Cece wrote:
In Dr. Sclafani's thread, he floated the idea of using botox on a muscle that is compressing the vein. That would be a bad idea if using a muscle relaxant that effectively paralyzes the muscle would have a detrimental effect on the valves within the vein.
This is intersting, mainly as it suggests there is at least an interaction between muscles and viens.
Cece wrote:How would anyone go about proving a connection between neck muscles and IJV valve health?
This is where I'm stuck, becasue before proving anything, being non medically trained I have no idea about the anatomy and the interaractions that take place in that area of the body, I'm not sure where to start though. Muscles would be dealt with but physio type people, veins dealt with by vascular types - and I think this is what's causing the problem. Medicine has become so specialised there is really no one left looking at things globally, the bigger picture if you like.
I would like to understand the interaction between the muscles, viens and nerves of the neck, head and upper spinal area. Who exactly do I approach about this?
Cece wrote:And I am all for your Emma getting back her improvements. Maybe a misaligned jaw has an outsized effect when the jugulars are blocked and the body is relying on collaterals, if the misaligned jaw and atlas are in some way infringing on those collaterals.
We're going to give Dr Amirs theories a shot Cece and report what we find on open forum. Emma has reached that point in her MS development that she's in a no choice position as every conventional route has nothing to offer and CCSVI treatment was transient.
We've ended up where we are now by accident, it was due primarily to the enourmous amount of Jaw pain Emma was suffering, It had reached a level where she could only consume liquid. In our travels we stumbled across Amir and figured we had nothing to lose. Only days in, the jaw pain is gone, Neuralgic pain is being managed (not yet completely gone but far more bearable) eyesight improvements are fluctuating but are close to permanent and Emma is yet to have any treatement to her upper spine.
The thing is, Amir is learning all the time, it's refreshing to find a medical specialist that interacts with his patients and behaves like a "sponge" when it comes to absorbing information and understanding your ailment. Rather then assume the MS diagnosis is right he takes a left field look at what is happening to each patient. Interestingly it was MS pateints seeking him out rather than the reverse that I find fascinating, along with the fact that the Edingburgh clinic happen to have arrived at a similar connection at almost the same time. At least then you don't feel completely mad!