm
 
5.  Transverse myelitis occurs in adults and children, in both genders, and in 
 all
races.   http://www.ninds.nih.gov/ disorders/transversemyelitis/ 
detail_transversemyelitis.htm
 
6. Can be  Acute (happening within hours) or Subacute (happening within  days
or weeks) 
 
7. The  inflammation that causes such extensive damage to nerve fibers of  the
spinal cord may result from viral  infections, abnormal immune reactions, or
insufficient blood flow through the blood vessels  located in the spinal cord.
Transverse  myelitis also may occur as a complication of syphilis,  measles,
Lyme disease, and some  vaccinations, including those for chickenpox and
rabies.
 
8. Can be  Idiopathic (no known cause)
 
9.  Typically a one time occurrence but there are some that have recurrent  TM.
 
10. 10% or better possibility of developing Multiple  Sclerosis but the 
possibility is fairly low if there is a normal brain MRI at  TM  
onset...http:// www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/ 18080852
 
11.Most  symptoms of TM are identical to MS
 
12.Prevailing difference between TM and MS is that  lesions are on spinal 
nerve in
TM and on  Brain in MS.
 
13.Transverse myelitis is a neurological disorder caused  by inflammation 
across
both sides of one  level, or segment, of the spinal cord. This damage causes
nervous system scars that interrupt communications  between the nerves in
the spinal cord  and the rest of the body.
 
14. The  inflammation and lesion created, is caused by the bodies own  immune
system attacking the myelin  coating of the spinal nerve.
 
15.The  segment of the spinal cord at which the damage occurs determines  which
parts of the body are affected.  Nerves in the cervical (neck) region control
signals to the neck, arms, hands, and muscles of  breathing (the diaphragm).
Nerves in the  thoracic (upper back) region relay signals to the torso and  
some
parts of the arms. Nerves at the  lumbar (mid-back) level control signals to 
the
hips and legs. Finally, sacral nerves, located within  the lowest segment of 
the
spinal cord,  relay signals to the groin, toes, and some parts of the legs.  
Damage
at one segment will affect  function at that segment and segments below it. In
patients with transverse myelitis, demyelination usually  occurs at the 
thoracic
level, causing  problems with leg movement and bowel and bladder control,
which require signals from the lower segments of the  spinal cord.    
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/ disorders/transversemyelitis/ 
detail_transversemyelitis.htm
 
16.About  

Re: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about TM

2012-01-25 Thread Janice Nichols

lezli,
Are you artistic  -  what do you create? Good to hear from you, you are 
a new name to me.

Janice

-Original Message- 
From: Lezli

Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2012 3:53 PM
To: tmic-list@eskimo.com
Subject: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about TM

Thank you ver much , John!

While far from a newbie, sadly, there are things I forgot and forget about 
™.
It was comforting to be reminded that my lack of energy may be part of it. I 
used to live 20 action packed hours a day and I was berating myself for not 
getting enough done of late. On reflection, both the desire to create and 
the overextension ( living a 20 hour day one day on fire and then sleeping 
for 12 hours for the next two) are good signs.





Re: [TMIC] Squeezes

2012-01-25 Thread Janice Nichols
I haven’t, but I do not stretch very much in bed.Sometimes at the kitchen 
counter.I really am one of the lucky ones that has very little pain or 
discomfort
from banding. Were you maybe experiencing Banding?
Janice


From: James Berg 
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2012 2:55 PM
To: transverse myelitis 
Subject: [TMIC] Squeezes

Recently I have been experiencing full body squeezes when I am stretched out in 
bed.  Has anyone else had such a thing happen?  Pretty scary! 

RE: [TMIC] Squeezes

2012-01-25 Thread Elizabeth Clark
Are you referring to a spasm that seems to grab your entire body in a tight
grip but only lasts a few seconds? If so, I've had them off and on over my
5+ years with TM. Used to have them more often and like you said, only when
I'm laying flat out in bed. I tend to sleep only on one side in a fetal
position for 4-6 hours a night. Then I get up, hit the bathroom, take my
first morning dose of meds and then crawl back into bed on the other side
for a couple more hours. I've never been able to sleep flat on my back or my
stomach due to my Scoliosis and fused spine, but I do sometimes stretch my
legs out and lay on my back momentarily and that's when it usually strikes. 

 

Betty

(in Northern California)

 

  _  

From: john snodgrass [mailto:jcs...@yahoo.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2012 4:09 PM
To: James Berg; transverse myelitis
Subject: Re: [TMIC] Squeezes

 

thats a new one on me!

 

in other words,,,never heard of it.

 

being different sounds strange,sure hope it is nothing additional other than
different

 

  _  

From: James Berg molokai...@gmail.com
To: transverse myelitis tmic-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2012 3:55 PM
Subject: [TMIC] Squeezes

 

Recently I have been experiencing full body squeezes when I am stretched out
in bed.  Has anyone else had such a thing happen?  Pretty scary! 

 



Re: [TMIC] 35 Things you probably don't know about TM

2012-01-25 Thread Lezli
Hi Janice!

