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	<title>Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency -CCSVI General News</title>
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        <![CDATA[MSRC's Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency -CCSVI General News Page]]>
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    <pubDate>Thu, 02 Jun 2011 03:30:01 EDT</pubDate>
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    <image>      <url>http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/90x88.jpg</url>
      <title>Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency -CCSVI General News</title>
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      <title>Patients report controversial Multiple Sclerosis treatment improves their lives</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;p>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />Although using angioplasty to treat multiple sclerosis (MS) is highly controversial, sufferers often insist it helps &amp;ndash; in some cases dramatically, such as allowing them to walk without a cane. &lt;/p>&lt;p>Patients with less severe MS also reported additional quality of life improvements, such as being able to talk more clearly, after having treatment to open blocked blood vessels in the chest and neck, according to research being presented at the 24th annual International Symposium on Endovascular Therapy (ISET).&lt;/p>&lt;p>A controversial theory holds that MS &lt;a title="MS Symptoms" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/743" rel="nofollow nofollow" target="_blank">symptoms&lt;/a> may be caused by narrowed veins leading away from the brain, which interrupts blood flow between the brain and heart. This condition, called &lt;a title="CCSVI" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" target="_blank">chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency&lt;/a> (CCSVI), is treated with minimally invasive angioplasty to open up those narrowed veins. In the research being presented at ISET, more than 65 percent of patients treated for CCSVI report quality of life improvements three months after treatment.... [&lt;a href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954">Read More&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6480193</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 17 Jan 2012 02:36:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>MS clinic's practices stir alarm</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;p>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />Tens of thousands of dollars have flowed from multiple sclerosis patients to a Winnipeg-based company that is coming under fire for &amp;quot;pressuring'' patients to fly to India for the headline-grabbing &amp;quot;liberation&amp;quot; procedure.&lt;/p>&lt;p>CCSVI Clinic, which operates out of an office in Fort Garry, has now come to the attention of Health Minister Theresa Oswald, who said she would forward concerns to the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Manitoba.&lt;/p>&lt;p>Until early December, CCSVI Clinic, which calls itself a non-profit group of physicians and researchers, had been acting as the Winnipeg referral agency for Mobile Life Screening, a Fargo, N.D., ultrasound clinic.&lt;/p>&lt;p>As part of that referral service, at least 100 patients were tested for &lt;a title="CCSVI" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" target="_blank">chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency&lt;/a> (CCSVI) -- blocked veins in the head and neck, controversially linked to MS.... [&lt;a href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" rel="nofollow nofollow" target="_blank">Read More&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6474935</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6474935</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 11 Jan 2012 04:00:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>Man seeking MS procedure loses human-rights complaint</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;p>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />A British Columbia man with multiple sclerosis who was denied a controversial medical procedure promoted by Italian physician Paolo Zamboni has had his complaint dismissed by the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal.&lt;/p>&lt;p>Gregory Turnbull says he was denied access to and funding for treatment and diagnostic procedures normally available to the public because he suffers from MS.&lt;/p>&lt;p>The tribunal said it found no evidence of discrimination in its ruling last week.&lt;/p>&lt;p>&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p>&lt;p>Turnbull said in his complaint that he was scheduled to receive venous angioplasty by an interventionist radiologist at Victoria General Hospital for treatment of &lt;a title="CCSVI" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" rel="nofollow nofollow" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#000000">chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency&lt;/font>&lt;/a> (CCSVI) resulting in abnormal narrowing of his left and right jugular veins, a condition ancillary to multiple sclerosis.&lt;/p>&lt;p>Two other multiple sclerosis patients had previously undergone this procedure, he said.... [&lt;a href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" rel="nofollow nofollow" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#000000">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6420947</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6420947</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 15 Nov 2011 02:53:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>CCSVI to be spotlighted at the international symposium on endovascular therapy (ISET) 2012</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;p>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />Innovators in the field of endovascular therapy will explore the often-contentious topic of chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI), which is theorized to be a contributing factor in the development of multiple sclerosis (MS), at the 24th annual International Symposium on Endovascular Therapy (ISET).&lt;/p>&lt;p>Recognized as one of the industry&amp;rsquo;s foremost meetings in the multidisciplinary field of cardiac and peripheral interventional medicine, ISET is attended by physicians, researchers, scientists and other professionals. ISET 2012 will take place at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach from January 15-19, with continuing medical education (CME) accreditation provided by Complete Conference Management (CCM).... [&lt;a href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" rel="nofollow">&lt;font color="#000000">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6411649</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 07 Nov 2011 06:31:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Multiple Sclerosis operation changed my life - now I want it on NHS</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;p>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />An Inverness woman left virtually housebound after suffering from MS has had a miraculous turnaround in her life after pioneering treatment abroad.&lt;/p>&lt;p>Since diagnosis over 15 years ago, multiple sclerosis sufferer Audrey Barnett (40) has endured limited walking ability, severe fatigue and dizziness.&lt;/p>&lt;p>But within hours of treatment, she says a serious eye problem was corrected and her balance also improved. She believes the surgery has made &lt;em>&amp;quot;an amazing difference&amp;quot;&lt;/em> to her life, enabling her to resume driving for the first time in two years and horse riding after five years.&lt;/p>&lt;p>Audrey, who featured in the Highland News after launching a campaign calling for further research into the operation, underwent the percutaneous venoplasty procedure &amp;ndash; privately at a cost of &amp;pound;7,500 &amp;ndash; last September in Warsaw, Poland.... [&lt;a href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" rel="nofollow nofollow" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#000000">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6341005</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 21 Sep 2011 05:18:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>NICE consultation on percutaneous venoplasty for CCSVI in MS begins</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;p>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />NICE announces that the consultation on Percutaneous venoplasty for CCSVI in MS began on 24th August 2011.&lt;/p>&lt;p>Guidance on commenting on an Interventional Procedures Consultation Document as a patient/carer or member of the public is detailed below.&lt;/p>&lt;p>This factsheet has been designed to help patients/carers and members of the public when commenting on provisional guidance produced by the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) on percutaneous venoplasty for chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency in multiple sclerosis. ... [&lt;a href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" rel="nofollow nofollow" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#000000">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6302783</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 25 Aug 2011 04:31:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>CCSVI NICE Public Consultation</title>
      <description>
&lt;p>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" src="../images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />NICE are consulting with patients in the UK about CCSVI treatment. &lt;/p>&lt;p>There is a public consultation running from 24 August until 21 September 2011. Even if you have been treated abroad for &lt;a title="CCSVI" href="index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#000000">Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency&lt;/font>&lt;/a> (CCSVI) NICE would like to hear from you.&lt;/p>&lt;p>Anyone is able to comment, and the PPIP team at NICE will be producing a fact sheet outlining the type of comments the committee would like to see from patients, which will help you when making your comments. &lt;/p>&lt;p>Anyone interested in commenting please contact Emma Chambers at NICE to register your interest and she will send a factsheet about the sort of things they would like to know - &lt;a title="mailto:emma.chambers@nice.org.uk" href="mailto:emma.chambers@nice.org.uk">&lt;font color="#000000">emma.chambers@nice.org.uk&lt;/font>&lt;/a>&lt;/p>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6247706</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 18 Jul 2011 10:11:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Second reported death after controversial MS treatment</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;p>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />A Calgary woman has died in the United States following controversial neck vein surgery to treat her multiple sclerosis.&lt;/p>&lt;p>Maralyn Clarke died April 18, shortly after undergoing treatment at Synergy Health Concepts Inc. in Orange County, Calif.&lt;/p>&lt;p>She becomes the second victim of the vein procedure, almost a year after Mahir Mostic of St. Catharines, Ont., died in October 2010 following a similar operation in Costa Rica.&lt;/p>&lt;p>The treatment is based on a procedure developed by Italian Dr. Paolo Zamboni, whose research suggests that multiple sclerosis may be associated with &lt;a title="CCSVI" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#000000">vascular problems&lt;/font>&lt;/a>.... [&lt;a href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" rel="nofollow nofollow" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#000000">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6237185</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 11 Jul 2011 03:11:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Nova Scotia won’t fund liberation therapy for MS patients</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;p>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />Nova Scotia&amp;rsquo;s health minister says there are no plans to follow New Brunswick&amp;rsquo;s lead and begin funding the costs of the so-called liberation therapy for multiple sclerosis patients.&lt;/p>&lt;p>New Brunswick announced Wednesday that patients can receive funds to help cover the costs of medical services including liberation treatment outside the province.&lt;/p>&lt;p>Nova Scotia Health Minister Maureen MacDonald said today that her department will wait for stronger evidence before considering a similar move.... [&lt;a href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" rel="nofollow nofollow" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#000000">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6200861</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6200861</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 17 Jun 2011 08:40:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>MS: review ordered into surgery for clogged neck veins</title>
      <description>
&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px; padding-bottom: 3px; padding-left: 3px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">A consultation will take place this summer on a surgical technique that unblocks veins in the neck as a treatment for patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) has asked a specialist committee to examine whether the&amp;nbsp;&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">procedure, which improves blood flow, is of value to people with MS.&lt;/span>&lt;/span>&lt;div style="min-width: 0px; max-width: 99%">&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">&lt;br />&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">&lt;a title="CCSVI" rel="nofollow nofollow" target="_blank" id="link_15" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952">Chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency&lt;/a>&amp;nbsp;(CCSVI) has become a popular topic for discussion among MS patients since an Italian scientist first linked the disease with the condition of veins in the neck. Dr Paolo Zamboni put forward the theory that MS can be caused by blockages in veins draining blood from the brain and that, if the blockages are cleared,&amp;nbsp;&lt;a title="MS Symptoms" rel="nofollow nofollow" target="_blank" id="link_16" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/743">symptoms&lt;/a>&amp;nbsp;of MS may be eased.&lt;/span>... [&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;a rel="nofollow nofollow" target="_blank" id="link_17" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954">Read More&lt;/a>&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">]&lt;/span>&lt;/div>&lt;/span>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6079895</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6079895</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 05 May 2011 08:18:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>NICE to review balloon angioplasty with or without stenting surgery for CCSVI</title>
      <description>
&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="NHS Logo" vspace="3" align="left" style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px; padding-bottom: 3px; padding-left: 3px" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_nhs.jpg" />NICE has been notified about this procedure and will consider it as part of the Institute&amp;rsquo;s work programme.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px">It is possible that there is a link between blocked veins in the neck and progression of multiple sclerosis (CCSVI). This procedure aims to open blocked veins by inflating a small balloon in the vein, allowing for better blood flow.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">The Interventional Procedures Advisory Committee (IPAC) will consider this procedure and NICE will issue an Interventional Procedures Consultation Document about its safety and efficacy for 4 weeks public consultation. IPAC will then review the consultation document in the light of comments received and produce a Final Interventional Procedures Document, which will be considered by NICE before guidance is issued to the NHS in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.&lt;/span>... [&lt;a rel="nofollow nofollow" target="_blank" id="link_15" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954">Read More&lt;/a>]&lt;/p>&lt;/span>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6075541</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 04 May 2011 06:47:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>People power: social media can alter research priorities</title>
      <description>
&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px; padding-bottom: 3px; padding-left: 3px" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />Widespread demands in Canada for clinical trials for a controversial treatment for multiple sclerosis show the growing power of the Internet and social media to influence research priorities, according to a paper published April 27 in&amp;nbsp;&lt;em style="min-width: 0px">Nature&lt;/em>.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">P&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">aulo Zamboni, an Italian surgeon, suggested in 2008 that MS was not an autoimmune disease but rather a vascular disease caused by blockages in the brain. He proposed unblocking the veins by mechanically widening them &amp;mdash; what he calls the &amp;ldquo;&lt;a title="CCSVI" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" id="link_42" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952">liberation procedure&lt;/a>.&amp;rdquo;&lt;/span>&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">&lt;br />&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">His hypothesis got little public attention, except in Canada, where more than 500 Facebook pages, groups or events devoted to the theory have been created with tens of thousands of followers. A poll shows more than half of Canadians are familiar with the theory. Stories about it have appeared in the media almost weekly since The Globe and Mail, a national newspaper, wrote about it in November 2009 and it was featured on the CTV public affairs program W5.&lt;/span>... [&lt;a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" id="link_43" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954">Read More&lt;/a>]&lt;/p>&lt;/span>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6051872</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=6051872</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 28 Apr 2011 04:21:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>One year later, MS patients track their progress</title>
      <description>
&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px; padding-bottom: 3px; padding-left: 3px" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />A year later, five Canadian multiple sclerosis patients have reported their progress to CTV News, and there are positive signs for some from a new MS treatment.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px">Last year, Lianne Webb was flattened by fatigue -- the result of a decade of living with multiple sclerosis. But 14 months after receiving a highly debated treatment known as&amp;nbsp;&lt;a title="CCSVI" target="_blank" id="link_15" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952">liberation therapy&lt;/a>, Webb says she feels more energetic than she has in years.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">Indeed, on a recent afternoon, she was horseback riding; something that would have been unthinkable before receiving the therapy.&lt;/span>... [&lt;a target="_blank" id="link_16" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954">Read More&lt;/a>]&lt;/p>&lt;/span>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5995681</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5995681</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 11 Apr 2011 02:38:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Zamboni says no conflict in applying for MS patents</title>
      <description>
&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="Doctor Zamboni" vspace="3" align="left" style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px; padding-bottom: 3px; padding-left: 3px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/pepl_zamb.jpg" />&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">The Italian doctor behind a furiously debated theory of multiple sclerosis treatment applied for several patents to protect his discoveries long before they became widely known, and has worked closely with a company marketing an MS ultrasound machine built according to his specification.&lt;/span>&lt;div style="min-width: 0px; max-width: 99%">&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;br />&lt;/span>&lt;/div>&lt;div style="min-width: 0px; max-width: 99%">&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">Dr. Paolo Zamboni&amp;rsquo;s patent requests and corporate connections add a new twist to what is often characterized as a clash between entrenched, Big Pharma interests and a scientific renegade with forward-thinking ideas.&lt;/span>... [&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;a target="_blank" id="link_15" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954">Read More&lt;/a>&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">]&lt;/span>&lt;/div>&lt;/span>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5976947</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5976947</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 04 Apr 2011 04:27:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>SIR: Vascular MS treatments safe, but efficacy unclear</title>
      <description>
&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;div style="min-width: 0px; max-width: 99%">&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px; border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333">&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px; padding-bottom: 3px; padding-left: 3px" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />Angioplasty for obstructed veins leading away from the brain and spine appears safe for multiple sclerosis patients, although whether it holds any more than a placebo effect for the degenerative disease remains to be proven.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px; border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333">&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">That was the conclusion of several single-center series reported here at the Society of Interventional Radiology meeting on the controversial treatments for what has been termed&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px">&amp;nbsp;&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px">&lt;a title="CCSVI" target="_blank" id="link_15" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952">chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency&lt;/a>&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px">&amp;nbsp;&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px">(CCSVI).&lt;/span>... [&lt;a target="_blank" id="link_16" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954">Read More&lt;/a>]&lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/span>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5968879</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5968879</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 01 Apr 2011 03:52:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>The Facebook treatment for MS</title>
      <description>
&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px; padding-bottom: 3px; padding-left: 3px" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />A patient-led movement, fought via social media, has fuelled the widespread use of a controversial treatment for MS before research has proven it effective, writes Michael Slezak.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">If anyone wants a miracle cure for multiple sclerosis, it's Brian Lee. Diagnosed with MS in 1999 just after the birth of his second son, his disease progressed faster than usual. Within seven years, he was permanently confined to a wheelchair and he has slowly started losing control of his body.&lt;/span>... [&lt;a target="_blank" id="link_15" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954">Read More&lt;/a>]&lt;/p>&lt;/span>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5966426</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5966426</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 31 Mar 2011 03:22:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>ISNVD first annual meeting - conclusions</title>
      <description>
&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px; padding-bottom: 3px; padding-left: 3px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px">Many of the issues which are still open on the relationship between CCSVI and MS found an answer at the ISNVD (International Society for Neurovascular Disease) Annual Meeting. The Society, chaired by Prof. Paolo Zamboni, held its meeting in Bologna (Italy) on March 14-15, 2011 under the High Patronage of the President of the Italian Republic.&lt;/p>&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">The Meeting &amp;ndash; attended by registered physicians, researchers and accredited journalists &amp;ndash; was preceded by a preliminary meeting of the International Scientific Committee on Sunday March 13. It was organized in the form of a Consensus Conference with the purpose of defining minimum starting points in the approach to the investigated diseases.&lt;/span>... [&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;a target="_blank" id="link_15" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954">Read More&lt;/a>&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">]&lt;/span>&lt;/span>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5928029</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5928029</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 16 Mar 2011 10:18:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Consensus on CCSVI diagnostics from ISNVD meeting in Bologna</title>
      <description>
&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px; padding-bottom: 3px; padding-left: 3px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">As a prelude to the ISNVD (International Society for Neurovascular Disease) Annual Meeting, a Consensus Conference was held in Bologna on Sunday March 13th to define the practical guidelines to the screening investigation of CCSVI.&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;br />&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&amp;nbsp;&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;br />&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">The Consensus Conference focused on the method proposed by Prof Zamboni for the detection of&amp;nbsp;&lt;a title="CCSVI" target="_blank" id="link_15" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952">Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency&lt;/a>(CCSVI) using Doppler. This diagnostic method was developed by Prof Paolo Zamboni and his Staff at the Center for Vascular Diseases of the Ferrara University.&lt;br />&amp;nbsp;&lt;br />The conference became necessary to standardize the investigation and reporting techniques all over the world. It will thus be possible to use common diagnostic criteria and standards in the scientific reports.&lt;/span>.. [&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;a target="_blank" id="link_16" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954">Read More&lt;/a>&lt;/span>&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">]&lt;/span>&lt;/span>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5923576</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5923576</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 15 Mar 2011 02:59:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>'British MS experts have to open their minds’</title>
      <description>
&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px; border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333">&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px; padding-bottom: 3px; padding-left: 3px" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />Last July, we reported on the battle by MS sufferer Mark Walker to have a controversial new treatment recognised in Britain. Here, he tells how his condition has improved since having it abroad.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">My wife&amp;rsquo;s reaction when she touched my feet on July 1 2010 was unexpected but very welcome.&lt;em style="min-width: 0px">&amp;nbsp;&amp;ldquo;They&amp;rsquo;re the same temperature and nearly the same colour,&amp;rdquo;&lt;/em>&amp;nbsp;Natasha announced excitedly. I should explain that my right foot has felt cold to the touch and been purplish in appearance for many years.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px; border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333">&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">The day before, I had undergone a controversial treatment at a clinic in Athens and this was tantalising evidence that something had changed in my body as a result.&lt;/span>... [&lt;a target="_blank" id="link_22" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954">Read More&lt;/a>]&lt;/p>&lt;/span>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5907252</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5907252</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 07 Mar 2011 04:39:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Concerns raised about controversial MS treatment</title>
      <description>
&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px; padding-bottom: 3px; padding-left: 3px" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />Serious concerns have been raised about a controversial vein-widening treatment being offered to people with multiple sclerosis.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px">An investigation by BBC Inside Out discovered that one doctor carrying out the procedure in Egypt is not licensed to practice medicine in that country.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px">The BBC understands that in the UK, an NHS GP has been reported to the doctors' watchdog, the General Medical Council, for organising the treatment through his private company at a cost of nearly &amp;pound;8,000.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">The operation has been dubbed the&amp;nbsp;&lt;em style="min-width: 0px">'Liberation Procedure'&lt;/em>&amp;nbsp;by those who believe it helps relieve the symptoms of MS, an incurable condition.&lt;/span>... [&lt;a target="_blank" id="link_15" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954">Read More&lt;/a>]&lt;/p>&lt;/span>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5907115</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5907115</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 07 Mar 2011 03:08:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Experts to assess CCSVI multiple sclerosis treatment</title>
      <description>
&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;div style="min-width: 0px; max-width: 99%">&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px; border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333">&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px; padding-bottom: 3px; padding-left: 3px" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />The Ontario government has assembled a group of experts to develop guidelines on followup care for multiple sclerosis patients who&amp;rsquo;ve travelled abroad for a controversial medical procedure not available in Canada.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">Hundreds of MS patients &amp;mdash; including some from Windsor and Essex County &amp;mdash; have gone to different parts of the world for the so-called&amp;nbsp;&lt;em style="min-width: 0px">&amp;ldquo;liberation&amp;rdquo;&lt;/em>procedure, which involves opening up blocked veins to improve blood flow.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px; border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333">&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">Many of them have complained about the lack of followup care and treatment once they return home. They also complain about dealing with physicians who are skeptical of the theory that improper drainage of blood from the brain may be causing MS and could be corrected with angioplasty &amp;mdash; a simple vein opening procedure&lt;/span>... [&lt;a target="_blank" id="link_15" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954">Read More&lt;/a>]&lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/span>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5897853</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5897853</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 02 Mar 2011 02:56:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>No consensus yet on CCSVI/MS theory</title>
      <description>
&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: 12px; border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px; padding-bottom: 3px; padding-left: 3px" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />Neurologists and endovascular interventionalists may be edging closer to agreement on how to evaluate the controversial vascular theory of multiple sclerosis, but important gaps still appear to divide the two groups.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px">That was the upshot of a panel discussion held here Monday at the International Symposium on Endovascular Therapy (ISET), featuring the National Multiple Sclerosis Society's (NMSS) chief medical officer -- a neurologist -- along with several representatives of the interventional community and a patient advocate for more aggressive study of the theory.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="min-width: 0px; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 0px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 0px">Like North and South Korea glaring at each other across the demilitarized zone, relations between neurologists and endovascular interventionalists have become tense over the theory that obstructions in the jugular vein disrupt blood outflow in the brain, leading to the nervous-system inflammation characteristic of MS.&lt;/span>&amp;nbsp;... [&lt;a target="_blank" id="link_15" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954">Read More&lt;/a>]&lt;/p>&lt;/span>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5804955</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5804955</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 18 Jan 2011 04:15:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Studies in 2011 could decide MS theory's validity</title>
      <description>
&lt;span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: 12px; border-collapse: collapse; color: #333333; -webkit-border-horizontal-spacing: 2px; -webkit-border-vertical-spacing: 2px">&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px">&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px; padding-bottom: 3px; padding-left: 3px" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />Almost exactly a year ago, a theory about a potential contributing cause of multiple sclerosis burst into the public consciousness. For many MS sufferers, it seemed an answer to their prayers; for the medical community it was variously viewed as a promising notion worthy of investigation to scientific nonsense or even an outright scam.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px">What can be said for certain, however, is that no other medical story has dominated the headlines in 2010 as the contention by an Italian vascular surgeon that narrowed neck veins could be an underlying cause of MS.&lt;/p>&lt;p style="min-width: 0px; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 20px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; font-family: Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px">Dr. Paolo Zamboni speculates that reduced blood flow leaves iron deposits in the brain, leading to the neural lesions typical of MS. He suggests that reversing the condition -- dubbed&amp;nbsp;&lt;a title="CCSVI" target="_blank" id="link_15" style="min-width: 0px; color: #000000; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; background-image: initial; background-attachment: initial; background-origin: initial; background-clip: initial; background-color: transparent; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; text-decoration: underline" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952">chronic cerebrospinal venous insuffi&lt;/a>ciency, or CCSVI -- by unblocking neck veins could help alleviate patients' symptoms or possibly halt progression of the debilitating disease.............. [&lt;a target="_blank" id="link_16" style="min-width: 0px; color: #006400" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954">Read More&lt;/a>]&lt;/p>&lt;/span>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5755690</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5755690</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 28 Dec 2010 04:23:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>New Brunswick will fund MS/CCSVI vein-opening treatment</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venoplasty" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_janet.jpg" />The New Brunswick government will set up a fund to help people to pay for a controversial multiple sclerosis treatment despite the death of an Ontario man who travelled outside of Canada for the procedure. &lt;p>&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p>&lt;p>Mahir Mostic, 35, of St. Catharines died on Oct. 19 after complications from the MS treatment that he received in Costa Rica.&lt;/p>&lt;p>The Progressive Conservative government announced in its throne speech that it will create a $500,000 fund to help MS patients seeking treatments... [&lt;a id="link_16" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5689947</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5689947</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 24 Nov 2010 10:33:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>MS patient  dies after CCSVI vein opening surgery complications</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />An Ontario man with multiple sclerosis died of complications after a controversial treatment in Costa Rica to open up his neck veins, CBC News has learned. &lt;p>&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p>&lt;p>Mahir Mostic, 35, of St. Catharines died on Oct. 19, one day after doctors in the Central American country tried to dissolve a blood-clot complication.&lt;/p>&lt;p>&lt;em>&amp;quot;We didn&amp;rsquo;t find exactly what happened with Mahir, but I mean it was very terrible story for us,&amp;quot;&lt;/em> vascular surgeon Dr. Marcial Fallas of Clinica Biblica in San Jose said Thursday.&lt;/p>&lt;p>&lt;em>&amp;quot;He was a person that was looking [for] some way to improve his life. He found that for a short period of time his life improved.&amp;quot;&lt;/em>... [&lt;a id="link_16" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5679852</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5679852</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 19 Nov 2010 04:30:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Alberta to help MS patients after CCSVI surgery abroad</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />Alberta's health minister says patients who need treatment following controversial out-of-country surgery for multiple sclerosis will get help. &lt;p>&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p>&lt;em>&lt;p>&lt;em>&amp;quot;This is one of the problems you have when you have something that is classified by the medical community as experimental in nature,&amp;quot;&lt;/em> Gene Zwozdesky told reporters Tuesday following a protest by MS sufferers outside the legislature.&lt;/p>&lt;p>&lt;em>&amp;quot;But the fact is that if somebody goes out (for the surgery) and has a complication that develops, then we in the province have no choice but to help them best we can to alleviate their difficulties.&amp;quot;&lt;/em>&lt;/p>&lt;p>Zwozdesky was referring to treatment for &lt;a id="link_16" title="CCSVI" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" target="_blank">&lt;strong>&lt;font color="#333333">chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency&lt;/font>&lt;/strong>&lt;/a>, or CCSVI.... [&lt;a id="link_17" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>&lt;/em>&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5675171</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5675171</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 17 Nov 2010 03:08:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>MS patients warn of complications after CCSVI treatment</title>
      <description>
&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />Three multiple sclerosis patients who went outside&amp;nbsp;of Canada&amp;nbsp;for the &amp;quot;liberation treatment&amp;quot; are warning other patients to make sure they have follow-up care in case they return with complications. &lt;p>&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p>&lt;p>One of them is longtime MS patient Jan Wexler, who went to a Bulgarian medical clinic in June. Doctors there performed an angioplasty on one of her jugular veins in her neck and the azygos vein in her chest, using a catheter-guided balloon to open up veins in the neck, in an effort to improve drainage from the brain. ... [&lt;a id="link_16" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>]&lt;/p>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5670771</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5670771</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 15 Nov 2010 04:38:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Multiple Sclerosis And CCSVI</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />The Coll&amp;egrave;ge des m&amp;eacute;decins du Qu&amp;eacute;bec and Its Experts Express Their Opinion on Dr. Zamboni&amp;rsquo;s Hypothesis. &lt;p>&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p>&lt;p>During a press conference held this morning, the Coll&amp;egrave;ge des m&amp;eacute;decins du Qu&amp;eacute;bec (CMQ) and its experts outlined their thinking with respect to the hypothesis issued by Dr. Paolo Zamboni in 2009 on the possible link between chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (&lt;a id="link_16" title="CCSVI" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" target="_blank">&lt;strong>&lt;font color="#333333">CCSVI&lt;/font>&lt;/strong>&lt;/a>) and multiple sclerosis. The Coll&amp;egrave;ge des m&amp;eacute;decins is of the opinion that, outside the framework of research work, current knowledge does not allow for physicians in Qu&amp;eacute;bec to practice this treatment, which, for the time being, is not recognized by the scientific medical community.... [&lt;a id="link_17" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5659256</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5659256</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 10 Nov 2010 05:29:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Calling the Multiple Sclerosis detectives</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" align="left" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />Scotland&amp;rsquo;s community of 10,000 multiple sclerosis sufferers will be focused intently on a hotel in Clydebank this weekend, where the potential of a controversial new treatment will be debated by clinical experts. &lt;p>&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p>&lt;p>Specialists from Poland, Canada, Bulgaria, Jordan and the UK will come together to discuss the theories of Dr Paulo Zamboni, an Italian vascular surgeon, who claims that the symptoms of MS can be treated by clearing the blocked veins which cause toxic build-ups in the brain. &lt;/p>&lt;p>Already, dozens of Scots with MS have travelled to eastern Europe to be treated for &lt;a id="link_15" title="CCSVI" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" target="_blank">&lt;strong>&lt;font color="#333333">Chronic Cerebro-Spinal Venous Insufficiency&lt;/font>&lt;/strong>&lt;/a> (CCSVI), which involves balloon angioplasties or stents being fitted into the jugular and azygos veins in the neck............[&lt;a id="link_16" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>]&lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5619471</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5619471</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 25 Oct 2010 08:21:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>'Liberation therapy' doctor urges caution for patients</title>
      <description>
&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="Prof. Zamboni" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/pepl_zamb.jpg" />The Italian doctor who created the controversial ‘liberation therapy' for multiple sclerosis -- trumpeted by some as a possible miracle treatment -- is now urging MS patients to wait for more clinical trials.&lt;/div>&lt;div>Dr. Paolo Zamboni's caution comes after many MS sufferers have already crossed borders and paid thousands of dollars for the procedure, which attempts to open up some of the brain's blood vessels.&lt;/div>&lt;div>Zamboni has hypothesized that improper blood drainage may be a factor in causing MS, but that position is controversial in the MS community.... [&lt;a id="link_46" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/div>&lt;br />&lt;br />
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5601120</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5601120</guid>
      <pubDate>Sun, 17 Oct 2010 04:22:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>CCSVI treatment for MS in the UK</title>
      <description>
&lt;p>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />The first CCSVI operations in the UK for multiple sclerosis patients - known as the liberation procedure - will take place in a private clinic in Edinburgh later this month. &lt;/p>&lt;p>The angioplasty procedure to treat narrowed veins in the neck is being arranged by the Essential Health Clinic in Glasgow, which has already screened 400 patients for the condition.&lt;/p>&lt;p>Until now, UK patients have had to travel to clinics abroad for treatment, including in Poland and Bulgaria.&lt;/p>&lt;p>We talk to Glasgow GP Dr Tom Gilhooly who has arranged the scanning and treatment and seek reaction from other experts in the field about this new treatment.... [&lt;a id="link_16" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5589865</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5589865</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 12 Oct 2010 11:37:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Can diet &amp;supplements reduce CCSVI severity?</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="Judy Grahma undergoing CCSVI scanning" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_jgccsvi.jpg" />I have just got back from Glasgow, Scotland, where I had my veins scanned at the Essential Health Clinic. &lt;/div>&lt;div>The result was that I have mildly narrowed veins on one side only. Of the 150 patients this clinic has seen so far, only 3 have had stenosis on one side only and I am one of them. &lt;/div>&lt;div>Dr Tom Gilhooly, who runs this private clinic, told me not to bother with angioplasty as it was unlikely to make much difference to me as the stenosis is so mild. He only recommends treatment for &lt;a id="link_16" title="CCSVI" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">CCSVI&lt;/font>&lt;/a> in severe cases where the stenosis is higher than 60%. ... [&lt;a id="link_17" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5576808</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5576808</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 07 Oct 2010 04:01:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Consensus document of the International Union of Phlebology</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" /> &lt;p>&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p>&lt;p>Diagnosis and treatment of venous malformations&lt;/p>&lt;p>B. B. LEE 1, J. BERGAN 2, P. GLOVICZKI 3, J. LAREDO 1, D. A. LOOSE 4, R. MATTASSI 5, K. PARSI 6, J. L. VILLAVICENCIO 7, P. ZAMBONI 8 *&lt;/p>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Overview&lt;/strong>&lt;/p>&lt;p>...CVMs [congenital vascular malformations] are &amp;ldquo;self-perpetuating&amp;rdquo;embryologic tissue remnants. Precise understandingof this critical fact is required for successfulCVM management and treatment.... [&lt;a id="link_16" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2955" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5574763</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5574763</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 08:30:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Surgery for multiple sclerosis available at private clinic in UK</title>
      <description>
&lt;p>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />A surgical treatment for multiple sclerosis is to be offered privately in the UK, despite warnings that it has not been proved safe or effective. &lt;/p>&lt;p>A clinic in Edinburgh will begin operations within weeks that involve a package of screening, consultation, day surgery under local anaesthetic and a six-month follow-up, costing &amp;pound;5,950 in all. As the medical establishment advised caution, the NHS made it clear it would not offer the treatment in its present state, however frustrated patients may be.&lt;/p>&lt;p>The Essential Health Clinic says the procedure, meant to improve the blood flow from the brain and central nervous system, will be carried out by a surgeon, Donald Reid, and &lt;em>&amp;quot;an internationally recognised&amp;quot;&lt;/em> expert from Bulgaria responsible for more than 300 procedures.... [&lt;a id="link_16" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5563995</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5563995</guid>
      <pubDate>Sat, 02 Oct 2010 03:55:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Multiple Sclerosis doctors attacked for their skepticism</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />Dr. Mark Freedman was unprepared for the onslaught of hate. &lt;p>&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p>&lt;p>There were the angry letters and phone calls. There were patients who told him he was fired, and others who accused him of conspiring with drug companies to keep them ill in the name of profit. There was the vitriol being poured into online forums, where he was called a pompous windbag with the bedside manner of Adolf Hitler, a pill pusher and, even, the &lt;em>&amp;ldquo;King of all Turds&amp;rdquo;.&lt;/em>... [&lt;a id="link_16" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5548591</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5548591</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 27 Sep 2010 05:06:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Health ministers agree to move 'quickly, ethically' on MS treatment</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />Canada's provincial health ministers pledged Monday to work together to explore ways to speed up the study of a controversial treatment for multiple sclerosis. &lt;/div>&lt;div>The agreement came as the ministers gathered in St. John's for two days of meetings on everything from sodium reduction to a national pharmacare program.&lt;/div>&lt;div>&lt;em>&amp;quot;I think it's safe to say we agonize over many issues that we want to address and certainly MS is one of those issues,&amp;quot;&lt;/em> Maureen MacDonald, Nova Scotia's health minister, said to reporters.... [&lt;a id="link_16" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>]&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5510069</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5510069</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 14 Sep 2010 03:27:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Mum revitalised by pioneering MS surgery</title>
      <description>
&lt;p>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="Silvie Wright &amp;amp; family" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/pepl_silbr.jpg" />A multiple sclerosis patient from Sheffield is enjoying a new lease of life after undergoing pioneering treatment abroad. &lt;/p>&lt;p>Sylvie Wright travelled to Poland for a procedure to clear a blocked vein in her neck. &lt;/p>&lt;p>She has also had a stent fitted to keep her left jugular vein open - it was originally 80 per cent blocked.&lt;/p>&lt;p>Although the &lt;a id="link_16" title="CCSVI" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">CCSVI&lt;/font>&lt;/a> treatment, which is designed to open up blood flow, has not yet been clinically approved, Sylvie said the anecdotal evidence that it could help MS patients was enough to make her determined to try it.... [&lt;a id="link_17" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5496977</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5496977</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 08 Sep 2010 06:31:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Why national MS societies are not acting in the best interests of persons with MS</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="Aston Embry" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/pepl_ae.jpg" />&lt;strong>Introduction&lt;/strong> &lt;/div>&lt;div>With the advent of CCSVI as a major factor in multiple sclerosis, it has become painfully apparent that national MS societies do not have the best interests of persons with MS as their highest priority.&lt;/div>&lt;p>This has taken many people by surprise because most people are under the assumption that the main concern of national MS societies is the well being of persons with MS. This assumption is not, and has never been, true. Perhaps one more benefit of the discovery of &lt;a id="link_16" title="CCSVI" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">CCSVI&lt;/font>&lt;/a> as an important causal factor of MS, has been to expose the myth the national MS societies have people with MS as their #1 priority.... [&lt;a id="link_17" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5483224</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis. ccsvi</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5483224</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 31 Aug 2010 06:55:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Denied help: MS patient blasts health bosses</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="Suzanne Harvey" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/pepl_ccsvi_sh.jpg" />A woman whose life is blighted by MS has slammed the NHS for dismissing a treatment that could help her and potentially save thousands on expensive drugs. &lt;/div>&lt;div>Suzanne Harvey believes new research holds the key to a condition strongly linked to MS, but funding chiefs say they need more evidence, forcing her to raise thousands of pounds for private treatment. &lt;/div>&lt;div>Suzanne said: &lt;em>&amp;ldquo;It&amp;rsquo;s insane, they&amp;rsquo;ll put me on expensive drugs that cost &amp;pound;3,000 to &amp;pound;6,000 a month but they won&amp;rsquo;t look at this.&lt;/em>... [&lt;a id="link_16" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5483090</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, ccsvi</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5483090</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 31 Aug 2010 04:40:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Nova Scotia premier supports clinical trial on controversial MS treatment</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />Nova Scotia's premier has added his voice to a growing chorus of support for a national clinical trial for a controversial treatment for multiple sclerosis. &lt;/div>&lt;div>Darrell Dexter's comments in favour of his province's participation in a trial came&amp;nbsp;in response to the Manitoba health minister, who wrote a letter to her provincial, federal and territorial counterparts seeking support for so-called liberation therapy.&lt;/div>&lt;div>The treatment is based on a &lt;a id="link_16" title="CCSVI" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">theory&lt;/font>&lt;/a> that narrowed neck veins cause blood-borne iron deposits to build up and damage brain cells, and that unblocking the veins will help people with MS.... [&lt;a id="link_17" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5456343</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, ccsvi</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5456343</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 20 Aug 2010 11:26:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>Quebec ready to collaborate on controversial MS procedure</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />Quebec's health minister says he's ready to join other provinces in a national clinical trial of a controversial treatment for multiple sclerosis. &lt;/div>&lt;div>Yves Bolduc says he's very open to Quebec collaborating on clinical studies, adding he will ask his own experts to provide him with an opinion.&lt;/div>&lt;div>Manitoba Health Minister Theresa Oswald has written a letter to provincial, federal and territorial health ministers seeking their support.&lt;/div>&lt;div>She has called for a pan-Canadian randomized clinical trial of the efficacy of the so-called liberation procedure.... [&lt;a id="link_29" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>]&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5449953</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, ccsvi</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5449953</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 18 Aug 2010 03:36:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Manitoba pushing for national trial for MS treatment</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />Manitoba Health Minister Theresa Oswald on Monday sought support from other Canadian leaders to launch a nationwide clinical trial to test the efficacy of a controversial multiple sclerosis treatment which is currently not available in this country. &lt;/div>&lt;div>Oswald sent a letter to all federal and territorial health ministers requesting their support for a national randomized clinical trial of the so-called &lt;em>&amp;quot;liberation treatment.&amp;quot;&lt;/em>&lt;/div>&lt;div>Oswald's letter said patients with multiple sclerosis have been waiting too long for a treatment breakthrough and that it's &lt;em>&amp;quot;time that we work together to try and find scientifically sound answers as to whether this procedure is effective.&amp;quot;&lt;/em>... [&lt;a id="link_16" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5446320</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5446320</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 17 Aug 2010 08:31:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Social media drives Multiple Sclerosis controversy</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />Feeds acrimony over liberation treatment, but also forces researchers to respond. &lt;/div>&lt;div>A controversial treatment that promises relief from the daily torment of multiple sclerosis has created a deep rift between its proponents and those who say it doesn't work. &lt;/div>&lt;div>Helping drive the controversy is social media, where it can be difficult for people to determine the truth. ... [&lt;a id="link_16" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5432452</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5432452</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 11 Aug 2010 04:35:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Scarborough wife's plea for life-saving procedure</title>
      <description>
&lt;p>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="Angela Baldock" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/pepl_abald.jpg" />A Scarborough couple are fighting for a life- changing treatment for multiple sclerosis to be made available on the NHS. &lt;/p>&lt;p>The procedure is still being researched and could lead to a breakthrough in the treatment of thousands of people in the UK and across the world.&lt;/p>&lt;p>Angela Baldock, of Westfield Avenue, off Cross Lane, was one of the first people in the country to have a special type of scan designed to show up &lt;a id="link_16" title="CCSVI" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">blocked veins&lt;/font>&lt;/a> in those with multiple sclerosis (MS).... [&lt;a id="link_17" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5428323</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5428323</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 09 Aug 2010 08:46:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Canadian premiers to debate CCSVI MS treatment</title>
      <description>
&lt;div class="scrolling">&lt;div>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="Canadian Flag" vspace="3" align="left" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_canflag.jpg" />Leaders differ on approach to 'liberation therapy' &lt;p>&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p>&lt;p>An experimental treatment for multiple sclerosis will be discussed at a meeting of Canada's premiers this week, P.E.I. Premier Robert Ghiz said.&lt;/p>&lt;p>Ghiz said he was open to considering adding so-called liberation therapy to the list of insured provincial health services.&lt;/p>&lt;p>Nova Scotia Premier Darrell Dexter rejected calls for changes in the near future.... [&lt;a id="link_16" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>&lt;/div>&lt;/div>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5412843</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5412843</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 03 Aug 2010 03:02:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Alberta ponders paying for new MS treatment</title>
      <description>
&lt;p>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />The Alberta government is looking at whether to follow Saskatchewan's lead and pay for studies of a controversial experimental treatment for people with multiple sclerosis.&lt;/p>&lt;p>Alberta Health Minister Gene Zwozdesky is pulling together a working group of about a dozen people to examine the issue, he said Thursday.&lt;/p>&lt;p>The group will look into whether the province should pay for clinical studies of the so-called liberation therapy. The treatment is based on research by Italian physician Paolo Zamboni that suggests MS, a baffling nerve-wrecking disorder, stems from iron buildup due to &lt;a id="link_16" title="CCSVI" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">constricted blood flow&lt;/font>&lt;/a> out of the brain.... [&lt;a id="link_17" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5403545</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5403545</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 30 Jul 2010 06:55:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>CCSVI – different approaches, different techniques</title>
      <description>
&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />A report on the CCSVI Symposium in New York 27/07/10 &lt;p>&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p>&lt;p>Yesterday, a symposium about the vascular theory of MS (aka CCSVI) was held in Brooklyn.&amp;nbsp; This is a pretty exciting development because it marks one of the first times the medical community&amp;ndash;specifically interventional radiologists(IRs)&amp;ndash;have come together to discuss CCSVI and its treatment.&lt;/p>&lt;p>In a nutshell, here&amp;rsquo;s what was concluded:&amp;nbsp; we are at the very early stages of our understanding of &lt;a id="link_16" title="CCSVI" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">CCSVI&lt;/font>&lt;/a>&amp;ndash;what it means, how to diagnose it and how to treat it.... [&lt;a id="link_17" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5398191</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5398191</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 28 Jul 2010 03:29:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Saskatchewan premier calls for clinical trials of MS treatment</title>
      <description>
&lt;p>&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />Saskatchewan is ready to help pay for clinical trials of the so-called liberation treatment for multiple sclerosis sufferers, despite a lack of scientific evidence that it might work, says Premier Brad Wall.&lt;/p>&lt;p>&amp;ldquo;There isn't unanimity on the issue, I understand that,&amp;rdquo; Mr. Wall said Tuesday. &amp;ldquo;But we also know anecdotally and otherwise, frankly, of reasons for some optimism and some hope about the liberation treatment, so maybe it is time for clinical trials and ... the province of Saskatchewan is willing to play a funding role.&amp;rdquo;... [&lt;a id="link_16" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5397362</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5397362</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 27 Jul 2010 18:02:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Doctor calls costly MS therapy ‘robbery’</title>
      <description>
&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_3.jpg" />Clinics charging multiple sclerosis patients thousands of dollars for an unproven treatment are basically stealing, an internationally recognized stroke researcher and Robarts Research Institute scientist said Monday. &lt;p>&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p>&lt;p>&amp;ldquo;That is robbery. . . . It is quackery because nobody knows yet if it works,&amp;rdquo; said Dr. David Spence, director of the Stroke Prevention and Atherosclerosis Research Centre in London, Ontario.&lt;/p>&lt;p>News reports that Italian doctor Paolo Zamboni last year discovered a treatment for MS that involved &lt;a id="link_16" title="CCSVI" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">unblocking veins&lt;/font>&lt;/a> have sparked intense interest from people with the disease.... [&lt;a id="link_17" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5395854</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5395854</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 27 Jul 2010 03:47:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>CCSVI Alliance launches website</title>
      <description>
&lt;img border="0" hspace="3" alt="CCSVI Venogram" vspace="3" src="http://www.msrc.co.uk/images/gallery/img_ccsvi_2.jpg" />Website Provides Information for Multiple Sclerosis Patients, &lt;br />Caregivers, and Medical Professionals &lt;p> &lt;/p>&lt;p>On February 16, 2010, CCSVI Alliance formed as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit and on July 26, 2010 launched their website for multiple sclerosis (MS) patients, caregivers, and medical professionals to learn about a new condition, Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency (CCSVI), that may be significantly related to MS. &lt;/p>&lt;p>The &lt;a id="link_16" title="CCSVI Alliance Website" href="http://www.ccsvi.org/" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">site&lt;/font>&lt;/a> will be a resource for patients, caregivers, and medical professionals to explore many aspects of &lt;a id="link_17" title="CCSVI" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2952" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">CCSVI&lt;/font>&lt;/a>. It also will provide patients and caregivers information to advocate for diagnosis and treatment of the condition, and to donate to the cause of advancing CCSVI research.... [&lt;a id="link_18" href="http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954" target="_blank">&lt;font color="#0000cc">Read More&lt;/font>&lt;/a>] &lt;/p>
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5392591</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5392591</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 26 Jul 2010 04:19:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Symposium on proposed endovascular treatment of chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency</title>
      <description>
The Departments of Radiology and Neurology at SUNY Downstate Medical Center will hold a symposium on CCSVI (chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency) on Monday, July 26 from 9:00 am to 4:00 pm, in the Alumni Auditorium, 395 Lenox Road, Brooklyn, New York 11203.

