What Chiropractic care is best for MS/CCSVI
What Chiropractic care is best for MS/CCSVI
Want to see a Chiropractor after reading some success stories but what type of chiropractor do i see for MS/CCSI?
Merci
Merci
- civickiller
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Re: What Chiropractic care is best for MS/CCSVI
you need to see a chiropractor that deals with the Upper Cervical spine, specifically C1 and C2. a traditional chiropractor wont adjust that but you still need to call just to make sure.
have you had the CCSVI surgery?
if youd like help finding a chiro that can help please let me know what state and town you live in
have you had the CCSVI surgery?
if youd like help finding a chiro that can help please let me know what state and town you live in
- THEGREEKFROMTHED
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Re: What Chiropractic care is best for MS/CCSVI
Major Diagnostic Breakthrough in Multiple Sclerosis Achieved with Advanced FONAR UPRIGHT® MRI
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By FONAR Corporation
Published: Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011 - 6:11 am
MELVILLE, N.Y., Oct. 5, 2011 -- /PRNewswire/ -- In a newly published paper, medical researchers at FONAR Corporation (NASDAQ-FONR) report a diagnostic breakthrough in multiple sclerosis (MS), based on observations made possible by the company's unique FONAR UPRIGHT® Multi-Position™ MRI. The findings reveal that the cause of multiple sclerosis may be biomechanical and related to earlier trauma to the neck, which can result in obstruction of the flow of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), which is produced and stored in the central anatomic structures of the brain known as the ventricles. Since the ventricles produce a large volume of CSF each day (500 cc), the obstruction can result in a build up of pressure within the ventricles, resulting in leakage of the CSF into the surrounding brain tissue. This leakage could be responsible for generating the brain lesions of multiple sclerosis.
To view the multimedia assets associated with this release, please click http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases ... 15283.html
The paper, titled "The Possible Role of Cranio-Cervical Trauma and Abnormal CSF Hydrodynamics in the Genesis of Multiple Sclerosis," has just been published and appears in the latest issue of the journal Physiological Chemistry and Physics and Medical NMR (Sept. 20, 2011, 41: 1-17). It is co-authored by MRI researchers Raymond V. Damadian and David Chu.
Commenting on the study, the lead researcher and president of FONAR, Raymond V. Damadian stated, "These new observations have uncovered biomechanical barriers that appear to give rise to multiple sclerosis, and, even more excitingly, these barriers may be therapeutically addressable." Damadian is the medical doctor who discovered the abnormal signals from tissue that are the basis of every MRI image made today and who went on to invent the MRI and build the world's first MRI by hand at New York's Downstate Medical Center.
The findings are based on viewing the real-time flow of cerebrospinal fluid in a series of eight randomly chosen patients with multiple sclerosis.
The cerebrospinal fluid, known as CSF, lubricates the brain and spinal cord. Utilizing FONAR's patented Advanced UPRIGHT® Multi-Position™ MRI technology, the team was able to view the flow of cerebrospinal fluid in and out of the brain with the patients lying down and upright. These invaluable dual observations have only been possible since the invention of an MRI capable of imaging the patient upright.
Damadian and co-researcher, Chu, discovered obstructions of the CSF flow in all eight patients in the study and, in seven out of eight patients, the obstruction was more pronounced when the patient was in the upright position. The UPRIGHT® MRI also revealed that these obstructions were the result of structural deformities of the cervical spine, induced by trauma earlier in life.
The research was initiated when Damadian and Chu scanned a patient with multiple sclerosis. In reviewing the MRI scans, Damadian noted that one of the MS lesions in the patient's brain was directly connected with the CSF within the ventricles of the brain, which are the structures in which the body continuously produces CSF fluid. It does so through a network of blood vessels within the ventricles known as the choroid plexus. This network generates a large volume of CSF daily, approximately 500 cc.
Damadian knew that in multiple sclerosis the lesions are typically concentrated adjacent to the ventricles and are peri-ventricular in distribution (i.e. surrounding the ventricle). He had also determined that the patient had a history of severe trauma to the cervical spine. When a careful history of subsequent patients in the study was taken, it revealed that all but one had also experienced some form of serious traumatic injury to the cervical spine.
