Aa
Aa
A
A
A
Close
Avatar universal

Tingling and Numbness with Rapid Paralysis

My mother is 66 years old.  She is a smoker with very high cholesterol.  In November 2005 she began experiencing tingling in her left big toe and two fingers of her right hand.  The tingling got rapidly worse.  By Thanksgiving (3 weeks after first tingling) the tingling and muscle weakness had progressed up both legs and she was forced to use a walker.  By Christmas, she was wheelchair bound and only able to make it from her chair to the toilet.  By mid January she had absolutely no use of her legs or trunk area and had lost the use of her left arm.  She still has complete feeling in all extremities but no muscle control and severe tingling(tingling even occurs in her trunk stomach area).  She also has no pain just says that she feels extremely weak.  She also says that she can actually feel the weakness coming up her body(a little more each day).  We
41 Responses
Sort by: Helpful Oldest Newest
Avatar universal
Sounds like Guillian Barre Syndrome (sp?), but I am not a medical expert.  I have in-laws whose sister came down with this.  She happened to live alone, and one day while not feeling well, fell asleep on the sofa.  She woke up and could not move very well.  Could not make it to a phone and fell.  She was alone for two days before her cleaning lady found her and took her to the hospital, where she was pretty much paralyzed from  the neck down.  On a respirator, etc.  It took about two weeks and she recovered fully, slowly.  But, there are cases where recovery is not complete, and it takes longer.  Have the doctors ruled out this?  I know Shands is an excellent medical facility.  Good luck and keep posting.
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
Oh one more thing... ask yourself ( or her ) ..did she have any surgical procedures in the few weeks proceeding all the neuro symptoms? Did she cut herself working outside, maybe in the garden or on the house? Did she have any mild illnesses, like a the flu, gastrointestinal illness? Anything you can find to relay to her doctors is helpful.
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
I don't know that I would wait for an acceptance. I think I would just probably show up on their doorstep!! As for Acute Transverse Myelitis, I have no idea. Whatever it is, it sure has progressed rather quickly. Have the B-12 shots helped yet? And don't forget to dissect her history ( even bug bites ) the few weeks before this all began. That is very important. ( See above ) Hang in there.
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
My mother has had many MRI's done especially to her spine.  She has also had a brain scan, cat scan and bone scan.  All results were normal.  I will ask my father to mention the thyroid on Friday.
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
Has your mom had any MRI's done???  What about thyroid testing.  Some people dont know to ask for the T4 and the T levels (not sure exactly ) of the trhyoid gland.  Some doctors only take a basic thryoid test and do not check the T levels of the thyroid. When the test is taken for just the regular thryoid test it can come back negative, but the T levels can come back showing a thryoid problem.  I only know this because my sister had lots of problems they told her that her thryoid level was fine.  She later went to an Endorcrinolgist who gave her further testing for thryoid specific blood work and it came back postive.  She is now on medication and doing well. See if your mom had this done.  Throid problems can cause havoc on a body.
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
First thing that comes to mind is Myasthenia gravis. Did the doctors rule it out? I know this must be very scary for you and your family.
Helpful - 0

You are reading content posted in the Neurology Forum

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