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In fact, a completely routine pregnancy requires 15 visits over eight months, and just getting there can be exhausting for women with mobility problems. Signore says the challenges start at the front door, and showed photos of herself stuck outside a physician's office, unable to heave open a heavy door even though its lever handle complied with accessibility laws.
"Accessibility is in the eye of the beholder," she says.
The issue may be best studied so far in multiple sclerosis, perhaps because of some good news. Symptoms of MS, an autoimmune disease that can wax and wane, tend to improve temporarily during pregnancy, probably because of hormonal changes. The National Multiple Sclerosis Society notes that research has begun to test whether adding a type of estrogen to regular treatment when women aren't pregnant might mimic some of that benefit.
Radoslovich was one of those lucky ones while pregnant with her first child, Steven Andrew, now 1.
But a few months after giving birth, about 30 percent of MS patients have a flare-up of symptoms that can be severe. Breast-feeding sometimes staves off the episodes, but didn't for Radoslovich, who had to quit when a flare-up suddenly left her unable to walk or use her right side until intravenous steroids kicked in.
The toddler is her morale booster: "When I'm having a bad day in terms of not feeling well, all I need is to see that smile on his face and him reach out to me and it's pure medicine."
Radoslovich was thrilled to learn she was pregnant again -- a second son is due in August. But this time, the weakness, muscle stiffness and her other usual symptoms didn't abate. She's learned to ask for help on tough days.
Still, her doctor says she can try a vaginal birth despite having a C-section the last time that was unrelated to MS. Radoslovich hopes she'll have the energy to make that happen.
She craves hearing how other women with MS handle pregnancy's hurdles: "I feel like, if you can do it, so can I."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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