Selma Blair is feeling hopeful for her health after going into remission. The 49-year-old actress was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2018 before going through a risky two-month hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) in order to try and jumpstart her immune and believes that "no news is good news" following a recent MRI scan. She told E! News: "I've been in remission for a while.
I just had an MRI last week. No news is good news. But I did a transplant, and it was amazing to have the bone marrow transplant.
" The Cruel Intentions star also noted that she is glad to have gone public with her neurological condition - which affects the brain and causes symptoms, such as problems with vision, arm or leg movement, sensation, or balance - especially now that her fellow actresses Christina Applegate and Jami-Lynn Sigler, who document their own struggles with the disease on the MeSsy podcast. Journalism for the curious Australian across politics, business, culture and opinion. She said: "They're being really open about their experiences.
I love that they're doing that. They're both good friends of mine. I love listening to them hang out and discover.
" Blair first revealed that she was in remission in late 2021 and reflected that she wanted to "tell the truth" about her condition even though it had been a "really hard time" for her. Speaking in her documentary Introducing Selma Blair, she said of her life before the treatment: "It was a really hard time in my life. People .
