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Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 9:09 am
by daniel
You can create ISO's with the 'Free ISO Creator' program:
http://www.minidvdsoft.com/isocreator/index.html

You just pop in your CD, open the program, select 'Add Folder' and choose the CD drive, then just create ISO... you can PM me if you need more details

Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 9:20 am
by Jamie
I will be getting Mel's MRV's and will host them at my website.

I'll make a post when they are up and you can PM me for the link.

Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 9:22 am
by Jamie
Host the CD images as an ISO that is, I'll also host full resolution images for anyone to download.

When we have the follow up in 2 months I'll post those images too.

Should be enough to pique a doctors curiosity.

Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 9:40 am
by gibbledygook
I'll try my best to get this done on powerpoint for everyone to see/use but it all depends whether the radiologist at St George's can manage. I've also got a meeting on the 21st with a radiologist at Univesity College London so hopefully one of these two pros can manage to at least find the right scanned images from the thousands of files that are on the CDs.

The film is a documentary which a friend has been putting together to document her diagnosis the year before last with MS. They came and filmed me walk during my relapse of early 2008 and have got some quite good cuts and the basis of a documentary. She is a Londoner who makes documentaries for a living so there's a reasonable chance it goes live but there's a lot of ifs there! However I'm sure she could put it on Utube if she fails to get the money from any of the main channels.

Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 9:44 am
by Jamie
That would be fantastic!

If this could be part of her film - what great publicity!

Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 9:50 am
by peekaboo
that's really cool...Youtube gets alot of hits for a plan B...

Thanks Alex for being our ambassador in the UK

Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 10:40 am
by Sharon
Alex you wrote
Maybe I was more fatigued than I knew although I certainly have never found fatigue debilitating
Ditto - I even told Dake that fatigue was not one of my symptoms. I am wondering if it is more of a mental response - the head is a little clearer and you feel like doing more things. And, to think we are all on these big doses of blood thinners which can cause tiredness. Once we get off of them, we may give the Energizer Bunny competition!

Sharon

Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 7:00 pm
by CureOrBust
gibbledygook wrote:I'm also smiling a lot. 8)
That's just the "muscle relaxant" talking :)

Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 7:17 pm
by CureOrBust
Alex, you mentioned your jugular stenosis was obvious, even to a layman. If you can view this image on your computer, and are running windows, try the following:

1. Get the image up on your screen
2. hit the "Print Screen" key on your keyboard
5. start the application "Paint" (you will find it under Start/All Programs/accessories in Win XP)
6. select the "Edit" menu, and then the "Paste" item in the menu list

You should now see an image of the screen you saw in step 1. Save this file as a JPG, and then you can use whatever to place it on this website.

If you are running a Mac, I am sure there are similar options. But it all depends if you can view the images in Windows.

Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 7:20 pm
by daniel
If you're on a mac, you would just get the image on the screen, and hit Command+Shift+3 and you'll get a Picture.pdf or Picture.jpg file on your desktop.

Posted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 6:10 am
by mrhodes40
go! go! go! Alex!!! yeah team! Woohooo!!

(you're workinghard at this I just thought I'd help)

Posted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 6:33 am
by gibbledygook
Yes, I meant when I was in Professor Dake's room and he showed me the jugular constrictions all nice and clear!!!! Now I'm stymmied to produce a nice big picture. So far. Monday's coming though and this bone surgeon friend sounded quite positive about my chances of succeeding with the radiologist, with cash payment procurements perhaps facilitating the expenditure of time on the radiologist's part...

Posted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 7:06 am
by CureOrBust
gibbledygook wrote:with cash payment procurements perhaps facilitating
Well, usually it is the "plumber", that wants to be paid in "cash".

Posted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 7:32 am
by gibbledygook
Just an update on the MS symptoms about 2.5 weeks after surgery. I am also sleeping on an inclined bed so maybe that is also having an effect. I continue to have much reduced urgency on the bladder front and I am able to void a bit better too but still need manual assistance to void completely. I don't think I need to pursue the catheter plan which 4 months ago I initiated with the NHS. I have had a few spasms last night whilst going to sleep and this morning however they were very mild and seem somehow different to the old spasms. I needed no tizanidine/baclofen and have had no baclofen/tizanidine since the operation. I ventured forth on my own today to a meeting full of serious suits and stood throughout the half hour lunch break talking and eating. The walk thereafter to the taxi wasn't too bad but I was glad for my walking stick. I noticed today the tight bands around both knees which had seemed to disappear immediately after the surgery and walking today hasn't been quite as good as the last few days. My right hand is silky smooth including the index finger and thumb which have in the past always retained some numbness. I honestly can barely tell the difference between my right and left hands. To summarize, I think the MS symptoms immediately improved after the surgery and are now in a state of a small amount of flux. Things seem to be changing, some positively, some a bit negatively. I expect quite a lot of time will be required before things settle down.

My shoulders are still pretty sore. Pain about 2.5 to 3. I slept on a funny, mould-your-head-to-the-pillow pillow last night and awoke with sore shoulders and neck, so I'm not sure about that. It seemed really comfortable to go to sleep on. :roll:

Posted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 8:11 am
by Loobie
I use a Temper pedic pillow also and was thinking it would really help. I love it because it cradles your head and you wake up in the exact position you crashed in. Oh well, I have plenty of other to try as well! Sounds good Gibbs. I have that knee thing also. Does yours hurt so bad sometimes you can't take it? Mine sure does. It feels like someone took a hammer to it after the tightness comes on.