MS Societies step up their game
- foreignlesion
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MS Societies step up their game
After months of agitation from some patients, Canadian and U.S. societies put up $2.4-million to probe links between CCSVI and MS
Adrian Morrow
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
Published: Friday, June 11, 2010 8:34PM EDT
Last updated: Friday, June 11, 2010 9:36PM EDT
A sweeping new set of studies is aiming to determine whether there’s any merit to a controversial theory that blocked blood veins cause multiple sclerosis.
The theory, called chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI), was first proposed by Italian doctor Paolo Zamboni, and suggests that blocked veins stop blood draining from the brain, leading to an accumulation of iron, rather than the conventional thinking that MS is an autoimmune condition.
“This is a huge step in determining what the connection is between CCSVI and MS,” said Stewart Wong, spokesman for the MS Society of Canada. “The research that has been published to date has been limited.”
The announcement of the studies is after months of agitation from some MS patients and their families, who want the society to push for CCSVI treatments such as angioplasty to be made available to MS patients in Canada. On Saturday, CCSVI advocates will try to win seats on the MS Society’s board.
The $2.4-million studies, to be jointly funded by the MS Society of Canada and the U.S. National MS Society, will include some participants with MS and others in a control group.
Four of the studies will take place in Canada and three in the United States. They will use tools such as MRIs, ultrasounds and catheters to examine the structures of veins in MS patients and iron deposits in the brain.
The studies will not test possible treatments.
“The purpose of these studies is to build the building blocks to see if further clinical studies are warranted,” Mr. Wong said.
Article: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/hea ... cle1601709
Idiots they are
http://www.thebarrieexaminer.com:80/Art ... ?e=2619856
There is only one way to show these guys who we feel. No more money or help to get money.
- 1eye
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Meanwhile the patient in Barrie, and others elsewhere, stay on their deathbeds. Or die. Who will take the blame for all this pompous foot-dragging that's helping nobody but MS drug companies. Nothing they're selling is any use in that hospital room in Barrie.
"Drops of water turn the mill, singly none."
Not a doctor.
- happydance
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Why 2 years to study 100 patients? Buffalo tested 500 people in about 6 months. What an insults to Canadian's.
- foreignlesion
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The MS Societies DO NOT decide what studies are conducted, but they DO provide funding for those that are.
MANY of the studies for CCSVI that are just now receiving funding were presented to the ethics committee months before the W5 episode aired in November. It has taken these researchers a very long time to even receive approval.
I GUARUNTEE, should much larger studies be approved, or ANY studies for treatment, the first place to fund them WILL be the MS Societies.
Cutting off funds to the MS Societies WILL HINDER the size and number of studies that will be conducted.
This being said, the MS Societies are doing a PITIFUL JOB of lobbying the various levels of government that are hindering the CCSVI cause. I also abhor the tight lipped and uninformative practices they incorporate. MS'ers DESERVE to be extremely well informed as to ALL the practices of those who CLAIM to represent them.
A four page monthly newsletter and an infrequently updated web page is a PATHETIC example of access to information.
My thinking (and it may be faulty) is this...if the MSSC/their Board selects the international review committee and their own medical review committee is also selected by them...they have probably consistently selected members whose views are aligned with theirs...and so for all intents and purposes, they did in fact decide what studies would be conducted.
- foreignlesion
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Whether or not any studies involving CCSVI treatment were up for the proposed allocation of funds and were denied is unfortunately something that is only known to the board and the review committee, but I have a strong belief that no such studies have yet been approved in Canada, and I think all such studies were halted in the U.S.
- foreignlesion
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- fiddler
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Funding Lesion
...Ted
My blog: www.my-darn-ms.blogspot.com
- 1eye
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research
Not very non-transparent, in an ironic sort of sense.
Now I really hate to say anything against them. But just this morning some uniformed bicyclists came by my house (they were training). One of them had borrowed a road bike from me once, and this year they were going on the ride for MS. I told them about the doings at Parliament Hill, and to donate the money to Haacke instead.
This sort of thing is bound to get around. I don't think people at the protest May 5 were thinking about them, even though they had just given out FREE daffodils to the MPs. They were thinking more about dying MSers, because they were right in front of them.
Next time we get a chance, I think we should run a full slate of IRs and vascular surgeons, all favorable to Liberation. But that's just me.
Not a doctor.
- foreignlesion
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•Dr. Brenda Banwell, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario: studying vein abnormalities in children and teenagers who have MS, and healthy controls of the same age. The team is seeking to determine whether the veins are abnormal at an early age among pediatric MS patients. These findings will add additional depth to studies of CCSVI in adult MS. Fact sheet
•Dr. Fiona Costello, Hotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta: examining a cross-section of people with MS compared to other neurological diseases and healthy volunteers. The team is seeking linkages between vein abnormalities and different aspects of MS activity and tissue damage to gain insight into the significance of differences in vein drainage and their implications for the future treatment of MS. Fact sheet
•Dr. Aaron Field, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison: using magnetic resonance (MRI) scans to generate detailed images of the head and neck veins in people with early and later MS, healthy volunteers, and controls with other neurological conditions. This team is also using the ultrasound techniques originally used by Dr. Zamboni. If they obtain similar results as those published by Dr. Zamboni, it would represent a powerful confirmation of the CCSVI hypothesis and help lead the way toward trials of appropriate treatment. More information: www.nationalmssociety.org/ccsvi
•Dr. Robert Fox Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland: studying people with MS or who are at risk for MS (CIS) and comparison groups including healthy volunteers and people with brain atrophy (shrinkage) from Alzheimer’s disease. This team is using the ultrasound techniques originally used by Dr. Zamboni, as well as magnetic resonance studies of the veins (MR venography), MRI scans of the brain, and clinical measures to determine MS activity and atrophy. They are also examining neck and spinal cord tissue from MS patients at autopsy to provide a tissue-based evaluation of CCSVI and its possible relationship to MS. More information: www.nationalmssociety.org/ccsvi
•Dr. Carlos Torres, The Ottawa Hospital, University of Ottawa, Ontario: employing powerful MRI technology to explore vein anatomy and assessing for iron deposits in the brains of people with MS and in age-matched healthy volunteers. These studies work towards mapping out normal variations in brain vein anatomy and providing insight into CCSVI in MS. Fact sheet
•Dr. Anthony Traboulsee, UBC Hospital MS Clinic, UBC Faculty of Medicine and Dr. Katherine Knox, Saskatoon MS Clinic, University of Saskatchewan: studying the prevalence of CCSVI in people with MS and controls without MS, using catheter venography, ultrasound, and magnetic resonance venography. Unique to this study is the inclusion of family members, such as identical twins of MS patients who have not developed MS, in control groups. They also hope to verify the usefulness of techniques that would make it easier to screen for CCSVI. Fact sheet
•Dr. Jerry Wolinsky, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston: replicating the ultrasound methods used by Dr. Zamboni to investigate the association of CCSVI with major clinical types of MS and in non-MS control groups. The team is also testing whether other imaging methods can confirm the ultrasound findings, while identifying the most reliable technique to screen for CCSVI. More information: www.nationalmssociety.org/ccsvi
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