About
ALS

Amyotrophic
Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is a motor neuron disease, first described in
1869 by the noted French neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot. Although the
cause of ALS is not completely understood, the last decade has brought
a wealth of new scientific understanding about the disease that
provides hope for the future.
Lou
Gehrig first
brought national and international attention to the disease in 1939
when he abruptly retired from baseball after being diagnosed with ALS.
Most commonly, the disease strikes people between the ages of 40 and
70, and as many as 30,000 Americans have the disease at any given time.
ALS has cut short the lives of other such notable and courageous
individuals as Hall of Fame pitcher Jim
"Catfish" Hunter, Senator Jacob
Javits, actors Michael
Zaslow and David
Niven, creator of Sesame Street Jon Stone,
boxing champion Ezzard
Charles, NBA Hall of Fame
basketball player George
Yardley, pro football player Glenn
Montgomery, golfer Jeff
Julian, golf caddie Bruce
Edwards, musician Lead
Belly (Huddie
Ledbetter), photographer Eddie
Adams,
entertainer Dennis
Day, jazz musician Charles
Mingus, composer Dimitri
Shostakovich, former vice president of the United States Henry A. Wallace and
U.S. Army General Maxwell
Taylor.
ALS is a neurodegenerative disease that usually attacks both upper and
lower motor neurons and causes degeneration throughout the brain and
spinal cord. A common first symptom is a painless weakness in a hand,
foot, arm or leg, which occurs in more than half of all cases. Other
early symptoms include speech swallowing or walking difficulty.
The biological mechanisms that cause ALS are only partially understood.
The only known cause of ALS is a mutation of a specific gene: the SOD1
gene. This mutation is believed to make a defective protein that is
toxic to motor nerve cells. The SOD1 mutation, however, accounts for
only 1 or 2 percent of ALS cases, or 20 percent of the familial
(inherited) cases.
Familial ALS represents between five to 10 percent of all cases. The
rest arise spontaneously and mysteriously, making seemingly random
attacks on previously healthy adults. ALS can strike anyone, anytime.
Physicians have limited choices for treating ALS, and the options that
do exist have come into use within the last 10 years. Studies suggest
that patients' length of survival and quality of life are enhanced by
night-time breathing assistance early in the course of the disease and
by aggressive application of alternate feeding options to assure good
nutrition once swallowing becomes difficult. At this time,
Riluzole® is the only drug that has been approved by the FDA for
treatment of ALS. In clinical trials, Riluzole® has shown a slight
benefit in modestly increasing survival time.
Stem cell and gene therapy are promising areas of research. In a
variety of studies, ALS mouse models are being used to develop
treatments that may someday lead to similar human clinical trials. Gene
therapy is one field of research where The ALS Association is
concentrating support for more study.
More significant advances of research into ALS has occurred in the last
decade than all of the time since Charcot identified the disease.
Advances in technology and the genetic revolution are aiding
researchers in unlocking the ALS mystery. As more scientists focus on
this perplexing disease, the outlook for new understanding brightens
each day.