CCSVI is a syndrome in which blood flow from the brain is compromised. While CCSVI is a disease state that by itself often requires intervention, it has been proposed that the syndrome promotes the development of multiple sclerosis (MS). Speakers from the United States, Bulgaria, Italy, and Kuwait will present a thorough review of CCSVI, including the proposed relationship between CCSVI and MS.

Salvatore J. A. Sclafani, MD, professor and chair of radiology at SUNY Downstate, has organized the symposium and will provide an overview of CCSVI for interventional radiologists.

While this free symposium is directed at physicians and other healthcare providers, members of the general public are invited and there will be a presentation on patient activism. Those wishing to attend should respond in advance to CCSVISymposium@gmail.com.

Provided by SUNY Downstate Medical Center (21/07/10)
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5374109</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5374109</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 21 Jul 2010 11:44:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>'Amazing’ results of radical new surgery for MS patient</title>
      <description>
A Knutsford man who suffers from multiple sclerosis travelled more than 900 miles for a pioneering treatment which has divided the medical community. 

Colm McLaughlin flew to a clinic in Krakow, Poland, for a £6,000 procedure not available in the UK but is said to be able to reverse the symptoms of the paralysing disease. 

Now two weeks on, the 47-year-old, who has primary progressive MS, says he has been amazed by the results. 

“I’m over the moon. It’s really given me more than I hoped for,” he said. 

“I noticed my eyesight had improved. Everything came into focus, the colours were a lot deeper. It was amazing. 

“My heat tolerance has improved incredibly. I’ve got scars all over my legs from falling in the shower – I was always in danger of fainting. 

“The odd hot day we have I’m not able to go out. 

“But the last day in Poland my wife went out to the shops and when she came back she said she couldn’t believe how hot it was in the room. I hadn’t even thought about it.” 

Before the operation, Colm told the Guardian that fatigue was a ‘constant battle’, but he now says it is not an issue anymore. 

The procedure, known as chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI) treatment, was created by Dr Paolo Zamboni and involves opening a patient’s blocked veins to prevent iron deposits in the brain. 

Colm, of Mereside Road, added: “I saw people who had just been ‘liberated’ and people who were about to have it done who looked nervous. 

“It was relieving seeing people coming back with huge smiles on their faces saying how easy it was.” 

Usually, the operation takes hours but for Colm it was just 25 minutes. 

The father-of-two said: “I had to sign a raft of forms signing my life away basically, and as the day goes on you do get a little nervous, but I didn’t have any second thoughts. 

“Some of my symptoms have been greatly alleviated. I’ve had this condition for 15 years now and it’s not going to go away over night. 

“There’s no guarantees, but I really do believe this will stop the progression of the disease. 

“The best case scenario would mean I can start tap dancing. Some people have remarkable recoveries.” 

Colm, who sent a 10,661-name petition to Parliament, is now fighting to have the treatment recognised in the UK. 

He added: “It has to happen and it will happen. It’s just a matter of time. 

“Multiple sclerosis robs people of a lot of things but one of the first things is the ability to earn money. A lot of people don’t have the money to throw at this.” 

Source: Knutsford Guardian © Copyright 2001-2010 Newsquest Media Group (19/07/10)
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5365871</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5365871</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 19 Jul 2010 10:41:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Multiple Sclerosis patient boosted by 'second chance'</title>
      <description>
Barb Farrell hesitates about being videotaped. With the exception of a touch of mascara, she's without make-up and that's just not to her liking. 

But she agrees and she begins to answer the question: What's changed? 

"Everything," she says immediately, sitting in a wheelchair for the first time in two months. 

"I was completely paralyzed and I thought that my life was over, but now I have a new start. I have a second chance and that's pretty amazing." 

The video rolls for more than four minutes as the 46-year-old Barrie mother of a 10-year-old boy talks about her new lease on life. There's still a significant drawl to her speech, but it appears effortless, compared to two weeks earlier, when she whispered a few words at a time. 

Barb has multiple sclerosis and wanted a balloon angioplasty procedure that is believed to help many with her condition. She had a collapsed vein, something which appears to be common in those with MS. 

But the vascular treatment of MS, proposed by Italian Dr. Paolo Zamboni, is considered an unproved theory. And although it is used for other ailments, including heart conditions, it's not being made available to patients with MS. 

Barrie vascular surgeon, Dr. Sandy McDonald, thinks that Zamboni is on to something. He's been testing the veins of hundreds of MS patients at his clinic. And six have undergone the angioplasty procedure at Barrie's Royal Victoria Hospital. 

Barb was to be next, but access to the procedure here was halted just two days before she was to receive it. 

It's not available anywhere in Canada and only "through the back door" of the odd facility in the United States, along with a few other countries. 

Barb's condition deteriorated and she had been in a Barrie hospital bed, almost motionless, for a month. She and her husband, Patrick, broached the possibility of accessing hospice care, but ultimately decided they weren't ready.

Last month, they formally requested to have the procedure done on compassionate grounds at RVH and were denied. 

Three days later, Patrick received a call. A benefactor had come forward to pay, not just for the treatment, but also for the special transport required to get her to the U.S. clinic to have it done. 

Five days later, Barb was on an aircraft equipped with two pilots and two paramedics on her way to the U.S. There, major blockages were discovered in both her jugular veins. She was also discovered to have May-Thurner syndrome, which was also corrected. That's a condition that causes clots. 

Balloon angioplasty worked in one of the veins, but the other didn't hold up. So, two stents were installed to keep it open. 

Barb was back in her Barrie hospital bed that night. 

That weekend she entered into a deep depression. 

"Nothing had happened to me yet," she explained. 

There was some minor movement in her feet and her hand immediately after the procedure, but Barb said she felt the same. She thought that was it for her last chance. 

Then, on July 6, she woke up. And things had changed. 

She dropped her hourly morphine drip. Now she's given Tylenol 3 when she has pain. She follows movement with her entire head, not just her eyes. Her smile comes easily and it broadens when her nurses joke around while putting her back in her bed. 

She's been at Orillia Soldiers' Memorial Hospital's complex care unit for close to 10 days and the goal is to get her onto a lighter unit. Ultimately, she'd like to be back home. 

"She's going to be in a chair every day now," says her husband. "She's so much more vibrant now. 

"She seems genuinely happy. She seems genuinely motivated." 

Because all this is new, it's anyone's guess how far Barb can push the envelope. 

But, she says she has more than a fighting chance. 

"I feel normal again." 

Source: The Barrie Examiner © 2010 , Sun Media (16/07/10)

MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5356412</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5356412</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 16 Jul 2010 05:03:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Access to treatment for multiple sclerosis must be based on science, not hope</title>
      <description>
The controversial venous angioplasty procedure proposed as a novel treatment for multiple sclerosis by Zamboni and colleagues1 has generated substantial public debate. for an untested procedure first reported mere months ago. 

Patients and their advocates have held well-publicized demonstrations demanding access to the procedure. 

In Ottawa, some MPs are lobbying the federal government for millions of dollars in new funding for multiple sclerosis research and this new treatment. 

Desperation has even led some patients to file a lawsuit against the BC government claiming that denying access is discriminatory.2 But do we want hopeful media reports, special interest groups and political opportunism to decide which treatments we should study, provide and insure? 

The idea that multiple sclerosis is caused by chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency and can be treated successfully by percutaneous angioplasty of venous strictures is both novel and unexpected. 

To date, the published evidence is limited to a case series of 65 patients.1 The results reported by Zamboni and colleagues — greater freedom from relapse (50% v. 27%) and fewer lesions seen by magnetic resonance imaging (12% v. 50%) — seem promising but remain untested in controlled randomized trials. In addition, we are lacking a great deal of the relevant basic science, knowledge about the normal anatomy of the venous system, and links between venous anomalies and symptoms of multiple sclerosis. 

Multiple sclerosis is difficult to study because most clinically relevant outcomes are subjective and because the natural history follows a waxing and waning course. These features make it challenging to ascribe benefit to treatment in the absence of a control group. No wonder that skepticism abounds in the medical and scientific communities about this treatment. 

Many patients with multiple sclerosis understand these arguments; nevertheless, they insist that venous angioplasty be offered to them. They can hardly be blamed for this. Understandably, they fear ongoing loss of function and premature death. But good health policy decisions should not based on hope and desperation. 

On the other hand, scientists and skeptics should avoid dismissing novel ideas prematurely. It is precisely the unexpected scientific discovery that often leads to major advances in care. The Nobel Prize-winning discovery that infection with Helicobacter pylori is a leading cause of peptic ulcer disease was met with widespread skepticism that delayed its translation to further research and practice. Unfortunately, for each major discovery, there are hundreds if not thousands of failures, where seemingly promising therapies prove useless and even harmful. 

This controversy over access to novel treatment illustrates how quickly news of promising scientific discoveries can create unrealistic expectations. In contrast to novel medications, all other health interventions have few regulations to help manage expectations with proper evaluation. As a consequence, unproven therapies can be rapidly introduced into practice, overwhelming our ability to evaluate their safety and effectiveness. Regulating the complex process of developing and testing procedures won’t work. Rather, we need to build a new and ongoing capacity to initiate clinical studies in response to promising therapeutic discoveries. 

A major part of this approach involves limiting access to experimental procedures to well-designed clinical studies or research programs. Doing so will ensure access to innovative care for all patients while ensuring that the procedures are introduced safely into practice with appropriate evaluation. Hospital staff and clinicians have a duty to keep unproven therapies from premature use. Similarly, provincial governments should prevent public funds from being diverted to the use of drugs or procedures that lack evidence of safety and effectiveness. 

Patients should insist on evidence. They should also insist on having their views represented when decisions about where to spend research dollars are made. With other diseases, such as breast cancer, patient advocates have successfully provided an important perspective in the decision-making process. It is only with patients that can research priorities can be set, implemented and tested so that we find better treatments. 

The federal government should refrain from allotting funds for specific projects because (a) provinces may be incapable of dealing with the repercussions in clinical care; (b) we may not have organized clinical research networks able to design and execute a study; and (c) the project may not be feasible or the best one to take forward, once examined by experts and peer reviewers, given other promising alternatives. 

Our tax dollars and charitable contributions should target research programs, networks and infrastructures that will leave long-lasting legacies, including a means to safely access innovations. Public funds should also address major questions that will improve care and health while promoting excellence. Failure to do so will leave our academic institutions and research community repeatedly at the mercy of advocacy campaigns and decisions based on political expediency and opportunism. 

Matthew B. Stanbrook MD PhD Deputy Editor, Scientific Paul C. Hébert MD MHSc Editor-in-Chief 

CMAJ 

With the editorial advisory team: Ken Flegel MDCM MSc and Noni MacDonald MD MSc 

Competing interests: See www.cmaj.ca/misc/edboard.shtml CMAJ 2010. DOI:10.1503/cmaj.100835 

REFERENCES 

1. Zamboni P, Galeotti R, Menegatti E, et al. A prospective open-label study of endovascular treatment of chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency. J Vasc Surg 2009;50:1348-58. 

2. Feds urged to fund MS trial. CBC News. 2010 June 1. Available: www.cbc.ca/health/story/2010/06/01/ms-ccsvi-trial-funding.html  (accessed 2010 June 14). DOI:10.1503/cmaj.100835 

All editorial matter in CMAJ represents the opinions of the authors and not necessarily those of the Can adian Medical Association. 

Source: CMAJ © 2010 Canadian Medical Association or its licensors 1 Early release, published at www.cmaj.ca on June 28, 2010. Subject to revision. (13/07/10)
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5344945</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5344945</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 13 Jul 2010 02:52:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Can a controversial new treatment for multiple sclerosis offer relief?</title>
      <description>
 
A new treatment is giving hope to MS sufferers such as Mark Walker. So why can’t he get it in Britain?

Mark Walker is what the NHS calls an “expert patient”. He’s someone who knows all there is to know about the disease that has shadowed his existence on and off, for nearly 20 years, forcing him to give up the high-flying job he adored, and curtailing an active life. Walker asks difficult questions of doctors, expects candid answers, and pursues new research doggedly. 

Before our meeting at the pretty bungalow on the outskirts of Oxford where he lives with his wife, Natasha, he provided me with a detailed record of the onset of his multiple sclerosis (MS): from the first signs of a problem (double vision in December 1991) through putative diagnoses (myasthenia gravis and a brain tumour) and accumulating symptoms (numbness, balance and bladder problems) to definitive diagnosis in 2000. Each treatment tried and its result are documented meticulously, as you would expect from someone who qualified originally as a pharmacist. 

Today, at 51, the former IBM management consultant has severely impaired mobility on his right side. He relies on a walking aid known as a Musmate and trekking poles. He knows what, in all probability, lies ahead – a life of increasing debilitation and limitation. It is this glimpse of the future that lies behind his decision – a “rational and considered one” – to go to Athens for tests and, possibly, treatment based on a controversial new theory about the cause of MS. 

Walker is frustrated, however, that he must seek help abroad and, given that he lives close to two world-renowned MS centres at the John Radcliffe and the Nuffield hospitals, angry at the lack of support from MS experts here in exploring new approaches. 

“Yes, I am desperate. Two years ago I was living in a three-storey townhouse in the centre of Oxford. Now, I’m living in a bungalow because I can’t do stairs very well. Ten years ago, I was managing a team of 20 people in Rome. Now, my life is all about managing my disease. 

''In the 21st century, patients like me, who are well informed about their progressively disabling disease, should be allowed to choose private diagnostic tests and treatment for themselves. And health-care professionals should surely be helping patients’ freedom of choice.” 

MS is a degenerative disease of the nervous system affecting 100,000 people, most of them young adults, in the UK. It is believed to be autoimmune in origin, triggered by genetic or environmental factors (or a combination of them) that cause immune cells to cross the blood/brain barrier (which keeps blood and cerebrospinal fluid separate) to attack the fatty, white myelin sheath that surrounds and insulates nerves in the brain and spinal chord. 

Symptoms vary widely, as does the severity of the disease. In some, it progresses relentlessly. Other patients suffer the relapsing and remitting form – periods of relative good health interspersed with flare-ups and neurological deterioration. There are several therapeutic regimens of varying efficacy, including antibiotics, steroids, and immuno-modulator drugs. 

Now, an Italian surgeon, Professor Paolo Zamboni, director of the Centre for Vascular Diseases at the University of Ferrara, is urging a radical rethink on MS. What began as a labour of love for Zamboni could, he claims, “revolutionise” management of the disease. 

In 2005, Zamboni’s wife Elena was diagnosed with MS and he embarked on a mission to find out everything about it, from poring over medical literature dating back 100 years or more, to using state-of-the-art body-imaging techniques. 

His conclusion was that this wasn’t only an autoimmune disease, but also a vascular one, caused by restricted, blocked, malformed or twisted veins in the trunk and neck. A small study showed that 90 per cent of his patients had venous obstruction. He named the condition chronic chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI) and went further, postulating that an excess of iron, which causes inflammation and cell death, was responsible for tipping the immune system out of balance, resulting in MS symptoms. 

For a vascular surgeon, the only response to restricted veins is to unblock – or de-stenose – them so that healthy blood-flow can resume. (The procedure, known as venoplasty, is similar to angioplasty, in which a balloon is inserted into an artery supplying the heart and inflated to remove a blockage.) The effect in this case, it is claimed, was a dramatic alleviation of symptoms in Zamboni’s wife and in subsequent patients he treated. 

News of Zamboni’s approach spread among the MS community, initially by word of mouth, and has accelerated rapidly, via chatrooms and websites, as access to the internet has grown. Vascular surgeons in private clinics in Poland, Bulgaria, Greece, Germany, Belgium, the US and India are now offering diagnostic tests to confirm the presence of stenosed veins, and surgery to unblock them, with waiting lists growing by the day. Anecdotal reports suggest that treatment stops relapses in some patients, and eases symptoms and halts the disease’s progression in others. 

It was in October last year that Walker began his own research, drawing on the limited scientific literature and anecdotal reports on the web. He was sceptical, at first, and questioned Zamboni’s iron hypothesis, but he was open to the possibility that restricted veins may be a factor in MS. 

A diagnosis, then, was his first objective and he assumed that it would not be a problem arranging the test known as colour doppler sonography. He found an interventional radiologist (who worked at the Radcliffe and in private practice) familiar with Zamboni’s work and willing to help. He was also a private patient, happy to pay for the test and surgery if restricted veins were confirmed. 

However, the test was prevented by neurologists at the Radcliffe on the grounds that it was not ethical or prudent because of doubts about Zamboni’s work, which has yet to be formally approved by clinical trials. 

Surgery for CCSVI has had some negative publicity, Walker acknowledges. The MS “establishment” (that is, neurologists) has been riled in particular by Zamboni’s description of his procedure as the “liberation treatment”. In addition, a woman in California died from a stroke after stents (small metal tubes used to keep veins open by a minority of vascular surgeons, but not Zamboni) were inserted in her veins to maintain blood flow following venoplasty. Walker points out there was a familial history of stroke and she was also on the anti-coagulant warfarin, which is a further risk factor. Another patient had open heart surgery to remove a stent that had migrated to the heart. 

“Out of 1,000 or so procedures so far, it is just two cases,” he says. Both are a cause for concern, yes, but not for the hysteria neurologists have generated. Walker believes a “turf war” is under way between neurologists here who believe they “own” MS, and radiologists and vascular surgeons who may have something to contribute to its management. Patients are being caught in the crossfire. 

“Neurologists have been treating MS with powerful drugs for decades. Despite this, many patients suffer continued progression of their disease. Others give up the drugs because of side-effects. Treating any CCSVI symptoms is worth a try for many people.’’ 

And Zamboni is not setting himself up in opposition to conventional treatment, Walker adds. “He advises patients to continue with their drug therapy.” 

Having satisfied himself that the risks were minimal, and opted for balloon venoplasty rather than the stent procedure, Walker sought the advice of other MS sufferers in finding a clinic and a surgeon in whom he had confidence. He is lucky, he says, because he can afford the £5,000 fee (plus travel costs). Other British patients cannot and he is angry that they must wait, while their health worsens, for research to be done before neurologists even consider it as an option. The MS Society here has yet to allocate funds to studies, in contrast to MS societies in America and Canada, which last month committed $2.4&amp;#8201;million (£1.6&amp;#8201;million) to exploring the link between restricted veins and MS. A study at Buffalo University, New York, involving 1,700 patients (and controls), is also in progress. 

“Medicine is practised in silos here,” says Walker. “I want doctors to start talking about this. If I could find something to stop my progression, I’d be happy. If I could get any relief from symptoms, I’d be happy. The cost is irrelevant. I know I’m taking a risk, but it’s my money – £7,000 won’t buy you a lot of adaptation [to accommodate disability] in a house, so why wouldn’t I want to try this?” 

Two weeks ago, Mark Walker saw consultant vascular surgeon Constantinos Kartkaletsis at a hospital in Athens. He diagnosed four “restricted” veins which were then cleared using balloon venoplasty. The Telegraph will update readers on his progress in six months. 

Source: Telegraph.co.uk © Copyright of Telegraph Media Group Limited 2010 (12/07/10)
 
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5342084</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5342084</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 12 Jul 2010 03:55:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>MS Society of Qatar urges integrated efforts on care of MS patients</title>
      <description>
The Multiple Sclerosis Society of Qatar (MSSQ) has called for an integrated approach towards the care of those suffering from the nerve problems.

MSSQ president Abdulaziz Ibrahim al-Jaber, speaking to the media on the sidelines of a one-day symposium hosted by the society and the Supreme Council of Health (SCH) to discuss various and latest means of treating the disease, said that there is a need to co-ordinate care of MS among different cadres of medical professionals.

Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a progressive disease leading to nerve damage (neurodegeneration), which gets worse over time.

The nerve damage is caused by inflammation, which occurs when the body’s own immune cells attack the nervous system. Repeated episodes of inflammation can occur along any area of the brain and spinal cord.

Researchers are not sure what triggers the inflammation but the most common theories point to a virus or a genetic defect, or a combination of both.

People with a family history of MS and those who live in a geographical area with a higher incidence rate for MS tend to have a higher risk of the disease.

“There is a growing confusion between a new technique for treating MS presenting with chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI) and the regular medications as there is no proof that this new procedure for CCSVI can totally cure MS or not. I want the patients to get the differences between the two solutions,” al-Jaber said.

