I am not sure why people are upset if someone wants to say our spouses have or may have bvFTD or bvFTD phenotype
Maybe because some of us have relatives with degeneratives diseases and know exactly what it means, and don't like that such an heavy, painful thing is made equal to MLC, a reversible condition?
My former BIL for example had a meltdown in midlife but didn't have an affair; he yelled obscenities at a group of students.
So what? My cousin that had MLC didn't had an affair. He also screamed obscenities at his fellow students, at his partner, at his brother and to some friends. Once his crisis was over, my cousin went back to normal.
Do you know how many neurologic and psychiatric disorders involve having a meltdown and screaming obscenities? Several. Including Alzeimer's and Vascular Dementia. My paternal grandmother has the first, my mother the second.
I am not sure why people feel angry at the suggestion their spouse might have bvFTD. I wouldn't feel mad if someone told me my FH has a brain tumor.
I am glad you wouldn't mind someone telling you your husband has bvFTD or a brain tumour without any proof of such thing.
If you are worried this news means your spouse will never recover, we are all encouraged to live as if they won't come back.
There is a very big difference between being encouraged to live as if the MLCer is not coming back and telling people their spouse have a progressive degenerative disease. Again, it is incorrect, not to say wrong and unethical, to tell LBS their spouse have a degenerative disease when do not.
No worthy doctor or health professional would do that. Serious health professionals and scientists do not go around telling people their spouse has a degenerative disease just because some symptoms can be similar to that disease.
The only other reason I can think to reject the idea of bvFTD is the desire to raise awareness of MLC as its own unique syndrome.
Yes, there is a desire on HS - a site and forum for MLC, to raise awareness for MLC as a unique syndrome. Otherwise, this would be a site/board for other conditions and it is not. But that is the only reason you can think to reject the idea of bvFTD?
How do explain that MLC mimics bipolar? So, is it Bipolar, or is it bvFTD? Or its unique type of depression? Or a special sub-set of bipolar? Even if, bipolar is for live and MLC isn't. And the same is true of bvFTD, it is for life, MLC isn't.
How do you explain that MLCers go back to normal? That would not be possible with bvFTD or, for example, Bipolar.
In that case, however, perhaps research into bvFTD can offer clues as to the cure to MLC and vice versa.
The same could be said for research into Unipolar and Bipolar Depression as well as into endocrinology, the central and peripheral nervous system - namely the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems, the amygdala, etc. We have debated pretty much all those issues on the neuroscience threads.
And you Velika, always jump on the bandwagon of any new thing that comes along and always think MLC is that thing. You can never stick to a train of thought, you get all over the place, always thinking the new stuff that was mentioned must be it, it must be the anwswer, it really must explain MLC.
It is impossible to conduct any sort of serious study into a subject if one keeps thinking every new thing is it, and if one is always setting aside other previous, often far more simpler and close to home, explanations.
We can rule out bvFTD, OP. As for bvFTD phenocopy syndrome, experts aren't even sure it does exist or what it is. But, to my knowledge, even in bvFTD phenocopy syndrome exists, people with it do not go back to normal - the illness may not progress, but it also does not regress. Once the crisis is over, MLCers go back to normal.
What bothers me is emphatically stating that MLC IS a prefrontal lobe disorder.
I think MLC, like many other things, can impact the prefrontal lobe. But that is not the same as having a prefrontal lobe disorder.
MLC impacts many areas of the brain and body.
I think people here that are not familiar with our neuroscience threads should go read them to have an idea of the many things that have been discussed over the years.
The big problem with bvFTD is that she got here and said all our spouses are suffering from bvFTD. She didn't say some of them may have it, she said MLC is bvFTD. Big difference.
In what is bvFTD correct, aside from saying her husband as bvFTD (if he does, because, from what bvFTD writes he does not fullfill the 3 criteria necessary)? She claims, over and over again, all our spouses have bvFTD.
We know that is not true.
Ready2, we have often debated neuroscience issues, that may, or may not, be related to MLC. I don't think that is stop focussing on ourselves, I think that is learning and thinking about broader issues, not just MLC.