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A chameleon among diseases

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In 1993, Johnson was driving to the post office when her fingertips felt numb. She later noticed her grip had weakened.

Doctors diagnosed Johnson with MS, but she initially ignored their treatment recommendations because her symptoms remained so mild.

Despite residual tingling in her hands and feet, Johnson continued to live as she always had until a family gathering in the summer of 2002 when the extreme heat gave her such bad vertigo she could barely walk.

For days after, Johnson used a walker and then, eventually, affixed a rubber end to one of the African walking sticks she collects to turn it into a cane.

For the first time, Johnson said she realized the seriousness of MS.

She retired several months early and started working out. She began injecting herself daily with a drug meant to slow the disease. About two years ago, Johnson also applied for a handicap placard for her vehicle.

When it arrived in the mail — the word “permanent” inscribed on its shiny, blue plastic — she cried.

Yet Johnson said she is grateful, especially on hot days, that she has it. Those types of uncomfortable decisions, Johnson has tried to remind herself in recent years, are part of taking as much control of life as possible.

“You can’t let fear keep you from living the best quality of life you can,” she said.

David Sackett

Even if he must limp, David Sackett walks.

At work, he chooses the stairs. At home, he retrieves the newspaper from the front porch.

While seemingly small, these simple actions represent what Sackett, 52, still can do.

“It gets harder and harder every day,” said Sackett, sitting in his Oswego home with his wife on a recent weekend. “So I force myself to do it.”

Sackett, who left a corporate sales job about 10 years ago for a second career as a firefighter and paramedic, was diagnosed in 2010 with progressive MS after he noticed that his right leg felt “floppy.”

Most people who are diagnosed with MS have the relapsing/remitting kind, which means they may be asymptomatic for years between flare-ups. In Sackett’s case, however, his mobility problems reflect permanent nerve damage that will only get worse.

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