Does anyone have neuropathy related to MGUS?
I have neuropathy in my feet and lower legs caused by MGUS the docs tell me, I do not have pain - just numbness. Does anyone know of any supplements or drugs that help alleviate the numbness?
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If things are particularly unpleasant, I kind of say to myself “it could be worse”, and then I actually purposefully think of something that would be worse - then, I’m thankful that I’m only dealing with what I am in that moment 🙂
Perspective and relativity 👍🏻
I learned long ago that fear isn’t useful. Finding strategies and prioritising to maintain the best equilibrium was, along with being flexible to deal with the odd surprise or change in function here and there.
Thanks Patty 🙂🙌🏻
Welcome @renesotomayor, I've had the numbness that started in my toes for over 25 years but only bothered to get a diagnosis in 2016 when it seemed to be progressing some. I guess we both can count ourselves lucky that we don't have pain with the neuropathy. I'm 80 years old but living the best life I can and trying to focus on some daily exercise, healthy eating and staying as positive as I can. I have been working a little harder on my balance exercises because I really don't want to have a bad fall and make things worse.
Have you found anything that helps you get through the day?
Sorry to hear Wendy. Sounds hard. The way I tell the difference between spine issues causing weakness/nerve symptoms in my legs and the issue of PN is how symptoms are in my thighs and pelvis/hips - when this is high, and while laying down I have difficulty moving my legs (they’re heavier/shooting pain from spine to thighs, etc) then I know it’s spinal. When I have stabbing into my hells when I place my foot on the floor, I know that’s spine. Numbness in feet/lower legs, loss of distal proprioception (knowing where my foot is in space and having it move accordingly comes from the PN (it took me years to learn the difference). I have failed prior back surgery for chronic compression from multiple disc injuries when I was 28 (amongst other damage). I have a knee replacement on the left (I got it when 47 due to bone on bone and 5 prior surgeries to help keep it working eventually failing), and I’ve damaged the prosthesis in a fall (I’m waiting on another replacement as this is now very loose and contributes to more falls). I know when it’s the knee when my leg buckled and collapses - these falls are kind of ‘building implosion’ type falls; straight down because the ‘foundation’ has collapsed. Hopefully there’s something helpful there?
Sorry for all your pain. Do you have MGUS as well? My heel on both feet fell like a drill is boring a hole about 1/2 inch wide.
Unfortunately, almost nothing. One rubbing oil called NEUROPATHY helps a little with the tingling of my feet. It’s an Homeopathic oil that I found in Amazon. Good luck.
I have MGUS IgG Lambda, low levels of IgA. I’m on the cusp of SMM according to bone marrow sample taken a couple years ago now, however in that time I’ve definitely developed more intense symptomatology (significant spine bone pain, and long bone pain in my legs, as well as kappa/lambda ratio being outside usual parameters, and fatigue that hits like a truck that calls for laying down - something I never had before). I’m wondering how accurate the sample was at that time, considering distribution isn’t uniform throughout the marrow in the body, and they took the sample immediately adjacent to some stainless hardware which has significant thickening of cortical-like bone around it (suggesting to me that perhaps they didn’t get an indicative sample? 🙂).
I’m sorry to hear it’s really painful in your heels.
I believe that because MGUS isn’t seen to be ‘cancer’, many of the non-cancer symptoms that come with having a monoclonal gammopathy are summarily dismissed by many in the medical community (ie:you don’t have cancer so you cannot have other symptoms), however having wrong kinds of cells/antigens floating around will cause some other non-cancer related problems, due to the nature of what they are and the effects they have on other tissues. This is a matter of great neglect imho, where this could be a great area to address for those of us with symptoms related to monoclonal gammopathy itself.
My haematologist looks at me like I’ve instantly grown a second head if I dare mention it in his presence haha 😉
started sandblasting and painting jop at 13, used to wash the paint off my hands and face with laquer thinner, five years of that, then exposure to benzene in fuel and constant over the years safety kleen solvents, mechanic 22 years and shop owner 15, mgus at 66, your hemo doc is wrong, damage to dna at bone marrow after accumulated time/concentrate, my stepfather used roundup without ppe and I warned him, he had multiple myeloma, but I find a 2 hour bike ride hike push bike up trails and ride back keeps them away for 2 days, 3rd day they are back, D.mg
Sorry to hear such toxic exposures occurred.
Yes I think there’s some kind of positive outcome from physical activity; when I was still physically functional enough, physical activity would make improvements.
When I initially noticed symptoms (early 30’s) I tried to stay as active as possible to try to stave off illness. I was diagnosed (MGUS, bone marrow biopsy) at 48, however it was a good 4-5 years before that when I started having nerve problems (beyond what I had from a traffic incident at 28), and that’s when I think MGUS was becoming an issue symptomatically.
As a child I was standing in pans of petrol cleaning engine parts for rebuilds for hours each day after school. No shoes, neither gloves. Felt crook as afterwards, like I may have had less exposure if I drank petrol instead hehe.
I to have MGUS and very unsteady on my feet due to my neuropathy.
None of my physicians have ever mentioned that MGUS could be the cause.
Thank you for answering! I’m brand new to this website, so I’m just learning to use it. We have a lot in common- sorry for us!
In August of last year I went to the er with severe back pain. I learned a lot from the test results. I had three compression fractures in my lumbar region. I also had nerve compression at one level and they suggested surgery for L5-S1. There was severe compression on both sides. I had cementing of the three fractures. Then another one collapsed and I broke my collarbone in a fall. So, another cementing and a nerve block for my left leg. I started PT for my weakened back. My doctor discovered osteoporosis and I began monthly injections.
My back had become so weakened I was unable to swim( I used to swim a mile every day).
PT was designed to work hard so I could walk normally. Instead, my knees, which were bone on bone blew out. Intense pain in the right unlike before. ( I had managed my arthritic knees with injections every three months)
In May I had a total right knee replacement, at 73. I have been in PT now for two months. At ten weeks out I can walk without an aid. But I have a limp and can’t walk far. My left leg is weaker than the right! It’s like there is a short circuit from brain to left leg, in terms of stride. And from PT I know the quad muscles are weaker.
Add to that, I also have PN and can’t feel my left foot. It seems to be moving into my ankle. Is that possible?
I was born with MTHFR double allele mutation, have MGUS, and developed hemolytic anemia. I don’t know if any of these conditions contribute to my current challenge.
Any suggestions out there? All I want is to be able to walk my dog and travel again!!