Pam,
There are many stories just like the one you describe. The key is that we don't know all the details of her emg. You say it was negative, but what does that mean? It could mean that it wasn't "normal", but not clearly indicative of als. In those cases, patients are usually told that a wait and see approach is necessary. I would be very surprised if she had an absolutely normal emg, and if she did, you would be reading her story in medical journals instead of magazines. Finally, the fact that she continued to get weaker and weaker over a period of a year is as important as any emg. Weakness as we all know is the hallmark of als. I can say with absolute certainty that once weakness began, she wouldn't/couldn't have had a normal emg (because of the mechanisms that cause weakness in als). So the year time frame from her first emg and the second is irrelevant. It wouldn't have taken a year for her emg to show "evidence" of something terribly wrong, she simply chose to wait that long.
Be careful reading stories like the one you describe. While they are really sad and compelling, many times they are incomplete descriptions of the story. As all of us know on this board, the devil is in the details. And you will have a hard time finding a group that is more into details than this group, except when we read a story about someone else that scares us. Take a step back and look at the story in a whole and really see if there are any holes/omissions.
Take care,
Gary
There are many stories just like the one you describe. The key is that we don't know all the details of her emg. You say it was negative, but what does that mean? It could mean that it wasn't "normal", but not clearly indicative of als. In those cases, patients are usually told that a wait and see approach is necessary. I would be very surprised if she had an absolutely normal emg, and if she did, you would be reading her story in medical journals instead of magazines. Finally, the fact that she continued to get weaker and weaker over a period of a year is as important as any emg. Weakness as we all know is the hallmark of als. I can say with absolute certainty that once weakness began, she wouldn't/couldn't have had a normal emg (because of the mechanisms that cause weakness in als). So the year time frame from her first emg and the second is irrelevant. It wouldn't have taken a year for her emg to show "evidence" of something terribly wrong, she simply chose to wait that long.
Be careful reading stories like the one you describe. While they are really sad and compelling, many times they are incomplete descriptions of the story. As all of us know on this board, the devil is in the details. And you will have a hard time finding a group that is more into details than this group, except when we read a story about someone else that scares us. Take a step back and look at the story in a whole and really see if there are any holes/omissions.
Take care,
Gary