chrishasms wrote:Well if you read down the list there is a whole post called "I'm waiting." I am the author. I did my leg work for MS and I'm happy with where I am right now, even with the disability I have. But, even my doctors at Johns Hopkins are fascinated with this right now too. With the number of people having this done now and the fact I just had an MRI on Thursday showing healing and no activity there is no reason for me not to wait to see other peoples MRI reports. I know what I did allows for healing for ME. Good enough for now but I pray this works for everyone because I am sitting on my hands with nervous excitement.
If you are that close to becoming bed bound...listen to me please. I was there. I was within three months of being bed bound with a catheter when I was accepted to do Revimmune. I was so weak in the hospital I could barely stand to get to the bathroom, and I used a wheelchair, a full 8 - 12 steps away. You need a quick, stop this horror now, fix. You need to look into HiCy or Campath. I have actually seen some folks stop this horror with Tysabri, and I just read today, get something back. The Revimmune I think if you are RRMS or SPMS, with the other AI issues, they would love to see you because my other AI issues went away because of the HiCy as well. I would think they would like to see if restarting you would end those other issues.
Point being you have got to do something to stop this.
Thanks for the advice, but unfortunately I've already been turned down for revimmune. I've never had any enhancing lesions, or evidence of inflammation, so they rejected me. I was one of the first to apply.
Campath, too, is being reserved only for people with relapsing forms of the disease. I've already tried Tysabri, Rituxan, plasmapheresis, intrathecal methotrexate, along with a whole bunch of other treatments, none of which has been of any benefit whatsoever. The one treatment that did temporarily knock back my symptoms was a 10 day course of IV Solu-Medrol, which unfortunately left me with the horrendous side effect of avascular necrosis, which has destroyed my hips and shoulders. Both of my femoral heads have collapsed, but I'm not a candidate for total hip replacements because of the ravages of my neurologic disorder.
I'm scheduled to be seen at the National Institutes of Health next week. They've agreed to look at my case because it's so atypical. I'll be getting a complete going over by the government researchers that practice there. Hoping to get some answers, and possibly some new ideas for treatment.
I've also begun the process of being evaluated to undergo stem cell therapy in Israel. That's my fallback plan if all else fails...
By the way, I've been seen by Dr. Calabresi at Johns Hopkins, who is the head of their MS clinic. Although I found him to be a terrific doctor, I passed him on some of the CCSVI materials, and he was quite dismissive. So I guess not everybody at JH is intrigued, unless he's become intrigued in the month or so since I sent him the materials...