CCSVI is a syndrome associated with a blockage restricting the blood flow from the central nervous system (CNS), through the cervical and thorac veins. 

It is when the blood supply from the brain and spine has trouble returning to the heart. 

“It is suggested that this blockage is due to stenosis of the jugular and azygos veins. An Italian surgeon, Dr Paolo Zamboni, identified and labelled the CCSVI syndrome and has linked it to MS,” al-Jaber said. 

“We want the doctors carrying out this new technique to come out to the public forum and explain its effectiveness, and work as a team with those doctors who are experts in the old method. 

“We want them all to come together and work as a team in order to find a lasting solution to MS,” he said.

Al-Jaber said that other treatments for MS are available free of cost in the country.

He said CCSVI surgeries have been performed on two patients, but only one of the cases was deemed successful.

The CCSVI procedure is being done in other countries at a cost ranging between $7,000-$10,000.

“Due to this result, we decided to stop the procedure and wait for results of further research to be approved by our local doctors,” he said.

Al-Jaber said that officially there are around 200 people suffering from MS in the country, but there are up to 450 unreported cases.
The QSSM president commended the Minister of Public Health HE Abdullah bin Khalid al-Qahtani for his support towards care for people affected by MS. 

The QSSM now operates under the umbrella of the SCH, he said.
Al-Jaber revealed that the society is redesigning its website and is planning a new one for children with MS or those exposed to the disease.

At the symposium, speakers discussed new treatments of MS, highlighting their differences as well as pros and cons.

The speakers said that although efforts are being made in many areas, including that of stem cell research, there remains no cure for MS.

Source: Gulf Times © 2009-2010 Gulf-Times.com (02/07/10)
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5309437</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5309437</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 02 Jul 2010 07:00:00 EDT</pubDate>
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      <title>From M.S. patients, outcry for unproven treatment</title>
      <description>
For her first appointment with Dr. Daniel Simon, Neelima Raval showed up with a rolling file cabinet full of documents. She had downloaded every word written by or about Dr. Paolo Zamboni, a vascular surgeon from Italy with a most unorthodox theory about multiple sclerosis. 
Dr. Zamboni believes that the disease, which damages the nervous system, may be caused by narrowed veins in the neck and chest that block the drainage of blood from the brain. He has reported in medical journals that opening those veins with the kind of balloons used to treat blocked heart arteries, an experimental treatment he calls the “liberation procedure”, can relieve symptoms.

The idea is a radical departure from the conventional belief that multiple sclerosis is caused by a malfunctioning immune system and inflammation.

The new theory has taken off on the Internet, inspiring hope among patients, interest from some researchers and scorn from others. Supporters consider it an outside-the-box idea that could transform the treatment of the disease. Critics call it an outlandish notion that will probably waste time and money, and may harm patients.

These critics warn that multiple sclerosis has unpredictable attacks and remissions that make it devilishly hard to know whether treatments are working — leaving patients vulnerable to purported “cures” that do not work.

The controversy has exposed the deep frustration of many people with this incurable, disabling disease, who feel that research has let them down. It is a case study in the power of the Internet to inform and unite angry patients—which may be a double-edged sword. Pressure from activists helped persuade the Multiple Sclerosis Society to pay for studies of Dr. Zamboni’s theory, but the Internet buzz has also created an avid market for a therapy that is still unproved.

“It’s eye-opening the way this group of patients has grabbed hold of the social-networking technology,” said Dr. Simon, an interventional radiologist at JFK Medical Center in Edison, N.J. “They’ve taken this to a level I’ve not seen in other patients. Patients used to read an article or two. Now, they’re actually seeing procedures on YouTube. Is this the future of medicine?”

Scientifically, the jury is out: Dr. Zamboni’s hypothesis is being studied. It is not known whether narrowed veins are more common in people with multiple sclerosis than in others, and even if they are, whether the narrowings are a cause, or an effect, of the disease. There is no solid proof that opening the veins can help. There have been no studies with control groups — the only way to find out whether a treatment works.

“In my view the evidence is quite scanty and the biological plausibility is low,” said Dr. Stephen L. Hauser, the chairman of neurology at the University of California, San Francisco. Many neurologists agree. Dr. Hauser said there was much stronger evidence that the disease arose from genetic variations affecting the immune system.

But Dr. Adnan H. Siddiqui, part of a team at the University at Buffalo that has been studying Dr. Zamboni’s theory, said that it made sense and that the data from Italy was encouraging. Still, he emphasized that more study was needed, and that patients should not be treated until the research was done.

In Demand

Despite the lack of proof, many patients are captivated by the idea that multiple sclerosis might turn out to be a vascular disease. They want to believe it can fixed with a relatively simply procedure, and they want to be tested and treated. Now.

These patients say they cannot afford to wait for research results because they will wind up in wheelchairs before the studies are done. Their only option so far has been a lifelong course of drugs with limited benefits and harsh side effects. To some, balloon treatment seems no riskier than those drugs.

Dr. Zamboni himself has said that the procedure should not yet be done outside of studies. He said in an interview that he was conducting research only and had turned down thousands of requests from people wanting to go to his clinic at the University of Ferrara.

But other doctors have set up shop. A clinic in India with a toll-free American phone number has an online advertisement for a “liberation package.” Patients are posting testimonial videos and trading tips on clinics in Bulgaria, Poland and Jordan.

In the United States, where many hospitals forbid experimental treatments outside of studies, a “back alley” network of doctors willing to perform the procedure has begun to develop, said Dr. Salvatore J. A. Sclafani, chairman of radiology at Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn. He said he knew of about a dozen. The doctors try to stay under the radar, and patients quietly pass their names to one another.

“It reminds me of abortion in 1968,” Dr. Sclafani said.

He said he had treated about 20 patients at Kings County Hospital before the hospital ordered him to stop in early April. He said he had a waiting list of 300 to 400 patients.. 

Meanwhile, researchers are trying to answer basic questions. On June 29, the team in Buffalo is to begin the first treatment study to include a control group. The controls will be given a sham procedure, and compared with others who get the real thing. Initially, 30 patients — only those with an early form of the disease — will be enrolled. Thousands of people applied. 

The Multiple Sclerosis Societies in the United States and Canada will spend $2.4 million over the next two years on studies at seven centers. Researchers will study veins in patients with different stages of multiple sclerosis, in healthy people and in those with other neurological diseases. The studies will not test the balloon treatment, but are meant only to find out if the narrowings really exist, if they are related to the disease and if they are a cause or an effect.

Some patients complain that the society has been too slow to consider the new idea. A splinter group — the Reformed Multiple Sclerosis Society — has formed to increase the availability of the vein treatment.

Joyce Nelson, the president of the Multiple Sclerosis Society in the United States, said, “I wasn’t aware how thin the veneer was and how close to the surface the frustration was.”

“ ‘We can’t wait’ has resounded,” Ms. Nelson said. But she added, “There isn’t a way to rush the work that needs to be done.”

As the procedure has caught on in some places, few serious complications have been reported. But at Stanford University, a woman, 50, treated with stents (wire-mesh tubes used to hold blood vessels open) and blood-thinning drugs, died of a brain hemorrhage after returning home, and another patient needed heart surgery after a stent placed in a neck vein came loose and was swept into the heart. The procedures were stopped.

Dr. Michael Dake, who treated the patients, declined several requests for an interview, but said by e-mail that he hoped to discuss “a number of exciting developments” about the procedure “in the near future.”

Dr. Philip Pizzo, the dean of Stanford’s medical school, said the vein theory “deserves to be explored” — but only in studies. A study with a control group is being planned.

About 400,000 people in the United States have multiple sclerosis; worldwide, there are 2.1 million. (The disease is more common in temperate zones than in the tropics, and affects more women than men and more Caucasians than members of other groups.) It usually begins in young adults, with fatigue, vision problems, numbness, bladder trouble and difficulty with walking, balance and coordination. The disease eats away a fatty substance, myelin, that coats nerves, and gradually scars the nerves. The damage is thought to occur because the immune system, for unknown reasons, mistakenly attacks myelin.

Most patients, 85 percent, start out with a form called relapsing-remitting. In about half of those the disease becomes progressive, harder to treat and more disabling. Ms. Raval, who is 38 and has had multiple sclerosis for 13 years, implored Dr. Simon to test her for narrowed veins and, if he found any, to open them.

Dr. Simon regularly uses balloons and stents to open bile ducts and blood vessels. He was impressed with Ms. Raval’s determination, her trove of information and her background. She has a degree in toxicology and works for a drug company. But he was also familiar with Dr. Zamboni’s work—and deeply skeptical of it.

“My initial take was, it doesn’t make any sense,” Dr. Simon said.

But Ms. Raval had high hopes. She said she believed that the balloon treatment would be “the next best thing to a cure.” The usual drugs have not worked for her. Her 5-year-old son is eagerly awaiting the day when she can run with him, but she is finding it harder and harder even to walk. Theory Born of Experience

Dr. Zamboni, 53, (no relation to the inventor of the ice-rink machine) began studying the medical literature on multiple sclerosis in 1995 when his wife learned she had the disease.

“What I found was like a detective story,” he said.

He discovered reports of vein abnormalities and of brain lesions forming around veins. But the research had been abandoned. Vein disorders are his specialty; he has been studying them for 25 years. He began using ultrasound and other imaging techniques to examine veins, and found narrowings in the neck and chest veins in people with the disease, but not in healthy ones. He suspected that abnormal blood flow and pressure in the veins— not just narrowing alone — might cause minute amounts of bleeding in the brain, leading to an immune reaction and inflammation that damaged myelin and nerves. Iron deposits could also form, and add to the damage. He wondered if opening the narrowed areas might help.

In 2006 he began using balloons to treat patients, including his wife, whose symptoms went away and, he says, have not come back. Other patients who, like his wife, had relapsing-remitting disease, also recovered fully, he said; but some did not respond at all. In those with progressive disease, fatigue improved, but not mobility problems, according to a pilot study he published in December in The Journal of Vascular Surgery. And in half the treated patients, the neck veins closed up again. The study did not have a control group, and the patients were also taking drugs to treat multiple sclerosis . More rigorous trials will start in Italy this summer, Dr. Zamboni said.

Another doctor, Marian Simka, who has been performing the procedure in Pszczyna, Poland, has reported that it has made symptoms worse in some patients.. 

Researchers in Buffalo have confirmed (but not yet published) that narrowed veins and abnormal blood flow are more common in people with multiple sclerosis. But, while Dr. Zamboni found them in all patients and no healthy people, the Buffalo team found them in about 60 percent of patients and 15 percent of healthy controls. 

Dr. Simon sensed that Ms. Raval would have no peace unless she could learn whether she had narrowed veins, and he wanted to help her.

So he offered to perform a test to find out, a venogram. It involves passing a tube into a vein in the groin and up to the neck and chest, and then injecting dye to take X-rays of the veins. He felt sure there would be no blockages.

“And then she would be able to stop obsessing over this and move on with her life and get some kind of conventional treatment,” he said.

But he was stunned to find narrowings, right where Dr. Zamboni’s theory predicted: in the jugular vein in the neck, and the azygous, a vein in the right side of the chest.

Ms. Raval was elated. She felt certain that opening up those veins would solve her problems. Dr. Simon agreed to try.

Although it was, technically, an experimental procedure, Dr. Simon said he did not have to ask his hospital for permission to perform it. The details were similar to other procedures that interventional radiologists do every day. It is not uncommon for them to take a device approved for one purpose and use it for another, like putting a bile-duct stent into a blood vessel — a practice called “off-label” use, which the Food and Drug Administration allows. Interventional radiology, Dr. Simon said, is an “off-label specialty” that depends on innovation and adaptability.

On March 24, as Ms. Raval lay on a padded table in a treatment room, Dr. Simon passed balloons to the pinched spots in her right jugular and azygous, and dilated them.

The procedure took less than an hour. In the recovery room, Ms. Raval said she felt better already.

Over the next days and weeks, she noticed remarkable improvements. Her fatigue went away. She walked and climbed stairs more easily, and the color in her face brightened. Her husband and co-workers saw the changes, too, she said.

Was it real, or just one giant, communal placebo effect? Ms. Raval posted exuberant Facebook messages naming her “most amazing doctor.” Other patients began calling Dr. Simon.

Within a month, Ms. Raval again had trouble walking. She felt sure her veins had closed again. Another venogram showed they had. Dr. Simon reopened them.

Ms. Raval felt better — and then deteriorated again. On June 18, another venogram, her fourth invasive procedure in three months, suggested that the narrowings had recurred. She struggled over what to do. She could not keep having balloon procedures again and again. Dr. Simon consulted Dr. Dake, his former mentor, who recommended stents.

Initially, Ms. Raval and Dr. Simon had thought stents too risky. Unlike balloons, which are inserted briefly and removed, stents are permanent. They can migrate to somewhere they do not belong, like the heart, as occurred in Dr. Dake’s patient. Or tissue growth can clog them.

But Dr. Simon and Ms. Raval could see no other option. On June 23, he implanted a stent in her two jugular veins.

“I really have a good feeling on this one,” Ms. Raval said a few hours after the procedure. “ I think this is the resolution, long-term. Let’s wait and see.”

In the meantime, Dr. Simon had conducted venograms on about 20 other patients with multiple sclerosis. He found narrowed veins in all but one. He said he was going to ask the hospital’s ethics panel for permission to perform balloon procedures in those patients. But the hospital would have to figure out how to get paid: insurance might cover venograms, but not an experimental treatment. The total charge for the procedure, including both hospital and doctor fees, would be about $10,000, Dr. Simon said.

He and his partner, Dr. Noam Eshkar, said they knew many researchers thought patients should not be given unproven treatments outside of clinical trials. They said they did not disagree. But they also sympathized with patients who had progressive diseases and who felt they did not have the time to wait. “In the real world,” Dr. Eshkar said, “things happen at the edge of scientific proof.” 

Source: The New York Times Copyright 2010 The New York Times Company (30/06/10)
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5301846</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5301846</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 30 Jun 2010 05:02:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>Medical journal urges caution over new MS treatment</title>
      <description>
Solid science rather than hopeful media reports and advocacy campaigns should determine whether patients receive access to a new, as-yet unproven therapy for multiple sclerosis, according to an editorial in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.

Patients and advocacy groups across the country have been lobbying for access to the venous angioplasty procedure, also dubbed “the liberation therapy,” in the wake of a 2009 study that suggested it held promise to relieve the disease’s debilitating symptoms.

The study, lead by Italian researcher Dr. Paola Zamboni, tested the theory that clogged neck veins, a condition called chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency or CCSVI, could trigger multiple sclerosis. The research into unblocking veins made headlines around the world, galvanizing patients to seek the procedure and raising red flags for neurologists.

On Monday, the country’s top medical journal joined the debate by voicing its concern that allowing hope to trump science will set a dangerous precedent about which treatments Canada decides to study, provide and insure.

“This is a significant public policy issue,” said CMAJ editor-in-chief and editorial co-author Dr. Paul Hebert in an interview.

“I’m always concerned when special interest groups and stakeholders get a hold of the public agenda and focus it on very specific diseases and their interests. There is no shortage of diseases to study.”

Unlike drugs, which undergo rigorous, peer-reviewed study before being used by the public, new medical procedures are not regulated. In the editorial, Hebert and another CMAJ editor argue the safety and effectiveness of unproven procedures cannot be properly evaluated when they rapidly enter medical practice. They say Canada needs to come up with a new process that gets promising procedures quickly into clinical trial. This way, they write, experimental procedures undergo appropriate scrutiny, which ultimately benefits patients.

“We could, in theory, allow an unproven procedure go unchecked if we start paying for it and we will never know if it hurts people or helps them,” Hebert said in an interview.

While stating hospitals should not prematurely offer unproven therapies and provinces should not fund them, the editorial also notes the novel MS procedure should not be dismissed prematurely.

Earlier this month, the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada and the National MS Society in the U.S. committed $2.4 million to support seven new research projects – four of which are in Canada – to investigate CCSVI.

Source: The Toronto Star © Copyright Toronto Star 1996-2010 (29/06/10)

    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5298756</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5298756</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 29 Jun 2010 03:50:00 EDT</pubDate>
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      <title>CCSVI recognised as an independent vascular condition by Italian health authorities</title>
      <description>
The Italian CCSVI Society met with the Ministry of Health, and it was decided that CCSVI can be diagnosed as a stand alone disease, without being correlated to MS. 

It was also decided that Dr. Zamboni can go forward with his blinded clinical trials of CCSVI in MS. Although there was no time-line given for testing and treating CCSVI, the ministry has promised to move quickly.

Google translation of the press release:

The cerebrospinal chronic venous insufficiency, "is recognised as a disease"

The Association CCSVI in multiple sclerosis - Onlus "asks for guidelines for diagnosis and therapy."  Ministry of Health: "The State shall take responsibility to implement what the scientific community in the world has crossed"

ROME - The cerebrospinal chronic venous insufficiency (CCSVI) is recognized in Italy as a disease in itself that can be quickly drawn up guidelines to be able to diagnose and treat beyond its correlation with multiple sclerosis. This is called the association "CCSVI in multiple sclerosis - Onlus" the Ministry of Health in a just concluded meeting between representatives of the association and Albert Zangrilli, president of the second section to the Board of Health in the same ministry. "While science makes its way to validate the correlation between MS and CCSVI - Tobacco said - as, we ask that, since the CCSVI has already been validated by the scientific world as it has been validated his therapy, the state will face load to implement what the scientific community worldwide has already validated and to draw up guidelines with respect to this disease occur until the science correlation."

Found in several trials around the world in people with multiple sclerosis, CCSVI is a disease that affects the cervical and thoracic veins that because dell'inspessimento anomalous venous walls, remove inefficient blood from the central nervous system. The correlation between the two diseases in Italy is a study whose results, explain the association, are expected at the end of next year. "Today's meeting went very well" - added Tobacco - "The Ministry has taken note of our request." The timing, however, there are still some news. "On this we had no indications, but the ministry made us know that it will mobilize more quickly." 

Italian News report - http://www.redattoresociale.it/DettaglioNotizie.aspx?idNews=312625

http://ccsvi-sm.org/?q=node%2F223

Source: CCSVI in Multiple Sclerosi (26/06/10)
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5290731</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5290731</guid>
      <pubDate>Sat, 26 Jun 2010 04:31:00 EDT</pubDate>
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      <title>CCSVI 'Liberation procedure' for multiple sclerosis sparks debate</title>
      <description>
Nasha Smith knows that skeptics would say her multiple sclerosis got better after an unorthodox treatment at Lankenau Hospital simply because she believed it would.

But the 40-year-old Reading resident also knows the "placebo effect" can't explain her transformation. Practically overnight, she went from being homebound - disabled by foot numbness, fatigue, balance problems, and painful bowel spasms that left her incontinent - to being able to complete a three-mile fund-raising walk for MS.

"I know there's a lot of controversy about this, but I don't know why," Smith said. "The procedure was so simple, yet life-changing."

The procedure, balloon angioplasty, is routinely used to open clogged heart arteries. But MS patients around the world are seeking what they call "the liberation procedure" to widen veins.

Groundbreaking research by an Italian vascular surgeon suggests that narrowed veins are common in MS patients, causing blood to drain improperly from the brain.

For a disease long blamed on out-of-control immune cells that attack the central nervous system, the blocked-vein theory is a radical departure - one that experts say remains speculative. To begin to confirm it, the National MS Society and the MS Society of Canada on Friday awarded $2.4 million to seven groups. They will study the diagnosis and frequency of poor vein drainage but will not treat patients who have the problem.

"We certainly feel the patients' sense of urgency," said Patricia O'Looney, vice president of the National MS Society. "But there are conflicting reports from scientists. The appropriate action is to bring clarity to the question" of whether veins play a role.

Patients are not waiting for more clarity. Dissatisfied with the marginal benefits and serious side effects of standard therapies, they are turning to interventional radiologists like Lankenau's Joseph Bonn, who treated Smith.

At least, until hospital lawyers step in.

In April, they ordered Bonn to stop performing balloon angioplasty on MS patients pending approval by officials at the Wynnewood hospital.

Zamboni's discovery

It's not clear who coined the catchy term liberation procedure, but it stems from the work of Paolo Zamboni, a vascular specialist at Italy's University of Ferrara.

While trying to help his wife's MS, he discovered that the three main veins that channel blood from the brain back to the heart - the jugulars and the azygos - are often twisted, bent, compressed, or otherwise constricted in MS patients. He gave this abnormality a distinctly uncatchy name, "chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency," or CCSVI. His first paper on the condition was published only a year ago.

Neurologists, the specialists who usually treat MS, as well as others, see holes in his out-of-the-box thinking.

For one thing, poor vein drainage doesn't bother everyone who has it. Zamboni found it in the majority of MS patients, and few of the healthy people he checked. But then University of Buffalo neurologist Robert Zivadinov did a larger study of 500 patients. CCSVI showed up in 60 percent with MS, 43 percent with other neurological conditions, and 22 percent of healthy controls.

Another thing: Not all MS patients get better after angioplasty. And the veins often re-narrow within a year. Zamboni found this happened in up to 47 percent of jugulars, although azygos veins usually stayed open.

Stanford University researchers tried to combat the re-narrowing with stents designed to prop arteries open. One patient needed open-heart surgery when the stent dislodged, and another died of brain bleeding while taking a blood thinner prescribed with the metal devices.

Still, Zamboni's maverick work offers a neat explanation for the central mystery of MS: why immune cells run amok, attacking nerves in the very body they are supposed to protect.

Zamboni found that blood backs up in the brain, or "refluxes," as it creates new drainage patterns to circumvent the blocked veins. Iron settles out of refluxing blood and, like toxic pollution, irritates delicate brain tissue. In theory, this signals immune cells to seep out of the blood and try to clean up the mess.

Normally, vessels in the brain are impermeable, so immune cells can't access that all-important organ. But the constricted veins develop high blood pressure, making them stretch and spring microscopic leaks. In theory.

Angioplasty techniques are so well-established for treating vessel abnormalities that MS patients feel they are being discriminated against. In their view, they have little to lose and much to gain from trying to get better blood flow.

CCSVI is diagnosed with ultrasound imaging, followed by special X-ray and MRI imaging. Balloon angioplasty, performed under sedation, involves inserting a tube through a small incision, threading it deep into the vein, and inflating the balloon tip to expand a narrow spot. Serious complications - rupturing the vein or a dangerous blood clot - are rare.

Bonn, who does procedures on heart, kidney, and cancer patients, knew virtually nothing about MS until two months ago. Then, at a medical convention, he vaguely heard about the blocked-vein theory and made a note to learn more. Just two days later, he saw Janet Grieco, 53, an MS patient who had called out of the blue seeking treatment for CCSVI.

"He pulled out his BlackBerry and showed me the note he made at the convention," the Chalfont resident recalled.

Soon, Bonn was getting calls from MS patients near and far as their online community added him to the list of doctors willing to help.

He treated only three MS patients, including Smith, but the results were good.

Relief from headaches

Grieco had suffered from chronic migraines, balance problems, and fatigue that was intensified by insomnia.

"By the time I got to recovery after the procedure, I didn't have a headache," she said. "When you have a headache for three years and then it's gone, it's remarkable."

That day, she strolled her neighborhood with her husband and stopped needing her nightly sleeping pill.

Denise Graff, 43, of Somerset, N.J., experienced a phenomenon that other patients have reported.

"My toes were like icicles" because of foot numbness, she said. "During the procedure, I could feel them warm up just after he ballooned the first vein."

Bonn's fourth patient, Paulette O'Leary, 41, of Toronto, was minutes from being wheeled into the angioplasty suite when the hospital lawyers interrupted.

"I don't know who was more shocked - Dr. Bonn, or me and my husband," O'Leary said.

Bonn is now designing a clinical trial, the gold standard for studying safety and effectiveness. Patients with CCSVI would be randomly assigned to balloon angioplasty with - or without - the inflation that opens veins. The trial must be approved by the hospital's review board.

As a scientist, Bonn sees the need for rigorous studies. But he also understands patients' frustration.

"They suffer for decades on a slow downhill course," he said, "with few options in terms of medications or procedures. So this has been a real roller-coaster ride for them."

O'Leary stayed on the roller coaster. Last month, she paid $13,000 for liberation at Albany State Medical Center, where a trial was already under way.

Now, she said, she no longer uses a cane, clings to a wall to climb stairs, or suffers from incontinence.

Balloon angioplasty is not a cure, not even close, she said. But it offers quality-of-life improvements that are impossible with any of the seven approved MS drugs, as well as a new one, Novartis' fingolimod, that was recommended for approval last week. All the drugs modify the immune system.

Still, as patients travel to India, Bulgaria, Poland, and other countries for angioplasty, they may underestimate the skill and savvy it requires.

"I did my first MS patient at the end of last year. It didn't work out too well," said Salvatore Sclafani, chair of radiology at SUNY Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn. "The anatomy was much more complicated than I expected. I did the balloon, but she developed a [blood clot]. I sent her home on anticoagulants and said, 'I'll try again after I get more experience.' "

Since then, he's done about 20 patients - a few with "miraculous" results - and become beloved for contributing to an online MS forum.

Indeed, when he was ordered a few months ago to stop doing the procedure outside of a clinical trial, "there was an outpouring of grief, and of compassion for me," he said. "Then they got angry. So we started to dialogue about the trials and what we want to learn from them. Now they're participating in the development of the research.

"I was ready to retire," added Sclafani, 63. "But this has touched me. Now my practice will be all MS."

Source: The Philadelphia Enquirer © Copyright 2010 Philly Online, LLC (16/06/10) MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5257958</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5257958</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 16 Jun 2010 11:39:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>Touched by Multiple Sclerosis, foes lay politics aside</title>
      <description>
Conservative MP Larry Miller had just finished speaking Monday night when NDP MP Malcolm Allen rose from his Commons seat, walked over and gave him a great big hug. 

It was a remarkable gesture in a House that is so often filled with acrimony and dissent. But this was a remarkable debate — a so-called take-note debate — on a controversial new procedure to diagnose and treat multiple sclerosis. 

“Those kinds of things don’t happen in the House,” Mr. Miller, the MP for Bruce-Grey-Owen Sound, said Tuesday. 

But Mr. Allen, who lost his father to the disease, was moved by Mr. Miller’s speech, in which he spoke of his youngest sister, Mary Lou, 45, who has suffered from MS for nearly 20 years. 

There is a new hypothesis that MS is not an auto-immune disease but a condition caused by “Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency,” or (CCSVI), which is the narrowing of veins that prevents the blood from draining from the brain efficiently. 

The diagnosis and treatment for this is not performed in Canada and many MS sufferers have gone abroad to have it done — at great expense and with some positive results. 

Earlier in the debate, Lethbridge Conservative MP Rick Casson was just barely able to hold on to his composure as he stood in his place to speak of 38-year-old daughter, who also has MS. 

“I can put a personal touch on this,” he said. “If I am going to recommend that my daughter takes a treatment of some kind, I want to make damned sure it will not kill her, cripple her or make her worse.” 

She was diagnosed five years ago; she has two children, is a teacher in Edmonton and is contemplating doing a PhD. 

Mr. Casson describes her as “amazing." He wants to ensure that enough caution is used so that MS sufferers are not given false hope by this procedure. He notes, too, that not all MS sufferers would benefit from it. 

There was no vote at the end of this debate. 

Still, it gave MPs the opportunity to look at and debate the reluctance of governments to recognize, through funding, this new procedure. 

Mr. Miller’s sister, meanwhile, is to be tested soon to determine if she can have the treatment. If she can, Mr. Miller, says it is likely she will go try to go to New York to have the procedure done. 

In fact, it was noted that some Canadians are travelling to Poland and other European cities, paying up to $10,000 to have the angioplasty procedure that opens up the neck veins. 

Mr. Miller’s sister was diagnosed with MS about nearly 20 years ago. Reports (first broadcast on CTV’s W5) of the controversial procedure by Dr. Paolo Zamboni gave her “really the first ray of hope or sunshine that she has seen”, he told the Globe in an interview Tuesday. 

She wanted to try the procedure immediately. 

“We want it to be a safe procedure … I’d like to see it here (in Canada),” he said. “If research and science shows that there is something wrong with it, then fine, we will accept that. 

“But everything we have seen in Europe so far it looks very, very promising and I just want to see us piggy back on research that is already done and advance it from here,” he said. 

Last night, he spoke about the provincial and federal governments putting jurisdictional issues aside and working together on this. 

As well, Mr. Miller, who does fundraising for MS, expressed disappointment with the MS Society, who he said, “has not yet taken an even broader approach to include more new treatment options that have shown promise, like CCSVI …” 

Ms. Duncan, whose tenacity sparked the debate, says that at first there were some politics played last night over the role of the federal government in health issues. 

But she said there was a real shift in the debate when “someone on the government side had the courage to say that we have responsibility here.” 

“It was really good,” she said. “What we’re fighting for is that these guys be able to have diagnoses and treatment in Canada. Why are they having to go overseas when everything is available here?” 

Source: The Globe and Mail © 2010 CTVGlobeMedia (16/06/10)
MSRC Genera,l CCSVI News Page - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5257242</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5257242</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 16 Jun 2010 06:37:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>MS Society board bid foiled for frustrated Multiple Sclerosis patients</title>
      <description>
Multiple sclerosis patients and advocates were thwarted in a bid to win two seats on the MS Society of Canada's board on Saturday, positions they sought in order to push for immediate access to an unproven treatment not available in Canada. 

Linda Molyneux, whose 22-year-old son has MS, and Brock Winterton, whose wife has the disease, failed to secure enough votes to unseat two of the five board nominees on a slate proposed by the society's governance committee. 

Though their nominees prevailed in the election, the society's executive and professional staff took a verbal pounding. Member after member denounced them for failing to use the society's clout to demand immediate access to treatment in Canada for a condition called CCSVI ---- short for chronic celebrospinal venous insufficiency. 

"You're not meeting the Number 1 need of your constituents," one angry society member said in a heated discussion that stretched what is normally a 30-minute meeting to nearly five times that. 

"It has become quite clear to me the MS societies have lost touch with their membership," Molyneux said when she appealed for votes. 

Patients feel the single greatest impediment that stands between them and this treatment is the MS Society, she said. 

At issue is the unhappy confluence of a new theory about what causes MS, an untested therapy, a disease advocacy group that feels it must be guided by scientific evidence and a sizable membership that is unwilling to wait for science to prove something they already believe to be true. 

"This house is probably divided and we may not reconcile it today," Yves Savoie, president and CEO of the MS Society of Canada, acknowledged. 

The society gently reiterated that it cannot advocate for treatment for a condition -- CCSVI -- that hasn't yet been proven to be involved with MS, let alone shown to be the cause of, not a side-effect of the condition. 

The theory is the brain child of Italian physician Dr. Paulo Zamboni, who has linked blocked neck veins with MS. He contends a build up of iron in the brain due to insufficient blood drainage triggers the disease. The longstanding belief is that MS is an autoimmune disease. 

Since word of Zamboni's research was publicly aired last November, patients have been demanding access to treatment for the blockages and MS society officials have been struggling to figure out how to cope with the increasingly frustrated demands. 

At Saturday's meeting, society officials noted the Canadian and U.S. societies decision to  grant $2.4 million in research funds Friday, and that the Canadian group had asked the federal government for $10 million to devote to CCSVI research. 

But the patients weren't in the mood to be told to wait several years for research studies to answer those questions, and dismissed the Canadian portion of that funding package -- $700,000 over two years -- as "inappropriate." 

"People with MS don't have the luxury of time," Winterton said. 

"I want my veins opened. Why can't I have my veins opened?" asked MS patient Michele Deverill, 51, of Toronto. 

Deverill said she is outraged that people with other conditions can have the vein-opening procedure -- which involves snaking a balloon into the vein and inflating it -- but because she has MS she cannot have it done in Canada. 

Many patients aren't waiting. Instead they are flocking to clinics in Poland, Bulgaria and India to undergo the procedure. 

In fact, Molyneux just arrived back late this week from Bulgaria, where her son had angioplasty for blocked veins. Winterton and his wife left the meeting early to catch a flight to the same Eastern European country, where she will have the procedure next week. 

While most people attending the meeting demanded the MS Society make CCSVI research and treatment its top priority, a few raised cautionary voices. 

One woman said she was unwilling to be a guinea pig. And a man whose wife suffers from MS worried that too much focus on one theory could prove to be a mistake down the road. 

"If we've put all our eggs in the one basket, we could be years behind on the research to find the cure," said the man, who asked not to be identified because his wife keeps her MS under wraps. 

"I mean, I'm hopeful that this is it. That would be fantastic. But you've got to diversify your portfolio and make sure that you've got all avenues covered so that if this doesn't work, well maybe this does, or this does." 

Source: CTV News © Copyright 2010 CTVglobemedia Publishing Inc (14/06/10)
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5250072</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5250072</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 14 Jun 2010 09:37:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>MS patients told it'll be years before treatment</title>
      <description>
More than 600 multiple sclerosis patients came to Hamilton hoping to hear about a possible cure to what until now has been a mystery disease with few treatment options. 

Many left Michelangelo's Event and Conference Centre Saturday frustrated that it will be years before they can "be liberated" as the treatment has been called by Dr. Paolo Zamboni, the Italian surgeon who has pioneered it.

"I'm 70 years old, where do I fit in?" said Barbara Farraway, of Hamilton, who was diagnosed with MS 20 years ago. "It's hard to wait when it's progressing."

