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Pursuing Health

Taking Control of Multiple Sclerosis with Jasmine Joy PH169

Pursuing Health

Julie Foucher MD, MS

Health & Fitness

4.81.3K Ratings

🗓️ 10 November 2020

⏱️ 53 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

To look at Jasmine Joy, you would never know there are lesions on her brain and spinal cord, or guess that rods and screws are holding her spine in place. To the casual observer, 26-year old Jasmine is healthy, happy, and moving freely with full intensity in the gym. Yet, it is actually because of those three things that Jasmine is capable to live her life with little fear of what is to come. The choice of health, happiness, and movement are life-changing ones. When she was age 20, Jasmine was preparing for a spinal fusion to treat severe scoliosis. The surgery would help adjust and hold her spine by using two metal rods and at least a dozen screws and would be followed by a daunting recovery process. Jasmine would have to relearn how to stand, walk, move, and function on her own before returning to college. During the preparation process, the doctors asked a series of routine of questions including, "Do you ever feel numbness, tingling, or pins and needles?" Jasmine told the doctor yes, thinking "who doesn't?" However, the degree, frequency, and locations of pins and needles she was experiencing was not normal and thus, further testing began. An MRI revealed that Jasmine had lesions on her spinal cord and brain. During what was supposed to be the most fun and social time of her life, Jasmine learned that she likely had Multiple Sclerosis, and she was still preparing for a terrifying spinal fusion to boot. Jasmine’s fusion was a success, and after an arduous and painful recovery she returned to school, but her health challenges weren’t over. Follow up testing revealed that at just 20 years old, she had Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis. Over the next several years her doctors worked to find the right medications to help her as she struggled with pain, allergic reactions and extreme side-effects like depression. Jasmine also started to make some changes on her own. Driven by having own basic mobility taken from her after her spinal fusion, she was no longer taking movement for granted. She began running, paying attention to her nutrition, and frequenting the gym. Says Jasmine, “I not only realized what a gift movement was by having it taken away, but I also had this looming dread that one day my ability to move might still be taken away, and maybe for good. If there was any chance of that, I wanted to do everything I could now.” After trying all sorts of fitness, Jasmine ultimately joined a CrossFit affiliate and fell in love with it during her first class. She recognized that in the years to come she might lose some of her abilities, and she knew that when that time came, she would be able to continue by adapting her workouts or finding someone to help her, regardless of how her MS might eventually look. Now 26, Jasmine has been symptom-free since starting CrossFit, and her MS specialist encourages her to continue with high intensity exercise. CrossFit helps Jasmine forget she even has a terrifying disease with no cure and her doctor assures her that her beliefs as to how she is no longer experiencing symptoms is neither cheesy nor crazy- it’s possible and likely. The impact CrossFit has had on Jasmine’s life is remarkable. She says, “I know that because of CrossFit, I took control over who I was, who I wanted to be, and the role my conditions would play in my life. I no longer focus on what my body looks like, rather on what it can do. I celebrate new movements and strength, not pounds loss. I look at ingredient lists, and I keep track of macro-nutrients I am taking in, not which food to "cheat" with. I have a massive second FAMILY of people I get to talk to authentically, get to know on good days and bad, workout next to, coach, celebrate with, and just live this life everyday seeing…. I am fully aware that to most everyone, CrossFitters sound like they are this insane cult of people who only talk about CrossFit. However, when you find a community, methodology, and sport that does for you and for count

Transcript

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0:00.0

You have something like a major surgery, whether you have MS specifically or whether you have any other type of autoimmune disease or anything like that, that those don't have to be death sentences, even

0:15.2

though that's what they feel like when you first get diagnosed.

0:18.0

And if the relapses are hitting harder and harder or if symptoms are getting worse.

0:23.0

It's easy to think it's just going downhill.

0:26.7

And the biggest thing that Cross Fit has done for me

0:29.9

is to remind me or show me that I can take control of my health. I can take

0:36.4

control of what my body does. I can take control of what I put into my body and

0:41.4

all of those things are going to benefit me.

0:44.0

Hello and welcome to pursuing health. I'm Dr. Julie Fushe, family physician and former Cross Fit Games athlete.

0:54.0

Here I bring you information and inspiration to help bridge the gap between fitness and

0:58.9

medicine and support your journey toward your healthiest self. This episode is one of a series of pursuing health stories.

1:05.0

Here I feature the inspiring stories of regular everyday people

1:09.0

who have used lifestyle to overcome some incredible health challenges.

1:12.0

But before I dive in, I do want to make it clear

1:15.0

that this podcast is for general information only and does not provide medical advice. I recommend

1:19.7

that you seek assistance from your personal physician for any health conditions or concerns.

1:24.0

Hey there, in this week's story episode, I am sitting down with Jasmine Joy, who shares her story of

1:29.8

undergoing a very invasive surgery for severe scoliosis, as well as finding out that she had multiple sclerosis at the age of 20.

1:38.0

We talked about living with scoliosis as a child and her eventual decision to get surgery while she was in college.

1:44.0

How she then found out that she had multiple sclerosis or MS during her pre-operative

1:48.3

evaluation for that surgery. Her early treatments for MS which involve several medications and side effects,

1:55.0

how she's used nutrition and fitness to help with her recovery from surgery and her MS

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