They were like peak X-ennial heartthrobs. Feel so old right now |
| At least he went quickly. It's a terrible disease. |
Stfu. Don’t even speak to me on this. I’m the OP of this thread. I had no idea one could pass so quickly from ALS. I had a family member pass from ALS and it was 4-5 years after her diagnosis. It is a horrific disease and honestly I might contemplate it if I had it. |
All of them are sad to me. |
True. |
You can tell both his voice and breathing were already being affected a while ago. He could still walk, but eating, swallowing and breathing are critical so it wasn't a good sign that core functions were showing an impact. ALS can progress in different patterns with some keeping strong breathing and swallowing while losing the ability to walk or use their hands, while others are impacted in core functions but can still have some limb function. |
He disclosed in interviews that he had symptoms for a year and a half before he was diagnosed too. |
| Wow ,RIP. So sad. I pray for a cure for this horrible disease. My father died of Huntingtons, which is similar but genetic. He lived 7 years after diagnosis in his mid-70s which was fortunate, but he had a mild case. Still, it stole his ability to walk, communicate and made it difficult to swallow so eating and drinking enough without aspirating was a daily challenge. |
That's what I was thinking. Or he may have blown off some symptoms and it was brewing for a while. |
| I loved him in Charmed and one of those X-Men movies. RIP. |
I would suspect he passed naturally, and was perhaps on hospice. But motor neuron disease is a common reason in Europe for people availing themselves of Dignitas. RIP Erik. Nobody deserves that wretched disease. |
NP here. I just watched some of the Netflix interview that he did under the conditions that it only be released until after he passed. My MIL died from ALS 1 year after her initial diagnosis (but 3 yrs after first symptom) and he sounds almost exactly like her the last time I saw her. You lose the ability to swallow and eat. I suspect he was on a feeding tube. Life is miserable at this point. My MIL decided to enter hospice which for her meant the feeding tube was discontinued and you slowly die from dehydration and no food. This is the common protocol for ALS hospice and likely what he did which is not the same as assisted termination legal in some states. Whatever happened it doesn’t matter and isn’t our business. |
Yes, not our business- I agree with you. I am so sorry for the loss of your MIL. |
| He got hotter with age - I loved him with the silver/white hair. |
Please stop. |