Farraway and her husband took little comfort in reassurances that research is being fast-tracked to test Zamboni's theory MS is a vascular disease involving blocked veins improperly draining blood from the brain and spinal cord.

While the information session was put on by the MS Society of Canada, there was a lot of anger at the organization and its American counterpart over the decision to give no money to high-profile studies in Hamilton and Buffalo when they handed out $2.4 million in funding Friday to test the theory called chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI).

"One of my questions is why the MS Society didn't back the Hamilton project because it's going to slow the process down," said Jim Palango, of Brantford, about the society's refusal to provide any information about why certain studies weren't recommended for funding by its international review panel. "Will more donations speed up the process and if so, let's get on the bandwagon to help St. Joseph's since the MS Society of Canada is not supporting them."

The lead researcher in Buffalo says he suspects his study and the one in Hamilton, being done by St. Joseph's, McMaster University and Hamilton Health Sciences, weren't funded because of their ties to Zamboni. Both consulted Zamboni about their studies.

"I think probably it has to do with it," said Dr. Robert Zivadinov, director of the Buffalo Neuroimaging Analysis Center, and one of the presenters at the information session. "They wanted the people who are not connected with the way Zamboni is doing this."

Researchers in Buffalo and Hamilton say they will continue with their studies despite being shut out of funding.

Hamilton's study has about $350,000 to get started, mostly donated from MS patients.

Today, the House of Commons will have a four-hour debate about whether Ottawa should put money toward testing the theory.

Zivadinov says he will soon be publishing a paper with Zamboni showing the blockages in the veins return after the treatment far less often than originally believed.

Zamboni has reported the blockages reoccur about 50 per cent of the time after the veins are opened using angioplasty. Zivadinov says new information shows the blockages return about 30 per cent of the time.

Despite initial results that support Zamboni's theory, Zivadinov still urged patients to wait until more study can be done before going to other countries and paying to get the treatment.

He worries about the risk to patients, even though angioplasty is a commonly used procedure for other conditions.

But patients say the risk is worth it and they don't have time to wait.

Source: thespec.com © Copyright Metroland 2010 (14/06/10)
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5249398</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5249398</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 14 Jun 2010 05:57:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>CCSVI scanning &amp;treatment about to start in UK</title>
      <description>
From the new Essential Health Clinic Newsletter 

It's starting! - CCSVI Scanning &amp; Treatment about to start in UK

We are pleased to announce that we have now taken delivery of our Premium Echo Doppler Scanner System. This scanner has been specially designed by Professor Zamboni and his team for the diagnosis of CCSVI. We are also proud to b...e the first clinic selected in the UK to have this equipment and we have been told that currently no other establishment in the UK and Ireland is using this sophisticated equipment.

Professor Zamboni devised five specific protocols for the detection of CCSVI and this equipment is programmed with the algorithms created to aid the analysis of these five protocols. These special measurements available with this equipment have recognised the needs of this type of scanning - and the fact that existing scanners may struggle without the specific measurements required................

Read More - http://us1.campaign-archive.com/?u=646d7fd51cbebd959c3a5b033&amp;id=a9ce662ff6

Source: The Essential Health Clinic (11/06/10)
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5238399</link>
      <category>multiple sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5238399</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 11 Jun 2010 02:22:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>MS patients to launch rights complaints demanding unproven CCSVI treatment</title>
      <description>
Multiple sclerosis patients in at least two Canadian provinces are preparing to launch human rights complaints as they demand access to an unproven treatment that has excited the hopes of people living with the degenerative disease and already prompted some to seek the procedure abroad.

A group of patients in British Columbia and another man with the disease in Newfoundland say denying them treatment for a vein condition that's been called chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency, or CCSVI, amounts to discrimination.

An Italian doctor recently claimed narrowed neck veins cause or contribute to MS and unblocking them could help treat the disease, but the procedure isn't offered in Canada as the medical community waits for large-scale clinical trials and studies to test the theory.

Jenna Machala, a Vancouver-area realtor who is among the patients preparing a complaint to the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal against the province's Health Ministry, said people living with MS can't afford to wait for governments to give a green light to the treatment.

"I have friends who have no time to wait for them to make up their minds and do their blind studies," Machala said in an interview.

"We are begging everybody to have a look at us. It's like we are drowning and no one wants to throw us a life jacket."

Machala said the complaint will argue MS patients are being discriminated against because, she says, the same type of balloon angioplasty used in the experimental CCSVI treatment is available to patients with other medical conditions.

She has been meeting with a tribunal lawyer during the past several weeks as she gathers the material for her claim and encourages other patients to sign on. It's not clear how soon the tribunal could hear the case.

In the meantime, Machala, who underwent tests at a private medical clinic in Vancouver and showed signs of narrowed veins, has already booked a trip to Poland next month to have the procedure done there.

Mark Lane, an MS patient in Holyrood, N.L., also plans to file a human rights complaint if, as he expects, a vascular surgeon he's set to see next month refuses to schedule the procedure.

The CCSVI theory gained worldwide attention last year as Dr. Paolo Zamboni of Italy promoted his claim that MS is a vascular condition rather than an autoimmune disease, which is the commonly accepted belief in the medical community.

MS patients staged rallies across the country this year calling for more funding and research into the theory, and several patients held a news conference in Ottawa last week alongside Liberal MPs urging the federal government to earmark research funding.

The Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada has called on Ottawa to set aside $10 million for CCSVI research, and the organization plans to announce its own research grants later this month.

But the response from the federal and provincial governments has largely been to wait and see.

"It is not at all appropriate to move forward with a procedure before it's gone through appropriate reviews to ensure that you're providing a procedure that is not going to harm individuals and is actually going to provide a benefit," B.C.'s health minister, Kevin Falcon, told reporters last week when asked about the CCSVI treatment.

The federal health minister has said researchers interested in testing the theory should apply for existing funding.

There have been several cases in which patients have complained either to human rights bodies or the courts that denying them treatment was discriminatory, and the results have been mixed.

One of the most high-profile examples involved a group of B.C. parents who claimed that denying their autistic children a form of intensive therapy violated the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Two B.C. courts agreed and ordered the province to pay for the therapy, but the Supreme Court of Canada overruled those decisions in 2004, concluding the treatment wasn't a "core medical service" that the law requires provincial governments to pay for.

Also in B.C., a Victoria lawyer has been challenging the province's refusal to pay for a prostate cancer screening test known as PSA, arguing it is discriminatory to pay for mammograms for women but not PSA tests for men.

The B.C. Human Rights Tribunal ruled against Laurie Armstrong. He challenged the decision in court, initially winning at the provincial Supreme Court but losing in the B.C. Court of Appeal.

He is waiting to hear whether the Supreme Court of Canada will hear the case.

Armstrong said the greatest challenge for the MS patients will be to demonstrate they are being treated differently than other patients who are getting similar angioplasty procedures solely because they have multiple sclerosis.

"They have to make their case that the denial of a service, otherwise available to members of the public, is based on disability," said Armstrong.

"But then the government will argue that it's got nothing to do with MS, that it's the unproven medical knowledge that is the determining factor.

"If they can establish a human rights component, then they should go for it. I wish them luck." 

Source: CityTV © 2010 by Rogers Broadcasting Limited (07/06/10)
MSRC General CCSVI News Page - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5215294</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5215294</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 07 Jun 2010 04:36:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>Controversial treatment creating bitterness in Canadian MS Society elections</title>
      <description>
The Multiple Sclerosis Society’s national board election next week is expected to become a battleground as members rally to shut out supporters of a controversial treatment.

An e-mail circulated on Friday urged MS Society supporters to sign up to become members, which will give them voting rights.

And the e-mail asks them to use those votes to maintain the balance of the current board, effectively closing out candidates who want resources increased for research into chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency, a new diagnosis that suggests MS could be caused by iron blockages in the veins.

Based on this theory, Italian physician Paolo Zamboni has claimed some success with a procedure he developed known as the Liberation Treatment. Publicized in Canada last fall, it has given sufferers a ray of hope, and had them clamouring for the procedure that some people who tried it are saying has eliminated symptoms. It is not available in Canada but is approved some countries, including Bulgaria, Kuwait and Poland. Even proponents say the procedure has not been scientifically proven, and a clinical trial at the University of British Columbia is just gearing up.

The diagnosis and procedure have become divisive issues in the MS community, and Ontario board vice-chair Valerie Hussey fears they might overshadow other important ongoing research the MS Society is promoting.

“Anyone with a connection to MS hopes for a ‘liberation’ cure,” she wrote in the widely circulated e-mail. “But is this really it?”

In an interview, the Toronto woman, who has a loved one with MS said she only hopes to maintain balance on the current board of 10 directors. New members who are staunch advocates of CCSVI might steer decision making in one direction.

“Because there’s this sense of hope around CCSVI, my concern is that our very balanced approach to research not be diminished, not be altered.”

But board candidate Brock Winterton, whose wife, Janet Heisey, has battled the disease, says it is necessary to have a strong voice in support of CCSVI and the Liberation treatment on the current board. Many MS sufferers would like to try this treatment, which includes an ultrasound or MRI and then an angioplasty which involves local anesthetic, whether it’s as part of a clinical trial or not, he said.

He is running for a seat with Linda Molyneux, who he joins on the Blocked Veins MS Research Group which maintains that the MS Society isn’t allocating nearly enough resources to the study of CCSVI.

“We’re not trying to take anything away from anybody else. We’re not trying to diminish the research dollars that are going into stem cells and many other areas of research,” he said. “We simply want to see the MS society take this seriously and provide the opportunity for MS sufferers to improve their quality of life.”

In December, the MS Society announced it will include grants to study potential vascular aspects of the disease. The total grants are $100,000 over two years of study, and only part of that will look at CCSVI, said MS Society president and executive director Yves Savoie. The CCVSI competition results will be announced on June 14.

But the entire $100,000 would only cover about a tenth of the cost of the clinical trials starting up at UBC and 20 per cent of what’s needed to run trials at McMaster University’s St. Joseph Hospital, said Kate Bahen, managing director of Charity Intelligence, an organization that helps Canadians make educated charitable donations.

“The medical research are not funded and people who want these trials funded should donate directly to UBC faculty of medicine and St. Joseph’s,” she said. “You don’t have to go through the middle guy.”

Mr. Savoie says he’s excited that there will be such vigorous debate at the upcoming Annual General Meeting in Toronto next Saturday where these votes will be cast (members can also vote by proxy).

“Our members, many of them who have MS, have mobilized, they’ve pressured governments and we have called for quick action,” he said. “And what we’re seeing is that debate’s taking place everywhere - Question Period, letters to the minister… and now on the floor of our AGM. People who are passionate about this issue and their voices will be heard.”

In early May, Liberal MP Kirsty Duncan urged health minister Leona Aglukkaq to call a provincial meeting to discuss the controversial treatment and dole out $10 million for more study on the diagnosis.

About 55,000 to 75,000 Canadians are suffering from the debilitating disease.

Source: The Globe &amp; Mail © Copyright 2010 CTVglobemedia Publishing Inc (05/06/10)
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5210792</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5210792</guid>
      <pubDate>Sat, 05 Jun 2010 01:39:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>MS patients tell MPs about life after CCSVI 'liberation'</title>
      <description>
A group of Canadian patients with multiple sclerosis gathered on Parliament Hill Tuesday to testify how a controversial new treatment has changed their lives, as two Liberal MPs reiterated their call for more research. 

The patients included Steve Garvie and Lianne Webb, both of whom were profiled in a recent report from CTV's W5. 

Garvie was diagnosed 10 years ago with secondary progressive MS, which left him using a walker most of the time, suffering profound fatigue. 

But since he's had what's been dubbed the "liberation treatment" to open up a blocked left jugular vein in this neck, his life has transformed. 

He testified to the parliamentary Subcommittee on Neurological Disease Tuesday that he is now able to stand and walk on his own. He told the MPs that he was once suicidal and needed daily care to wash and cook. Now, he has regained his strength and independence. 

Liane Webb, who was diagnosed with relapsing-remitting MS almost 20 years ago, has also been treated for blocked veins, a condition called CCSVI, or chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency. 

Webb says she hasn't had an MS attack in the four months since her treatment, and her chronic fatigue has disappeared. 

"I go golfing three times a week and I don't take the cart," she says. "I am able to go on bike rides and walks after work with my family now that I have the energy." 

Dr. Sandy MacDonald, the Barrie Ont. doctor who helped diagnose and treat Garvie and Webb, told the committee that the balloon angioplasty used in the liberation treatment is a safe, relatively easy procedure for what he is finding is a common condition. 

"I've done scans on almost 200, and greater than 90 per cent have venous anomalies," Dr. MacDonald told MPs. 

Also Tuesday, two Liberal MPs reiterated their call for federal investment in research on CCSVI. 

Liberal public health critic Dr. Carolyn Bennett and health critic Dr. Kirsty Duncan called for the Harper government to invest in MS research, diagnosis and treatment, and to immediately convene a meeting of provincial and territorial health ministers to discuss a national approach to funding MS and other diseases of the brain. 

"We support the call by the MS Society of Canada and thousands of MS patients across the country who want the Harper government to provide $10 million for research into MS and its potential cause," Duncan said in a news release. 

Drs. Duncan and Bennett wrote a letter to Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq on May 6 asking for support to research the "liberation treatment." Aglukkaq has yet to respond. 

Dr. Duncan has also called for an emergency debate in the House of Commons on this issue, but so far those calls have been rejected. 

"Liberation treatment centres are popping up daily around the world, and Canada, with one of the highest rates of MS in the world, should be on board," Duncan said. "MS patients and neurologists all agree that well-designed clinical trials must take place as soon as possible." 

MS patients have organized numerous petitions calling on the government to fund liberation procedures, and hundreds of patients gathered for a rally on the Hill last month. Bennett noted that a number of MS patients are going overseas for treatment for CCSVI, at their own expense. 

"What does this mean for a family who simply does not have the financial resources to do so? We believe that, just as heart patients are treated for blocked arteries, MS patients should also have access to this treatment," Bennett said in a statement.

Source: Sympatico.ca © Bell Canada, 2010 (02/06/10)

MSRC General CCSVI News Page - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5201417</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5201417</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 02 Jun 2010 02:37:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>MSIF statement on CCSVI released</title>
      <description>
Multiple Sclerosis International Federation (MSIF) Statement


Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency (CCSVI) - 24 May 2010


Introduction
Recent preliminary studies have suggested that a phenomenon called Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency (CCSVI), a reported abnormality in blood drainage from the brain and spinal cord, may contribute to nervous system damage in MS.

This hypothesis has been put forth by Dr. Paolo Zamboni from the University of Ferrara in Italy. Based on the results of his initial preliminary findings published in June 2009 from a study of approximately 65 patients, Dr. Zamboni and colleagues state that this pilot study warrants a larger and better controlled study to definitively evaluate the possible impact of CCSVI on the disease process in MS.

MSIF’s Principles for the Promotion of the Quality of Life include that “People with MS must be empowered to take control of the decisions affecting their lives and to self-manage the disease as much as possible. To encourage the highest possible degree of self management, they should be able to access a broad range of information, advice, and education regarding the nature of MS, its treatment, and methods for improving QOL”.

The risks and benefits of procedures to treat CCSVI have not been established by properly controlled clinical trials. Unless and until strong supportive evidence is produced, and until the risks of treatment are thoroughly assessed, any procedures to mechanically correct the purported problem outside of a clinical trial are not recommended.

MSIF will continue to facilitate an open exchange of information amongst its members in relation to the research that is being undertaken. Several MS societies are promoting further research in CCSVI as a matter of urgency in order to evaluate the hypothesis of a link with MS, and what could be the short and long term benefits and risks of treatment.

Question 1 (Q): What is CCSVI?
Answer (A): Chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency is a reported abnormality caused by narrowing of the veins which drain oxygen depleted blood from the brain and spinal cord. It is theorised that the slowed draining of blood can cause reflux back into the brain and spine, leading to a lack of oxygen in the brain and iron deposition in the tissue.

Q 2: What is the connection between CCSVI and MS?
A: A recent study by Zamboni et al on 65 people with different types of MS (published in J Neurology Neurosurgery Psychiatry. 2009 Apr; 80 (4): 392-9. Epub. 2008 Dec 5.), compared with 235 people who were healthy or had other neurological disorders, reported abnormal venous flow in 100% of MS cases and in none of the people without MS. Venous drainage of the brain and spinal cord was examined using an ultrasound technique (Doppler). The researchers also noted that patterns of venous obstruction differed between people at different stages and courses of MS although there was no clear relationship between severity of MS and extent of venous obstruction. The treatment status of the people with MS did not appear to influence whether they showed signs of CCSVI. A further study from the same group in Italy (Journal of Vascular Surgery, 2009 Dec 50:1348-58) looked at the effects on MS of improving venous blood flow by a technique called balloon dilation. This open-label study (not blinded or controlled – see Q3 below) evaluated the safety and preliminary outcomes of vascular surgery in 65 people with MS who had previously been diagnosed with CCSVI (35 individuals with relapsing-remitting MS, 20 with secondary-progressive MS, and 10 with primary-progressive MS). Some positive impacts were reported including a reduction in new brain lesions on MRI scans and reduction in the number of relapses experienced by some of the participants in the trial.

However, results were confounded by a number of factors including; restenosis in 47% of cases (meaning that internal jugular veins went back to having restricted blood flow after the procedure), inconsistency in the timing and type of MRI scans taken and the fact that participants remained on their Disease Modifying Treatments during the study period.

These are all major factors that need to be considered when data from the study is interpreted. Researchers conducting the study reported that further trials will need to be conducted to measure the benefits and risks of balloon dilation in people with MS.

Q 3: Why are blinded controlled trials important?
A: In controlled trials, “blinding” of participants and researchers as well as the use of a comparative control group are considered essential to ensure that the hopes and expectations of the participants and the researchers do not influence the assessment of the trial outcomes or the interpretation of the results. So far, none of the procedures conducted to correct CCSVI have been done in the context of a controlled trial.

Q 4: What does the latest CCSVI research show?
A: Preliminary results from a large ongoing Combined Transcranial and Extracranial Venous Doppler Evaluation study at the University at Buffalo Medical Center aimed at investigating if CCSVI is associated with MS, were released on February 10, 2010. 

Doppler scan results were reported on five specific criteria that affect venous blood flow. Patients who met at least two of the criteria were considered to have CCSVI. 289 of the 500 patients enrolled had MS. Of these, at least 56 percent of the MS cohort met the criteria for CCSVI. The same was true for at least 22 percent of the 163 healthy controls and at least 42 percent of people with other neurological conditions. The results were substantially different from those reported by Dr Zamboni and suggest impaired venous flow is not specific for MS.The researchers concluded that further blinded studies are needed to determine the prevalence and significance of CCSVI in MS. A second stage of the study will involve screening a further 500 participants using more advanced screening methods.

Q 5: What further research is being undertaken into CCSVI?
A: MS Societies that fund MS research are interested in pursuing all promising avenues of MS research. In December 2009, the MS societies of Canada and USA issued an expedited international request for proposals on CCSVI and MS. Proposals were received from seven countries and final decisions will be announced on 14 June with projects anticipated to start on 1 July 2010. An international review panel of MS and vascular experts has been convened in cooperation with these MS Societies to ensure an expedited, coordinated response.

Several MS Societies, including those in Canada, Italy, Netherlands, United Kingdom and USA will also consider funding projects on CCSVI through their normal funding process. The Steering Committee of the Italian MS Foundation (FISM) will evaluate proposals on CCSVI that have been submitted through their annual call for projects in March. 

In addition, FISM is promoting an epidemiological study to confirm and extend Dr. Zamboni’s findings by evaluating the prevalence of CCSVI in healthy controls, MS and other neurodegenerative diseases, other inflammatory diseases of the central nervous system and other systemic autoimmune diseases. This study plans to enroll 1690 subjects and will involve15 clinical centres. FISM is also participating in a randomized controlled trial to evaluate the short and long term efficacy and risks of the venous dilation procedure on disease progression and symptoms. Both studies are likely to start in the second half of 2010.

The MS Society of Canada has also called on its government to make extra research funding available to speed up research on CCSVI.

Q 6: Does CCSVI cause MS?
A: At this point there is not enough evidence to draw conclusions on CCSVI and MS. Based on what has been published to date, we can only say that in some people MS may occur in association with impaired venous drainage of the central nervous system. However this phenomenon has also been observed in people who do not have MS.

There is not enough evidence to determine whether obstruction of veins causes MS, or is caused by MS, or even to determine when this obstruction may occur in the course of disease.

Q 7: How has CCSVI been treated?
A: Surgical procedures for CCSVI in MS have used balloon dilation to open up obstructed veins or insertion of stents into veins to help keep them open (endovascular surgery). These procedures have been performed on only a small number of MS patients.

Q 8: What is known about the risks involved in this treatment? A: No studies testing the safety and effectiveness of treatments for CCSVI have reported detailed safety findings to date. Procedures involving stenting or balloon dilation of the jugular and Azygous veins for the treatment of CCSVI are of unknown safety.

It is known, however, that endovascular procedures, like any procedures, do carry risks. Balloon angioplasty and stenting both carry a small risk of elastic recoil, rupture of the vein and blood clots. The rates of restenosis (re-narrowing) are also high. Stenting carries additional risks because it requires that the patient takes anticoagulant drugs which could lead to bleeding and also because there is the possibility that the stent could come loose and migrate towards the heart.

This does not mean that these procedures would not be considered as a potential treatment in the future if further research proves that they are safe and effective at treating MS. At present treatments for CCSVI remain unproven and it is prudent that any such procedures only be performed as part of properly regulated controlled clinical trials, especially in light of adverse events reported to date.

Reports of CCSVI surgical procedures involving stents resulting in adverse events in persons with MS include one reported death. According to the Annals of Neurology, the person died of a haemorrhage in the brain while taking a blood thinner (anti-coagulant), which is commonly prescribed when stents are inserted into blood vessels. In another individual, a stent dislodged and moved to the heart, requiring emergency open heart surgery to remove the device. MS endovascular surgery was halted at Stanford University after these two adverse events occurred.

Q 9: Will the treatment of CCSVI be useful for the various forms of MS?
A: As research on this question is at a very early stage, it is currently unknown whether this type of treatment will be useful in any form of MS. More research is looking at possible links between CCSVI and MS, and/or its effects on MS symptoms and clinical studies on the effects of CCSVI treatment on MS are needed before it will be considered for approval in treating people with MS.

Dr. Zamboni has suggested that if further evidence supports the link between MS and CCSVI, its treatment may ultimately add to the arsenal of therapies available for MS. He emphasized the need for more research on his hypothesis, and noted that it is still not proven whether CCSVI is a cause of MS or related to MS in some other manner. Dr. Zamboni also noted that people with MS should remain on their immunomodulatory therapies.

Q 10: Should I have treatment?
A: The risks and benefits of procedures to treat CCSVI have not been established by properly controlled clinical trials. Unless and until strong supportive evidence is produced, and until the risks of treatment are thoroughly assessed, any procedures to mechanically correct the purported problem outside of a clinical trial are not recommended.

Source: Multiple Sclerosis International Federation (MSIF) (27/05/10)
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
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      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5185746</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 27 May 2010 10:53:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>MS Society CCSVI meeting webcast tomorrow (26th May) 1-3pm.</title>
      <description>
The MS Society was approached by online CCSVI pressure group MS-CCSVI-UK - http://www.facebook.com/ms.ccsvi.uk who requested a meeting with the MS Society about CCSVI. 

In response to this request, and to news of the CCSVI demonstration being held by MS-CCSVI-UK outside the MSS headquarters the MSS set up a CCSVI Meeting with interactive webcast.

Watch the webcast at http://bit.ly/dkA588 email conference@voiceprompt.co.uk or tweet at http://twitter.com/mssocietyuk your CCSVI questions to their panel from 1pm.............. 

MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5179428</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5179428</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 25 May 2010 09:19:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>Dr. Ashton Embry responds to the Canwest CCSVI article in Montreal Gazette</title>
      <description>
May 19, 2010 

Dear Ms Levy and Dr Lang, 

I read your recent column on the treatment of CCSVI (Liberation or placebo effect? MS surgery, Montreal Gazette) and was very surprised at how much you left out about the science of CCSVI. You completely missed the implications of the key scientific findings of CCSVI and why these findings strongly indicate that it is important to be treated for CCSVI sooner than later. 

First of all the current science has left no reasonable doubt that CCSVI is associated with MS, that is, it is far more common in persons with MS than the general population. This is based on Dr Zamboni’s research as well as published information from other centres, including a major study at the University of Buffalo. No credible researcher is disputing this clear association. Of course, association alone does not mean cause. Your statement “CCSVI, if that condition actually exists” indicates that neither of you have not read the literature (e.g. the April issue of International Angiology which had 13 contributions on CCSVI). How you think you can write an intelligent column without such background reading boggles my mind. 

Another critical scientific finding which you seemingly know nothing about is that the venous malformations that drive CCSVI are almost exclusively congenital, that is, they were there at birth. Again comprehensive papers have been published on this and it is very widely accepted. This is critical because it shows that CCSVI precedes the MS disease process and is not an effect of it. 

Finally, it is also well accepted that biological mechanisms which are a consequence of CCSVI, such as reflux of venous blood back to the brain, the deposition of iron in the brain, hypoperfusion, and the upregulation of adhesion molecules on the endothelium of the venules, all can be reasonably related to the MS disease process. 

I would also emphasize that no one credible is claiming MS is not an autoimmune disease. The huge MS data base shows it almost assuredly is. However, it also must be emphasized that the biological mechanisms associated with CCSVI all significantly enhance the autoimmune process. 

This brings us to another of your ill-conceived statements. “CCSVI, and MS, breaks down on a number of other fronts, including the fact that patients who have impaired blood flow in their veins as a result of surgeries, for example, don't develop MS. Similarly, vessels tend to narrow as we age and yet MS is not a disease of older individuals. The blocked vein theory of MS is so out of keeping with our understanding of the disease that it might be compared to fixing a burned out car radiator by changing the tires of a car.” I was embarrassed for both you when I read it. MS is an autoimmune disease which is substantially aggravated by the co-occurrence of CCSVI. Not everyone with MS has CCSVI and not everyone with venous problems has MS. This again is well established in the literature. I cringe when I read ridiculous statements which attempt to discredit the CCSVI/MS association. You two are better than the nonsense you wrote. 

I might note that CCSVI helps to explain a major puzzle in MS. As you both well know, the brain is protected from the blood-borne, immune system by what is known as the blood-brain barrier (BBB); greatly strengthened, blood vessel walls which prevent the passage of immune cells into the CNS. It has always been a problem to explain why the autoimmune cells were able to cross the BBB so easily in the MS disease process, given that evolution had ensured this would not happen. Of course the trick is that the biological mechanisms associated with CCSVI degrade the integrity of the BBB and allow the autoaggressive immune cells to cross the BBB much more easily. Thus, with CCSVI as part of MS, we now have an improved, more theoretically reasonable, disease model which fits an evolutionary perspective. 

Given all of the above, there can be little doubt that CCSVI is an important part of the MS disease process because 1) it is associated with MS,2) precedes MS and 3) can reasonably contribute to the actual MS pathogenesis. As an analogy, just imagine if people with persistent back pain were found to have a pin sticking in their backs. If, in most cases, it was found the pins were there before the back pain and the pain was associated with the pin, then it would be reasonable to postulate the pins were part of the problem. Of course, if the pins were shown to be there after the pain, then one would assume the pin is not a big player in the problem and may be an effect of it (a failed treatment?). 

The question now becomes now that once it is established that the pins precede the back pain and can help to explain it, do we wait for 7 years of research before pulling the pins, or do we pull the pins and at the same time do research to determine how they got there, how they cause the pain, what is the safest way to remove them etc. Clearly the latter is the common sense approach. Any advocacy of the first option immediately raises the spectre of a hidden, self-serving agenda. 

Exactly the same logic applies to CCSVI and MS except it is more important that treatment be done as soon as possible. This is because, in the 7-10 years needed for all the research, many people with MS will suffer serious, irreversible damage to the CNS and will experience serious clinical symptoms because of such damage. Because CCSVI is almost assuredly an important part of the MS disease process as the current science has shown, then it is important that it be resolved as soon as possible. There is no doubt that large amounts of research are needed on CCSVI but treatment of those with MS cannot wait until this research is completed. 

In summary, what the media (including you) have missed is that the current science says CCSVI is very likely a key part of the MS disease process and consequently needs to be treated as soon as possible. This is not a treatment which addresses symptoms but one which addresses a main driver. I am not surprised that many people are experiencing major improvements in their MS symptoms once CCSVI is relieved. I expect those with the pin in their backs would also enjoy some relief upon pin removal. Any time you counter a key part of a medical problem, from a bacteria which causes an ulcer, to immune suppression in autoimmunity, relief is to be expected. Claims that all the impressive improvements are simply “placebo effect” are also nonsense. They are just as real as the few cases of adverse effects. 

Persons with MS are simply asking for a serious pathology (impaired venous flow from the brain), which science says is very likely to be a part of their disease process, to be corrected. To an objective observer, and hopefully to the media, this should be seen as a most reasonable request. 

I also hope you can understand why pharmaceutical companies and those who receive substantial financial benefits from such companies (neurological community, MS Society), all of whom have much to lose from the introduction of CCSVI as a standard treatment, are strongly opposed to making CCSVI treatment available. Who can blame them? However, given their blatant and rather large conflict of interest, their opinions on this matter have to be weighed very carefully and seen in the light of the strong subjectivity they carry. Given that you are mouthing the same hollow arguments of those opposed to CCSVI, I have to wonder “who got to you”. A drug company, your favourite neurologist or perhaps a representative from the MS Society? 

I hope this helps you understand why there is so much turmoil concerning CCSVI treatment. From an objective, scientific point of view, CCSVI needs to be treated anytime it is found. From a financial point of view, various factions are strongly opposed to such treatment. I hope some day the media gets at the real stories –1) science supports CCSVI treatment as soon as possible and 2) There is a war going on with the stakes being the physical health of persons with MS versus the financial health of drug companies, neurologists and national MS societies. Which is more important to our society? I know what side you two are on and it is not something you should be proud of. Beating up on persons with MS for financial reasons is as about as ugly as it gets. You are out doing the bankers in terms of a complete disregard for the values of our society. 

I hope I have given you a broader perspective on CCSVI and the importance of treating it sooner rather than later. This issue will not go away until “the right thing to do” is done. 

Sincerely, 

Dr Ashton Embry 
President, Direct-MS

Liberation or placebo effect? MS surgery, Montreal Gazette  
MSRC CCSVI General News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
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      <pubDate>Thu, 20 May 2010 04:13:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>MS patient slams NHS operation snub</title>
      <description>
  
An Inverness woman being forced to go private for treatment on a debilitating disease has launched a battle to make the operation available on the NHS.

And Audrey Barnett (39), who is housebound because she suffers from multiple sclerosis (MS), has claimed it is "scandalous" that a leading research charity has failed to back the surgery - costing up to £6,000 privately.

She has now launched a fundraising drive to pay for her treatment at a private clinic in Glasgow and is also lobbying the Scottish Parliament for urgent research so it can be offered to all MS patients.

This is despite the MS Society saying there is not enough evidence to prove its success.

She said: "This operation gives me hope I can get my life back - but I want it available to all MS patients on the NHS."

Mrs Barnett, of Underwood Place, Balloch, was diagnosed with MS, the most common disabling neurological condition affecting young adults, after she temporarily lost the feeling in one leg and the strength in the other 15 years ago.

At first, she had "long good spells" in remission, but her most recent relapse severely affected her quality of life.

Mrs Barnett, a former civil servant who retired on health grounds, said: "My main ongoing problem is fatigue and my walking is limited. Last year, I had three relapses which is frightening as the illness often becomes progressive.

"My last relapse in August started as very severe dizziness, which slowly improved to being slightly dizzy/very light headed but it has not improved any further.

"I can no longer go out of the house on my own, as I don't feel safe to, and am not able to drive which leaves me feeling very isolated. Nobody can do anything for me apart from treat the anxiety it causes."

But a ray of hope came when she learned of pioneering MS surgery by an Italian doctor.

Involving angioplasty to open a blocked vein, Mrs Barnett found it has been carried out overseas with "dramatic" results.

She said: "This is not a procedure that is new to vascular surgeons as it is already being performed for many reasons - it's just new as a possible treatment for MS.

"As it is not a proven treatment for MS, the UK is not prepared to carry out this simple operation on the NHS until it is proven. This could take years. It is being done in many other countries with amazing results.

"I'm now campaigning to get the Scottish Parliament to push the NHS to do research into this with a view to starting treatment for all MS sufferers as soon as possible."

As well as writing to local politicians, she has submitted a petition proposal to the parliament which will go online before being considered by the Public Petitions Committee.

A stumbling block, however, are some MS charities which have not yet come out in support of the treatment.

She said that after news broke about the treatment last year, the MS Society quickly stated it was not convinced by the evidence. And, she added, when a petition with more than 10,000 signatures calling for the procedure to be made available was handed into Downing Street, the Government's response was similar to the MS Society's statement.

Mrs Barnett said: "For some reason the MS Society, which is a private charity and not in the public health domain, seem to be calling the shots with the Government and do not appear to be working in our best interests - it's nothing short of scandalous."

