
Featured Articles

Game On!
On March 21, MDA launched Game Night, a weekly Saturday night event designed to gather online gamers and families for regular connection (and a little healthy competition).It couldn’t have been better timed.MDA began developing its online gaming platform, MDA Let’s Play, in 2019. The idea was simple: connect the online gaming community and the MDA community — which already overlap — to grow a new network of support. And now, as families have found themselves practicing social distancing from friends, neighbors, and family, there’s no better time to go online for a bit of fun together in support of MDA’s cause — and maybe to build the most amazing Minecraft village in history while they’re at it.
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7 Ways to Make Life at Home Easier
Now, more than ever, we’re spending a lot of time at home. While the continuing threat of the novel coronavirus makes this the safest place to be, home is also a place where frustrations can multiply when trying to accomplish everyday tasks.We chatted with experts and people living with neuromuscular diseases to get tips on how to ease some common struggles so you can truly feel the comforts of home.
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All in the Family
Within our family of five, my daughter and I have a neuromuscular disease called scapuloperoneal spinal muscular atrophy (SPSMA). I was born with this rare motor neuron disease, and our precious Leah inherited the same disease; however, this is not what makes us unique. What makes our family uncommon is our relentless dedication to accomplishing tasks collectively.
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MDA’s 2020 Clinical & Scientific Conference Trial News and Updates
When the novel coronavirus pandemic forced MDA to cancel our in-person 2020 Clinical & Scientific Conference, one of our first actions was to move the conference’s key Clinical Trial Session online. On March 24, every one of the more than a dozen speakers originally slated to present recent clinical trial results at the Orlando conference shared those results, instead, in a virtual meeting attended by more than 1,200 researchers and clinicians from across the nation.
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Pompe Disease Treatment Is Moving Forward
Pompe disease (also called acid maltase deficiency) is a rare, inherited glycogen storage disease that affects the muscles, particularly the heart and skeletal muscles. It results from mutations in a gene that carries instructions to make the enzyme acid alpha-glucosidase (GAA), also called acid maltase, which plays a role in the body’s ability to process and break down complex sugars (glycogen). With insufficient GAA, glycogen builds up in and damages muscle cells.
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Coping Through a Crisis
(Editor’s note: In the print edition of Quest Issue 1, 2020, Sarah Clark-Stoney, MSW, LSW, was misquoted. Her quotes have been clarified here, and updated in the full, downloadable PDF version of Issue 1, 2020.) Fifteen years ago, my family lived through Hurricane Katrina in Louisiana. At the time, our son was a freshman in high school. Falling pine trees and rain destroyed half of our home. Rebuilding took seven months, and we lived in the chaos during the process.
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