Articles tagged with: Peripheral Neuropathy
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Peripheral neuropathy (PN) is a common side effect of a number of chemotherapy drugs used to treat multiple myeloma. Symptoms range from tingling or numbness of the toes, fingers, feet, hands, or legs, to severe pain—and everything in between.
Like many multiple myeloma patients, I suffer from PN. Some of it began even before I began treatment, most likely caused by nerve compression in and around my damaged vertebrae. Once I began treatment, it rapidly got worse.
My hands became so unsteady it was (and still is) difficult for me to write …
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For multiple myeloma patients, treatment history and personal predisposition have been identified as two key factors that may predict if a patient treated with Velcade (bortezomib) or thalidomide (Thalomid) will develop tingling and pain from nerve damage in their limbs.
Thalidomide and Velcade are among the many myeloma treatments that are neurotoxic, which means that they cause damage to the body’s nervous system. As a result, multiple myeloma patients commonly experience tingling and pain from nerve damage in their extremities as a side effect of treatment – this is called …
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Carfilzomib, which is a proteasome inhibitor under development as a treatment for multiple myeloma, has recently been shown to be a safe and effective treatment for myeloma patients with kidney failure, chromosomal abnormalities, or peripheral neuropathy. These results will be presented at the 51st American Society of Hematology (ASH) Annual Meeting and Exposition in New Orleans December 5 through 8.
Additionally, ASH presenters will examine the effects of carfilzomib in patients who have previously been treated with Velcade (bortezomib) and in patients who are receiving carfilzomib in combination with Revlimid …