New negative articles
New negative articles
Neurology has finally published an article on CCSVI and it is negative of course. It is accompanied by an editorial.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20881272
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20881272
Last edited by Direct-MS on Mon Oct 04, 2010 4:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: New negative articles
Are you disputing their methodology or conclusions? If so could you please explain why so that Thisisms members can better understand what has you disgruntled with this study. Thanks for your time.Direct-MS wrote:Neurology has finally published an article on CCSVI and it is negative of course. It is accompanied by an editorial.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20881272
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Re: New negative articles
I read the post you are referring to and I do not see any disgruntlement.scorpion wrote:Are you disputing their methodology or conclusions? If so could you please explain why so that Thisisms members can better understand what has you disgruntled with this study. Thanks for your time.Direct-MS wrote:Neurology has finally published an article on CCSVI and it is negative of course. It is accompanied by an editorial.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20881272
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Re: New negative articles
I will only respond to you once so as not to get in a back and forth with you but generally when you call something negative it means you are discontented with it. Hence the word disgruntled 1eye.1eye wrote:I read the post you are referring to and I do not see any disgruntlement.scorpion wrote:Are you disputing their methodology or conclusions? If so could you please explain why so that Thisisms members can better understand what has you disgruntled with this study. Thanks for your time.Direct-MS wrote:Neurology has finally published an article on CCSVI and it is negative of course. It is accompanied by an editorial.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20881272
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Re: New negative articles
I read the abstract and the only thing I see is "these data do not support CCSVI." Perhaps that is negative but I don't see how it proves anything negative about CCSVI.scorpion wrote:Are you disputing their methodology or conclusions? If so could you please explain why so that Thisisms members can better understand what has you disgruntled with this study. Thanks for your time.Direct-MS wrote:Neurology has finally published an article on CCSVI and it is negative of course. It is accompanied by an editorial.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20881272
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Re: New negative articles
Scorpion:scorpion wrote:Are you disputing their methodology or conclusions? If so could you please explain why so that Thisisms members can better understand what has you disgruntled with this study. Thanks for your time.Direct-MS wrote:Neurology has finally published an article on CCSVI and it is negative of course. It is accompanied by an editorial.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20881272
Dr Z never said that the iron was in the CSF (spinal fluid) He said that the brain parenchyma ( main tissue) had an abnormal amount of iron- He also said it was broken down into Ferritin and ultimately Hemosiderin (products of iron oxidation.) The red blood cells are the source of the iron, but they are not sure how it gets imbedded- they have a few theories- we will find this out in the next few years. I think its from turbulance from the flows against the normal epithelium (sheer stress)and red cells may fracture slowly over time by being beatup by turbulance, this with the slowr than normal drain off and you get imbedded iron. This iron build up is SLOW and directly proportional to the extent of the blockages- Zamboni describes the breeching of the BBB but this is describing oligoclonal bodies in it ,not frank blood or iron. He does say that the iron is found in patterns consistent with flow and in the gray matter too- We see the same type ofiron in peripheral venous disease of the lower legs.
This article is off track in talking about CSF and not the vasculature
(veins) The venules and capillary epthelium are where the iron is and it appears on SWI with certain patterns that coincide with the reflux flow.
Neuros have limited knowledge of the hemodynamics of the vascular system and are much more comfortable with the CSF- CSF is in their arenas.
The implication of this lack of iron in the CSF is a moot point..... no one ever implied that this was a finding.
Think about iron outside the human body-- its quite strong, corrosive and oxidizes easily- everyone has seen rust.
Iron in the body belongs only in a few places- mainly the marrow and spleen and red blood cells where they bind with oxygen to carry it as hemoglobin. Red cells live 120 days.
In people with MS the macrophages (a specialized White blood cell) are "ladened" with iron.I believe in an attempt to clean it out.
Most neurologists believe that the WBCs were destroying the brain cells (axons) by attacking myelin.that insulate them.......... maybe they were just trying to remove the excessive hemosiderin.(iron)
Please go to the CCSVI research posts and read the Zamboni iron related papers for more details.
Cat (Catherine Somerville on FB)
MegansMom
My 35 yo daughter is newly dx 8/19/10 (had 12 symptoms)
Dx with Type A CCSVI- 1 IJV & double "candy wrapper" appearance of her Azygos
Venoplasty done Sept 21, 2010
Doing extremely well-
MegansMom
My 35 yo daughter is newly dx 8/19/10 (had 12 symptoms)
Dx with Type A CCSVI- 1 IJV & double "candy wrapper" appearance of her Azygos
Venoplasty done Sept 21, 2010
Doing extremely well-
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We've already been discussing this paper here:
http://www.thisisms.com/ftopict-14016.html
And as I've said on that thread and will repeat....
Ferritin is not the issue---it's hemosiderin. Ferritin shows recent infarction, like a stroke---hemosiderin shows ongoing deposition and degradation of plasmic particles. Dr. Zamboni found very high levels of hemosiderin in the urine of pwMS. This is also a biomarker of chronic venous disease. Once again, the researchers are not looking at the correct markers. If they consulted a vascular doctor or read Dr. Zamboni's research, it would be as clear to them as it is to most of us.
A simple test....check the urine levels of pwMS for hemosiderin. That's what Dr. Zamboni suggested. BTW---Jeff had high hemosiderin levels.
cheer
http://www.thisisms.com/ftopict-14016.html
And as I've said on that thread and will repeat....
Ferritin is not the issue---it's hemosiderin. Ferritin shows recent infarction, like a stroke---hemosiderin shows ongoing deposition and degradation of plasmic particles. Dr. Zamboni found very high levels of hemosiderin in the urine of pwMS. This is also a biomarker of chronic venous disease. Once again, the researchers are not looking at the correct markers. If they consulted a vascular doctor or read Dr. Zamboni's research, it would be as clear to them as it is to most of us.
A simple test....check the urine levels of pwMS for hemosiderin. That's what Dr. Zamboni suggested. BTW---Jeff had high hemosiderin levels.
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
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So: a simple urine test for 'MS'. I am disgusted at the 15 years it took me, and my veins in my arm became almost useless on account of the blood draws....cheerleader wrote:A simple test....check the urine levels of pwMS for hemosiderin. That's what Dr. Zamboni suggested. BTW---Jeff had high hemosiderin levels.
cheer

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"I'm still here, how 'bout that? I may have lost my lunchbox, but I'm still here." John Cowan Hartford (December 30, 1937 – June 4, 2001)