Unless we are talking to each other. And that is about the pain that is experienced that comes along with the disease. The old literature will still tell you that MS is painless, and for the lucky few that is true. But more and more research is being done into the whole pain thing.
Much remains unknown about the scope, nature, and impact of pain on the lives of persons with multiple sclerosis (MS).
In the present study, 180 community dwelling adults with MS completed a postal survey that included demographic measures, MS disease measures, and several standardized measures of pain, including pain intensity, variability, location, and pain-related interference.
66% of the sample reported pain,
25% of whom reported severe pain.
Persons with pain reported an average of 6.6 distinct pain sites.
Using the Brief Pain Inventory Interference Scale, the average level of overall pain interference was 3.33 (0-10 scale) in the group reporting pain.
The highest levels of pain interference were reported for sleep, recreational activities, and work in and outside the home.
Persons with pain were more likely to report greater MS disease severity, poorer psychological functioning, and poorer health than persons with MS but not pain. Persons with pain were also less likely to be employed.
These findings are consistent with previous research that shows that pain is common in MS, that it is severe in a substantial subset of these individuals and has the potential to negatively impact physical and psychosocial functioning over and above the effects of MS itself.
Source
So there you go some 2/3rds of people with MS experience pain.
Personally my whole headache thing recently would be the worst pain I have experienced that could be related to the disease. Followed by the spastic shoulder and neck muscles, then the burning skin. Oh yeah, and the eye pain in light. But that is about it, take a Mercandol when it gets too bad and go to bed is my motto.
eye pain MS Stuff multiple sclerosis pain spastic