Every March, MS Awareness Month gives us a chance to bring multiple sclerosis to the forefront, to help advocate for people and families living with MS every day, and to educate the public. Below, you’ll find a quick overview of what MS is and some of the most common ways in which it impacts lives. (Click here to go back to our main MS Awareness Month page)

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Answering MS Questions

  • Click here to download a PDF version of “Answering MS Questions” — English | Spanish

MS is often an “invisible” disease. So many common symptoms can be truly life-altering to those living with them, but not always apparent to the outside world. We’ve created this page of basic MS information for patients and families living with MS, to help them share the facts about MS with loved ones, friends, co-workers, neighbors, and anyone else who may not have a great understanding of what it means to live with MS.

This MS Awareness Month, we invite you to not only read the information included here, but also to share it with others, especially on social media using the hashtag #MSAwareness. By answering some common questions, together we can build understanding of MS and how it affects those living with it.

MS: The Basics

MS is a disease of the central nervous system that disrupts communication between the brain and other parts of the body. The severity of the disease and its symptoms vary from person to person. The cause of MS is unknown and although there are treatments that can slow disease progression, at this time there is no known cure.

What is MS?

MS is a chronic disease of the brain, spinal cord and optic nerves. Three factors appear to have an influence on developing MS: genetic predisposition, environmental factors such a geographical location, and a trigger, such as a virus.

How Does MS Manifest?

The nerve fibers in the central nervous system are protected and made more effective by a fatty substance, myelin, which helps the nerve fibers conduct electrical impulses to and from the brain. MS produces injury in the central nervous system when the immune system mistakenly attacks myelin. Areas of myelin damage are known as plaques, or lesions, and these eventually fill in with scar tissue. The name multiple sclerosis means “many scars.” MS can also cause destruction of the entire nerve. The damage from lesions disrupts the transmission of nerve impulses from the central nervous system to the rest of the body causing a variety of symptoms.

Common MS symptoms often include (among many others):

Many MS patients experience “quiet” periods when the disease is relatively dormant, but they may still be coping with one or a number of symptoms that aren’t apparent to the outside world. These patients can also have periods where the disease is quite active, known as exacerbations. During exacerbations, symptoms can be more pronounced, but usually subside and sometimes go away entirely soon after an exacerbation. Other patients may not experience dormant periods, and instead live with constant symptoms or a progressive worsening of the disease. MS can sometimes lead to disability, depending on a multitude of factors.

Every case of MS is different and every patient’s experience is unique. No person experiences the same symptoms in the same way, making MS a particularly difficult experience to explain or relate to others. At the Rocky Mountain MS Center, our focus is on treating the disease early and effectively with the aim of halting disease progression and maximizing the lifelong brain health of MS patients.

Who Gets It?

MS is most commonly diagnosed in young adults. Eighty percent of MS patients develop MS between the ages of 16 and 45. Women are more frequently diagnosed with MS by at least 2 to 1. MS is the leading cause of disability in young women and the second leading cause of disability in young men.

According to a 2019 study published in the journal Neurology, nearly 1 million adults in the United States have MS. In the Western US, including Colorado, the prevalence estimate is 277 per 100,000 residents. Based on the study’s estimates, approximately 16,000 Coloradans are living with MS, or an estimated one in 360 people.

MS is not a required-reporting disease, so these numbers are estimates.

How is MS Treated?

It’s only been since 1993 that medications have been available to treat MS. Today there are more than 20 agents approved by the FDA for the treatment of MS, but these drugs are only partially effective.

Research efforts to improve MS treatment are ongoing, and much of that research is being done by the MS Center right here in Colorado. An encouraging new frontier is exploring potential strategies for neuroprotection and neurorepair.

Learning More and Getting Involved

Visit us at MSCenter.org/awareness for more detailed information about our annual MS Awareness Month campaign, including ways you can help! We have several fundraising opportunities where you can directly support the important work of the Rocky Mountain MS Center, helping us continue to provide programs and services free of charge to our entire MS community and beyond.

We also invite you to explore this website, particularly links to our Learn About MS where we’ve collected a wealth of information, a searchable index of webinars on various topics, current and past issues of our quarterly InforMS Magazine, and much more.

We also hope you’ll connect with us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn by searching for “Rocky Mountain MS Center.” Once we’re connected, help us spread the word by sharing and liking posts, and using the #MSAwareness hashtag.

NEW for 2024! MS: The Basics

Join the MS Center’s Kelsey Morrow and Elissa Berlinger for an informative new webinar on the basics of MS — a presentation lasting roughly one hour that’s perfect for sharing with anyone in your life that’s interested in learning more about multiple sclerosis! Click here to watch the recording.