Dear Elaine:
ALS does not give a patient pain, so I would not think he has ALS. Muscle weakness, fatigue, cramping, without sensory changes, an abnormal EMG that shows positive sharp waves, fasciculations and maybe fibrillations are the hallmark of ALS, so I would think that your neurologist based on his/her exam and EMG would have given your father the diagnosis of ALS. The symptoms are too vague without doing the neurological examination and seeing the lab results to give you somesort of diagnosis over the internet. Many patients with spinal problems have fasciculations, fatigue, pain, weakness etc. Most of the time there are other reasons for the spinal problems, such as arthritis, lupus, diabetes, etc that compound the spinal problem and give vague symptoms. Give your father's neurologist a chance to view the labs, follow the neurological exam, and see if a good diagnosis doesn't follow. I hope that it is something simple and fixable.
Sincerely,
CCF Neuro MD
You should not worry about your ailments. I think you answered your own question. If you look for posts around this forum, very credible, you will find that your situation most likely suggests a benign condition. The worry will affect you much more than your twiches will!
Take care,
Joe