Symptoms
At the onset of ALS, the symptoms may be so slight that they are frequently overlooked. With regard to the appearance of symptoms and the progression of the illness, the course of the disease may include the following:
- Muscle weakness in one or more of the following: hands, arms, legs or the muscles of speech, swallowing or breathing
- Twitching (fasciculation) and cramping of muscles, especially those in the hands and feet
- Impairment of the use of the arms and legs
- "Thick speech" and difficulty in projecting the voice
- In more advanced stages, shortness of breath, difficulty in breathing and swallowing
The initial symptoms of ALS can be quite varied in different people.
One person may experience tripping over carpet edges, another person
may have trouble lifting and a third person's early symptom may
be slurred speech. The rate at which ALS progresses can be quite
variable from one person to another. Although the mean survival
time with ALS is three to five years, many people live five, ten
or more years. In a small number of people, ALS is known to remit
or halt its progression, though there is no scientific understanding
as to how and why this happens. Symptoms can begin in the muscles
that affect speech and swallowing as well as in the hands, arms,
legs or feet. Not all people with ALS experience the same symptoms
or the same sequences or patterns of progression. However, progressive
muscle weakness and paralysis are universally experienced.
Muscle weakness is a hallmark initial sign in ALS, occurring in approximately
60 percent of patients. Early symptoms vary with each individual, but usually
include tripping, dropping things, abnormal fatigue of the arms and/or legs,
slurred speech, muscle cramps and twitches and/or uncontrollable periods of laughing
or crying.
The hands and feet may be affected first, causing difficulty in lifting, walking
or using the hands for the activities of daily living such as dressing, washing
and buttoning clothes.
As the weakening and paralysis continue to spread to the muscles of the
trunk and of the body, the disease eventually affects speech, swallowing, chewing
and breathing. When the breathing muscles become affected, ultimately, the patient
will need permanent ventilatory support in order to survive.
Since ALS attacks only motor neurons, the sense of sight, touch, hearing, taste
and smell are not affected. For many people, muscles of the eyes and bladder
are generally not affected.
For the vast majority of people, their mind and thoughts are not impaired and
remain sharp despite the progressive degenerating condition of the body.