Cece wrote:With the right search words, you can find them from all the CCSVI presenters at ISET. It's not actually his presentation, it's the slides and whatever was turned in ahead of time to ISET, but they finish up their work on the presentations more at the last minute, so some of what is in these ISET files did not make it into the actual presentations. It is an IT error, I believe, that these were posted by ISET and made available in google search results like this. It's why I haven't linked to it directly before. Fantastic material. Did you see the tricuspid valve malformation? And the sideways valve, both in the venogram image and then cut out as an actual tissue sample? Remarkable.
Yeah, I really dug it for the visual representations of things we discuss frequently, what you mentioned, the collagen III pics, and especially the visual on how/why the venous circles fill and in what order, plus the reminder that there is just a wee bit of leftover arterial pressure which adds to the venous pressure etc etc.
Was actually looking up stuff related to venous pressure when I found it.
Circulation, fluid dynamics, Starling forces, capillary beds, so intriguing and fascinating the interplay. Hopefully the current research will lead to entire new areas of investigation, esp. as it pertains to the BBB and the exact causitive forces behind it's breach (though of course it is inferred at this point via CCSVI).
More stuff to dump in my lunchbox...
(if you want another fascinating read, check out wiki about collagen, scleroproteins, and how they fold the hydrophobic portions to the inside and the structure becomes basically water insoluble, almost like bone. When I read of things like "a clot that a diamond tipped drill can't get through", seems like it ties in with this, as scleroproteins and their functions are what makes bone, muscle fiber, and other "permanent" matrixes what they are, and indeed may play a precipitous role in what we are seeing with scar formations and the aftermath of venous insults caused by stretching, tearing, stents and the like, maybe someday we will have something that can be tested and counteracted against in respect to the Collagen III in our veins, if even for a short time of proper healing?)