Source: Highland News copyright 2010 Scottish Provincial Press Ltd.(14/05/10)
 
MSRC General CCSVI News Page - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5141200</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5141200</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 14 May 2010 02:31:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>MS patient blossoms, however, doctor rebuked</title>
      <description>
A woman is crediting an experimental procedure performed at Victoria General Hospital for clearing up her multiple sclerosis symptoms, even if the treatment earned her doctor a professional rebuke.

Kornelija Valentic, a 38-year-old mother of three from Surrey nearly disabled by MS, said all she hoped to get from a procedure last month to open the veins in her neck was an end to her constant headache.

But, within 48 hours of the procedure, she was walking better, her vision improved, she recovered feeling in her hands and feet and regained control of her bladder -- and her headache was gone.

"I wanted the headaches gone," said Valentic in a telephone interview. "My little bonus is being able to make it to the bathroom, being able to see, hand tremors that are gone -- and I can drink my coffee without spilling anything.

"I wasn't expecting it. But you know what? I'll take it," said Valentic.

But last week it was learned the Victoria radiologist who performed the procedure, along with one other, had been chastised by medical officials at Vancouver Island Health Authority for performing what's considered an experimental procedure outside of an approved trial.

The treatment, known as "liberation procedure," has unleashed enormous pressure from MS patients and their supporters on doctors and health administrators ever since it was first reported in 2008 by Italian vascular surgeon Paolo Zamboni.

Zamboni has theorized many of the symptoms associated with multiple sclerosis -- pain, crippling fatigue, blindness and progressive paralysis -- is the result of an iron buildup in the brain.

Zamboni's liberation procedure uses angioplasty to clear blocked veins and increase circulation to the brain. A small balloon is inflated in the veins that carry blood away from the brain.

The first reports turned medical scientific opinion about multiple sclerosis on its head. Traditionally, it is considered a disease where the body's immune system attacked the fatty, insulating coating on the nerves, called myelin, destroying the nerve's ability to transmit signals to and from the brain.

Clinical trial of Zamboni's liberation procedures are now being fast-tracked across the world, including the University of B.C. and McMaster University in Hamilton, Ont.

But patients who have been slowly losing their lives to MS are less than patient. They have been paying thousands of dollars to fly to Italy, Poland and, most recently, India, to obtain the procedure.

Just last week, MS patients and their families demonstrated across Canada, at the House of Commons in Ottawa and the B.C. legislature for governments to start funding the procedure.

Source: The Province © Copyright (c) The Province (13/05/10)

    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5139799</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5139799</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 13 May 2010 11:29:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>The Essential Health Clinic Announces CCSVI Treatment Packages</title>
      <description>
EHC have announced further information on the CCSVI Treatment Packages that will be available through The Essential Health Clinic in Scotland from July onwards. 

Full details are on their website at - The Essential Health Clinic Treatment Packages - http://www.essentialhealthclinic.com/website/index.php/clinic/ccsvi/ccsvi-information.html

Source: The Essential Health Clinic (13/05/10)
The MSRC General CCSVI News Page - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5138911</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5138911</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 13 May 2010 03:13:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>MS patients rally for experimental treatment</title>
      <description>
  
Canadians with multiple sclerosis rallied across the country Wednesday to demand access to a controversial procedure not available in Canada or covered by provincial health insurance policies.

The procedure, developed by Italian researcher Dr. Paolo Zamboni, involves angioplasty to help ease the flow in neck veins of blood from the brain to the heart. Zamboni believes narrowed or blocked veins force blood to move backwards or reflux back into the brain and spine, causing damage. 

He's termed the condition chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency, or CCSVI.

Rallies were planned for Halifax, Ottawa, Toronto, Regina, Edmonton, Vancouver, Victoria and elsewhere.

"With this kind of an illness, there isn't time for them to take three years to find out something," said Jennifer Noriega of Edmonton, a 38-year-old mother of two who has been living with MS for 11 years. 

Noriega, who can no longer walk, tried many different medications, including chemotherapy drugs, and now plans to travel to Bulgaria for the treatment.

"The risk might be that it works and then three months later it doesn't work," Noriega said. "But at least I'll have those three months."

More than 20 Canadians travelled to a clinic in Poland between February and April for the treatment.

Many MS specialists say Zamboni's procedure is experimental at best and could be dangerous.

Studies are underway to show how common CCSVI is in MS patients, those with other neurological conditions and healthy people, as well as to explore its potential role as a major risk factor in MS.

But despite the specialists' hesitation, some Canadian patients are travelling overseas, paying for tests and surgery out of their own pocket. Others are lobbying for the Canadian health-care system to cover the diagnostic tests to look for blocked veins in people with MS. 

"I've been fixed," Steve Garvie, 53, told the crowd gathered at Queen's Park in Toronto. Garvie was one of five people who had the procedure at Royal Victoria Hospital in Barrie before the surgeon voluntarily stopped.

"What they're doing is criminal," Garvie added in an interview. "Every person that wants the operation should have it." About 150 people gather at Queen's Park in Toronto to demand that multiple sclerosis patients get access to a controversial new surgical treatment. (Mike Crawley/CBC)

"With any new treatment, whether it's drugs or technology, we need to ensure that it is thoroughly researched before it is approved for use," said Andy Weiler, a spokesperson for Alberta Health. "It needs to be an evidence-based decision that it is a safe and effective treatment."

Likewise, Nova Scotia's Minister of Health, Maureen MacDonald, met with protest organizers in Halifax for about 30 minutes on Wednesday but was not swayed by their arguments.

"We still don't know what the risks or the evidence are of the treatment," MacDonald said. "At this stage, it would be premature to have kind of a mass testing process for a treatment that is still unproven." 

MacDonald said no other province is funding this kind of testing or treatment for MS. 

Last month in Toronto, Zamboni and his collaborator, Dr. Robert Zivadinov, associate professor of neurology at State University of New York at Buffalo, cautioned people with multiple sclerosis to not rush to seek out the surgical procedure to unblock veins unless it was through official clinical studies

Source: CBC News Copyright CBC/Radio-Canada (06/05/10)
 
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5123482</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5123482</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 06 May 2010 09:26:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Canadian MS Society lobbies government for $10 million for funding into CCSVI and MS research</title>
      <description>
The Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada is calling on the government to provide $10 million for research into chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI) and MS.

The request for funding comes as Canadians with MS continue to seek diagnostics and treatment for CCSVI elsewhere, paying out-of-pocket for tests and experimental therapies that could be provided in Canada.

"The safety and health of people living with MS is our primary concern," says Yves Savoie, president and CEO of the MS Society. "The Government of Canada can play a leadership role in addressing the needs of Canadians living with MS by funding research, including clinical trials in CCSVI and MS. Doing so will both advance research and provide safeguards to those seeking treatment."

The Government of Canada has acted quickly in the past to respond to health crises with innovative research, such as its 2009 investment of $6 million to support research to find alternative medical isotopes.

"The MS community has spoken. They want access to diagnostics and treatment for CCSVI in Canada," says Linda Lumsden, chair of the national board of directors for the MS Society. "The MS Society has already committed to funding CCSVI research and now we are calling on the Government of Canada to do its part."

Tomorrow, Lumsden will formally ask Minister of Health Leona Aglukkaq for the funding. The MS Society proposes that the $10 million be appropriated to the budget of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and earmarked for CCSVI research.

MS Society representatives are in Ottawa for the next two days meeting with various Members of Parliament to advocate on key MS issues.

"It is obvious that the relationship between CCSVI and MS requires further investigation," says Savoie. "This funding request will give researchers the tools to examine both the prevalence of this condition and the potential benefits of treating people with it."

In late 2009 the MS Society of Canada announced a special research competition for CCSVI related studies. The results of this competition will be announced on June 14th, 2010.

"I fully support the MS Society's efforts to lobby the government for research into CCSVI and MS," says Joan Ozirny, a volunteer board member with the MS Society's Alberta Division who lives with MS. "Increased research funding is the only way we'll get closer to unraveling this complicated disease."

As part of its overall lobbying effort, the MS Society, in collaboration with other Canadian health charities, is calling on the federal government to increase overall funding to the CIHR annually to a level equivalent to 1% of total health spending in Canada. This amounts to $1.8 billion based on $183.1 billion in health care funding as of 2009.

Source: PR Inside.com (c) 2010 Market Wire. (06/05/10)
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5123026</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5123026</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 06 May 2010 04:58:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>American MS Society fast-tracks research on chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI)</title>
      <description>
  
The National Multiple Sclerosis Society in the United States is assuming a leadership role in disseminating information and mobilizing research on the role of chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency in the etiology and treatment of multiple sclerosis. The move comes in response to mounting pressure from patients and the scientific community questioning the hypothesis.

The society and the American Academy of Neurology jointly organized a 90-minute Web forum during the annual meeting of the AAN that was open to thousands of off-site patients, family members, researchers, and members of the press. The forum featured two of the investigators whose research on chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCVI) has sparked so much interest. In addition, the society has implemented an expedited research program to see whether scientific results can be replicated and further avenues explored.

“I know the MS Society shares the public’s sense of urgency in advancing any lead that may help us understand the cause, provide the cure, or change the course of MS,” said Dr. Aaron E. Miller, the society’s chief medical officer. Dr. Miller, who is also professor of neurology and director of the MS Center at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, participated in the forum.

“The MS Society suggested holding a cosponsored educational Web forum on the CCSVI and MS because of the extent of misinformation and general confusion we were observing both on the Internet and in the media. We also felt the timing to be apropos because of the number of experts who would be [at the AAN meeting],” Arney Rosenblat, the society’s vice president of public affairs, said in an interview.

More than 5,000 people were preregistered for the forum, and more than 1,000 questions were submitted. 

The speakers included Dr. Paolo Zamboni, director of the Vascular Diseases Center at the University of Ferrara, Italy, whose team was instrumental in hypothesizing a link between cerebrovascular insufficiency and MS.

In June last year, he and his colleagues described evidence of slowed and obstructed drainage in cerebrospinal veins in 100% of patients with MS, a condition that they called CCSVI (J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry 2009;80:392-9). They also suggested that blood flow is detoured around obstructions and that reversed blood flow might initiate the inflammation and immune-mediated brain damage characteristic of MS. The investigators had used advanced ultrasound techniques to evaluate blood outflow in 65 people with MS and in 235 controls who were either healthy or had other neurologic disorders.

Later last year, in December, the group reported on the safety and preliminary outcomes of surgical intervention using percutaneous transluminal angioplasty in 35 patients with relapsing-remitting, secondary progressive and primary progressive MS (J. Vasc. Surg. 2009;50:1348-58). Some positive effects were described – significant reduction of relapses and active lesions, improved function and quality of life, and less fatigue – although a high rate of restenosis was reported. The group issued a call for larger, controlled trials.

Dr. Robert Zivadinov, director of the Buffalo (N.Y.) Neuroimaging Analysis Center, was another featured speaker. He and his group are exploring the prevalence of venous obstruction in 1,700 children and adults with MS, healthy controls, autoimmune-vascular disorders, and other neurologic diseases using a combination of transcranial and extracranial venous Doppler methods.

They released their preliminary results earlier this year, and Dr. Zivadinov unveiled the results of phase I of the Combined Transcranial and Extracranial Venous Doppler Evaluation Study during the forum. In these first 500 patients, 62.5% of MS patients met CCSVI diagnostic criteria, compared with 25.5% of healthy controls and 45.8% of those with other neurologic diseases. Although there was an increased likelihood that MS patients would meet the criteria for CCSVI (odds ratio, 4.85; P less than .001), compared with healthy controls, CCSVI seemed to be present in a proportion of healthy controls as well – in contradiction to Dr. Zamboni’s hypothesis.

By late 2009, patients and their families began asking for more information about CCSVI as a possible cause of MS, and endovascular stent treatment as a possible cure. At Stanford (Calif.) University, vascular specialist Dr. Michael D. Dake embarked on a program to insert stents into the internal jugular veins of MS patients based on Dr. Zamboni’s reports – a program that was terminated in December because the procedure was deemed experimental. Complications included the death of one of Dr. Dake’s patients who had been on coumadin and a dislodged stent that required surgical removal in another patient.

With research reports published in reputable medical publications and calls from patients for more information, the MS Society decided to take an active role in evaluating “this interesting hypothesis that needed to be further explored: whether there is an association between CCSVI and MS,” said Patricia A. O’Looney, Ph.D., the vice president of biomedical research for the society. She cited previous research programs in gender differences in MS, genetics, and myelin repair mechanisms, as examples of the society’s role in encouraging research in “underexplored” areas.

On Dec. 16, 2009, the society invited researchers worldwide to submit applications for funding and proposals for further research on CCSVI in MS. The deadline for submissions was Feb. 9, and decisions are expected mid-June.

In an interview, Dr. O’Looney declined to specify how much money has been allocated by the society. She said that she expects more than one project to be funded and that the hope is that definitive information about the CCSVI-MS association would be available within 2 years.

“We felt that answering this question was critical before patients underwent interventional treatment, which carries its own risks,” Dr. O’Looney said.

Source: MedConnect Copyright (c) 2009 Elsevier Global Medical News.(05/05/10)
 
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5120870</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5120870</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 05 May 2010 07:30:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Essential Health Clinic CCSVI Waiting List</title>
      <description>
CCSVI Treatment Packages Waiting List


We are now pleased to give further information on the CCSVI Treatment Packages Waiting List which opens on Wednesday 5th May. 

We fully appreciate the problems some of our patients have experienced in trying to book CCSVI Scanning appointments and we have taken on board all the comments you have sent to us. We are a committed team and have dedicated considerable time and resources towards putting systems in place that will enable us to cope with the number of enquiries we have received (and continue to receive). We are putting the final details together for a range of Treatment Packages (including Scanning, Venogram, Liberation Treatment) and will be announcing these within the next 10 days. These will be designed to cope with the requirements of our patients; many of whom are traveling considerable distances to see us.

"We believe that patient experience should be seamless from consultation and diagnosis through to treatment and surgery. Our priority is to give every patient the highest standard of care."

If you are interested in having the CCSVI Treatment, we strongly recommend that you take a place on our waiting list as soon as possible (opening Wednesday 5th May). Deposits paid are fully refundable (see terms below). This not only gives you the peace of mind in knowing you have secured a place, but helps us with our forward planning for the next 12 months.
 
Waiting List
Anyone can apply to go on our waiting list. A deposit of £100 is required and this is fully refundable at any time prior to booking one of our treatment packages. This service opens on 5th May at 11.00 GMT (12.00 BST).

Places will be reserved on our waiting list in the strict order in which we receive your deposit. Each month we will email those on our waiting list to advise them on the anticipated length of time before it is expected that they will receive an appointment. 

Once the next block of appointments is available they will be offered to those who have been on our waiting list the longest. These people will then be able to book their appointment online using a special code to deduct their deposit from the Treatment Package of their choice.

Our Basic Treatment Package at £450 includes;

CCSVI Screening Scan (up to 60 minutes) followed by a Consultation with one of our Doctors (up to 60 minutes). This will take place at our Glasgow clinic in Rutherglen on weekdays only. Extra option of Blood Testing package (Vitamin D, Omega-3, Nitrotyrosine) at an additional £125
(both fees are fully refundable up to 30 days before CCSVI Screening Scan).
Note: Our Treatment packages will only be offered to people on our waiting list and in strict rotation.


Please note we can only accept waiting list applications via the website. We are unable to take orders/payment for the waiting list or Treatment Packages over the phone.

Note: Waiting list places are not transferable

Prior to the opening of the Waiting List
If you choose to go on our waiting list, you will be asked to log into your online account with us. It is strongly recommended that you set this up prior to Wednesday as this will save you some time when obtaining your place on our Waiting list. To Register for your FREE account please click here. Once you have entered your basic details you will be taken into your account 'dashboard'. Under the heading 'Address Book', please click on the 'Edit Address' link and enter your address details. This is then recorded as your 'primary address'. Please also enter your telephone details. Once you click on the 'save address details' (bottom right of the screen) and your account will then be setup ready for booking on our Waiting List on Wednesday. All you will need to do is log into your account (by clicking on the Login button on the top right of our website). 
The Scottish Clinic we have partnered with for the Venogram and Liberation treatment is the ultimate, state of the art, 5-star healthcare facility based in Scotland. This clinic offers unparalleled access to leading consultants in serene, comfortable surroundings.

London facilities are still being looked into but are not likely to be available until the start of 2011.

MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5118772</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5118772</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 04 May 2010 09:17:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Legal fears thwart doctor's bid for ‘liberation' from MS pain</title>
      <description>
Paulette O’Leary already had an IV in her arm when the lawyers arrived.

The 41-year-old Toronto doctor and mother of two had flown to Pennsylvania over the weekend to undergo a controversial “liberation” treatment she hoped would alleviate the symptoms of multiple sclerosis that have plagued her for 22 years. 

On Sunday night, she and her husband went out for dinner on the instructions of the doctor who would perform the surgery – he was so confident it would work, he had instructed her to celebrate.

But on Monday, the same doctor, a vascular radiologist named Joseph Bonn, sat at her bedside at Lankenau Hospital outside Philadelphia and informed her that he had just been ordered by lawyers to cancel her procedure, as well as those of countless other MS patients who had booked his surgery time solid through to October.

“I was in shock, because I was so pumped up,” Dr. O’Leary said Wednesday before flying back to Toronto. “It’s going to be awful when I arrive back at the airport because my daughter’s expecting me to run to her, and she’s going to see me still walking with a cane.”

Dr. O’Leary, a researcher with the University Health Network in Toronto, had paid $18,000 (U.S.) to be just the fifth MS patient, and first Canadian, to be treated by Dr. Bonn.

Since an Italian vascular surgeon named Paolo Zamboni released a study suggesting MS was connected to Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency (CCSVI), patients in Canada and around the world have been desperately seeking out doctors who will perform procedures to unblock their veins.

But in the U.S., hospitals are beginning to ban the procedures for MS patients until more research is done, as fears of legal liabilities surface. Dr. O’Leary and others in the MS community worry that this reluctance will force the treatment underground, with people lying about why they need an angioplasty or paying large amounts to receive the treatment overseas.

“People are willing to mortgage their houses for this,” Dr. O’Leary said.

A statement released by Lankenau on Wednesday said that while CCSVI “may offer a breakthrough” in the treatment of MS, the hospital is suspending the unblocking treatments until they are approved by its Institutional Review Board.

In December, Stanford University in California also ordered vascular specialist Michael Dake to stop performing a procedure to open the veins of MS patients. Although many of his patients reported improvements in their symptoms, one woman died of a brain hemorrhage on the way home from the treatment, and another patient required surgery after the stent installed to open his jugular vein broke free and floated into his heart.

Since then, other U.S. doctors who had been quietly performing the procedure – their names spread swiftly by online MS support groups – have been ordered to stop by their legal departments.

In New Jersey, Steven Sclafani was told to cancel all appointments for MS patients, even though he was performing a balloon angioplasty that is commonly used to treat other congenital vein abnormalities, and was not using stents.

“I believe that our IRB understands the importance of this treatment and will not unduly delay their review,” Dr. Sclafani wrote on a message board for MS patients.

Denise Graff, a 43-year-old from New Brunswick, N.J., was on Dr. Sclafani’s waiting list when his procedures were shut down, and quickly found Dr. Bonn. Last Tuesday, she became his third MS patient to have her veins surgically unblocked. Diagnosed with MS in 1999, she said she felt an immediate change.

“I felt energetic,” she said. “The fatigue I had is beyond any tired you’ve ever known. It’s somebody sucking the life out of you. It was gone and I have not felt it since.”

But not everyone is convinced. Some critics say such anecdotal reports are the result of a placebo effect.

Ian Rodger, vice-president of research at McMaster University, St. Joseph's Healthcare, said Dr. Zamboni has simply raised a hypothesis that must now be proved by the research community, something that will take time.

But he understands some MS patients might not be willing to wait. “If I were in their situation, I might well feel the same way,” Dr. Rodger said.

The relative safeness of the procedure is what led Dr. O’Leary to seek out Dr. Bonn, whom she learned of through a Toronto colleague. “They’re saying it’s not tested, but it’s an angioplasty,” she said.

Dr. O’Leary has learned to live with her disease, but said she needs to try the new procedure, even if it doesn’t work. It would not be the first time she’s made a difficult and controversial decision regarding the illness.

She gave birth to her two daughters, now four years old and eight months, since her diagnosis. In the last trimester of her second pregnancy, she became temporarily paralyzed from the waist down. To manage her symptoms, she is also taking Tysabri, a drug that has been linked to the development of brain disease.

She is considering a trip to Bulgaria, where an angioplasty appointment will cost her just $8,000, but has been promised by Dr. Bonn that she’ll be his first patient once the procedure is approved.

As a doctor, she understands the introduction of novel medical treatments requires precaution and due diligence, but she thinks hospitals could move faster to approve what is already established as a relatively safe procedure.

“I do believe in this liberation procedure, I don’t know how it could get much safer,” she said. “But they’ll have crossed all their t’s and dotted all their i’s. And I have to agree with that.”

Source: The Globe And Mail © Copyright 2010 CTVglobemedia Publishing Inc.(29/04/10)
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5106351</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5106351</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 29 Apr 2010 04:43:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Networking power of the web shifting power balance between doctors and patients</title>
      <description>
  
Rebecca Cooney may have a debilitating, degenerative disease, but that doesn't mean she's ready to automatically defer to the authority of the medical community. 

"I've never been a person who thinks somebody else can make decisions for me. Even my doctors - they're the experts, I take what they say, but I have my own mind and my own information," says Cooney, 42, who has been living with multiple sclerosis for the past 18 years. 

"I'm not one that believes the Pope is the only one who can speak to God. I can speak to God myself." 

There have always been patients with Cooney's independent bent. But these days there seems to be hordes of them, due in large measure to the extraordinary reach of the Internet. 

A technology that makes a pioneering or profiteering clinic somewhere overseas a mere Google search away, the Internet is changing the nature of patient advocacy. It's amping up the activism. 

And those more activist patients, who share information and strategies through email, discussion boards and Facebook, are actually in some cases altering the research agenda in fields such as cancer, alternative medicine and now multiple sclerosis. 

Some want access to experimental drugs or therapies before science has proven that they are safe or useful. In other cases, they are agitating for a say in which theories, techniques or treatments get research funding. 

Patients like Cooney are thrilled about what she describes as the huge power shift she has seen in the years since she was first diagnosed. 

"The Internet - email - has really allowed me and most of the MS patients to really work in conjunction with the doctors, which we've never been able to do," she says. 

"It used to be almost what your neurologist said or what your doctor said was God. You couldn't really debate it. You couldn't say anything. Because you didn't know." 

"Now, I'm empowered. I can find out information." 

Other players are not so enthusiastic, saying the change is fostering tension within disease advocacy organizations and between doctors and their patients. 

Such is the case with multiple sclerosis, where the patient community is aflame with hope about a new and as-yet unproven claim by Dr. Paolo Zamboni that clogged neck veins may be triggering the disease or contributing to the destruction it wreaks. The condition has been dubbed chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency or CCSVI. 

Individually, a number of MS patients have already flown to clinics in places like Poland to undergo a vein opening operation that has been given the hope-inspiring name "the liberation procedure." 

Collectively many MS patients are pushing the MS Society of Canada and the National Multiple Sclerosis Society in the U.S. to fast-track funding for CCSVI research. 

The societies have jointly issued a special call for research proposals and will review them next month. The first funding awards are due to be announced in June. Donors - the societies get the bulk of their funding from the patient community - are even being allowed to earmark donations specifically to CCSVI work. 

Dr. Aaron Miller is a neurologist and head of the MS clinic at New York's Mount Sinai Medical Center. As the chief medical officer of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, he tries to keep an open mind towards new claims about MS, noting that there are times when ideas from out of left field propel scientific advances. 

He points to the example of stomach ulcers, which were long thought to be the product of stress. Then Barry Marshall and Robin Warren, two Australian researchers, proved they are caused by a bacterium, Helicobacter pylori and are treatable with antibiotics. 

Marshall and Warren won the 2005 Nobel Prize for Medicine. Still, those kinds of paradigm shifting successes aren't everyday occurrences. Miller suspects CCSVI isn't going to join that list but he fears that answer won't be arrived at quickly or cheaply. 

"We know that research dollars are extremely scarce, especially these days. And when you have to divert large sums of money to investigate something that's probably going to be barking up the wrong tree, it certainly is distressing," Miller says. 

He points out that the MS community has seen other provocative claims in the past, prior to the Internet's emergence as a communications tool for the masses. In the early 1990s, for instance, the TV newsmagazine "60 Minutes" aired a piece advancing the notion dental amalgam might be the cause of MS. Patients flocked to dentists to have old-fashioned fillings removed. 

"But the pace at which this happens now and the numbers of people to whom these stories and the information reaches is astronomical compared to what it once was," says Miller, who notes that Internet counselling has become a part of his routine interactions with patients. 

"It's a real challenge in how to interact with patients on issues like this," he admits. 

The scenario is unfolding in other subspecialties of medicine too. 

Dr. Maurie Markman, vice-president for clinical research at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, says the advocacy community has long been vocal in cancer care and research. 

Some bristle when they are told putative treatments need to be tested in staged clinical trials, he says. 

"Online, the New England Journal of Medicine has no more authority than Mr. Smith's or Mrs. Smith's website telling you that 'Here's the cure for cancer,"' Markman says. 

He explains the kind of pushback those insisting on proper trials sometimes encounter: "Five thousand people who are online say it's correct. So who are you ... Dr. Scientist, to tell me I'm wrong?" 

What's the answer? "It's not confrontation," Markman continues. "It's discussion and an awful lot more effort to explain." 

Still, a confrontational dynamic can emerge. 

The hesitancy of MS specialists towards CCSVI has frustrated and angered some patients. Some doctors who are viewed as impeding access to the treatment have received abusive hate mail. People on both sides of the divide say the situation has given rise to an us-versus-them mentality. 

"I do think the Internet has created an us-and-them thing," admits Cooney, who has co-founded a group called MS Liberation that is lobbying for the procedure to be available in Canada. 

"I don't like it. I wish it would stop. But ... I don't think it will until both people (parties) acknowledge that the playing field has changed." 

"I think the patients are not giving the neurologists and the doctors the time to really learn about this and to investigate it properly. But I also think the neurologists don't acknowledge that it's a different ball game." 

"They're used to holding back information from the patients. And what's happening is they can't do that anymore." 

Source@ AOL News © 2010 AOL Canada Inc All Rights Reserved. (27/04/10)
 
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5101086</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5101086</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 27 Apr 2010 03:52:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Latest from the Essential Health Clinic on CCSVI Testing and Treatment</title>
      <description>
CCSVI Appointments Update

We anticipate being able to release information to you next week with full details of the treatment plans we will have available in Scotland. 

We are aware that you are keen for news on our CCSVI treatment plans and are now very pleased to tell you we expect everything to be in place for us to offer the liberation treatment in Scotland and from as early as August. Our final complete package(s) will be released to you as an E-brochure next week.

A number of you are the first people to register with us for a Screening appointment in July/August and we realise that you are eager to know what happens if it is felt that you need to move onto the venogram and Liberation process. This will be in our E-brochure and will include full costings and information on our follow-up support. The final costings are almost complete and we just ask you to bear with us so we can announce everything in its entirety.

As many of you will know, we are the organisers of The 2nd European LDN conference which is being held in Glasgow this coming weekend. The inclusion in the conference for the first time of CCSVI has generated a lot of additional interest. More information can be found at www.bigonLDN2010.com. The closure of European airspace has created many challenges and caused a lot of extra work for us, but we can assure you that we have team members still working on the CCSVI package(s) and the conference will not delay us in releasing the additional information as soon as we have it.


Waiting List?

We anticipate being able to offer an online waiting list system for CCSVI Scanning, very soon. This will be announced through this Newsletter system. This will be for new patients and it will be followed, soon after, by the release of further Scanning appointments available in September. Please DO NOT phone the clinic for any other information on CCSVI as we have no other information that we can give at the moment.

MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
 
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5086871</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5086871</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 21 Apr 2010 04:36:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Venous abnormalities and multiple sclerosis: another breakthrough claim?</title>
      <description>
Recent reports of a possible link between venous abnormalities and multiple sclerosis have been associated with high levels of media hype. Many experts caution against premature promotion of the hypothesis and call for objectivity and scepticism in follow-up studies. Jane Qiu reports.

Poor judgment in medicine can lead to interventions with fatal consequences. Lives should not be lost before these interventions are halted, but they often are. In August, 2009, a patient with multiple sclerosis (MS) had two stents inserted into her right jugular vein; she died shortly afterwards of a brain haemorrhage while on the anticoagulant warfarin as a result of the procedure. 3 months later, another patient with MS had to have open-heart surgery to remove a jugular-vein stent that had come loose and moved into the right ventricle.

In December, 2009, Michael Dake, chief of interventional radiology at Stanford Medical Centre (CA, USA), who inserted stents in both patients as a way to treat MS, told his colleagues and patients that no further endovascular procedures would be done for the assessment or management of extracranial venous obstruction in any patients, with or without a diagnosis of MS, until clinical protocols were approved. The decision was made after “deep soul-searching”, said Dake in an email to his colleagues.

Dake is among the investigators who believe that venous stricture is a cause of MS and that endovascular procedures, such as balloon angioplasty or stent placement to widen the vein, could alleviate some of the symptoms. But the hypothesis is yet to be proven, let alone the safety and efficacy of the intervention. Many experts, such as Alasdair Coles, a neurologist at the University of Cambridge, UK, are openly critical that Dake subjected his patients to a grave risk without any evidence that the procedure would help to treat MS.
For a long time, neurologists have noted that some patients with MS have venous abnormalities in the brain. But it took many experts by surprise when Paulo Zamboni, a vascular surgeon at the University of Ferrara, Italy, and his colleagues reported that almost every one of the 65 patients with MS who they had examined with doppler ultrasound and venograms showed venous stricture in the jugular or azygous veins.

They also noted that different forms of MS were associated with different patterns of venous abnormality and, on the basis of ultrasound results, named the condition chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI). Such abnormalities were absent in the 235 control individuals, including healthy controls and patients with other neurological diseases.

The researchers suggested that venous stricture could lead to hypoxia and a breakdown of the blood—brain barrier, causing red-blood cell and fluid leakage into brain and spine tissues; as a result, iron and plasma from the blood that accumulate in the CNS over time might break the immune tolerance and set off a cascade of immune responses.

The team then reported an open-label prospective study of 65 patients with MS—35 relapsing-remitting, ten primary progressive, and 20 secondary progressive—who had undergone angioplasty to widen the veins. The researchers found that the procedure had “a minor and negligible complication rate” and, despite the fact that the study was neither blinded nor controlled, concluded that the treatment “significantly improved MS clinical outcome measures, especially in the [relapsing-remitting] group”.

Some neurologists think that the CCSVI hypothesis has weight. “The autoimmune hypothesis doesn't explain everything about MS, especially the neurodegeneration aspect of the disease, which has been increasingly noted in the past few years”, says Bianca Weinstock-Guttman, a neurologist at the University at Buffalo (NY, USA). For years, Weinstock-Guttman and other research groups have noted iron deposits around injury sites in the brain; the amount of iron deposits as measured by MRI seems to be associated with MS disease progression.

Others, however, are unconvinced. “The sensitivity and specificity of Zamboni's ultrasound tests are so high that they are hardly believable”, says Richard Rudick, director of the Mellen Centre for MS at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation (OH, USA). Similarly, Coles finds it “extremely surprising that Zamboni could distinguish different types of MS based on different patterns of venous abnormality”.

Experts are adamant that the observation needs to be confirmed by independent research groups and the underlying physiology and CCSVI better defined using modalities other than ultrasound. However, a recent study (as yet unpublished) by Robert Zivadinov, also at Buffalo, seems to have led to more confusion than assurance.
The team examined the venous system of 500 people, including 161 healthy controls, 280 patients with MS, mostly the relapsing-remitting form, as well as patients with other neurological disorders, and found that 56% of patients with MS and 22% of healthy controls showed narrowing of the extracranial veins. Furthermore, the more serious the disease was, the more venous abnormalities there were.
Many note that the prevalence of venous abnormalities in Zivadinov's study is much lower than that reported by Zamboni, and wonder what the real association is. Zivadinov says that his study might have been “better blinded”, which might have removed some levels of subjectivity during ultrasound scanning. “All patients walked in [to the ultrasound test room] with a walking stick, so the technician wouldn't know which subjects had MS or other neurological disease”, says Zivadinov.

Zamboni's team also used a more sensitive ultrasound machine, which might explain the much higher prevalence of CCSVI among patients with MS in their study, says Zivadinov. This, however, does not explain why Zamboni's more sensitive machine did not pick up any venous abnormalities in the control individuals, whereas the Buffalo team found that 22% of healthy control individuals had CCSVI.

“What all these are telling us is that we really don't know where we are at the moment in terms CCSVI and MS”, says Rudick. Even if there is an association, many suspect that venous abnormalities are likely to be part of the overall pathology of MS, rather than a cause of it. “The brain of patients with MS is a diseased organ: you get all sorts of abnormalities there and it would be almost impossible to imagine that the venous physiology would be normal”, says Rudick. “There are well known syndromes of venous occlusion where you don't get the kind of self-perpetuating autoimmune responses you see in MS.”

