HCS245
TRACIE SHARP
Disease in the new: Lou Gehrig's disease
Due: Monday, October 1,2012
By: Gabrielle Reina
Lou Gerhig’s disease, also known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a disease that affects the upper and lower neurons in the brain. This disease will lead to death and there is no known cure for it as of today. There are many treatment options for those who suffer with disease that may help in coping. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis had believed to be a disease that affected motor skills and to be a motor skills disorder but further testing on the disease have shown that disease also attacks the frontal and temporal regions on the brain and areas that do not affect the motor skills. ALS picked up the name Lou Gerhig’s disease after a very well known baseball player died from the disease after a seventeen year career. Along with there being no cure for the disease there has not been much to link the causes of the disease. When patients get a disease like cancer sometimes there are factors that show why and how they could have received this disease but with ALS there have been no shown reasons for why someone would get this disease. Most patients with ALS have no mental disability and fully understand that there is something no correct with how their body is acting. There are about fifteen new cases for Lou Gerhig’s disease a day. The symptoms associated with ALS are very wide ranged but the most common are muscle cramping, depression, and widespread pain. If someone is suspected to have ALS they should be quickly referred to a neurologist. When the patient is seen by the neurologist there will be assigned treatment. This treatment will include motor skill exercises, speech therapy, nutrition help, support groups, and counseling. The treatment becomes tools to help the quality of life for that person since the disease is labeled terminal. The