From M.S. Patients, Outcry for Surgery - NYTimes.com
From M.S. Patients, Outcry for Surgery - NYTimes.com
Just wish they would not call it surgery! But good exposure none the less...
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/29/health/29vein.html WORD!
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/29/health/29vein.html WORD!
It is minimally invasive percutaneous venoplasty done under limited anesthesia. That's more of a mouthful than 'surgery' but more accurate with less frightening connotations.
ok, off to read the article....
ok, off to read the article....
"However, the truth in science ultimately emerges, although sometimes it takes a very long time," Arthur Silverstein, Autoimmunity: A History of the Early Struggle for Recognition
Good article!
I especially love that our Dr. Sclafani was quoted. ^5, Doctor.
Also, I'm glad I learned about the nonprofit CCSVI advocacy organization Reformed Multiple Sclerosis Society--I love their name! Being in this article will be terrific for them.
Good idea, FlashHack.
Thanks for posting this, CharW.
~HP
I especially love that our Dr. Sclafani was quoted. ^5, Doctor.
Also, I'm glad I learned about the nonprofit CCSVI advocacy organization Reformed Multiple Sclerosis Society--I love their name! Being in this article will be terrific for them.
Good idea, FlashHack.
Thanks for posting this, CharW.
~HP
- thornyrose76
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Good too see this story is getting better coverage in the press stateside-The New York Times is a good start. I particularly appreciate the very last sentence.
"...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.”
"...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.”
- cheerleader
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- Location: southern California
Some good, some bad, some....odd choices? (No CCSVI Alliance?) And there were a few factual errors, but mostly a positive.
It was presented as a very compelling story, certainly interesting and will no doubt get more MS patients and caregivers googling CCSVI. I really hope it gets more vascular doctors and interventional radiologists interested in testing and treating. The description of Neelima wheeling in the file cabinet full of research papers made me smile. We sure gave her a mountain of papers on the CCSVI in MS page
The doctors and patients are learning together in real time, and it's a work in progress. Looking forward to the next chapter...
cheer
It was presented as a very compelling story, certainly interesting and will no doubt get more MS patients and caregivers googling CCSVI. I really hope it gets more vascular doctors and interventional radiologists interested in testing and treating. The description of Neelima wheeling in the file cabinet full of research papers made me smile. We sure gave her a mountain of papers on the CCSVI in MS page

cheer
Husband dx RRMS 3/07
dx dual jugular vein stenosis (CCSVI) 4/09
http://ccsviinms.blogspot.com
dx dual jugular vein stenosis (CCSVI) 4/09
http://ccsviinms.blogspot.com
Here it is HP...
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/06/2 ... 1#comments
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/06/2 ... 1#comments