Many experts think that Zamboni's open-label study falls short of the standards and quality that are acceptable in clinical research. “The study is not blinded and is uncontrolled”, says Coles. Indeed, the study didn't include patients with MS with CCSVI who didn't undergo angioplasty, and those who had the surgery were also on other treatments for MS. Therefore, their findings “are totally uninterpretable in terms of efficacy”, he says.

There is also widespread criticism of the media hype associated with the CCSVI hypothesis, which has been partly promoted by some of the investigators and has caused a whirlwind of exaggerated claims and expectations. For example, there is a CCSVI page on Facebook; a newsletter dedicated to the syndrome is sent to thousands of patients with MS by Zivadinov's team; and, according to a press release about a meeting in Bologna, Italy, in which Zamboni presented his studies, “endovascular therapy showed a decrease in the number of disease relapses, a marked reduction in the number of active brain and spinal lesions, and also a clear-cut improvement in the patients' quality of life”.

The premature promotion of the CCSVI hypothesis has led to a situation in which many patients with MS seek venous testing and, if the result turns out to be abnormal, endovascular interventions. “Patients are desperate for help, and the media and some of the investigators have played into that desperation in pushing forward this hypothesis”, says Rudick.

MS societies on both sides of the Atlantic are cautious of the CCSVI hypothesis. While acknowledging that it is “an interesting avenue of research”, Doug Brown, biomedical research manager at the MS Society in the UK, stresses that “the evidence isn't there at the moment to back up some of the bold claims that CCSVI is a cause of MS or that the treatment of CCSVI will cure MS”. He adds: “We would absolutely recommend against seeking so-called treatment of CCSVI because there is no evidence that this would benefit people with MS.”

Patricia O'Looney, vice president of biomedical research at the National MS Society in the USA agrees: “It's important that this possible association [between CCSVI and MS] is fully evaluated by others.” The society has made a special call for research proposals around the world to look into this issue. Rudick, who chairs the advisory committee of its research programme, says that the priority at the moment is to establish an association, rather than to fund a clinical trial.

Meanwhile, venous testing and surgical procedures for CCSVI “should be undertaken only as part of formal clinical trials that include all of the standard safeguards”, says O'Looney. Critics are adamant that clinical trials have to be undertaken with considerable objectivity and scepticism. “For clinical research to be valid, there needs to be equipoise on the part of the investigators who have no personal interest in what the outcome is”, says Rudick. “There should be real uncertainty in terms of research findings.”

“We have to guard against therapeutic misconception”, says Judy Illes, an ethicist at the University of British Columbia (BC, Canada). “Patients mustn't get into a trial thinking that they would benefit from it. That's the fundamental nature of clinical research and informed consent, especially when it comes to early trials.”

As for the CCSVI hypothesis, experts like Rudick would rather take it with a pinch of salt. “Over the years, we have seen all sorts of claimed breakthroughs that have come and gone in the field of MS”, he says. “We are yet to see whether this is one of them.”

Source: The Lancet © 2010 Elsevier Limited. (21/04/10)
MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5086837</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5086837</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 21 Apr 2010 04:04:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>CCSVI Debate on Alberta Primetime - Dr Simka's Response</title>
      <description>
Last week, Alberta Prime Time had a debate between Alberta Neurologist Brad Stewart and False Creek Surgical Center's Clinic Director, Mark Godley.

Dr. Marian Simka, who has treated around 250 patients for CCSVI in his clinic in Poland, has responded to this debate as follows:

Dr. Stewart emphasized that published results from Italy (Zamboni's initial study) show that many patients do not improve after the surgery. These are real facts. But in going into the details of this article we will find that early stage patients (relapsing-remitting), in general, improve. Progressive patients stabilize (that is not bad, but not as good as an improvement). The issue of chronic fatigue was not discussed, yet - it is perhaps not necessary to point how important this problem is for the patients. Anyway, knowing that the earlier that venous obstacles are removed, the better the result, an approach of "just wait for more evidence, unless there is no option for you" makes no sense. On the contrary, the treatments should be performed immediately after the first symptoms appear.

And now I am going to Dr. Godley's statement. In short, "Forget MS, is is vascular problem. MS should be managed by neurologists, while narrowing of blood vessels belong to vascular surgeons". You know, being a surgeon, I would never discuss a doseage of neurologic drugs, for example. So, why are the neurologists discussing which type of surgery should or should not be performed? Have they ever held a lancet?

The whole discussion about stent migration is ridiculous. All are saying: "Don't perform stenting because of the risk of migration". Nobody is discusing: "How to perform the procedure to avoid this complication". In Poland, we have spent hours discussing this issue. And it is only a technical problem that CAN be solved and HAS been solved. It is the problem of proper preop diagnostics, proper intraop tactics and proper choice of the stent. The stent should be tailored to the vein. And such a stent CANNOT migrate. And if you cannot tailor the stent, or stenting is just not necessary - you simply perform ballooning. But Zamboni's statistics show that in 50% of the patients ballooning is not enough. Consequently, either you will require repetitive balloon angioplasty (most likely not very successful), or you will have progression of MS.  Or - you should use stent. (In Latin: Aut, aut, tertium non datur)

What about safety. In our department we have already performed ~250 procedures, in over 100 patients we have applied stents. Serious complications: ZERO. Yet, in some patients, anticipating potential risks, only balloon angioplasty was done.

Another problem. Many doctors say: "We should establish the actual link between MS and CCSVI, and having these data we can perform treatments". Is such an approach correct? No !

Imagine, after some 3-5 years we have those data. They will be, most likely (I am nearly sure, since I already have the results), somewhere in between Zamboni's and Zivadinov's findings: ~90% MS patients and ~10-20% healthy people will have CCSVI. Another association, like EB virus, Actually, no argument for surgery.

And now forget MS. You have compromised blood flow in the most important organ of human's body (tens of articles on that, only an explanation was missing). This disturbed blood flow is manifested by many symptoms, not even mentioned in the criteria for MS, like: fatigue, "brainfog", headaches, etc. It has been already demonstrated in Zamboni's study that these symptoms dramatically improve after restoring the proper blood flow (anyway, it seems logical, but if anyone were asking for data - here they are). 

Unblocking obstructed veins is rather a simple procedure and a safe procedure (much safer than leaving those "diabolic" strictures). The real problem actually is: how to perform preop diagnosis (Zamboni's protocol is very far from ideal). What about other test (we are very proud of our MRV protocol (some images are at: http://www.ccsvimri.blogspot.com). Which endovascular equipment should be used (a very technical problem, but can be solved). What about postop medication (we know that oral anticoagulants are not a good option, but what about other drugs?). Those are real topic for clinical trials.

In Poland we say: Dogs are barking, but they will not stop the caravan."

Source: For Greet (19/04/10)

    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5081279</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5081279</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 19 Apr 2010 04:20:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>MS doctor says patients don't have time to wait</title>
      <description>
The Italian doctor behind the theory that multiple sclerosis is a vascular disease says patients with no other option should get the treatment now instead of waiting for proof it works.

"They do not have time," said vascular surgeon Dr. Paolo Zamboni in an interview yesterday with The Spectator.

"I can totally understand the desperation of people without treatment that day by day are worsening."

He's urging governments to provide and fund, on compassionate grounds, the treatment called the liberation procedure. It involves inserting balloon catheters to open up malformed or blocked veins in the neck, which Zamboni believes plays a significant role in MS.

He says too many patients -- particularly from Canada -- are travelling abroad to get the procedure. He's had 56,000 MS patients worldwide, including thousands from Canada, contact him about getting tested or treated.

"I recommend to treat these patients in their home country," he said.

"Canada... is in the perfect position to offer to their patients this treatment."

Zamboni says it's "safe and cheaper" for patients who are rapidly declining, have tried all drugs treatments available and have no other options.

In contrast, he recommends MS patients who are not getting worse and have other treatments available should wait for more evidence before getting the procedure.

But the Ontario government considers the treatment to be "experimental" and won't fund it for anyone without more evidence that it works, says Ministry of Health spokesperson Andrew Morrison.

There are also no doctors in Canada providing the liberation procedure to MS patients.

Doctors and researchers overwhelmingly recommend patients wait for more evidence that malformed veins play a role in MS and that the treatment works.

Hamilton researchers are embarking on a study to test Zamboni's theory called Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency (CCSVI) that so far has been primarily funded by MS patients themselves.

The study, which will use MRI scans and ultrasound to compare the veins in the head of 100 MS patients with varying degrees of illness to 100 similar healthy people, needs at least $400,000 to get off the ground.

Zamboni says patients and their families shouldn't have to pay for the research themselves considering the promise his theory holds to revolutionize the treatment of MS, which until now was thought to be an autoimmune condition.

He believes research dollars should be freed up to test his theory.

So far only the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada -- after being pressured by patients -- has offered funding in Ontario and it's limited to $200,000 over two years.

"We need really to investigate CCSVI," Zamboni said. "It is irresponsible to not fund completely this kind of research."

Source: TheSpec.com © Copyright Metroland 2010 (16/04/10)
MSRC General CCSVI News Page - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5066886</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5066886</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 16 Apr 2010 05:52:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>Doctors who believe MS linked to damaged veins urge more testing</title>
      <description>
The researchers behind a controversial theory that multiple sclerosis may be cured with simple surgery are now urging patients demanding immediate access to the treatment to wait until it is properly tested.

Doctors who are already offering to perform the procedure are acting irresponsibly and may risk harming patients, the researchers said during a forum at a major neurology conference n Toronto this week.

It is a cautious message coming from Paolo Zamboni and Robert Zivadinov, two researchers who helped propel the notion that MS is linked to blocked blood vessels leading from the brain, rather than the conventional thinking that it is an autoimmune condition. But it illustrates how little scientific research examining the theory has been done – and how many important questions remain unanswered.

“I think that the steps should be respected of scientific research,” said Dr. Zivadinov, associate professor of neurology at the University of Buffalo who is conducting research on the new theory, which was developed by Dr. Zamboni. “We need to first find whether something is safe, then whether it might be effective.”

But some members of the medical community say unjustified risks have already been run as MS patients around the world invest their money and fly to foreign destinations in hopes the unproven treatment will eliminate their often-debilitating symptoms.

“We’ve seen over and over again in the history of medicine claims for other surgical procedures, other kinds of interventions that come out with great hype and then, if they’re ever studied adequately, turn out not to be valid,” said Aaron Miller, who was part of Wednesday’s panel. He is professor of neurology and director of the Corinne Goldsmith Dickinson Center for Multiple Sclerosis at New York’s Mount Sinai School of Medicine.

At the heart of the debate is a theory developed by Dr. Zamboni, director of the Vascular Diseases Center at the University of Ferrara in Italy. He believes multiple sclerosis is a vascular condition caused by blocked or malformed veins responsible for draining blood from the brain, and that it can be treated with surgery to reopen the veins. After news of his research was published, patients flooded doctors offices with phone calls and some have travelled to such countries as Poland to get the controversial treatment.

Research conducted by Dr. Zamboni and published last year showed that nearly three-quarters of a group of 65 patients had no MS symptoms two years after they had surgery to repair the brain drainage problem.

However, critics say the study had serious limitations, such as the fact that results may have been biased because patients and doctors knew what the treatment was designed to do.

Another major issue is the fact that Dr. Zivadinov, who is also the director of the Buffalo Neuroimaging Analysis Center, wasn’t able to identify a vein problem in nearly half of the 500 MS patients involved in a study he is conducting. Furthermore, 22 per cent of the healthy control group involved in the study had the vein blockage problem.

Some members of the medical community say those kinds of facts cast doubt on Dr. Zamboni’s research. They also say it’s impossible at this stage to judge whether the vein drainage problem triggers MS, contributes to its progress, or is simply a secondary issue common to some people with the disorder.

“I think that a lot of people aren’t getting the full picture,” said Katherine Knox, director of the MS clinic at Saskatoon City Hospital. “We have to be very careful that we don’t conclude that association equals causation.… We cannot make those conclusions at this time.”

Dr. Knox is planning a study to determine whether the vein problem is present in people with symptoms of MS, as well as those at high risk of developing the disorder.

But Dr. Zamboni says his research clearly shows there is a link between vein blockage or malformation and multiple sclerosis. Now, it’s up to researchers to determine the extent of the link, how it might be related to the progression or onset of MS, and whether it’s associated with other neurodegenerative diseases.

Source: The Globe &amp; Mail © Copyright 2010 CTVglobemedia Publishing Inc. (15/04/10)
MSRC CCSVI General News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5064077</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5064077</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 15 Apr 2010 04:08:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>A live Web forum on CCSVI and what it could mean to people living with MS</title>
      <description>
On 14th April the American Academy of Neurology, in partnership with the US National Multiple Sclerosis Society hosted a live web forum with regards to CCSVI and Multiple Sclerosis. 

Those taking part included:  

Dr. Paolo Zamboni, Director, Vascular Diseases Center, University of Ferrara, Italy
Dr. Robert Zivadinov, Associate Professor of Neurology, University of Buffalo, State University of NY
Dr. Andrew Common, Radiologist in Chief, St. Michaels Hospital, University of Toronto, Ontario, CA
Dr. Aaron Miller, Professor of Neurology &amp; Director of the MS Center at Mount Sinai, NY, member of the AAN Board of Directors, Chief Medical Officer of the National MS Society

You can watch the whole meeting here. (15/04/10)
Source: MSRC CCSVI General News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5063987</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5063987</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 15 Apr 2010 03:06:00 EDT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>AAN: Caution urged in stenting veins in MS patients</title>
      <description>
  
Invasive procedures designed to correct venous blood flow in multiple sclerosis patients should not be performed until clinical trials can prove that the treatment is safe and effective, physicians here suggested.

John Corboy, MD, professor of neurology at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, Denver, reviewed studies performed by Paolo Zamboni, MD, professor of vascular surgery at the University of Ferrara in Italy. Zamboni has been the leading investigator into the possibility that chronic venous insufficiency could be a causative problem in multiple sclerosis.

"The logic for this is based on the fact that multiple sclerosis plaques are perivenular and that multiple sclerosis and chronic venous insufficiency share several features," Corboy said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology. Among those features are the expression of adhesion molecules, hyperactivation of matrix metalloproteinases, macrophage and T-cell infiltration, and iron deposition in the location of the lesion.

In the first paper in 2007 (Curr Neurovas Res 2007; 4(4): 252-58) Zamboni and colleagues found significantly increased bidirectional flow and/or reflux in deep middle cerebral veins and the transverse sinus in 89 multiple sclerosis patients compared with 60 controls, Corboy noted.

In an expanded study published in 2009 (J Neurol Neurosurg Psych 2009; 80(4): 392-99), the researchers looked at extracranial flow in the jugular and vertebral veins among 65 multiple sclerosis patients and 235 controls. They noted abnormalities in the blood flow in the multiple sclerosis patients and performed balloon angioplasties in those 65 patients, Corboy said.

That study found what the researchers termed a "dramatic" association between multiple sclerosis and venous abnormalities, with an odds ratio of 43 (95% CI 29 to 65, P=0.0001).

"After the procedure there was a small drop -- and I would emphasize small drop -- in the pressure gradient of about 2 to 3 cm of water," Corboy said. "They did report statistically significant reductions in relapse rate, an increase in the number of patients who were free from relapse after 18 months, a reduction in magnetic resonance imaging gadolinium enhancing lesions, and improvements in quality of life. In this uncontrolled fashion it was perceived that these were improvements for the patients." In an uncontrolled study these are likely to reflect regression to the mean -- a phenomenon frequently observed in the placebo arms of MS clinical trials.

He also noted that a study from the University at Buffalo, according to the institution's press release, described similar numbers when comparing 280 multiple sclerosis patients and 161 controls.

However, Corboy suggested several limitations of the studies, including difficulty in replication of the work and the unblinded nature of the trial. "When I showed this information to our pathologists they said, 'Wow. A couple of centimeters of water . . . that's nothing. Who would ever notice that?' There is no pathological or MRI correlation. We need controlled trials to see true effects of stenting."

Corboy said doctors who began treating chronic venous insufficiency at Stanford University, in Stanford, Calif., have halted their work following two devastating adverse events. In one case, a patient was stented, put on warfarin to prevent stent-related thrombosis, and then developed a fatal intracranial hemorrhage. In a second case, the stent mobilized and became lodged in the right atrium of the heart, requiring cardiac procedures to remove it.

Corboy acknowledged that the reports from Italian investigators have already gotten interest from multiple sclerosis patients but said that while early studies indicate there may be improvement in blood flow, the risks of the procedure may be too great to proceed without completing major, controlled clinical trials.

"Many of you are quite aware of this work and have been getting many phone calls from angiographers and other people about this procedure," Corboy said in his lecture updating developments in multiple sclerosis -- part of an all-day clinical review of neurologic developments. "I would not recommend it until we had a much better idea whether this approach has any merit whatsoever."

Lily Jung, MD, medical director of the Neurology Clinic and chief of neurology at Swedish Medical Center, Seattle, concurred with Corboy: "It is absolutely too early to recommend this procedure. There are a lot of methodological issues with the studies, and until those have been standardized in a randomized, double-blinded study and found to be effective, it is unreasonable to suggest that this procedure is ready for prime time."

She told MedPage Today, "There are reputable centers that are now beginning to look at the first step, which [is] identifying whether, in fact, multiple sclerosis patients have the finding suggested by Dr. Zamboni to be present. It is then another big leap to decide whether the procedure can be safely performed in humans. [And that is] before even going to full-blown clinical trials."

Corboy disclosed financial relationships with Orasi, Novartis, Lilly, Peptimmune and Genentech. Jung reported no financial disclosures.

Primary source: American Academy of Neurology
Source reference: "2FC.002 Neurology Update I, April 11, 2010" AAN 2010; pp. 100-102.

Source: MedPage Today © 2004-2010 MedPage Today, LLC. (13/04/10) MSRC General CCSVI News Page - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5058739</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5058739</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 13 Apr 2010 01:14:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>CCSVI: Why Multiple Sclerosis patients aren't waiting for proof</title>
      <description>
A fascinating medical drama is unfolding on the Internet among patients and scientists – who are struggling to study a new theory and experimental treatment for multiple sclerosis. 

W5 caused a huge stir among MS patients last November, when it broadcast a report about the new theory, which suggested that blocked veins in the neck and chest could be contributing to the disease. 

Since then, patients have scrambled to learn more about the theory, promoted by Italy's Dr. Paolo Zamboni. 

Zamboni believes that malformed veins cause blood from their brain to drain improperly, sending it back to their brain, and potentially setting off the immune response that marks MS. 

In a preliminary study published last November, Zamboni found that opening these veins with a balloon improved MS symptoms and reduced new attacks. He dubbed the procedure the Liberation Treatment. 

With many of Zamboni's patients reporting relief from some of their MS symptoms (for as long as the veins remain opened), MS patients from all over the world have been rushing to find someone willing to offer them the experimental treatment. 

One of them was Steve Garvie. 

He was diagnosed 10 years ago with secondary progressive MS. The disease left him using a walker most of the time, suffering profound fatigue and living in supportive housing. 

Garvie had few options since there are no drug treatments for secondary progressive MS. "The clock is ticking. People die. People with MS commit suicide at an alarming rate. There is no hope. So why don't we give them hope?" he wondered. 

But his neurologist told him to wait for more studies. So, Steve went to see vascular surgeon Dr. Sandy McDonald, who runs an imaging clinic in Barrie, Ont. 

McDonald decided to test Steve's blood flow with ultrasound, using money from his own pocket. 

When the ultrasound scan showed signs of blood flowing backward into Garvie's brain, McDonald sent Steve for a venogram, in which dye was injected into his veins to look for problems. 

Just as the Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency (CCSVI) theory suggested, Garvie had abnormal blood drainage from his brain, because of a narrowed left jugular vein. 

Dr. McDonald and his colleagues decided to unblock the vein with a small balloon, a procedure called a venoplasty. 

"I had to tell Steve very specifically: I don't treat MS. I have no idea what effect the balloon angioplasty would have on MS, but I knew from studies that had been done that the abnormal flow characteristics warranted further investigation," Mc Donald says. 

Steve says as soon as the vein was opened, he immediately felt warmth in the left side of his face and he could wiggle his toes. 

"One of the nurses came over and said ‘Are you alright?' I said, ‘Yes, shake my hand.' She shook my left hand which was useless before," remembers Garvie. 

"It was quite remarkable," remembers McDonald. 


‘The link has not been made' 

"The question as a physician, though, was: is it a placebo effect or is it real?," McDonald wonders. "I mean, when a patient really wants to get better, sometimes when you do something, they seem to feel better and it comes down, over time, to assessing whether or not his improvements are real or lasting." 

All over the world, MS patients are seeking out physicians who will test and treat them. They are then posting the results online. 

But many doctors who treat MS, such as Dr. Mark Freedman, the director of the MS research unit at the Ottawa Hospital, say the rush to test and treat vein problems bypasses the normal route of science. 

Freedman says theories have to be proven before patients are treated. 

"The link has not been made. The association has been made. But no one has convincingly shown this has anything to do with the disease," Freedman says. "Why would you fix something that may not have anything to do with the disease?" 

Garvie was one of five Canadian patients treated by Dr. McDonald's team. Another was Lianne Webb, who was diagnosed with MS almost 20 years ago. She has relapsing-remitting MS, had been taking the drug Copaxone, but still suffered MS symptoms and the occasional attack. 

"At one point, I didn't have any movement in my right side," she remembers. 

Ultrasound testing found she also fit the theory, with a venogram showing a narrowed left jugular vein. McDonald opened the vein a month ago. She says she feels better than she has the last five years or six years. "It's not a miracle, but if it stops progression, I'm all for it." 

Matt Maltese, 26, has suffered relapsing-remitting MS for a decade. His whole right side would often go numb. He couldn't go up and down stairs, and his family had installed an elevator into the house. 

When doctors performed the venogram in February, they discovered blockages in one of his jugular veins and the azygos vein in his chest. Both were opened with a balloon. The next day, Maltese was able to up and down the stairs with relative ease. 

Dr. Christopher Guest, an interventional radiologist who performed some of the procedures on Dr. McDonald's five patients, says venoplasty is a technique that has been used for years in veins in other parts of the body. He doesn't think performing it in the neck is much different. 

"If this were a risky procedure and there was poor data to support it, this would be a little more questionable. But these patients are severely debilitated, and the procedure is exceedingly safe," he says. 

Many neurologists, such as Dr. Freedman, have been confronted by anxious, sometimes angry, patients, who demand testing and treatment. His message to MS patients is: slow down. 

"It's an idea. All ideas on the table are important but we don't have the answers, and until we have all the answers you need to have a wide scope of understanding and belief." 

Balloons vs Stents 

Dr. Freedman and some colleagues wrote an article that appeared in the Annals of Neurology that urged doctors and patients not to test or treat vein problems until the theory has been proven in clinical trials. 

They also highlighted the dangers of a modified form of the Liberation Treatment, in which some clinics used metal stents to prop open the veins, which are prone to re-narrowing. 

One patient, treated in California last year, required surgery after the stent fell into his heart. Another patient died from bleeding linked to medications prescribed following treatment. 

The five Canadian patients were not treated with stents, only with balloon angioplasty, as per the Italian protocol, which has showed no serious reactions from the procedure. 

"I don't think it's a dangerous procedure," says Dr. Guest. "If you look at the complications that have been reported, they are related to stents, rather than the actual angioplasty. And we would certainly never place a stent until there was data to support doing that." 

Impatient patients question, 'why the wait?' 

While patients agree that more study is needed, many aren't willing to wait several years for answers. Webb says the damage that could be done while waiting two or three years for clinical trials may not be reversible. "So why would you wait," he wonders. 

Matt Maltese's father Vito says some patients and their families are willing to assume some risks. "Let us know what our risks are, let us know what our choices are, let us make the choice," he says. 

Another patient, Sandra Black, remains disabled by her MS, despite the treatment in Barrie two weeks earlier. She also has secondary progressive MS, and uses a walker and a wheelchair. While she can't walk, she says the circulation to her feet has improved. They're no longer blue, and she feels more energetic. 

"I am happy to stay awake all day, get up earlier and warm feet when I go to bed," she says. 

Steve Garvie has had some of the most noticeable improvements. He can now walk where once he used a walker. He also was able to vacation with his partner Donna in the Dominican Republic, where for the first time, they danced. 

But Garvie wouldn't call it a cure. 

"No, I don't think so. There are some things I may never get back. But I am about 75 per cent better than I was before. That would be a fair statement." 

These cases are anecdotal reports. They don't add up to much the scientific world, where only carefully controlled large studies will prove if this theory has merit. 

That's why Dr. McDonald and his colleagues are no longer treating patients and instead are planning a formal study. 

"We have to look at the rationale of doing venoplasty in MS patients aggressively. We need to study a lot of patients, done with neurologists, in a multi-specialty focus," says McDonald. 

At the same time, McDonald is continuing to monitor patients with ultrasound to see if their vein narrowings recur, something reported in 47 per cent of patients treated in the initial Italian treatment study. 

Canadian teams take training in Italy

The drive to learn more drew scientists to the San Giorgio Hospital in Ferrara, Italy, where Zamboni and his team are teaching researchers how to test for vein abnormalities using ultrasound. There are now some 100 other doctors and ultrasound technicians lined up for future classes in Italy -- and there are plans to open up training programs in North America. 

"Interest is really exploding and we are moving really faster because I have continuous contact with colleagues all over the world," says Zamboni. 

Canadian vascular surgeon Dr. Sandy McDonald and his technician, Angela, joined the s first international training program in Ferrara. 

Also there, were teams from the University of Saskatchewan and the University of British Columbia, including radiologist Lindsay Machan. He says the CCSVI theory is intriguing because is means that balloon venoplasty might lessen symptoms of a disease that is now treated only with expensive medications that carry heavy side effects. 

"If you think of the societal cost of MS young people, think of what we can accomplish for a relatively simple procedure. So we don't want this to languish and go on for a long period. We really want to get to the bottom of this," Machan says. 

Scientists are now seeking research dollars, through donations, or through scientific grants and from MS societies. 

Yves Savoie, the president of the Canadian MS Society, says 80 per cent of the phone calls the society now receives are about CCSVI. A one-time funding call was announced November. Grants for studies on CCSVI will be announced in June. The researchers selected will receive a maximum grant of $200,000 for a two-year study. But there have no details on how many centres have applied for funding. 

"I am quite convinced as a result of the excitement, the mobilization, the media attention, the process of discovery is going to be much accelerated," he says. 

But neurologist Dr. Freedman, who has spent much of his career testing other promising MS treatments, including stem cell therapy, worries the MS Society could be diverting funds away from other promising leads. 

"It's being forced, I think, to head down that road because patients are the main drivers of funds supporting the Society's work. And basically, they are looking at this and saying ‘Stop everything else. Redirect your funding to this project because it's worth it. And I don't think that's the truth over many other projects that may have more scientific rationale to move forward." 

Still, Freedman says his Ottawa team has submitted a bid to study the theory. 

Yet studies could take years. Patients such as Christopher Alchenbrack have already learned he has problems with his neck veins, and is in a hurry to get them opened. 

So the Wolfville, N.S. father of two, is funding his "study of one," spending more than $10,000 from his retirement fund to get the experimental treatment at a private clinic in Poland. 

"The reason I am so insistent on this procedure is that I have secondary progressive MS and nothing, none of the medicines I have used over the years, have worked to stop my MS. I've still progressed nonetheless." 

Countless MS patients are travelling to new clinics opening up in eastern Europe and India that are charging thousands of dollars for testing and treatment with metal stents, rather than balloons, and claiming Dr. Zamboni trained them, when he did not. 

"I understand that they are desperate and they can be attracted by this. I do not recommend this, because I do not know the quality. And probably this can be dangerous for the patients," says Zamboni. 

He insists the best way of protecting patients is by convincing established medical communities with hard scientific data from more studies that test and treat patients. 

"My position is to stand and respond with scientists and to tell the patients to give patience, because we are really running very, very fast." 

Source: CTV © Copyright 2010 CTVglobemedia Publishing Inc. (11/04/10)

    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5054522</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5054522</guid>
      <pubDate>Sun, 11 Apr 2010 04:19:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>MS vein theory has roots in rejected research</title>
      <description>
  
Interest in a controversial new theory that blocked veins in the neck and chest could be triggering multiple sclerosis has received huge interest since CTV's W5 first broke the story last November. 

Italy's Dr. Paolo Zamboni brought the concept to the forefront of the medical world, yet it has roots in decades of research. In fact, researchers have been investigating the link between MS and blood flow in the neck for close to a century. 

Austria's Dr. Franz Schelling was among those who studied the link. For 30 years, the now-retired doctor has been on a frustrating mission to get someone to study his findings. He theorized that poor blood flow from their brains of MS patients might be caused by damaged veins, which then triggers or contributes to the symptoms that mark MS. 

Dr. Schelling worked as a family doctor trained in radiology and neurology and spent much of his career treating patients with MS. He became convinced it was not just a disease of the immune system. 

He collected research that pointed to damage in the brains in those with MS. He also analyzed X-rays of MS patients and found odd anomalies in the neck and skulls of patients compared to healthy people. 

But Schelling's requests for more study were repeatedly rejected by MS specialists who insisted what has long been promoted: the disease is caused by immune problems, not the veins. 

"It really cracked me down, because I had patients that… patients died of MS," he told CTV News from his home in Dornbirn, Austria. 

Schelling says he went to Vienna, New York, London and points in between, asking doctors and researchers to investigate the vein-MS link. But no one was interested. 

Now, the long-proposed theory is being explored at high speed. Scientists from Europe, Canada and elsewhere are in Italy to learn about Dr. Zamboni's breakthrough research, as well as learn from his team how to test for the vein problems that Zamboni has dubbed CCSVI, or chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency. 

Those scientists include radiologist Lindsay Machan from the University of British Columbia. 

"We don't want this to languish for a long period. We want to get to the bottom of this," Machan says. 

Zamboni tells CTV News that in the last six months, there has been "an explosion of interest and we are going really fast." At least half a dozen studies on CCSVI are planned or underway around the world. 

Doctors say many of these studies are coming following a push from MS patients, who don't want doctors to wait any longer testing the CCSVI theory. They also want doctors to begin providing Zamboni's Liberation Treatment, a venoplasty procedure in which a balloon is inserted into the neck veins to open them. 

But MS specialists say it's important to do the studies to test the CCSVI theory methodically before proceeding with possible treatments. 

"It may be a few years, but very quickly we'll get to research that helps us make sure that treatments are offered with the appropriate safeguards," says Yves Savoie, the president and chief executive of the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada. 

But scientists in Italy hope to have further data from studies to conform or refute the theories available in less than a year, as patients around the world wait eagerly for an answer. 

Source: CTV © Copyright 2010 CTVglobemedia Publishing Inc. (10/04/10) MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
 

    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5052583</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5052583</guid>
      <pubDate>Sat, 10 Apr 2010 03:09:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Kuwait to offer CCSVI treatment to all its MS patients</title>
      <description>
Follow-up article to that of 08/04/10

Kuwait has become the first country in the world to offer a controversial treatment to all its patients with multiple sclerosis who have blocked veins in their necks.

CTV News has confirmed that Kuwait's minister of health has given interventional radiologists in the country the go-ahead to use the state-financed medical system to begin treating patients who have blocked veins and abnormal blood flow in their necks. 

According to a theory proposed by University of Ferrara's Dr. Paolo Zamboni in Italy, and first broadcast on CTV's W5 last November, many patients with MS have blocked or narrowed veins in their necks and chests. He calls the condition CCSVI, or chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency. 

He theorizes that the blockage prevents blood from draining properly, sending it back to their brain, a problem that could contribute to the immune response that marks MS. 

The theory has generated a lot of interest in Kuwait, which has high rates of MS, particularly among women. 

In a telephone interview with CTV, Dr. Tariq Sinan, an interventional radiologist and an associate professor at the Department of Radiology in the Faculty of Medicine at Kuwait University says the health ministry will allow radiologists to begin treating MS patients who have CCSVI, starting next week, as part of an ongoing study. 

The Kuwait News Agency KUNA also reported the development, quoting the chairman of the standing committee for co-ordination of medical research at the ministry, Dr. Youssof Al-Nesf, as saying: "The presentation meets the legal, moral and scientific criterions specified by concerned organizations, including the World Health Organization." 

The decision is based on research by a team headed by Sinan who studied 12 MS patients in March. All of them had CCSVI and were offered what Zamboni has dubbed the Liberation Treatment. The treatment is a vein version of angioplasty, in which a small balloon is inserted into a blocked vein to force it open. 

(No stents were used in the procedures, a practice some doctors around the world have tried and one that Dr. Zamboni does not endorse.) 

Sinan says all of the patients saw improvements in their MS symptoms, with some noticing "dramatic" results. 

"On one day, on March 3, we did three patients. Two had dramatic improvements on the table and started crying because they couldn't believe what they were feeling," Sinan reported. 

He says patients with more severe MS reported fewer improvements, but did notice feeling less stiffness and more energy. Those with less severe disease, reported up to 90 per cent improvements in their fatigue and numbness in their hands and leg. 

"In one case, the patient couldn't see from one eye and started to be able to see," Sinan reported. 

Sinan said he's confident the results he saw were not the result of the "placebo effect," a phenomenon in which patients fool themselves into feeling better by an otherwise ineffective treatment. 

