Multiple Sclerosis

Blogger reveals MS; comments spiral into West Wing memes, virus theories, and pharma hope

TLDR: A blogger openly shared a new MS diagnosis and plans for mid-strength meds, asking readers not to give advice. The comments promptly erupted into West Wing memes and a three-way debate—virus vs. gut vs. new pharma—complete with a snarky “Dead URL,” spotlighting how fast MS science and opinions are evolving.

A thoughtful post about a Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis diagnosis turned into a full-on comment carnival. The author set firm boundaries—“no treatment advice, please”—and shared they’re starting mid-strength oral meds to slow the disease, with a shoutout to keeping Vitamin D levels in check. Cue the community: West Wing fans arrived with Bartlet jokes, while the rest split into science camps faster than you can hum the theme song. Some users dropped straight into lab-coat mode. One linked AstraZeneca’s page on experimental cell therapies that aim to “reset” the immune system link, while another, claiming research chops, pushed the case that Epstein–Barr virus plus genetics is the main culprit. Then a new voice hyped a fresh study tying the gut to MS, arguing future treatments may target our insides link. And in the middle of all that? A brutally funny “Dead URL” drive-by that became the thread’s running gag. The drama: Is MS about viruses, the gut, or is Big Pharma plotting the reset button? The vibe: earnest science meets meme energy, with some commenters gently reminding others the poster didn’t ask for advice. It’s messy, nerdy, and very online—exactly the internet’s love language.

Key Points

  • Author received a diagnosis of Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis after blood and CSF analyses.
  • They request no treatment or lifestyle advice and express confidence in Portland-based medical care.
  • MS is not directly hereditary, though first-degree relatives increase incidence; family history is unclear due to adoptions.
  • Author highlights correlation between low vitamin D and MS and reports daily D3 (10,000 IU) and K2 (500 mcg) supplementation.
  • Neurologist recommended mid-range oral DMTs given older onset, spinal lesions, and stabilized symptoms; early DMT start is planned, plus medication for muscle stiffness.

Hottest takes

"Dead URL" — functionmouse
"cell therapies that reset the immune system" — prplfsh
"Epstein-Barr triggers autoimmunity" — maxall4
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