When viewing MRI scans of the first patient, Damadian hypothesized that any obstructions of the continuous circulation of the daily volume of CSF out of the brain to the spinal cord and back could cause increased pressure within the ventricles, which could result in leakage of the fluid into the brain tissue surrounding the ventricles.
Damadian knew that CSF fluid contains proteins, which are made up of polypeptides, in fact, that the fluid contains more than 300 polypeptides. Nine of the proteins they form are known to be antigens that stimulate the production of antibodies. He wondered if these proteins, leaking into the brain tissue, could be initiating the antigen-antibody complexes in the brain that cause the pathology and symptoms of multiple sclerosis.
The disease results in the destruction of the coverings, or myelin sheaths, that insulate the nerve fibers of the brain. The destruction prevents the nerves from functioning normally and produces the symptoms of multiple sclerosis. The destruction is the origin of the multiple sclerosis lesions seen on the MRI images.
But, unlike nerve tissue, the myelin sheaths can regenerate – once the cause of their destruction is eliminated. The paper suggests that surgical or biomechanical remediation of the obstruction of the flow of CSF in the cervical spine could relieve the increased CSF pressure within the ventricles and eliminate the resultant leakage of fluid into the surrounding brain tissue and the inflammation of the myelin sheaths that it generates. Once the leakage has been stopped, the myelin sheaths could be repaired by the body's myelogenesis process with the prospect of a return to normal nerve function for these nerves.
Images in the recumbent and upright positions of one of the MS patients from the study follow. Note the presence of ventral CSF flow when the patient (MS patient #6) is recumbent (Figure 6c) but the loss of ventral CSF flow when the patient is upright (Figures 6b).
To see more examples and images visit www.fonar.com/news/100511.htm.
See the attached photo of a patient in the FONAR UPRIGHT® Multi-Position™ MRI. Unlike traditional lie-down MRIs, patients walk into the UPRIGHT™ MRI and sit in the scanner. In the diagnosis of usual spine problems such as back pain, the patients are asked to place themselves in the position that causes their back symptoms. Then an upright MRI image is generated. As a result, the spinal pathology that is causing the patient's back pain can be more accurately and more completely identified and defined. Since the seat in the MRI can be tilted to any position and also flattened into a bed in the horizontal position, the researchers were able to view the patients in the MS study in both the recumbent and upright positions.
The study was part of ongoing research at the UPRIGHT® MRI CENTER at FONAR Corporation, which invented the UPRIGHT® MRI scanner. Research at the center, which is located in Melville, New York, has already provided unique diagnostic views of the upright spine with the weight of the body on it, including the spine with the patient bending forward and backward, radiation-free monitoring of scoliosis, upright imaging of pelvic floor problems in women, such as a prolapsed bladder or uterus, sit-down imaging of the prostate without the usual endorectal coil, and a walk-in, sit-down 10-minute scan that allows for cost-effective MRI scanning of patients undergoing chemotherapy to monitor tumor responses biweekly.
The complete study that led to the diagnostic breakthrough in multiple sclerosis can be accessed at the company website at www.fonar.com/pdf/PCP41_damadian.pdf
To see the full release and additional images visit www.fonar.com/news/100511.htm
About the Researchers
Raymond V. Damadian is the medical doctor who first proposed scanning medical patients by NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance, the original name of the MRI) based on his discovery of the principle on which all modern MRI is based – the different NMR signals that tissues emit in a magnetic field. The amplitude of these signals accounts for the pixel brightness in every MRI image. He discovered that the NMR signal amplitudes of cancer tissue differ markedly from the NMR signal amplitudes of the normal tissues because of the differences in their rate of decay. He simultaneously discovered that the NMR signal amplitudes also differ markedly among the normal tissues themselves because of the differences in their rates of decay. These signal amplitude differences enabled cancer tissues and other tissues to be visualized in MRI images because the signal differences generate the needed brightness differences (contrast) in the picture elements (pixels) needed to visualize detail in the MRI image. The contrast in pixel brightness allows the cancer pixels in the image to be distinguished from the surrounding normal pixels. It also allows the different normal tissues to be distinguished from each other and achieve the exceptional anatomic detail MRI pictures are known for. Damadian went on to build the first MRI scanner by hand, assisted by two post-doctoral students, at New York's Downstate Medical Center and achieved the first MRI scan of a healthy human body in 1977 and a human body with cancer in 1978. For these discoveries he received the National Medal of Technology from President Reagan in 1988, was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 1989 as the inventor of the MRI and was named Inventor of the Year in 2007 for his invention of the FONAR UPRIGHT® Multi-Position™ MRI. He founded FONAR to bring MRI diagnosis to patients. The company manufactured and installed the world's first commercial MRI in 1980. Damadian is currently FONAR's president and chief research officer.