"If this is a placebo effect and I have MS, I would want this placebo effect," Sinan said. 

"It is amazing the kind of improvements the patients say they have. It cannot all be attributed to placebo. Not being able to see and then being able to see, better bladder control, end of foot drop -- that cannot be placebo." 

Last week, Dr. Sinan says a group of neurologists petitioned the country's ministry of health to stop the treatments. Their concerns – shared by other MS specialists around the world -- is that the link between blocked veins and MS has not been proven, and that the treatment could be dangerous. They have called for more studies. 

But after review, and submissions from physicians and patients, the decision was to allow the treatments, which will be covered by the state-financed medical system. 

The procedure will not be performed to treat MS per se but to treat only "improper blood flow" in the veins. 

"So we say this is a vascular problem in the neck. Patients, when you dilate the veins, they feel better. We don't have to talk about MS or the link to MS," said Sinan. 

Patients will be warned that the procedure is experimental, and the potential risks of venoplasty will be detailed in consent forms. Patients who agree to treatment will be part of an ongoing study that will be done in cooperation with a Kuwait neurologist. 

The team will use ultrasounds and magnetic resonance venograms to scan the neck veins, as well as MRIs to track changes in the brain, including the appearance of MS-related lesions. 

Doctors hope to treat 10 Kuwaiti patients a week, beginning next week. 

Source: CTV © Copyright 2010 CTVglobemedia Publishing Inc. (10/04/10) - MSRC CCSVI General News Page - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5052547</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5052547</guid>
      <pubDate>Sat, 10 Apr 2010 02:20:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Direct-MS CCSVI Information Evening April 30, 2010</title>
      <description>
Direct-MS CCSVI Information Evening April 30, 2010 - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm?fuseaction=show&amp;pageid=2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5050284</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5050284</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 09 Apr 2010 04:26:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Kuwait government decides to treat all its 600 MS patients with CCSVI angioplasty at the rate of 10 a day</title>
      <description>
The Ministry of Health will resume surgeries for CCSVI in Multiple Sclerosis (MS) in a few days following approval of a relevant protocol for treating this disease. 
Health Minister Dr. Hilal Al-Sayer said in a statement to KUNA on Monday the operations would be conducted after a written approval by the patients and informing them on possible side-effects of the operation.

He indicated that this surgery is still classified in the testing stage, has not been accredited by the relevant international health authorities and warrants further researches to ensure that the patients undergoing such surgeries would not suffer from serious side-effects.

Dr. Paolo Zamboni, an Italian vascular surgeon, devised an experimental treatment similar to angioplasty, which involves removing the blockage in the veins that carry blood to and from the brain. Zamboni gained international attention after he published a study in 2009 that suggested the treatment was highly successful in reducing MS symptoms.

However, some experts have expressed concern that the surgery may cause clots in the brain.

Source: Kuwait News Agency (08/04/10) MSRC General CCSVI News Page - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5048191</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5048191</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 08 Apr 2010 11:29:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>New Multiple Sclerosis test comes to the UK</title>
      <description>
Glasgow clinic offering testing for CCSVI – narrowing of veins in the skull which recent studies have linked to MS

Chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI) is a hot topic for people with MS at the moment. The new theory is that multiple sclerosis can be caused by blockages in veins draining blood from the brain: Clear the blockages - and MS symptoms may be reduced.

The idea was put forward by an Italian scientist, Dr Paolo Zamboni.

Up until now anyone from the UK wanting to be tested or treated for the condition has had to travel to clinics in Italy or Poland.

Now a Glasgow clinic has started to take bookings for diagnostic tests this summer and plans to offer treatment to patients who are found to have CCSVI.

About MS
Multiple sclerosis is the most common neurological condition among young adults in the UK, affecting approximately 100,000 people.

CCSVI: The theory
Zamboni investigated links between MS and iron deposits in blood vessels.

He used ultrasound on the blood vessels leading in and out of the brain and found that in a majority of people with MS, including his wife, the veins taking blood away from the brain were blocked or damaged. This was not the case in people without MS.

He further suggested that iron was damaging the blood vessels and allowing the heavy metal, along with other unwelcome cells, to cross the crucial blood-brain barrier, a process he termed Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency.

Putting CCSVI to the test
MS is a condition which has attracted more than its fair share of miracle cures and scams. However supporters of the blocked vein theory remain optimistic after the first randomised clinical study in the US.

More than 55% of 500 MS patients participating in the initial phase of a study at the University of Buffalo exhibited narrowing of the extracranial veins, causing restriction of normal outflow of blood from the brain.

The study findings will be presented to the American Academy of Neurology meeting later this month.

Testing comes to the UK
The Essential Health Clinic in Glasgow has a large private practice for MS. Dr Tom Gilhooly sees patients from all over the UK and abroad for treatments like low dose naltrexone (LDN).

At first he thought the CCSVI concept was “whacky” but his patients kept asking about it. He read the scientific papers about it and tells us “I thought there is a biological plausibility here. You could see why venous drainage could impact on the immune system and therefore on the central nervous system and MS.”

The new approach, he says, is “potentially revolutionary”.

Gilhooly then set about planning for a screening service with a vascular stenographer and is setting up training for his staff at Zamboni’s clinic and at a centre in Poland.

Demand is such that he’s also expanding to set up a London clinic to offer the service.

“Interest has been intense. We’ve almost been blown away by it. The organisation has struggled to cope with the number of phone calls”.

More than 2,000 people have registered an interest in the screening at his clinic.

The treatment
The blockages in the veins are either dealt with by the insertion of a tiny tube, called a stent, or by balloon dilation. In both, the narrowed veins in the head are expanded in a procedure beginning in a leg vein.

Gilhooly hopes his clinic can help with research into the condition and treatment by carrying out a randomised clinical trial.

Charity support
The Multiple Sclerosis Resource Centre (MSRC) is following the CCSVI treatments and studies in detail. Chief executive Helen Yates tells us by email: "MSRC is fully supportive of Essential Health Clinic's efforts to enable scanning for CCSVI in MS patients in the UK.

“Currently anyone who believes that they have this problem has to go to Europe even just to get scanned, never mind treated. Enabling the scanning to take place here in the UK will represent a big step forward for people affected by Multiple Sclerosis who believe this venous insufficiency problem lies at the root of their MS."

“The idea that venous insufficiency might be either responsible for or partly responsible for MS is a very new one and opens up all sorts of possibilities. Whilst the procedure is relatively well tolerated by most people, it is not without risks.

“Of course more research needs to be done in this interesting and novel approach to MS, but in the meantime many people with MS feel that the least they can do is get scanned to see if this issue applies to them.

“No one is claiming the ‘liberation procedure’ is a cure,” she says, “What is apparent however, is that the procedure does seem to produce some positive effects for the majority of people who undergo it and for some the effects are quite profound.”

Source: Web MD © 2010 WebMD, LLC (08/04/10)

    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5047993</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5047993</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 08 Apr 2010 04:27:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Cardiac surgeon calls foot-dragging on CCSVI 'unethical'</title>
      <description>
  
As a multiple sclerosis patient, Gianfranco Campalani has been treated for Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency (CCSVI) twice and knows firsthand how this procedure has improved the quality of his life. As a doctor, he feels the reluctance that CCSVI is getting from the medical community is “unethical”. 

“I believe that when a new treatment has practically only minor possible complications (as reported by Zamboni with venogram and angioplasty) and a good potential for benefits, as opposed to the pharmachological treatment rich in harmful side-effects, the need for rigorous scientific double-blind trials is nonsense. We need a few more intelligent and courageous vascular surgeons and radiologists to start treating vascular anomalies (strictures of the jugular veins) on their own merit, not mentioning MS. But the medical establishment is notorious for being conservative and generally lazy.”

Sixty-four year old Campalani is a cardiac surgeon. He was recently featured on BBC Northern Ireland’s Superdocs, a TV programme that chronicles the men and women who are saving and changing lives on a daily basis. His life, however, has been changed by Superdocs of his own.

 Sometimes where you come from makes big difference to your life, and it’s been like that for Campalani. Born in Ferrara, Italy, his 35-year medical career took him first to London and eventually to Belfast fourteen years ago. Diagnosed with chronic progressive MS in 1986, he’s one of an estimated 100,000 people in the UK with the disease.

 Three years ago, on a visit back to his hometown, his brother arranged a dinner party with a good friend of his, Prof. Paolo Zamboni, because, as he’d told his brother, Zamboni had some rather different ideas about Multiple Sclerosis. The year before, Zamboni had published a paper called “The Big Idea” on the iron-dependent inflammation in venous disease and proposed parallels in multiple sclerosis. Campalani, of course, was interested in Zamboni’s ideas on venous disease and their discussion was friendly and collegial.

“Dinner was on a Friday in July 2006 in my brother's house. We were three couples. My brother did the cooking: an oriental dish. Paolo knew I had MS from my brother Andrea and Paolo asked me a few questions, like how long, how bad and so on. I had the plane back to Belfast the following day in the afternoon and Paolo wanted to check my neck with a Doppler. Saturday morning I was in his lab and had the study: Paolo told me that I had obstruction in the venous drainage from the brain. He then organized for me to come back for a liberation procedure a month later.”

Campalani’s blockages were corrected by angioplasty, a ballooning technique that was used to expand his veins.

“Five hours after the balloon dilatation, I could walk without my walking stick and my bladder improved,” he explains, “And another thing. I stopped using the little blue pill.”

Last year, however, Campalani started having a recurrence of MS symptoms. He began to have spasms in his legs and back, and he was worried that it might affect his surgical abilities as he regularly spends eight hours or more in an operating theatre saving the lives of his patients.

 “I had to convince a vascular surgeon to convince a radiologist to examine my jugulars,” Campalani says. “Luckily I had the images from my previous intervention. They saw the same narrowing that they treated in Ferrara.”

 The vascular surgeon - who coincidently studied under him, performed the second balloon dilatation and Campalani again was back to his pre-MS condition, spasm free.

 Despite having MS and being a part of the medical community, he refused to take any drugs to lessen his MS symptoms at any time since he first learned of his MS – with the exception of Viagra.

 “I always refused to take any medication whatsoever because I don’t believe you should take drugs to treat something the doctors don’t know the origin of,” Campalani explains. “But for the last 4-5 years I’ve taken fish oils, Vitamin C, Vitamin B complex because these are antioxidents.”

Source: For Greet (01/04/10)
 
MSRC CCSVI General News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm?fuseaction=show&amp;pageid=2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5032476</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5032476</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 01 Apr 2010 11:16:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Moment of truth for Tiger after his CCSVI MS treatment</title>
      <description>
Tim Stevens travelled to Poland in the hope of finding a cure for his MS, the hugely debilitating illness which has robbed him of the use of his legs. 

In this final part of his account of the trip, BRIAN BEACOM reveals how Tim got on after leaving the clinic in Katowice ...

As miracles go, it’s not exactly up there with the biblical classics. But for Tiger Tim’s wife, Caroline, the sight of her husband tucking into his Hawaiian pizza using a fork in his left hand was nonetheless astounding.

"My God," he’s holding it," shouts, Caroline of the fork adventure. "This is the first time in 10 years Tim has been able to use his left hand to eat, even though he is left handed.

"I can’t believe it."

Nor could Tim. The afternoon pizza experiment was carried out in hope rather than expectation. But then today had already been about a series of great surprises.

It began at 10am outside the 27-storey Hotel Qubus in Katowice.

Already 18 degrees and a beautiful day, those assembled to greet the patients as they returned from the Euromedic Clinic wanted desperately to believe that the bright sunshine overhead was a sign, a metaphor for the first day of Tiger’s new life.

After spending a precautionary night in the clinic after his ‘Liberation Treatment’ to clear his blocked veins, Tim had called to say he was on his way back to the hotel. But how would he feel? Doctors at the clinic don’t promise immediate results; they say that improvement can take up to six months, as the body begins to repair itself after the damage done to it by iron deposits in the brain.

However, they do say there have been some remarkable early results. Perhaps none more so than the 60-something US woman from Los Angeles, who two days earlier was restricted to using crutches.

"Look at me today," she exclaimed, with a smile as bright as the sunshine.

"We’re going shopping in Krakow and I want to walk, but my daughter says I should take my crutches – just in case."

She demonstrated her walk, which for a woman, who’s been dependent on crutches for years, is amazing.

But will Tim, and the others who had the same procedure on the same day, have such a positive a result?

First back from the clinic was Mark, the 29-year-old from North London, who uses a motorised wheelchair.

"I feel good," he said, his face beaming. "Normally, my hands and feet are cold, but feel them." He extended his hands and they felt ‘normal’.

"It’s amazing. But what’s also incredible is I can sit here in the sun. People with MS can’t take the sun."

He added grinning, "Maybe I’ll be able to get a sun tan for the first time in 10 years."

Next to return was 28-year-old Barry, from Shawlands. Mark’s delight seemed like downright misery by comparison. "Just look at me!" he said at the top of his voice.

Now, all Barry was doing was standing up. But as he pointed out, it’s been a few years since he’s been able to do that without support.

"I can stand, and I don’t feel dizzy! Watch me walk."

And he does. A few, faltering steps that gained confidence, which transformed into confident semi-strides.

It’s hard not to be moved by the sight of someone being so exhilarated by an action we all take so much for granted. Barry’s pregnant Katy was reduced to tears at the sight of her husband’s transformation.

"My speech is better," said Barry, whose voice was slurred.

"And I had this fuzziness in my head. But it’s gone. I feel, well, incredible."

But then there’s a moment of despair. Cecille, 38, from Colorado, emerged, clinging onto the back of her friend, Aidi. CC, as she’s known, has no improvement.

"I don’t feel a bit different," she said, her voice fighting back the horrid disappointment that she can’t celebrate with her new chums.

And what of the Tiger? Finally, he arrived, pushed up the ramp by wife Caroline. He relaxed for a few moments in the sunshine before taking stock.

"I feel good," he said "My feet are warm, and I’m enjoying the sun in my face."

He thought for a minute. "Yes, I feel better. But I’m tired." He added, grinning: "I had to share a room with these two blokes last night (Mark and Barry) and they both snored like elephants."

Caroline was hopeful about his progress. "Of course, you dream of a miracle, but the reality is it may not happen."

She added, her voice dropping in tone. "Really, we would be happy if Tim’s condition didn’t worsen. Already his breathing is very laboured. That’s what we’re really worried about."

One of the doctors who carried out Tim’s procedure, Dr Ludyga was cautiously optimistic. He said: "In general, we see the best results in people who haven’t had MS for very long. Tim has had MS for many years (36). But we would still hope to see some improvement."

After a nap, Tim craved a pizza. And that’s when the hand movement occurred. Then he realised he could move his left leg. The spasms which locked it rigid abated. Later than night Caroline reported another huge improvement.

"Tim can move the toes on his left foot, which he hasn’t done for years," she says, in an excited voice.

Now, the implications of this are immense. If, and it is a big if, Tim can move his toes and recover feeling in his foot, it won’t drag. And this is the primary reason he’s been confined to a wheelchair – combined with fading energy of course.

But then the following day comes another bombshell. Tim has a nap every afternoon. He doesn’t want one.

"I’m not tired," he says, chuckling like a naughty schoolboy who stays up late on a weeknight. "I don’t need to go to bed. That is absolutely amazing."

There’s more good news. CC texts to say she’s feeling warmth in her hands and feet. Mark feels better, stronger and Barry has walked outside his house in Shawlands for the first time ever.

Is it all too good to be true? The medical world point out this procedure is still an unproven experiment.

"What you’ve seen is merely an observation," said one consultant. "Until it’s been tested and compared it doesn’t prove anything. And the people involved could have had the same improvement had they been pumped full of steroids. Or, there could be a placebo effect."

They weren’t treated with steroids however. And would the placebo effect be so pronounced? It’s now a week since the operation and all are continuing to improve by degrees.

"I feel great," says Tim. "Gradually things are getting better. My head is clear, friends say my speech is so much better. Is there hope for the future? You bet."

Source: Evening Times © 2010 Herald &amp; Times Group (01/04/10)
MSRC CCSVI General News Page - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm?fuseaction=show&amp;pageid=2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5032177</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5032177</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 01 Apr 2010 09:09:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>It’s my chance to live</title>
      <description>
DJ Tiger Tim has suffered from MS for 36 years and is now wheelchair dependant. 

But last week he travelled to Poland to undergo a controversial new treatment which he hopes will give him some quality of life. BRIAN BEACOM travelled with the Radio Clyde legend.

It’s Tuesday, it’s 11pm at night and we’re on the 26th floor of a swish hotel in Katowice, Poland, an industrial town about 60 miles from the city of Krakow.

The Tiger is lying on his bed, bleary-eyed and exhausted, yet at the same time excited – and desperate for the new day to begin.

His mixed emotions are entirely understandable. Since Sunday, 58-year-old Tim has either been travelling or undergoing the scans that he hopes will help alleviate the symptoms of his multiple sclerosis.

Just a few months ago, his wife Caroline heard of a new treatment – still experimental – which, it is claimed, has achieved some remarkable results in treating MS patients.

The procedure is based around the belief that MS is at least partly caused by Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency. (CCSVI).

Put simply, it means that narrowed veins in the neck prevent blood from the brain and spine getting back to the heart.

And blood that stays in the brain too long can result in iron deposits, which can damage the central nervous system.

Dr Tomasz Ludyga of the Euromedic Clinic in Katowice, who will carry out Tim’s procedure, says: “It’s basically a plumbing problem.

“What we are looking for is blocked veins to show up on the MRV scans or the ultrasounds.

“If they appear, we believe we can carry out the procedure and make an improvement to the patients’ lives.”

Meantime, Tim’s mind is racing with possibilities; what sort of improvement can he expect?

His MRV scan, said the Polish medical team, revealed a blockage in Tim’s left jugular vein. However, the doctors are in fact looking for extensive vein narrowing (stenosis) because the greater the blockages the more they can repair – and allow the body to begin healing.

Initially, Tim feels encouraged. But he still has concerns.

He says: “In the morning I’m to have a Doppler ultrasound – MRVs don’t always reveal a full picture.”

There are other concerns, calculated risks. The treatment, ‘the liberation procedure,’ isn’t hugely invasive and is similar to angioplasty, where a wire is passed up through the groin and into the veins, which are then unblocked either by inserting a small balloon or a metal stent.

Euromedic’s Polish MS clinic has been open for six months and during that time has treated 200 patients. Of that 200, they say 80% have had ‘some improvement’ to their condition.

But how do you quantify the phrase ‘some improvement’? And could Tim be one of the 20% who see no improvement?

Tim says: “I have to go through with this. I have to be positive.”

The procedure costs around £7000, but expenses, travel and hotel bills can take this up to £9000. Tim’s journey to Poland however was funded by a special benefit show at Glasgow’s Pavilion Theatre.

Caroline says: “This isn’t about money, it’s about a future for Tim. It’s about praying that he will be able to breathe better, that he’ll be able to concentrate better and continue to work.

“It’s about Tim’s quality of life. But there’s much more to it. Tim is an explorer for every one of the 10,500 MS sufferers in Scotland.

“His experience will indicate to others if there is a glimmer of light for them in what would otherwise be darkness.”

Tim nods in agreement.

“I’ve tried every possible cure imaginable,” adds the DJ legend, who only realised he had MS when his legs suddenly collapsed under him one day while he was running along Prestwick beach.

The realisation came as quite a shock to the fun-loving broadcaster.

“I’ve tried natural therapies, conventional drugs, spiritual healing, new diets, exercise, goats’ serum, everything, but I’m still in a wheelchair,” says Tim.

“And my breathing is becoming difficult – and my eyesight is failing.

“I hope this treatment can make a difference.”

Tim adds, his voice full of emotion: “Even if the progress of the disease can be halted, then I’d be happy with that.”

Eight hours later Tim is waiting in the hotel lobby to taken by taxi to the clinic. Around him are people in wheelchairs, some on crutches, all set to be treated, including 28-year-old Barry from Shawlands, 29-year-old Mark from North London and 38-year-old Cecille from Colorado.

“It’s like a mini Lourdes,” says Tim, smiling. “But hopefully with better odds of success.”

Tim and the others are given early hope in the form of a 60-something lady from California.

“I had the treatment yesterday,” she says, her face beaming with delight.

“Before I couldn’t walk without crutches, my leg dragged behind me. But look at me now. Watch.”

And as we look on, she puts down her crutches and walks. Not an easy, flowing walk, but a walk nonetheless. And she smiles like an Olympic gold medallist.

Tim, Barry, Mark and Cecille’s eyes almost pop out of their sockets. But will the treatment give them such an immediate result? Or any result at all?

Only tomorrow will tell.

Source: Evening Times © 2010 Herald &amp; Times Group (30/03/10) - MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm?fuseaction=show&amp;pageid=2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5027127</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5027127</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 30 Mar 2010 09:42:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>The Essential Health Clinic Releases First CCSVI Scanning Appointment Dates</title>
      <description>
The Essential Health Clinic Releases First CCSVI Scanning Appointment Dates - http://www.essentialhealthclinic.com/website/ 

Source: MSRC General CCSVI News Page - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5024799</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5024799</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 29 Mar 2010 11:12:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>MS-CCSVI-UK delivers CCSVI campaign to Downing Street</title>
      <description>
Hope was in the air on the fine spring day of Monday 22nd March when Colm Mclaughlin and a group of team members from MS-CCSVI-UK passed security clearances then walked, or wobbled up to the iconic steps leading to the door of 10 Downing Street. 

They were there in person to deliver a copy of the petition calling for clinical research into CCSVI procedures to take place in the United Kingdom. The petition, which was initiated by Colm prior to his joining the group, had later been embraced as an early element of the MS-CCSVI-UK campaign and promoted with enthusiasm on the team’s Facebook page, followed up with publicity on the website http://www.ms-ccsvi-uk.org/ which was established some time later.

After surpassing the initial target of10,000 supporters by reaching 10,651 signatories at its closure date, the team was keen to maximise the exposure of this tremendous petition result. Permission was therefore requested from Downing Street for the group to deliver a copy of the document in person to Number 10.

After the event Colm commented: “Just got home after a day with some really good people. Thanks for making it a day to remember. Now on with the fight, there’s a war to win! 

When I first stumbled across CCSVI whilst surfing the web last year it made so much sense to me and I just wanted the world to know there was hope. For 4 years since my diagnosis with Multiple Sclerosis I had had none. I started the Petition in a bit of a rush – we have no time to waste, we need action, which is why I let it run for just 2 months. I knew I had to get 500 people to sign to get it in front of a Minister. I am a member of a fan site called "Red Issue" and that is where I started getting the first people to sign. Now the petition is ended with over 10,000 signatures I feel proud, justified in starting it, and committed to carry on the fight. The emails, and facebook messages I've had from people who can't afford to go to Poland and pay thousands of pounds is reason enough to carry on. The message of support I've had from around the world is humbling and inspiring.”

Michele Findlay added: “It was indeed a day to remember; it was the first time most of us had met each other, although of course we knew each other well from working together. Special people with an important job to do... onwards and upwards.”

Source: MS-CCSVI-UK (25/03/10) MSRC CCSVI General News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954

    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5016390</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5016390</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 25 Mar 2010 12:10:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Testing new MS theory as patients demand care now</title>
      <description>
Under intense pressure from patients, some U.S. doctors are cautiously testing a provocative theory that abnormal blood drainage from the brain may play a role in multiple sclerosis -- and that a surgical vein fix might help. 

If it pans out, the approach suggested by a researcher in Italy could mark a vast change for MS, a disabling neurological disease long blamed on an immune system gone awry. But many patients frustrated by today's limited therapies say they don't have time to await the carefully controlled studies needed to prove if it really works and are searching out vein-opening treatment now -- undeterred by one report of a dangerous complication. 

''This made sense and I was hell-bent on doing it,'' says Nicole Kane Gurland of Bethesda, Md., the first to receive the experimental treatment at Washington's Georgetown University Hospital, which is set to closely track how a small number of patients fare before and after using a balloon to widen blocked veins. 

In Buffalo, N.Y., more than 1,000 people applied for 30 slots in a soon-to-start study of that same angioplasty procedure. When the University at Buffalo team started a larger study a few months ago just to compare if bad veins are more common in MS patients than in healthy people -- not to treat them -- more than 13,000 patients applied. 

The demand worries Georgetown neurologist Dr. Carlo Tornatore, who teamed with vascular surgeon Dr. Richard Neville in hopes of getting some evidence to guide his own patients' care. 

''A lot of people are starting to go to fly-by-night places,'' says Tornatore. Doing this research takes time, he said. ''It's a marathon, not a 100-yard sprint. We have to be very careful.'' 

Multiple sclerosis occurs when the protective insulation, called myelin, that coats nerve fibers gradually is destroyed and scar tissue builds up, short-circuiting messages from the brain and spinal cord to the rest of the body -- impairing walking and causing fatigue and vision, speech, memory and other problems. It affects about 2.5 million people worldwide, including 350,000 Americans. 

A condition with an unwieldy name has become the hottest topic of debate in MS: Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency, or CCSVI. An Italian vascular specialist, Dr. Paolo Zamboni, was hunting ways to help his wife's MS when he discovered that veins carrying oxygen-depleted blood down the neck or spinal cord were narrowed, blocked or twisted in a group of patients. Zamboni reported that made blood back up in a way that might be linked to MS' damage, by causing tiny leaks of immune cells into the brain that start a cascade of inflammatory problems. 

Then came the step that spread excitedly through MS patient Internet forums: In a pilot study, Zamboni's team used balloon angioplasty -- similar to a longtime method for unclogging heart arteries -- to widen affected veins in 65 patients. He reported varying degrees of improvement, mostly in patients with the relapsing-remitting form of MS who experienced fewer flare-ups of symptoms over the next 18 months and some improvements in quality of life. 

But nearly half had their veins relapse, and Zamboni urged a larger, more scientifically controlled study be done. 

Next, Buffalo researchers scanned the veins of 500 people. About 55 percent of MS patients had signs of CCSVI, compared with 22 percent of healthy people, says lead researcher Dr. Robert Zivadinov, who will present his data next month at a major neurology meeting. 

Meanwhile, a Stanford University surgeon tried implanting scaffolding-like stents -- also developed for heart disease -- into some MS patients' narrowed veins. Dr. Michael Dake halted the work in December after 35 people were treated, saying in an e-mail to colleagues that he decided ''after deep soul-searching'' not to continue outside of a clinical trial. Stanford won't discuss details, but the journal Annals of Neurology reported that one patient's stent dislodged and flowed to the heart, requiring emergency open-heart surgery to remove it. (An earlier death was reported by family members to be from a stroke unrelated to the MS treatment.) 

The US MS Society soon will announce funding for additional studies. 

Like many neurologists, Georgetown's Tornatore watched the developments with a mixture of skepticism and curiosity. After all, decades ago some doctors first suggested circulation might play a role. The scars tend to cluster near veins, and blood-thinning treatment was tried before immune-targeting drugs were proven to help many MS patients. 

He ticks off the possibilities: This could be a blind alley, like so many to befall MS over the years. Or it could work a little. Or it might be revolutionary. 

''I have no idea. I'm not predisposed to any of them,'' Tornatore says. 

But he and Neville decided angioplasty was the least risky option for a limited test. In 30 patients who've undergone a $400 ultrasound exam so far, about half have evidence of the vein abnormality. 

Gurland was the first treated earlier this month, her jugular veins blocked so tightly that Neville had a hard time even pushing the tiny angioplasty wire inside. But right after the treatment, Gurland's feet that for years had been cold and purplish became warmer and normally colored. 

What about MS' hallmark fatigue and weakness, and her scarred nerve cells? While Gurland thinks her balance in the morning, often her worst time, is improving a bit, it's too soon to know; those tests are yet to come. 

But last week, her close friend Heather Tuck, 61, came in for a vein check, too -- calling it the first MS test she ever hoped to pass. 

Source: The New York Times (C) The New York Times Company (23/03/10)

    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5010835</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5010835</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 23 Mar 2010 05:26:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>New data on CCSVI and vitamin D underscore the need for taking action</title>
      <description>
By Ashton Embry Direct-MS

CCSVI
Any suggestion that CCSVI testing and treatment should not be available until
definitive trials have been done (5 -10 years), is irresponsible, reckless and
completely out of touch with the needs of persons with MS. Time is Brain and
everyone wants to preserve as much brain as possible.

Key findings from two recent studies show that CCSVI is a major problem in
MS and each person with MS should be tested and, if need be, treated for
CCSVI as soon as possible.

Having CCSVI makes MS worse - it is a significant driver of the MS disease
process and any person with MS and CCSVI has a much higher chance of
major disease progression.

Of course the major problem facing persons with MS right now is that those in
power, the neurologists and the big MS charities, are dead set against such
testing and treatment. There is no easy solution to this problem and it is
basically a test of wills.

I suspect the only hope persons with MS have is to get the media to see the
obvious logic of why CCSVI testing and treatment is necessary and to expose
the self serving and harmful agenda of the neurologists and MS charities. It
took a big media production (CTV documentary) to force the neurologists and
charities to finally acknowledge the existence of CCSVI. And it will take
similar media exposure to embarrass them sufficiently so that they will have
to do what is best for people with MS.

Definite Link Between CCSVI and MS

Two recent American trials have shown a definite link between CCSVI and
MS. One is ongoing at the University and Buffalo where researchers are
testing 1600 people for the presence of CCSVI in three phases. The 1600
includes 950 with MS, 100 who experienced an initial demyelinating event,
300 with other CNS diseases, and 350 healthy controls.

The results of Phase 1, which involved 500 patients (280 MS, 161 healthy
controls, 59 others), included:

- 56% of persons with MS had CCSVI
- 22% of healthy controls had CCSVI
- 38% of those with an initial demyelinating event had CCSVI
- 80% of those with more advanced MS had CCSVI

The second study at Georgetown University looked at the nature and origin of
the venous malformations responsible for CCSVI. The vascular researchers
found that the venous malformations are of congenital origin and are not the
product of post-birth, environmental insults or the MS disease process itself.
This in utero formation of the venous malformations means CCSVI occurs
BEFORE the MS disease process begins, an important constraint for
understanding the cause/effect relationship between MS and CCSVI.................

More - http://tinyurl.com/yfzhs4o (22/03/10)

Source: MSRC General CCSVI News Page - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5008341</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5008341</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 22 Mar 2010 05:04:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>CCSVI Press Conference at False Creek Healthcare Centre</title>
      <description>
Video of the CCSVI Press conference at False Creek Healthcare Centre. Featuring Dr. Mark Godley and Dr. Marian Simka 

Source: MSRC's General MS News Page - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5001970</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=5001970</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 19 Mar 2010 04:54:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Scottish doctor hails breakthrough CCSVI treatment for MS</title>
      <description>
  
Glasgow GP Dr Tom Gilhooly is at the forefront of an exciting new treatment for sufferers of MS. He comments ‘Scotland has the greatest incidence of Multiple Sclerosis in the world – and has more to gain than any other country from new developments such as CCSVI.’ 

CCSVI (Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency) is now an internationally recognised condition which has been found more commonly in MS patients. Gilhooly explains ‘We need more research to establish if treating CCSVI will improve outcomes in MS, but the theory does make sense. Leakage of iron from leaky veins could increase immune activity and contribute to breakdown of the blood brain barrier. Also MS lesions tend to occur round veins which makes sense if CCSVI is present. It’s early days, but this could be one of the greatest medical breakthroughs of the early 21st century.’ 

Gilhooly has one of the largest MS private practices in the UK, based at the Essential Health Clinic in Glasgow. There are plans to open a similar centre in London and they are actively seeking to offer scanning services for CCSVI in both London and Glasgow at some point later in 2010. 

Gilhooly continues ‘The beneficial impact of vitamin D, antioxidants and omega-3 also fit the CCSVI hypothesis, and could be used to alleviate the symptoms and treat MS. The Doppler ultra sound scan required to show the CCSVI abnormalities has been specially adapted and we hope to have an ultrasound technician fully trained later this summer.’ 

The cost of the scans in the UK is still to be finalised. Gilhooly and his team are also liaising with intervention radiologists to develop treatment centres around the UK. 

People wanting to find out more should visit http://www.essentialhealthclinic.com/ for more details, and to 
sign up for a free newsletter. 

Gilhooly is also due to chair the 2nd European LDN Conference which will also explore groundbreaking treatments for MS and other debilitating inflammatory conditions. The conference will take place in Glasgow on 24th April. The conference is sponsored by BIG ON Glasgow, and more details can be found at http://www.bigonldn2010.com/.

Source: Cisionwire © Cision 2010 (18/03/10)

Source: MSRC's General MS News Page - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm/fuseaction/show/pageid/2954
 

    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4999991</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4999991</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 18 Mar 2010 09:51:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Gloucestershire Multiple Sclerosis sufferer calls for pioneering treatment</title>
      <description>
Multiple sclerosis sufferer Stefan Cambridge is calling for a pioneering treatment to be available in the UK.

As a child, the now 34-year-old spent years caring for his father who had MS before seeing him die. Just five years later he received the devastating news he too had the disease.

Stefan, who uses a wheelchair and walking sticks, recently travelled to Poland for surgery which he says has halted the progression of the debilitating condition which affects all kinds of nerve function.

He is now calling for the pioneering surgery to be made available on the NHS.

