“…MS patients can present with different predominant symptoms that may emphasize tremor [20], ataxia [21], visual symptoms [22, 23], sensory symptoms including numbness and paresthesias [24, 25, 26, 27], pyramidal tract findings such as weakness, hyperreflexia, spasticity, and hypertonia [28, 29, 30], or spinal cord presentations that include paraparesis, sphincter dysfunction, and sensory levels [31, 32]. Some patients present with cognitive impairment [33, 34], dysarthria [35], dysautonomia [36], depression and psychiatric disturbances [37], imbalance [38] or fatigue [39]. It is of interest whether identifiable subtypes of MS based on predominant clinical presentation (sensory, cerebellar, motor, visual, cognitive, fatigue, etc.)…”