82 degree heat is bad news for me................ my that is good news that heat bothers you less



Totally awesome development there. Is he feeling there is no azygos involvement then? nothing further down at all?Dr. Dake had MRV’s done...a magnetic viewing of the veins, without any invasion or needles- instead of venography
yeah on that Woooohoooo!Dake will be performing endovascular surgery on Jeff in the next month- it will be an outpatient procedure. He called it a no-brainer and can’t wait to see how Jeff feels after-
This is the main point of all this research in my mind: these stenoses (blockages) exist and they are NOT benign nor are they some side issue. These are in the circulation DOWNSTREAM from the brain; below it, where the veins are traying to drain the blood away. The blood backs up to the brain and makes the area congested. There is no way that "white matter" anything can cause this, but a stenosis like this can cause lesions behind it (he brain is behind it), just like it does in the legs.no brainer
We're home. Dake looked at all of Jeff's spine and saw the azygos vein. No blockage or lesions any further down than the cervical spine. Dake saw a large lesion directly parallel to Jeff's jugular blockage in the cervical spine at the level of his jaw...but that was as far south as his stenosis and lesions went. Dake said this is not coincidental. He also said that he thinks every MS patient's level of stenosis, lesions and disability will be different. The only common denominator will be venous blockage and insufficiency.mrhodes40 wrote: Totally awesome development there. Is he feeling there is no azygos involvement then? nothing further down at all?
This is from the New York University MRI site, so NYU is a place to go on the east coast.The clinical applications of MRV include diagnosis of deep venous thrombosis, for which MRV is the “new gold standard,” evaluation of chest and upper extremity veins for venous access, differentiating bland from tumor thrombus, diagnosis of superior vena caval syndrome, identification of superior vena caval invasion or encasement by lung or mediastinal tumors, diagnosis of the Budd-Chiari syndrome, diagnosis of caval anomalies such as persistent left superior vena cava and interrupted inferior vena cava, and identification of the presence and cause of obstruction or occlusion of the brachiocephalic, subclavian, and jugular veins.
Two MR techniques used for venous imaging include two-dimensional (2D) time-of-flight (TOF) MR angiography and three-dimensional (3D) gadolinium enhanced gradient-recalled (GRE) imaging. TOF is a widely used, noninvasive technique used for the evaluation of the venous system. However, due to saturation and flow effects, which may result in non-diagnostic studies, three-dimensional (3D) gadolinium enhanced gradient-recalled (GRE) imaging may be used for problem solving. Alternatively, may centers, including our institution, now forgo TOF and go directly to a 3D contrast-enhanced approach.
Did dr dake say how he was going to recruit other ms'rs? Will he consider zamboni's groupies ( affectionate word used by msrhodes)? how may we contact him? I have kin out that way. my nephew is a prof at stanford (whole different field computer theory) and an X brother-in law prof of biology and ofcourse by eldest sister. where i could use as support, (room & board & taxi)He will look at other MS patients who are interested in being tested for his research.
Ditto!Thanks again to dignan for turning us on to this research.
couldn't say it any better! HollySTANFORD OFFICESWow, look at this man's list of published works on this link!
Cheer hit the jackpot!!! Yeah Cheer! I am so happy for all of us.