The dad-of-one, who has a progressive form of the condition, said: "I lost my dad to MS at a young age and I know what this illness can do.
 
"For someone like me not to progress is like a miracle. For people who have the procedure done early on before the damage starts then it's more of a cure........................."

More: MSRC's General CCSVI Page - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm?fuseaction=show&amp;pageid=2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4991912</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4991912</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 15 Mar 2010 09:10:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Dr Dake's CCSVI Presentation To The SIR 25th Annual Scientific Meeting</title>
      <description>
Dr Dake's CCSVI Presentation To The SIR 25th Annual Scientific Meeting  

Source: MSRC's General CCSVI News Page - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm?fuseaction=show&amp;pageid=2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4991887</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4991887</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 15 Mar 2010 09:07:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>BNAC CCSVI Update 12/03/10</title>
      <description>


BNAC CCSVI UPDATE - http://www.bnac.net/?page_id=561

    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4990265</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4990265</guid>
      <pubDate>Sun, 14 Mar 2010 03:29:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>MS Society of Canada - CCSVI Web Streaming Event</title>
      <description>


MS Society Of Canada - CCSVI Web Streaming Event - http://www.mssociety.ca/en/research/ccsviWebcast.htm 

Date: Wednesday, April 7, 2010 
Time: 1:00pm - 3:00pm ET 
Date: Wednesday, April 7, 2010 
Time: 1:00pm - 3:00pm ET (6pm - 8pm GMT) 

Source: MSRC General CCSVI News - http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm?fuseaction=show&amp;pageid=2954
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4986710</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4986710</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 12 Mar 2010 06:55:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>MSRC comments on Stanford University reportedly halting CCSVI treatments after two serious adverse events</title>
      <description>
Researchers at Stanford University have halted treatments for chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI) according February's edition of the journal Annals of Neurology.

The decision came after two people experienced serious side effects following stenting of the jugular veins, a procedure thought to correct CCSVI. One patient died from a brain haemorrhage following the procedure in August and another required emergency open heart surgery in November after a jugular vein stent dislodged into the right ventricle of the heart. 

Dr Jeffrey Dunn, associate director of Stanford's MS centre, called on other neurologists to speak out about the potential "dangers" of the unproven procedure: "If I can do anything to protect MS patients from the potentially devastating effects of false hopes or the risks of invasive and unproven treatment, I am happy to do so".

Helen Yates, Chief Executive of the Multiple Sclerosis Resource Centre (MSRC) said: “Whilst the case of the man who had to have open heart surgery to deal with a slipped stent is accurate, the case of the woman who had a haemorrhage is less so.  The lady in question had a pre-existing condition that  meant she was much more susceptible to haemorrhage, in fact it has been ascertained since her death that it was nothing to do with the procedure at all and was, in fact, an adverse drug reaction to one of the blood thinning drugs exacerbating  a genetic familial problem.  The first case is, of course, a reminder that no procedure is without risk and with stenting, there is always a slight risk of the stent coming loose.

It is important that these two cases are viewed accurately and in perspective”

The theory that CCSVI may play a role in causing MS was developed by Italian Cardiovascular Surgeon Dr Paolo Zamboni and has resulted in much debate and controversy. It has also sparked interest in many of the 2.5 million people with MS world-wide as a potential cause of MS. 

Dr John Richert, executive vice president for research and clinical programs at the National Multiple Sclerosis Society in the USA said, "When dealing with a disease like MS, where we don't know the cause or have many therapeutic options, it's important to think outside the box. Dr Zamboni is doing this, but his techniques need to be confirmed. 

He went on to add, "All of the evidence today is preliminary. There is not even enough evidence to say that obstruction of veins might be a factor in MS, or to determine when this obstruction may occur in the course of disease." 

MS Societies around the world have emphasised that new research studies will be pivotal in determining the link between CCSVI and MS before surgical procedures should be made available to treat CCSVI. 

Researchers in Buffalo NY are investigating the prevalence of CCSVI in people with MS. Dr Robert Zivadinov, Director of the Buffalo Neuroimmaging Analysis Centre and principle investigator of the Buffalo says: "If we can prove our hypothesis, that cerebrospinal venous insufficiency is the underlying cause of MS, it's going to change the face of how we understand MS", but he added that media coverage of CCSVI so far has been premature and "unrealistic". 

Source: MSRC &amp;Medical News Today © 2010 MediLexicon International Ltd  &amp; MSRC (08/03/10)

    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4977623</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4977623</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 08 Mar 2010 06:56:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Stars are all coming out for Tiger</title>
      <description>
Glasgow’s top stars are to appear on stage at a special benefit night for one of the city’s best-loved entertainers.

Pop stars such as Marti Pellow, Midge Ure and Hue and Cry will appear on the bill at the Pavilion theatre in Tribute To Tiger Tim.

All proceeds will go to a special benefit fund to send veteran DJ Tim Stevens, who is battling multiple sclerosis, to Poland for radical new treatment.

Also on the bill will be Tony Roper and Gerard Kelly, who will appear as Francie and Josie, and Tam Cowan.

The glittering event, on Saturday, May 15, promises to be one of the best variety shows in the theatre’s history.

Pavilion boss Iain Gordon said: “There are few people as popular in Glasgow as Tim Stevens.

“When I heard that Tim was having to raise £9,000 to pay for his treatment I figured it shouldn’t be down to him to pay this sort of money out of his own pocket, so I offered up the theatre for a special show.

“It really makes so much sense. Tim once starred here in panto, and as a radio presenter and charity worker he’s given so much to the city.

“It’s fantastic that our top performers are prepared to recognise that. And I’m sure the public will want to enjoy the night and show their appreciation for all that Tim has done for them.”

Tim and his wife Caroline will attend the event, being organised by Wet Wet Wet drummer Tommy Cunningham.

Ex-Radio Clyde DJ Paul Coia will host the event and several other top Clyde DJs will make an appearance.

Tommy said: “Tim Stevens is a man of the people. He’s been a great broadcaster and communicator but, more importantly, he’s a great bloke.

“When I left the band, Tim was one of the first people to call and offer support.”

The evening will also feature filmed messages of support for Tim and show his career highlights.

The finale will feature all the performers on stage for a rendition of the Beatles classic, With A Little Help From My Friends.

Tiger Tim’s MS was first diagnosed in the late 1980s and his condition has steadily deteriorated and he now uses a wheelchair.

However, in recent months new hope for MS sufferers has emerged with a surgical procedure called ‘the liberation procedure’.

Tim’s wife Caroline said: “I heard about this CCSVI treatment from family in Canada and since then we’ve been tracking down more information from Italy, America and Poland before deciding to go ahead. From what we’ve discovered, the results achieved in Poland seem to be incredible.”

The surgery is based on the theory that MS is caused by narrowed veins.

However, there are no guarantees that it will cure Tim. But Tim, 58, who has tried almost every possible ‘cure’ for MS over the years, is optimistic.

He said: “I hope to have some degree of success. But what I want most is to be able to offer some degree of hope to the other 80,000 MS sufferers in Scotland.”

Tickets for Tribute To Tiger Tim, priced £25, will go on sale at the Pavilion on Monday.

Source: Evening Times © 2010 Herald &amp; Times Group (05/03/10)

    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4970149</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4970149</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 05 Mar 2010 10:02:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Multiple Sclerosis sufferer shows improvement after CCSVI treatment in Poland</title>
      <description>
A mother from Seaford said her MS sufferer daughter has shown initial improvements after travelling to Poland for tests.

Michele Findlay made the trip with her 30-year-old daughter Ella and Ella's boyfriend last month.

Since returning to the UK the Kedale Road resident said Ella, who was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis 10 years ago, has seen some positive changes.

Mrs Findlay said her daughter did not feel much in the way of improvement in the first four to five days but added, "Her feet are warmer and that is one of the problems she had for a long time with the inability to keep her feet warm. When we got home she seemed to be more energetic and she says she is walking better and walking longer distances than she had been in the last nine, 10 months.
"People are noticing that she is more alert and more energetic."

Mrs Findlay travelled abroad to find out if her daughter had Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency (CCSVI). This follows a preliminary study by a leading surgeon called Dr Paolo Zamboni from Italy who used ultrasound and magnetic resonance venography to examine the blood vessels leading in and out of the brain of hundreds of patients. He found that the majority of all his patients with multiple sclerosis he treated had defective circulation in their neck - a defect he has called CCSVI. Mrs Findlay said tests on Ella showed that she did have CCSVI.

She added, "I'm pleased that we had the most experienced doctor in this to look at her because if it hadn't been for his experience at treating patients we may well have come home without any treatment at all because it wasn't very obvious at first sight where the problem was. 

"They found it in the right jugular vein between the jaw and ear."

After tests confirmed CCSVI the Farnham resident then had what is called liberation treatment which in her case involved being injected with an opaque dye and then a deflated balloon is guided up to the point of constriction and once there is inflated to widen the vein.
The procedure is designed to help free the blood flow. 

Mrs Findlay said, "There is a worry that the vein will collapse and that could happen tomorrow, in six months or a year but if it remains opens for as long as a year then they would do another treatment using the balloon. Hopefully things will improve some more, if the only thing that happens is she doesn't get worse that's good as well."

Mrs Findlay has, with another UK resident Gary Barclay, helped to set up a website about CCSVI.

For more information visit: http://www.ms-ccsvi-uk.org/

Source: Eastbourne Herald ©2010 Johnston Press Digital Publishing (03/03/10)
    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4964896</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4964896</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 03 Mar 2010 11:32:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>UBC researchers planning to study Multiple Sclerosis vein theory</title>
      <description>
A medical centre in British Columbia says it wants to become the first in the country to test the controversial theory that multiple sclerosis patients have blocked veins, preventing proper blood flow from the brain. 

"There's a large demand for us to look into this," Dr. Anthony Traboulsee told CTV News. "Patients are very excited. We are very interested ourselves, and we want to meet the demand of our patients." 

A group of researchers at the University of British Columbia MS Clinic, part of the Vancouver Coastal Health Authority, are planning to study the theory, using a variety of imaging techniques. If it gets approval and funding, it appears to be the most comprehensive examination of this novel theory in the world. 

They will be studying the findings of Italian researcher Dr. Paolo Zamboni, who believes that blocked veins in the neck and chest of MS patients lead to blood drainage problems and triggers the immune responses that mark the disease. 

Zamboni contends that angioplasty surgery on these blocked veins, a procedure he calls the Liberation Treatment, can then open them. A preliminary study of the treatment in 65 patients showed it improved the quality of life for many patients, and as long as the veins remained open, symptoms of MS were reduced and new attacks were halted. 

The BC team envisions a study that begins with MS patients being scanned for abnormalities, likely using the ultrasound test pioneered in Italy. They would also be given MRI scans, to see how the different tests detect possible problems. The prevalence of vein problems would also be assessed in MS patients and in normal healthy control patients. Data would also be blinded to minimize the risk for bias in the research. 

Once these non-invasive scans have been done, test patients would proceed to the angiography suite. There they would undergo a venogram. That's where a probe is inserted, from the groin, into the vein system that travels through the chest and into the neck. Doctors inject a dye and watch the blood-flow. This is also, according the University of Ferrara team, the definitive way of seeing blockages in the jugular veins in the neck and the azygos vein in the chest. 

And if there are blocked or narrowed veins, the UBC researchers want to open them up to see what happens. 

"Not only do we want to see if we can detect these abnormalities, we also want to see, if we change them, does it improve peoples' lives?" said Traboulsee. 

The B.C. researchers, who include radiologists, vascular specialists, and physicists working on new imaging technologies, say they had heard about the theory before CTV's W5 aired a story describing the theory, and were investigating the possibility of a study. 

But interest in the theory in Canada has exploded since the episode aired. 

A professor of neurosurgery at the University of Buffalo, Dr. Robert Zivadinov, who worked on an early study with Zamboni, says his office was contacted by 8,000 MS patients in the three weeks after the W5 episode aired. 

The Vancouver researchers want to determine the prevalence of the vein abnormality, which Zamboni has dubbed CCSVI -- or chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency. They also want to know how easily it can be detected with ultrasound and MRI testing. 

Joining the study will be Alex Rauscher, a physicist. He hopes to look at MRI scans of patients to search for evidence of iron deposits in the brain, since some research has suggested that iron in the brain may contribute to the inflammation and the immune system attacks that mark MS. 

"It is our duty to find the answers," said Rauscher. 

The Vancouver Coastal Health researchers say they have applied for funding from the MS Society of Canada to fund research to determine the most practical and reliable test for CCSVI. But because of the size and scope of the study -- and their desire to begin quickly -- they are also accepting funding from other agencies and private donations. 

Donations should be directed to: VGH and UBC Hospital Foundation  - UBC Faculty of Medicine (funds can be specified for CCSVI research) 

The researchers note that their study is not accepting patients yet and likely won't for a few months until they acquire funding, obtain ethical approval, and develop an MRI and ultrasound testing protocol. 

Patients are asked to refrain from contacting the clinics until they are ready to proceed with the study. 

Meanwhile in Italy, one of the companies that manufactures the ultrasound machines used in the testing for CCSVI, is beginning to hold training sessions for doctors and technicians who want to learn the novel technique for scanning the neck and head. 

One training program is being held this week at the University of Ferrara with technicians who developed the tests, and with Zamboni. A second session is planned for March. 

Contact information for the course is available through: Claudio.Buffagni@esaote.com 

Source: CTV News © 2010 CTVGlobeMedia (03/03/10)

    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4960958</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4960958</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 03 Mar 2010 03:38:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI) and multiple sclerosis - counter arguments</title>
      <description>
Chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency and multiple sclerosis

Omar Khan, MD 1 *, Massimo Filippi, MD 2, Mark S. Freedman, MD, FRCPC 3, Frederik Barkhof, MD, PhD 4, Paula Dore-Duffy, PhD 1, Hans Lassman, MD 5, Bruce Trapp, PhD 6, Amit Bar-Or, MD, FRCPC 7, Imad Zak, MD 8, Marilyn J. Siegel, MD, FACR 9, Robert Lisak, MD, FRCP 1

1Multiple Sclerosis Center, Department of Neurology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit
2Neuroimaging Research Unit, Scientific Institute and University Hospital San Raffaele, Milan
3Multiple Sclerosis Research Unit, The Ottawa Hospital General Campus, University of Ottawa, Ottawa
4Department of Radiology and Amsterdam MS Center; VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam
5Centre for Brain Research, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna
6Department of Neurosciences; Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland
7Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Montreal
8Department of Radiology; Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit
9Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis
 
*Correspondence to Omar Khan, Multiple Sclerosis Center &amp; Image Analysis Laboratory, Department of Neurology, Wayne State University School of Medicine 4201 St Antoine, 8A-UHC, Detroit, Michigan 48323

Ph: (313) 745-4280; Fax: (313) 966-9271

Abstract 
A chronic state of impaired venous drainage from the central nervous system, termed as chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI), is claimed to be a pathologic phenomenon exclusively seen in multiple sclerosis (MS). 

This has invigorated the causal debate of MS and generated immense interest in the patient and scientific communities. 

A potential shift in the treatment paradigm of MS involving endovascular balloon angioplasty or venous stent placement has been proposed as well as conducted in small patient series. 

In some cases, it may have resulted in serious injury. 

In this Point of View, we discuss the recent investigations that led to the description of CCSVI as well as the conceptual and technical shortcomings that challenge the potential relationship of this phenomenon to MS. 

The need for conducting carefully designed and rigorously controlled studies to investigate CCVSI has been recognized by the scientific bodies engaged in MS research. 

Several scientific endeavors examining the presence of CCSVI in MS are being undertaken. 

At present, invasive and potentially dangerous endovascular procedures as a therapy for patients with MS should be discouraged until such studies have been completed, analyzed, and debated in the scientific arena. 

Annals Of Neurology © 1999-2010 John Wiley &amp; Sons, Inc. 



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


An Open Letter to the Authors of Chronic Cerebrospinal
Venous Insufficiency and Multiple Sclerosis (Khan et al,
2010, Annals of Neurology)

Ashton Embry, Direct-MS

Background: A week ago a “Point of View” article on Chronic Cerebrospinal
Venous Insufficiency and Multiple Sclerosis was made available online at the
website of Annals of Neurology. 

It was written by 11 authors, with both
neurologists and radiologists being represented. Notably 7 of 11 authors
(including the first four, senior authors) disclosed significant financial interests
with pharmaceutical companies which produce drugs for MS (see Appendix).

In their opinion piece, the authors discussed Dr Zamboni’s published work on
CCSVI and concluded it should be considered “preliminary”. To my knowledge
no one has ever considered it to be otherwise. Most of the article consisted of
points and arguments that suggest it is not reasonable to consider CCSVI to be
the main cause of the MS disease process. Such a discussion has some value
although I must point out few are claiming CCSVI is the main driver of MS. Dr
Zamboni has been very clear on this and simply says CCSVI may be a significant
contributor to MS onset and progression. Thus, in their Point of View, the authors
essentially put up a straw man and then spend most of the article taking it apart.
Overall, most of their arguments against CCSVI as the main cause of MS are
readily dismissed once MS is seen as an autoimmune disease often exacerbated
by the presence of CCSVI.

The only truly offensive part of the article was the authors’ attempt to rationalize
their self-serving desire that no one with MS should be tested for CCSVI. They
emphasized the very rare occurrence of a serious adverse event associated with
endovascular treatment and totally neglected to discuss the risks of not being
tested and treated for CCSVI. Such a one-sided rationalization which is nullified
by a blatant conflict of interest of most of the authors cannot be taken seriously.

Below is an open letter to the authors.

Dear Dr Khan and fellow authors,

I recently read your opinion piece on CCSVI which was made available online in
Annals of Neurology (Khan et al, 2010) last week. I see it as part of “MS Wars:
Part II – The Medical Empire Strikes Back”. Overall, I enjoyed reading your article
because I always find it useful to read the arguments of those who hold a
different opinion than me on an important subject. I was also pleased that you
restrained yourselves and did not follow Mark Freedman’s infamous lead and call
Dr Zamboni’s work “a hoax”. The only part of the article I found distasteful was
your advice for persons with MS to not get tested for CCSVI for at least 5-10
years (while further research is being done). I discuss this point in detail later.

For a more up to date and more objective opinion piece on MS and CCSVI, I
direct you to my recent article “CCSVI and Multiple Sclerosis: Integrating New
Data to Help Guide Actions” which can be downloaded at http://tinyurl.com/yf36ege. 

This article interprets the relationship between the
CCSVI and MS in light of the recently available results from CCSVI-related
studies at the universities of Buffalo and Georgetown. Given you must have
known this critical information would be available in early 2010, I am surprised
you rushed into print before such crucial data were available. This made your
“Point of View” hopelessly outdated on the day it became available. I can only
surmise you did not want any solid data from the Buffalo and Georgetown studies
to cause problems for your critique.

In my article I also address the question of whether persons with MS should get
tested and treated for CCSVI as soon as possible or should wait 5-10 years until
major clinical trials are completed and analyzed. A reasonable answer to this
question depends on the major new data from the universities of Buffalo and
Georgetown. Your analysis of this same question without the benefit of these
crucial data is sadly premature and poorly supported. As I will discuss later, my
advice on this key question is the opposite of yours and, unlike yours, mine is
supported by the new data and is not hopelessly compromised by unacceptable
and major conflicts of interest.

To me, given the robust results of the University of Buffalo Phase 1 study and the
findings of hundreds of endovascular procedures which have already been done
to relieve CCSVI (almost all have found major blockages in the veins draining the
brain), there can be little doubt that CCSVI is associated with MS. And, as I
argue in my article, because the vascular malformations which constitute CCSVI
are mainly congenital (Georgetown data), there can be little doubt that CCSVI is
an important factor in the MS disease process in many cases (definitely not all
cases). Of course, without this new data, you could not offer any worthwhile
opinions on whether or not CCSVI is part of MS.

Furthermore, any claim that the established, robust association of CCSVI and
MS is purely coincidental cannot be taken seriously although I am sure such an
implausible thought will be offered by some. In my article, I interpret MS as an
autoimmune disease which, in many cases, is exacerbated by the co-occurrence
of CCSVI (in 25% of the healthy population and perhaps up to 60% of persons
with MS according to the University of Buffalo work). I find the “either it’s
autoimmune or it’s CCSVI” polarity which dominates your article to be overly
simplistic. An integration of the two phenomena is the most reasonable model
because both have very strong evidence supporting their involvement in MS. Of
course, the new data were required for such an integrated model to become
obvious.

Another key question which you could not evaluate without the new data is
whether or not CCSVI contributes to MS progression. The University of Buffalo
results nicely show that the higher the disability, the higher the chance that
CCSVI is involved. The congenital origin of the vascular malformations dictates
that such results mean that CCSVI is an adjuvant to the MS disease process. If
one has MS and CCSVI they have a much higher chance of progressing to a
higher disability level than a person with MS but no CCSVI. Given the potential
adverse effects of CCSVI on the CNS vascular system, such an empiricallysupported
association is certainly rational and plausible.

The argument that this relationship is due to MS causing CCSVI, an argument
you mentioned in your article, is ruled out by the data although once again I am
sure such an illogical interpretation will continue to be put forth. Many of you
have experience with EAE, the animal model for MS as an autoimmune disease.
I suggest you try to see the relationship of CCSVI and MS as being similar to the
addition of tetanus toxin (opens BBB) to the myelin/adjuvant mix which drives
autoimmunity in EAE.

Given the above, if one has MS, they would be wise to get tested for CCSVI and,
if necessary, treated for it. This is based on the logical reasoning (precautionary
principle) that the chance of harm associated with doing nothing (i.e. progressing
more rapidly and farther if CCSVI is present) is substantially greater than the
chance of harm associated with having endovascular surgery to relieve CCSVI
(extremely rare, serious side effects). As Mark “It’s a Hoax” Freedman correctly
and perhaps prophetically said, “Time is Brain” (Freedman, 2009). With this, and
the apparent role of CCSVI as an accelerant of the MS disease process, in mind,
persons with MS do not have the luxury to follow your self-serving, time table and
wait 5-10 years for what you see as required research to be completed.

Of course, most people with MS realize the obvious and are desperately seeking
such testing and treatment. Who wouldn’t if they had MS and were progressing
(the current drugs really don’t do much for most in the long run). Notably, most
neurologists are unable to understand or empathize with such a logical decision
to want to get CCSVI treated if present. The advice in your opinion piece of not to
get treated for CCSVI for at least 5 -10 years from now is both irresponsible and
dangerous. And this brings us to the topic of the serious lack of objectivity of
such advice.

One big problem with you saying not to get treated for CCSVI is that almost all of
you are closely aligned with the pharmaceutical industry and thus have a major
conflict of interest when you offer such advice. Should we heed the advice of
scientists closely allied with the petroleum industry when it comes how to
address the potential problems of global warming? Of course not! We do not
heed it because they have a blatant conflict of interest so we just don’t know if
they are pulling a fast one or not. One thing we know for sure, it is highly unlikely
their advice will be objective.

Like it or not, the long list of drug company associations for most of the authors
(see appendix below) disqualifies your “Point of View” as being a credible source
when it comes to advice on what to do about a non-drug treatment like CCSVI. I
would stress, you can’t have it both ways. You can’t take money from drug
companies and then turn around and offer advice on a treatment which
potentially would harm the drug companies. Naturally your advice is going to be
“Don’t use the non-drug treatment. Use only the drugs”. How can it be otherwise
and that is why advice from those with obvious conflicts of interest is self-serving
and worthless. It is too bad that most neurologists aren’t like George Ebers of
Oxford University and rise above the temptation to take the easy money from the
drug companies and thus escape a barefaced conflict of interest.

In summary, your Point of View is completely out of date and your advice
regarding CCSVI testing and treatment is totally compromised and of no value. It
is also potentially very harmful for persons with MS. Five to ten years is a very
long time to have to wait for testing and treatment of CCSVI and such a long time
represents a huge amount of lost brain (Time is Brain). I can only suggest you try
hard to take a patient-centred, evidence-based approach and do everything you
can to make testing and treatment of CCSVI available as soon as possible.

Sincerely,

Dr Ashton Embry
President, Direct-MS

Appendix- Financial Disclosures of the Authors

Dr Khan has received research support from the National MS Society (NMSS),
the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Teva Neuroscience, Genzyme Corporation, Biogen Idec,
Novartis Pharmaceuticals, and Acorda Therapeutics; consultancy and speaking honoraria from
Teva Neuroscience, Biogen Idec, Novartis Pharmaceuticals, and Bayer Healthcare.

Dr. Filippi has received research support from Bayer-Schering Pharma, Biogen-
Dompé AG, Genmab A/S, Merck Serono, Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd.,
Fondazione Italiana Sclerosi Multipla (FISM), and Fondazione Mariani; consultancy and speaking
honoraria from Bayer Schering Pharma, Biogen-Dompé AG, Genmab A/S, Merck Serono, Teva
Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd.

Dr. Freedman has received research support from the Canadian MS Society, EMD Merck-
Serono, Genzyme, and Bayer Schering Pharma; consultancy and speaking honoraria from Teva
Neuroscience, Bayer Healthcare, and EMD Merck-Serono.

Dr Barkhof has received research support from the Dutch MS Research Foundation and Merck-
Serono; consultancy and speaking honoraria from EMD Merck-Serono, Bayer-Schering Pharma,
Biogen-Idec, UBC, Sanofi-Aventis, Novo-Nordisk.

Dr Dore-Duffy has received research support from the NMSS and the NIH.

Dr Trapp has received research support from the NIH, NMSS, Canadian MS Society, Ohio Third
Frontier, Vertex, and EMD Merck-Serono; consultancy and speaking honoraria from Teva
Neuroscience, Biogen Idec and Pfizer.

Dr. Bar-Or has received research support from the MS Society of Canada (MSSC) and the MSSC
Research Foundation, The Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the FRSQ, Bayhill
Therapeutics, Biogen Idec, Bio MS, Genentech, and Teva Neuroscience; consultancy and
speaking honoraria from Biogen Idec, Eli Lilly, Genentech, MerckSerono, Novartis, Roche and
Teva Neuroscience.

Dr Lisak has received research support from the NMSS, NIH, Teva Neuroscience, and Questcor;
consultancyand speaking honoraria from Teva Neuroscience and Bayer Healthcare.

Drs Siegel, Lassmann, and Zak have nothing to disclose.

    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4948097</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4948097</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 25 Feb 2010 03:07:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Miracle MS 'cure' made me feel 'born again'</title>
      <description>
Multiple sclerosis is a devastating disease which, until recently, had no possible cure. 

Martin Jones suffered with MS for 13 years. But following a groundbreaking operation on his veins, Martin is now enjoying using parts of his body he thought he had lost forever. Reporter HOLLY THOMPSON talks to him about his remarkable recovery.

This time last year, Martin Jones could hardly leave the sofa.

His body would spasm involuntarily, he couldn't walk, he couldn't sleep because his arms and legs twitched at random, and he would regularly choke on his food.

"I was very close to being put in a nursing home and then probably dying," said Mr Jones.

"I had lost my life. As far as I was concerned it was over. I couldn't do anything – just lie there on the sofa endlessly trying to sleep. I was basically paralysed."

 
Now he can happily open the door to visitors, drive his car, and get up the stairs in one go.

He is almost completely cured of a disease which doctors claim is incurable. And all it took was two operations on his veins under local anaesthetic.

Mr Jones, 43, said: "I feel born again.

"Life was pretty much over for me but now I'm trying to find time to fit in everything I want to do."

The retired IT analyst was diagnosed with MS 13 years ago.

He said: "I suddenly started to lose my balance and began accidentally treading on people's feet in the tube.

"I went to the doctors for a scan, and it took them two years to diagnose MS.

"They told me it was progressive and therefore incurable. It was a crushing blow but I tried not to let it get me down."

Over the next few years Mr Jones's body began to deteriorate. He was forced to retire and spent his time lying on the sofa desperately scouring the internet for a cure. And last year, he struck gold.

Mr Jones, of Sycamore Drive, Woodhatch, said: "I read about this syndrome called chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency(CCSVI) and how it can be cured with a simple operation. I was on the phone immediately to book myself in.

"I had to travel to Poland to get it done but it was worth it. The moment it was over the first thing I realised was that I could feel my feet. I hadn't felt them for years. It was amazing."

Mr Jones had his first operation in November last year, and the second in January. He now wants to use his newly-restored health to help others suffering from MS.

He said: "The experience has made me evangelical. I want everyone to know about CCSVI and what it means.

"Scientists in this country are dismissing the treatment and calling it a placebo, but I'm proof that it works and that there is hope for MS sufferers all over the world."

Mr Jones and other MS sufferers are lobbying the Government to take this treatment seriously and perform it in the UK. To sign their petition, go to http://petitions.number10.gov.uk/CCSVINOW/

Source: thisissurrey.co.uk (c) East Surrey &amp; Sussex News and Media Ltd (23/02/10)

    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4944733</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4944733</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 23 Feb 2010 06:13:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Alberta Health Services statement on venous imaging and angioplasty in Multiple Sclerosis (MS)</title>
      <description>
Alberta Health Services Position

1.At this time, it is only a hypothesis that CCSVI contributes to, or causes, Multiple Sclerosis, and that venous angioplasty is clinically beneficial.

2.Further, independent and controlled studies are required to prove, discount, or better understand Dr. Zamboni’s study results.

3.The nature and frequency of the risks on venous angioplasty are not yet fully understood. Without a clear indication that venous angioplasty carries a clinical benefit that outweighs the risks, it cannot yet be supported as standard practice.

4.At present, there is no proven indication for venous imaging or venous angioplasty in patients with Multiple Sclerosis. Therefore, unless part of an approved research protocol, these procedures will not be provided by AHS to persons with MS.

5.If, and when, there is independent scientific validation of Dr. Zamboni’s results, Alberta Health Services will seek approval from Alberta Health and Wellness, under the province’s health technology assessment process (described at http://www.health.alberta.ca/initiatives/AHTDP.html), to introduce the new procedure into practice in Alberta. 

Full Statement - http://www.albertahealthservices.ca/1409.asp

    </description>
      <link>http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4934712</link>
      <category>Multiple Sclerosis, CCSVI,</category>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://feeds.rapidfeeds.com/?iid4ct=4934712</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 19 Feb 2010 03:59:00 EDT</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>CCSVI and Multiple Sclerosis: Integrating New Data to Help Guide Actions</title>
      <description>
Author: Ashton Embry, Direct-MS (www.direct-ms.org)

Summary
The recent scientific results on CCSVI and MS from both the University of Buffalo and Georgetown University have essentially left very little doubt that CCSVI is a causal factor in MS in the majority of, but not all, cases. Furthermore, persons with MS with more disability are much more likely to also be affected by CCSVI and thus there is little question that CCSVI accelerates the MS disease progression. Given the above, every person with MS should be tested for CCSVI. 

If CCSVI is detected, it should be treated as soon as possible. Persons with MS do not have the luxury to wait five to ten years for research to prove what is reasonably well established at present. Nutritional strategies which counter CCSVI, BBB breakdown and autoimmune reactions are essential both before and after CCSVI treatment.

Full article : CCSVI and Multiple Sclerosis: Integrating New Data to Help Guide Actions  

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      <pubDate>Thu, 18 Feb 2010 02:10:00 EDT</pubDate>
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      <title>Multiple sclerosis sufferers lobby for research into radical new treatment</title>
      <description>
A group of local multiple sclerosis sufferers are urging residents to lobby their MP to support a radical new treatment for the chronic illness.

The 20-strong group, which meets at the Multiple Sclerosis Forum at the Sanctuary of Healing, Langho, want more research into the theory MS is a vascular disease that can be treated by a simple surgical procedure.

They are asking people to send a letter, which the group has compiled, to their local MP asking for pressure to be placed on the Minister of Health to sanction vascular scans and follow-up treatments for all MS patients.

The theory that MS is a vascular disease that can be treated with angioplasty, which clears blockages in veins, is the work of Italian Dr Paolo Zamoni. His early findings suggest MS may, in fact, be a condition called CCSVI, which stands for chronic cerebro-spinal venous insufficiency.

Dr Zamboni believes CCSVI causes veins in the neck and upper chest to twist, narrow or become blocked; in some cases, these veins never form at all. The result is poor blood drainage from the brain. He found that more than 90% of patients with MS have these malformed veins, and improper blood flow from the brain.

This theory is a radical departure from current thinking and many in the medical community remain sceptical of Dr Zamboni's work.

However, local MS sufferers who are members of the Forum think no time should be wasted and more research should be conducted.

Forum spokeswoman Julie Hitchen explained: "The MS Society UK is very sceptical and dragging their feet, with no plans for research into CCSVI, although there are now 10 planned projects worldwide.

"We are asking everyone affected by MS, their families, friends, MPs, the media and the Great British public for their support in lobbying the Minister of Health to sanction vascular scans and the follow-up treatment for all MS patients in the UK."

The letter can be downloaded from the MSRC website at http://www.msrc.co.uk/index.cfm?fuseaction=show&amp;pageid=2964

A petition calling for Prime Minister Gordon Brown to make the CCSVI procedure available in the UK can also be signed at http://petitions.number10.gov.uk/CCSVINOW/

Source: The Clitheroe Advertiser &amp; Times ©2010 Johnston Press Digital Publishing (17/02/10)

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      <pubDate>Wed, 17 Feb 2010 06:32:00 EDT</pubDate>
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