David Chu is the head MRI scientist at FONAR who specializes in the imaging of the cerebrospinal fluid with advanced cines, or movies, which allow for observation of CSF flow in real time. The technology, which the company calls TrueFlow™ Imaging, made the diagnostic breakthrough in multiple sclerosis possible.
SOURCE FONAR Corporation
Read more: http://www.sacbee.com/2011/10/05/396164 ... z1ZwNRAmpW
Share
By FONAR Corporation
Published: Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011 - 6:11 am
MELVILLE, N.Y., Oct. 5, 2011 -- /PRNewswire/ -- In a newly published paper, medical researchers at FONAR Corporation (NASDAQ-FONR) report a diagnostic breakthrough in multiple sclerosis (MS), based on observations made possible by the company's unique FONAR UPRIGHT® Multi-Position™ MRI. The findings reveal that the cause of multiple sclerosis may be biomechanical and related to earlier trauma to the neck, which can result in obstruction of the flow of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), which is produced and stored in the central anatomic structures of the brain known as the ventricles. Since the ventricles produce a large volume of CSF each day (500 cc), the obstruction can result in a build up of pressure within the ventricles, resulting in leakage of the CSF into the surrounding brain tissue. This leakage could be responsible for generating the brain lesions of multiple sclerosis.
To view the multimedia assets associated with this release, please click http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases ... 15283.html
The paper, titled "The Possible Role of Cranio-Cervical Trauma and Abnormal CSF Hydrodynamics in the Genesis of Multiple Sclerosis," has just been published and appears in the latest issue of the journal Physiological Chemistry and Physics and Medical NMR (Sept. 20, 2011, 41: 1-17). It is co-authored by MRI researchers Raymond V. Damadian and David Chu.
Commenting on the study, the lead researcher and president of FONAR, Raymond V. Damadian stated, "These new observations have uncovered biomechanical barriers that appear to give rise to multiple sclerosis, and, even more excitingly, these barriers may be therapeutically addressable." Damadian is the medical doctor who discovered the abnormal signals from tissue that are the basis of every MRI image made today and who went on to invent the MRI and build the world's first MRI by hand at New York's Downstate Medical Center.
The findings are based on viewing the real-time flow of cerebrospinal fluid in a series of eight randomly chosen patients with multiple sclerosis.
The cerebrospinal fluid, known as CSF, lubricates the brain and spinal cord. Utilizing FONAR's patented Advanced UPRIGHT® Multi-Position™ MRI technology, the team was able to view the flow of cerebrospinal fluid in and out of the brain with the patients lying down and upright. These invaluable dual observations have only been possible since the invention of an MRI capable of imaging the patient upright.
Damadian and co-researcher, Chu, discovered obstructions of the CSF flow in all eight patients in the study and, in seven out of eight patients, the obstruction was more pronounced when the patient was in the upright position. The UPRIGHT® MRI also revealed that these obstructions were the result of structural deformities of the cervical spine, induced by trauma earlier in life.
The research was initiated when Damadian and Chu scanned a patient with multiple sclerosis. In reviewing the MRI scans, Damadian noted that one of the MS lesions in the patient's brain was directly connected with the CSF within the ventricles of the brain, which are the structures in which the body continuously produces CSF fluid. It does so through a network of blood vessels within the ventricles known as the choroid plexus. This network generates a large volume of CSF daily, approximately 500 cc.
