The Possible Negative Outcome Of Treatment
The Possible Negative Outcome Of Treatment
Knowing what I know now I would not have done the treatment.
There is a need to have this studied.
I do not want to scare people from trying the procedure, but one should be aware that it is not always successful and one can become more disabled.
I'm very sorry to hear what has happened to you. Whenever we make a decision we cannot tell with certainty what the outcome will be. Sometimes it doesn't work out as we had plannned or hoped. We've probably all had that experience with some decision we made in our life. Then we look back and say; wow that was the worst decision I ever made. I'd never do that again.
For whatever reason, it seems that your body did not adapt to ballooning or stents. But you didn't know that in the beginning. With MS, doing nothing can also be bad. We only have to look at the EDSS chart to see that. So I don't think you made a bad decision. I think you made the best decision you could make based on the information you had at the time. I hope and pray there will soon be methods of correcting the problems you now have.
Thank you for telling us your story. We should all be aware of the possible negative outcomes as well as the positive ones before we decide to get the Liberation treatment, or not.
I have been on anticoagualants for over 10 years. I have to be on them for life.Hi Dania,
So sorry to hear of your situation.
I think my left vein is now totally closed as well after the clot and treatments I have had. I don't know about the other 2 veins (azygous and right internal jugular) I also have calcification in the azygous which I don't think was present before (but I can't say with absolute certainty that it wasn't).
I just hope they find a way to help you or that your body grows some super collaterals to compensate.
How has your disability increased? Are you still on blood thinners?
I am weaker than ever. Muscle spasms are horrible. They have never been this bad. I was autonomous before this. I am no longer. Can no longer cook, drive, need help bathing. I could go on but I think you get the drift.
CoumadinI am so sorry Dania, Like David said you can't feel bad about the decision you made, we are all in a desperate situation and all of us (well most of us) would be willing to try anything if we thought it might help.
Please keep us up to date with how you are doing, I hope things improve for you. I hope your body is able to get some blood flow back...I am sure it will try its best.
Why have you been on blood thinners for 10 years?
It is a gamble. I'm very sorry that your turn of the dice was not good for you but made your situation worse. I can only hope that as they learn more, you too will be able to be helped.
I hope so. Hang in there. Thanks so much for sharing. We need to keep an open mind and not be blinded by the good stories. We NEED to hear experiences like yours too.
A vein transplant seems the only feasible solution now, and I wonder whether anyone has had a similar case so far.
- drsclafani
- Family Elder
- Posts: 3181
- Joined: Fri Mar 12, 2010 3:00 pm
- Location: Brooklyn, New York
- Contact:
Why have you been on anticoagulants for over ten years?dania wrote:I have been on anticoagualants for over 10 years. I have to be on them for life.Hi Dania,
So sorry to hear of your situation.
I think my left vein is now totally closed as well after the clot and treatments I have had. I don't know about the other 2 veins (azygous and right internal jugular) I also have calcification in the azygous which I don't think was present before (but I can't say with absolute certainty that it wasn't).
I just hope they find a way to help you or that your body grows some super collaterals to compensate.
How has your disability increased? Are you still on blood thinners?
I am weaker than ever. Muscle spasms are horrible. They have never been this bad. I was autonomous before this. I am no longer. Can no longer cook, drive, need help bathing. I could go on but I think you get the drift.
- drsclafani
- Family Elder
- Posts: 3181
- Joined: Fri Mar 12, 2010 3:00 pm
- Location: Brooklyn, New York
- Contact:
yes, coumadin would be the medication for anticoagulation long term. My question is that i want to know why you have been on coumadin for ten years. Did you have multiple episodes of blood clots ? are you a clot prone person? Did you have multiple pulmonary emboli? Do you have a heart valve replacement?dania wrote:CoumadinI am so sorry Dania, Like David said you can't feel bad about the decision you made, we are all in a desperate situation and all of us (well most of us) would be willing to try anything if we thought it might help.
Please keep us up to date with how you are doing, I hope things improve for you. I hope your body is able to get some blood flow back...I am sure it will try its best.
Why have you been on blood thinners for 10 years?
or is there another reason for the coumadin
I have had 2 Pulmonary embolisms. And I developed a clot in my arm when they put a portocath in my chest for chemo. I was tested and I have Factor V Leiden and Protein C deficiency. Lucky me! I keep saying if I did not have bad luck I would of no luck at all. LOL.drsclafani wrote:yes, coumadin would be the medication for anticoagulation long term. My question is that i want to know why you have been on coumadin for ten years. Did you have multiple episodes of blood clots ? are you a clot prone person? Did you have multiple pulmonary emboli? Do you have a heart valve replacement?dania wrote:CoumadinI am so sorry Dania, Like David said you can't feel bad about the decision you made, we are all in a desperate situation and all of us (well most of us) would be willing to try anything if we thought it might help.
Please keep us up to date with how you are doing, I hope things improve for you. I hope your body is able to get some blood flow back...I am sure it will try its best.
Why have you been on blood thinners for 10 years?
or is there another reason for the coumadin
Maybe in the future vein grafting using porcine or bovine veins may be an option. A man that used a vein graft, using a vein from his leg got good results, but in time that vein collapsed. My doctor who performed the first 2 procedures is a cardiologist. He does not think leg veins are a good idea for a vein graft for the neck.
Again I don't mean to sound uncaring about your condition. I sincerely hope that methods will soon be found that will help you. But I also want to see the procedure become safer for everyone. I hope the doctors are learning from the unfortunate outcomes, like the woman who died and the man whose stent migrated and from cases like yours where people became worse after angioplasty.
I'm no doctor, but I'm really surprised that testing for Protein C deficiency and Factor V Leiden testing isn't mandatory before venous ballooning and especially stenting. They are disorders that cause venous blood clots! Seems like a no brainer.
Here is more information about Factor V Laiden and Protein C deficiency: http://www.med.illinois.edu/hematology/PtProtC.htm
http://www.med.illinois.edu/hematology/PtFacV2.htm
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
- 17 Replies
- 304 Views
-
Last post by Scott1
Thu Feb 25, 2021 3:50 am
-
- 0 Replies
- 319 Views
-
Last post by Petr75
Tue Sep 15, 2020 10:19 am
-
-
Has this treatment been abandoned?
by daniel » Tue Jul 09, 2019 6:04 pm » in Biotin (Qizenday, Cerenday, MD1003) - 4 Replies
- 2106 Views
-
Last post by ElliotB
Wed Dec 25, 2019 4:53 pm
-
-
- 9 Replies
- 1551 Views
-
Last post by Zyklon
Tue May 21, 2019 8:00 am
-
- 0 Replies
- 3260 Views
-
Last post by NHE
Thu Apr 25, 2019 12:28 pm
-
- 0 Replies
- 3664 Views
-
Last post by NHE
Thu Apr 25, 2019 3:08 pm
-
- 0 Replies
- 1183 Views
-
Last post by NHE
Fri Aug 21, 2020 7:36 pm
-
-
Is there still a place for mitoxantrone in the treatment of MS?
by frodo » Mon Jan 13, 2020 9:42 am » in Novantrone - 0 Replies
- 2103 Views
-
Last post by frodo
Mon Jan 13, 2020 9:42 am
-
-
- 6 Replies
- 1091 Views
-
Last post by vesta
Sat Aug 29, 2020 2:22 pm