Medically reviewed by Lindsay Cook, PharmD Key Takeaways MS medications can help slow the disease and manage symptoms.
In a study of commonly used treatments for people with multiple sclerosis, both medical and behavioral interventions, and a combination of the two, resulted in meaningful improvements in fatigue, a ...
A small study found MS patients reported improved quality of life and reduced depression after Ocrelizumab biosimilar treatment ...
Injectable medications for multiple sclerosis (MS) are known as disease-modifying therapies (DMTs). This means they work by slowing or changing the progression of the condition. These are ...
The Elliot's Neurological Specialties clinic combines medical treatments to slow MS progression with holistic approaches to manage symptoms ...
Even women with more severe MS cases are less likely than men to get critical treatments, a new study finds. Women under age 40 with multiple sclerosis are 8 percent less likely than men to receive ...
Women are less likely than men to receive drugs for multiple sclerosis (MS) between the ages of 18 to 40, during women's childbearing years, even when those drugs have been shown to be safe for use ...
People with multiple sclerosis appear to have higher rates of thyroid problems than the general population. The link isn’t clear, but shared pathways and MS medication side effects may play a role. MS ...
Cognitive impairment is more common and severe in older adults with MS than in younger patients, but this is driven by ...
Medicare drug plans are increasingly excluding coverage of new specialty drugs that treat complex conditions like cancers and autoimmune diseases. New research from the USC Schaeffer Center shows how ...