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Posts Tagged ‘Hearing impairment’

Hereditary Spinal Ataxia and Receiving Social Security Disability

Monday, June 27th, 2011

Hereditary spinal ataxia is an inherited disease that results in progressive damage to your nervous system. This damage affects your spinal cord and the nerves that control muscle movement in your legs and arms.

Ataxia is usually a sign or symptom of coordination problems, such as unsteadiness or awkward or clumsy movements. Ataxia is present in many different diseases and conditions.

The ataxia in hereditary spinal ataxia results from the degeneration of nerve tissue in your spinal cord. In particular, this is your sensory neurons that are required (through connections with your cerebellum) for directing muscle movement of your legs and arms. Hereditary spinal ataxia causes your spinal cord to become thinner and nerve cells lose some of their myelin sheath (the insular covering on some nerve cells that helps conduct nerve impulses).

Hereditary spinal ataxia affects around 1 in 50,000 people in the United States. This disease affects men and women equally.

As mentioned earlier, hereditary spinal ataxia is an inherited disease. It results from an abnormality in one of your genes, called X25, located in the ninth chromosome pair. The pattern of inheritance is what is known as autosomal recessive. What this means is that hereditary spinal ataxia can only occur when you inherit the defective (faulty) gene from both of your parents. If you get a defective gene from only one of your parents, you become a carrier of the disease.

The signs and symptoms of hereditary spinal ataxia usually start between the ages of 5 and 15. However, with late onset of the disease, signs and symptoms may begin in your 20s or 30s.

There are several signs and symptoms that you may have with hereditary spinal ataxia. Some of these include:

  • Your feet becoming deformed and rigid
  • Muscle weakness in your arms and legs
  • Diabetes
  • Paralysis of a lower limb
  • Hearing loss
  • Curvature of your spine
  • Vision impairment
  • Heart disorders
  • Slurred speech
  • Problems swallowing
  • Trembling when you are standing still
  • Progressive weakness of your legs that may appear as a staggering, lurching gait when you are walking
  • Clumsiness
  • Partial loss of your sensitivity to pain and temperature or your sense of touch
  • Loss of coordination.

You or a loved one may be afflicted with hereditary spinal ataxia. Hereditary spinal ataxia and/or complications that have been caused by it or other disorders that you have besides this disease may have led to you or your loved one’s disability and inability to work.

You may need assistance if this is your situation. You may need financial help.

You or your loved one may be intending to apply for the financial assistance that you need from the Social Security Administration by applying for Social Security disability benefits or disability benefits because of the disability that has been caused by hereditary spinal ataxia and/or complications that have resulted from it or other disorders that you have besides this disease. You may have already tried this option, and your claim was turned down by the Social Security Administration.

If you or your loved one is planning on reapplying or appealing the denial, here is an important fact that you really need to keep in mind that you may not know about. The fact of the matter is that people who are represented by a disability attorney like the one you will find at socialsecurityhome.com are approved more often than people who do not have a disability lawyer standing with them.

Please do not delay or wait until tomorrow. This is a matter of great importance to you or your loved one. Contact the disability attorney at socialsecurityhome.com, today.

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Auditory Neuropathy and Receiving Social Security Disability

Thursday, December 30th, 2010
An illustration of one of the three semicircul...
Image via Wikipedia

The term “neuropathy” is used to refer to any and all malfunctions or diseases of your nerves. For example, peripheral neuropathy is a condition in which your peripheral nervous system is damaged. It is the vast communications network that transmits information from your brain and spinal cord (the central nervous system) to every other part of your body.

Auditory neuropathy (AN) is a hearing disorder that is marked by sound entering your inner ear normally, but the transmission of signals from your inner ear to your brain is impaired. It is a variety of hearing loss where your outer hair cells within your cochlea are present and functional, but the sound information is not faithfully transmitted properly to your auditory nerve and brain.

Auditory neuropathy is known by other names. It is also known as Auditory Neuropathy/Auditory Dys-synchrony (AN/AD) or Auditory Neuropathy Spectrum Disorder (ANSD).

Auditory neuropathy is a disorder that can affect anyone at any age. The number of people with this condition is unknown. What is known is that auditory neuropathy affects a relatively small percentage of people who are hearing-impaired or deaf.

Auditory neuropathy is a condition that is not fully understood at the present time. Researchers believe that this disorder may have more than one cause. Possible causes include:

  • Faulty connections between your inner hair cells and the nerve that goes from your inner ear to your brain
  • Damage to the nerve going from your inner ear to your brain
  • Damage to your inner hair cells (specialized sensory cells in your inner ear that transmit information sounds through your nervous system to your brain).

There are signs and symptoms that may be an indication of auditory neuropathy. Some of these include:

  • Normal Hearing, but trouble understanding
  • Anywhere from mild to severe hearing loss
  • Poor speech-perception abilities (trouble understanding speech correctly)
  • Speech perception that is worse than the degree of hearing loss would indicate
  • Hearing sounds, but difficulty recognizing spoken words
  • Sounds fading in and out and seeming out of sync.

You or a loved one may have auditory neuropathy. Auditory neuropathy and/or complications that have resulted from this disorder or other disabling conditions that you have along with it may be why you are disabled and in need of financial assistance.

You or your loved one may intend to apply for the financial help that you need from the Social Security Administration by applying for Social Security disability benefits or disability benefits because of the disability caused by auditory neuropathy and/or complications that have resulted from this disorder or other disabling conditions that you have along with it. You or your loved one may have already applied, and your claim was turned down by the Social Security Administration.

If you or your loved one plans on reapplying or appealing the denial, always remember. People who have a disability lawyer standing with them like the one you will find at Social Security Home are approved more often than people who are not represented by a disability attorney.