It's just my new Mac using my other name.
Yes, I'm artistic --- I create work in fiber, glass and paper and I'm a 
national award-winning poet --- among my honors are the NEA and
NYFA artist fellowships.

™ (drat, the new mac is too attentive making it into trademark)  Transverse 
myelsuffering 
curtailed my glass work -- I was into sand casting and kiln casting as well as 
flame work, but one
can't lift 50 pounds of molten lava  from a wheelchair and my studio is 
inaccessible to me.  So my visual art has become small
though my trajectory at the time of paralysis was working bigger….


Akua Lezli Hope

On Jan 25, 2012, at 8:13 PM, Janice Nichols wrote:

 lezli,
 Are you artistic  -  what do you create? Good to hear from you, you are a 
 new name to me.
 Janice
 
 



RE: [TMIC] Squeezes

2012-01-25 Thread Emily
I believe it is called banding..talk to your neuro about it..it is quite
common with TM.

 

  _  

From: john snodgrass [mailto:jcs...@yahoo.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2012 7:09 PM
To: James Berg; transverse myelitis
Subject: Re: [TMIC] Squeezes

 

thats a new one on me!

 

in other words,,,never heard of it.

 

being different sounds strange,sure hope it is nothing additional other than
different

 

  _  

From: James Berg molokai...@gmail.com
To: transverse myelitis tmic-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2012 3:55 PM
Subject: [TMIC] Squeezes

 

Recently I have been experiencing full body squeezes when I am stretched out
in bed.  Has anyone else had such a thing happen?  Pretty scary! 

 



Re: [TMIC] Squeezes

2012-01-25 Thread john snodgrass
actually Emily the banding is not a full body deal but localized. mine is at 
my waistline . a squeezing of the whole body is not common at all. 
buzzing,thrumming,pins and needles i could understand but not a full body 
squeeze.



 From: Emily em...@telephonelady.com
To: 'john snodgrass' jcs...@yahoo.com; 'James Berg' molokai...@gmail.com; 
'transverse myelitis' tmic-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2012 9:41 PM
Subject: RE: [TMIC] Squeezes
 

 
I believe it
is called banding….talk to your neuro about it….it is quite common
with TM.
 


 
From:john snodgrass
[mailto:jcs...@yahoo.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2012
7:09 PM
To: James Berg; transverse
myelitis
Subject: Re: [TMIC] Squeezes
 
thats a new
one on me!
 
in other
words,,,never heard of it.
 
being
different sounds strange,sure hope it is nothing additional other than
different
 


 
From:James Berg
molokai...@gmail.com
To: transverse myelitis
tmic-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2012
3:55 PM
Subject: [TMIC] Squeezes
 
Recently I
have been experiencing full body squeezes when I am stretched out in bed. 
Has anyone else had such a thing happen?  Pretty scary! 

RE: [TMIC] Squeezes

2012-01-25 Thread Roger Terese Pratt
Unfortunately, yes.  Muscle spasms, including full body ones, just seem to
be part of the territory. - Roger in Kennewick, WA 

 

  _  

From: James Berg [mailto:molokai...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2012 12:55 PM
To: transverse myelitis
Subject: [TMIC] Squeezes

 

Recently I have been experiencing full body squeezes when I am stretched out
in bed.  Has anyone else had such a thing happen?  Pretty scary! 



Re: [TMIC] Re:

2012-01-25 Thread Dalton Garis
I don't handle this, Leslie;

I get these emails just as you do.  Most are OK; and others just go on and
on and on and Š
Dalton Garis
40-26 College Point Blvd.
Tower 1, #17K
Flushing, NY 11354
(718) 838-0437

From:  Leslie Ballard ljballard...@yahoo.com
Date:  Wed, 25 Jan 2012 14:42:32 -0800 (PST)
To:  tmic-list@eskimo.com, sjmoreho...@hotmail.com,
grace...@alltel.net, fr...@franksheldon.com, howa...@bellsouth.net,
eeyore4...@hotmail.com, donmcel...@excite.com, Linda
limoga43...@yahoo.com
Subject:  Re: [TMIC] Re:
Resent-From:  tmic-list@eskimo.com
Resent-Date:  Wed, 25 Jan 2012 14:45:59 -0800

 PLEASE REMOVE ME FROM ALL E-MAILS CONCERNING THIS SUBJECT I HAVE
 ALREADY ASKED ONCE, I WOULD APPRECIATE YOUR IMEDIATE ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER.
 THANK YOU
 
 --- On Wed, 1/25/12, Linda limoga43...@yahoo.com wrote:
 
 From: Linda limoga43...@yahoo.com
 Subject: [TMIC] Re:
 To: tmic-list@eskimo.com, sjmoreho...@hotmail.com, grace...@alltel.net,
 fr...@franksheldon.com, howa...@bellsouth.net, eeyore4...@hotmail.com,
 donmcel...@excite.com
 Date: Wednesday, January 25, 2012, 10:35 PM
 
 
 Things are improving, thank you!
 http://mediamodedesign.com/httpmoneytracking263937622.php?sytusubpage61
 
 
 Wed, 25 Jan 2012 23:35:39
 
 It isnt a diffWhats try-angleation? Mr. (c) Ralina wxya3a7