Damadian knew that in multiple sclerosis the lesions are typically concentrated adjacent to the ventricles and are peri-ventricular in distribution (i.e. surrounding the ventricle). He had also determined that the patient had a history of severe trauma to the cervical spine. When a careful history of subsequent patients in the study was taken, it revealed that all but one had also experienced some form of serious traumatic injury to the cervical spine.
When viewing MRI scans of the first patient, Damadian hypothesized that any obstructions of the continuous circulation of the daily volume of CSF out of the brain to the spinal cord and back could cause increased pressure within the ventricles, which could result in leakage of the fluid into the brain tissue surrounding the ventricles.
Damadian knew that CSF fluid contains proteins, which are made up of polypeptides, in fact, that the fluid contains more than 300 polypeptides. Nine of the proteins they form are known to be antigens that stimulate the production of antibodies. He wondered if these proteins, leaking into the brain tissue, could be initiating the antigen-antibody complexes in the brain that cause the pathology and symptoms of multiple sclerosis.
The disease results in the destruction of the coverings, or myelin sheaths, that insulate the nerve fibers of the brain. The destruction prevents the nerves from functioning normally and produces the symptoms of multiple sclerosis. The destruction is the origin of the multiple sclerosis lesions seen on the MRI images.
But, unlike nerve tissue, the myelin sheaths can regenerate – once the cause of their destruction is eliminated. The paper suggests that surgical or biomechanical remediation of the obstruction of the flow of CSF in the cervical spine could relieve the increased CSF pressure within the ventricles and eliminate the resultant leakage of fluid into the surrounding brain tissue and the inflammation of the myelin sheaths that it generates. Once the leakage has been stopped, the myelin sheaths could be repaired by the body's myelogenesis process with the prospect of a return to normal nerve function for these nerves.
Images in the recumbent and upright positions of one of the MS patients from the study follow. Note the presence of ventral CSF flow when the patient (MS patient #6) is recumbent (Figure 6c) but the loss of ventral CSF flow when the patient is upright (Figures 6b).
To see more examples and images visit www.fonar.com/news/100511.htm.
See the attached photo of a patient in the FONAR UPRIGHT® Multi-Position™ MRI. Unlike traditional lie-down MRIs, patients walk into the UPRIGHT™ MRI and sit in the scanner. In the diagnosis of usual spine problems such as back pain, the patients are asked to place themselves in the position that causes their back symptoms. Then an upright MRI image is generated. As a result, the spinal pathology that is causing the patient's back pain can be more accurately and more completely identified and defined. Since the seat in the MRI can be tilted to any position and also flattened into a bed in the horizontal position, the researchers were able to view the patients in the MS study in both the recumbent and upright positions.
The study was part of ongoing research at the UPRIGHT® MRI CENTER at FONAR Corporation, which invented the UPRIGHT® MRI scanner. Research at the center, which is located in Melville, New York, has already provided unique diagnostic views of the upright spine with the weight of the body on it, including the spine with the patient bending forward and backward, radiation-free monitoring of scoliosis, upright imaging of pelvic floor problems in women, such as a prolapsed bladder or uterus, sit-down imaging of the prostate without the usual endorectal coil, and a walk-in, sit-down 10-minute scan that allows for cost-effective MRI scanning of patients undergoing chemotherapy to monitor tumor responses biweekly.
