Aa
Aa
A
A
A
Close
Avatar universal

Could it still be MS?

Hi there, I'm a 22 year old female, my symptoms started back in august 2013. The symptoms were, from what I was reading online at the time similar to MS. Over the past few years my symptoms have progressed. My first MRI scan that I had came back completely clear, and I was told to go back if they progressed, which they did. Since that scan I have had 2 more MRI's. The second MRI came up white white spots which was in January 2015, I was then sent for a lumbar puncture, but whatever they were looking for, it came back negative. I then had my most recent scan on 10th June 2016 and today received a letter with my results. The letter says. The young ladys MRI brain scan has shown no changes since her preivous scan in January 2015. A few bright spots were noted in the parietal lobes and these have not changed in any way. No new bright lesions have been seen. The radiologist commented that the foci high signal in the parietal lobes may actually be developmental in origin. I just want to know what  this means and where I can go from here as I do not feel my symptoms will go away on their own and I just want to know if there are  other ways to find out whats wrong as I don't feel the neurologist knows himself.
Caroline
0 Responses
Sort by: Helpful Oldest Newest
Have an Answer?

You are reading content posted in the Neurology Community

Top Neurology Answerers
620923 tn?1452915648
Allentown, PA
5265383 tn?1669040108
ON
1756321 tn?1547095325
Queensland, Australia
1780921 tn?1499301793
Queen Creek, AZ
Learn About Top Answerers
Didn't find the answer you were looking for?
Ask a question
Popular Resources
Find out how beta-blocker eye drops show promising results for acute migraine relief.
In this special Missouri Medicine report, doctors examine advances in diagnosis and treatment of this devastating and costly neurodegenerative disease.
Here are 12 simple – and fun! – ways to boost your brainpower.
Discover some of the causes of dizziness and how to treat it.
Discover the common causes of headaches and how to treat headache pain.
Two of the largest studies on Alzheimer’s have yielded new clues about the disease