dado84 wrote:I had my venogram at alfred with professor Thompson on thursday. My both jagulars and valves within it are perfect as well as azygous. Been quite dissapointed with the results and still cant believe that ccsvi is not part of my RRMS. I had doppler ultrasound couple of months ago which showed jagulars in fine order with no stenosis or reflux but there was mild reduced flow in vertebral veins.
..... though a lot of proffesionals including Professor Thompson thinks that CCSVI is probably another unfortunate thing that some MS patients have.
....the one to put the end to MS being stem cell therapy. Lets concentrate on that.
Dado84, this is very interesting...and good on you for contributing...it seems you are open minded and interested in finding answers...if you are the exception to the rule then your case should be studied more not less.
If you don't mind would you be able to clarify a few things to help us understand your case?
To be defined clinically definite MS and not CIS (Clinically Isolated Syndrome)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clinically ... d_syndrome:
1. Have you had 3 or more attack events? When diagnosed? Current symptoms?
3. Did you have a lumbar puncture which found oligoclonal bands in your CSF?
3. Did MRI scans confirm several periventricular plaques?
Other things to consider:
Have you had any MS drug treatment yet?
Have you been screened for Hughes Syndrome?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hughes_syndrome
Have any of your doctors considered differential diagnosis to MS?
http://www.mult-sclerosis.org/different ... nosis.html
Lastly, folks there are no easy answers to complex problems.
Stem cell research may be regarded as the holy grail of potential "cures" for many diseases but is yet to yield practical, mainstream medical solutions. I'm all for research, have got 2 family members in the medical research community and I would volunteer if and when Aussie trials are begun...but when it comes to buying a "ready made stem cell solution" from overseas that can cure all major diseases (try to find one that they don't cure) it's a Caveat Emptor situation.
Even those who have been treated via endovascular liberation procedures cannot be classified as "cured" but rather many if not all their their symptoms are at least alleviated if not extinguished, health and quality of life thereby is improved with a low risk of complications.
Remember at present we cannot be
un-immunised from our immune system's exposure to our CNS that's why stopping the cerebrospinal vasculature from leaking and restoring a more normal venous return pathway
will not cure MS but rather reduce further exposures to reactive immune cell populations.
Prof Zamboni himself has
never stated that CCSVI is the
cause of MS, but rather that
there is a significant association between truncular (large vessel>4mm) Venous Malformations of cerebro-spinal vessels, reflux of deep cerebral veins and MS.
The International uni0n of Phlebologists which includes Interventional Radiologists such as Prof Thomson agree and accordingly in their latest consensus document they published a protocol of treatment (i.e. venogram & venoplasty).
Cheers,
..Adolfo