Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease in which motor neuron cells of the brain and spinal cord progressively degenerate and die. There is currently a lack of curative treatment for individuals that are diagnosed with ALS. Since treatment options are limited, researchers have placed greater emphasis on evaluating Quality-of-Life (QoL) as it offers perspective into the everyday life of the patient and is sensitive to changes over time. The goal of this longitudinal observational study is to learn more about what factors negatively impact an individual's QoL after they are diagnosed with ALS. Previous research has shown that an individual's level of physical functioning can negatively impact their quality of life, but this may not be the only factor. The main objectives this study are: 1. Assess if there is a statistically significant correlation between patient's functionality scores (ALSFRS-R) and quality of life scores (ALSAQ-40). 2. Determine how disease stage (King's Clinical Severity Staging System) affects correlation between functionality scores (ALSFRS-R) and quality of life scores (ALSAQ-40). Participants will complete a quality-of-life questionnaire (ALSAQ-40) every other time they present to their standard-of-care clinic visits for a period of two years. In parallel, with the functionality rating (ALSFRS-R) scores captured as standard-of-care at every clinic visit.
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Results of the Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Assessment Questionnaire (ALSAQ-40)
Timeframe: Assessment will start at the initial visit, then every other standard-of-care clinic visit, through study completion (assessed up to 2 years).
Results of the Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Functional Rating Scale-Revised (ALSFRS-R)
Timeframe: Assessment will start at the initial visit, then every standard-of-care clinic visit, through study completion (assessed up to 2 years).