Key Facts and Figures on MS
- One in 20 Australians will be touched by MS through a family member, colleague or friend with the disease.
- An estimated 21,000 people in Australia have MS.
- Approximately 1,000 Australians are diagnosed with MS every year.
- Most people will be diagnosed in their twenties and thirties.
- MS affects three times as many women as men and the gap is widening.
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Worldwide facts and figures
- MS is a progressive disease of the nervous system, for which there is no cure.
- An estimated 2,500,000 people in the world have MS.
- More women than men have MS, with a ratio of 2 men to 3 women affected.
- MS is the most common disease of the central nervous system in young adults.
- There are four types of MS: benign, relapsing remitting, secondary progressive, and primary progressive.
- Sclerosis means scars – these are the plaques or lesions in the brain and spinal cord.
- In MS, the protective myelin covering of the nerve fibres in the central nervous system is damaged.
- Inflammation and ultimate loss of myelin causes disruption to nerve transmission and affects many functions of the body.
- While the exact cause of MS is not known, much is known about its effect on immune system function which may be the ultimate cause of the disease.
- MS is not directly hereditary, although genetic susceptibility plays a part in its development.
- MS is not contagious.
- Diagnosis of MS is generally between 20 and 40 years of age, although onset may be earlier.
- MS is rarely diagnosed under 12 and over 55 years of age.
- Life span is not significantly affected by MS.
- There are a wide range of symptoms. Fatigue is one of the most common.
- The incidence of MS increases in countries further from the equator.
- There is no drug that can cure MS, but treatments are now available which can modify the course of the disease.
- Many of the symptoms of MS can be successfully managed and treated.
Source: Multiple Sclerosis International Federation (2009)