The complete study that led to the diagnostic breakthrough in multiple sclerosis can be accessed at the company website at www.fonar.com/pdf/PCP41_damadian.pdf
To see the full release and additional images visit www.fonar.com/news/100511.htm
About the Researchers
Raymond V. Damadian is the medical doctor who first proposed scanning medical patients by NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance, the original name of the MRI) based on his discovery of the principle on which all modern MRI is based – the different NMR signals that tissues emit in a magnetic field. The amplitude of these signals accounts for the pixel brightness in every MRI image. He discovered that the NMR signal amplitudes of cancer tissue differ markedly from the NMR signal amplitudes of the normal tissues because of the differences in their rate of decay. He simultaneously discovered that the NMR signal amplitudes also differ markedly among the normal tissues themselves because of the differences in their rates of decay. These signal amplitude differences enabled cancer tissues and other tissues to be visualized in MRI images because the signal differences generate the needed brightness differences (contrast) in the picture elements (pixels) needed to visualize detail in the MRI image. The contrast in pixel brightness allows the cancer pixels in the image to be distinguished from the surrounding normal pixels. It also allows the different normal tissues to be distinguished from each other and achieve the exceptional anatomic detail MRI pictures are known for. Damadian went on to build the first MRI scanner by hand, assisted by two post-doctoral students, at New York's Downstate Medical Center and achieved the first MRI scan of a healthy human body in 1977 and a human body with cancer in 1978. For these discoveries he received the National Medal of Technology from President Reagan in 1988, was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 1989 as the inventor of the MRI and was named Inventor of the Year in 2007 for his invention of the FONAR UPRIGHT® Multi-Position™ MRI. He founded FONAR to bring MRI diagnosis to patients. The company manufactured and installed the world's first commercial MRI in 1980. Damadian is currently FONAR's president and chief research officer.
David Chu is the head MRI scientist at FONAR who specializes in the imaging of the cerebrospinal fluid with advanced cines, or movies, which allow for observation of CSF flow in real time. The technology, which the company calls TrueFlow™ Imaging, made the diagnostic breakthrough in multiple sclerosis possible.
SOURCE FONAR Corporation
Read more: http://www.sacbee.com/2011/10/05/396164 ... z1ZwNRAmpW
Re: What Chiropractic care is best for MS/CCSVI
Hello!
Thank you so much for the post! After several hours of researching this topic, it seems that Dr. Erin Elster, DC in Boulder, CO is an excellent choice. The only draw back to seeing her is the proximity, as I live in Upstate NY. Moreover, her office would require a temporary relocation to CO, as the treatment involves several weeks (~8) of therapy--~2ce a week to allow restabilization of the ligaments, etc. Does anyone have any Upper Cervical specialist recommendations in Upstate?
Thanks!
Peggy
Thank you so much for the post! After several hours of researching this topic, it seems that Dr. Erin Elster, DC in Boulder, CO is an excellent choice. The only draw back to seeing her is the proximity, as I live in Upstate NY. Moreover, her office would require a temporary relocation to CO, as the treatment involves several weeks (~8) of therapy--~2ce a week to allow restabilization of the ligaments, etc. Does anyone have any Upper Cervical specialist recommendations in Upstate?
Thanks!
Peggy
- civickiller
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Re: What Chiropractic care is best for MS/CCSVI
i recommend search google upper cervical care then the closest town
for example, say u live in buffalo, ny. i searched google, upper cervical care buffalo ny
the number of visits can vary. the upper cervical care dr can recommend how often to go. but with the very first visit you will get tested to see if you need UCC.
some take fewer visits than other to hold your alignment. the goal if you can is to stay in alignment. if you can afford it and can go twice a week in the beginning till you hold for a week, then two weeks and so on
i personally went once a week for 5 month only went once a week because my ucc dr is 100 miles away, once every 2 weeks for 5 months because i was holding my alignment longer, my last adjustment has held for one month but i need to go in for an adjustment. so my adjustment is holding longer and longer
for example, say u live in buffalo, ny. i searched google, upper cervical care buffalo ny
the number of visits can vary. the upper cervical care dr can recommend how often to go. but with the very first visit you will get tested to see if you need UCC.
some take fewer visits than other to hold your alignment. the goal if you can is to stay in alignment. if you can afford it and can go twice a week in the beginning till you hold for a week, then two weeks and so on
i personally went once a week for 5 month only went once a week because my ucc dr is 100 miles away, once every 2 weeks for 5 months because i was holding my alignment longer, my last adjustment has held for one month but i need to go in for an adjustment. so my adjustment is holding longer and longer
Re: What Chiropractic care is best for MS/CCSVI
Thanks for your insight! I think I might have found a good UCC in Rochester (about 100 miles from Syracuse, so not problem!). Just wanted to see if anyone had any good/bad experiences with UCC doctors in the Upstate area, as I'm a bit leary...I mean, it's your spine after all!
