MS pain treatment and MS pain medications are an important part of the process in dealing with Multiple Sclerosis. In the past, it was thought that pain wasn’t a major problem for sufferers of Multiple Sclerosis, but now it is accepted that MS pain medications will be required by the majority of Multiple Sclerosis patients at some point during the progress of their disease. If you are experiencing pain, this can have other effects on your general health, like affecting your sleeping patterns, appetite, mood and even causing mobility problems in the affected limbs. There are generally two types of pain associated with Multiple Sclerosis, both requiring their own particular type of MS pain treatment, usually in the form of MS pain medications.  These two types of pain are musculoskeletal, causing aches in the muscles and limbs along with neuropathic or nerve pain, causing unusual symptoms in the affected areas. Multiple Sclerosis is a disease which attacks the central nervous system and other nerves throughout the body, so it is hardly surprising that the majority of Multiple Sclerosis patients report experiencing nerve pain at some point during the progress of their disease, and many will also require MS pain medications.

 

Treatment for MS Pain

 

If the pain you are experiencing is musculoskeletal, this is actually quite easy to treat without seeing your doctor. Treatment for MS pain of this kind, which often affects the muscles and limbs, is usually provided with over-the-counter medicines, such as paracetamol and ibuprofen. If these MS pain medications don’t work, then your family doctor may be able to prescribe something stronger, such as an opiate-based drug, like codeine. Physical therapy may also be useful to relieve any spasticity or stiffness and ease the pain symptoms. It can also be useful if the pain has started to cause the patient mobility problems.

 

MS Pain Medications for Nerve Pain

 

Multiple Sclerosis nerve pain causes various symptoms and so will need a wide range of MS pain treatment. Symptoms of neuropathic pain include itchiness, numbness, burning sensation on the skin, loss of sensation and sometimes shooting or stabbing pains in the affected areas. There are some MS pain medications that are commonly prescribed for patients who are suffering from neuropathic pain. These include Gabapentin and Carbemazepine, usually given to epilepsy sufferers, which work by calming the affected and damaged nerves and stopping them from going into the series of spasms which cause the nerve pain in the first place. Another MS pain treatment for nerve pain is amitriptyline, which was more commonly used as an antidepressant, until its effects on nerve pain were discovered.