If you don't mind me asking, have your UCC visits been helpful? Do you notice a clear difference in symptoms, assuming you have symptoms?
If you don't mind me asking, have your UCC visits been helpful? Do you notice a clear difference in symptoms, assuming you have symptoms?
- civickiller
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Re: What Chiropractic care is best for MS/CCSVI
yes it is your spine but its only if an adjusting c1 &c2. it will make you stand even, just saying that based on my case. my shoulder and hip was higher on one side causing my weight to shift favoring one side. but after an adjustment everything was in aligned, shoulder, hips, no leg favoring. ive never heard of a case with someone having a spinal issue after getting adjusted, of course i dont know every case worldwide but the internet is the place to hear the bad. but yes every dr is different.
i think my UCC visits have been very helpful, when in alignment, no lower back pain, no heat sensitivity. iam closer to walking and using my dead leg more than ever, my standing is getting easier. even when i was walking with my cane and weight lifting with my legs before UCC, i am no where near as strong as i am now. physical therapy with a elastic band is strengthening my legs more than weight lifting. oh im in a wheelchair
i think my UCC visits have been very helpful, when in alignment, no lower back pain, no heat sensitivity. iam closer to walking and using my dead leg more than ever, my standing is getting easier. even when i was walking with my cane and weight lifting with my legs before UCC, i am no where near as strong as i am now. physical therapy with a elastic band is strengthening my legs more than weight lifting. oh im in a wheelchair
Re: What Chiropractic care is best for MS/CCSVI
I saw an Atlas Orthoganal doctor in northern NJ once/week for a couple of months. His x-rays showed improved alignment but I noticed nothing. Saw a NUCCA doctor in White Plains, NY for2-3x/week for about 5 months with the same results----improved images but no improvement in function.
- civickiller
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Re: What Chiropractic care is best for MS/CCSVI
Im sorry to hear UCC hasnt worked for you but no improvements at all even after the very first adjustment?
Re: What Chiropractic care is best for MS/CCSVI
After the first adjustment I felt like I had been beaten up, but I wasn't concerned because my body was clearly responding; but afterwards I never felt or saw anything - no improvement in any MS symptom. I was so disappointed. I was wondering if I needed a different type of upper cervical chiropractor. The one I went to was NUCCA.
- civickiller
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Re: What Chiropractic care is best for MS/CCSVI
sorry to hear Laura, ive never heard of this happening but i only know 2 other people that does ucc
Re: What Chiropractic care is best for MS/CCSVI
I am new to this forum and although I do not have MS my daughter does which perhaps has given me a better appreciation of what those of you with MS are experiencing. More to the point of this thread, I am a Doctor of Chiropractic and have been in practice for over 40 years and have seen many patients with MS over the years. Upper cervical, Atlas orthogonal, NUCCA, HIO are all upper cervical techniques, but are not the only techniques that address the upper cervical region of the spine, these techniques just focus on that region. But please remember, upper cervical, full spine, diversified, Gonstead, etc, etc, any chiropractic technique, may, MAY, help a person with MS and may relieve some, none or all of that persons symptoms; each person will have to see what works best for them and so having a doctor that has a wide range of techniques in their "basket" may be a better choice of doctor. As you know the lesions of MS can be anywhere in the CNS and so what works for one MS person, may not for another when it comes to chiropractic adjustments, or anything for that matter. While I think that chiropractic adjustments will help with the unbalanced mechanics that may result from your MS, the adjustments will not "cure" the MS. Each person is different and a good chiropractor will not only address the mechanics, but will be able to assist you with some of the nutritional issues that are so important in helping anyone with any health issue and may have other possible options to look into as well.
Good luck and good health
Good luck and good health
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Re: What Chiropractic care is best for MS/CCSVI
I've seen some improvement from an Atlas Orthogonist. He also started me on a diet and supplements too so I don't know which of the three is helping my fatigue but something is. In any event. Now that my Atlas seems to be holding, I started looking into an inversion table as opposed to paying all that money to use his decompression table. So I found what looks like a good one the brand is Ironman Gravity 4000. It's about $200 at Walmart. Inversion sounds interesting after reading that study on the effects of CSF fluid on lesion activity.