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Old 08-22-2011, 10:09 AM
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https://www.gizmag.com/ccsvi-multiple-sclerosis-ms-cure-zamboni/13447/

An Italian doctor has been getting dramatic results with a new type of treatment for Multiple Sclerosis, or MS, which affects up to 2.5 million people worldwide. In an initial study, Dr. Paolo Zamboni took 65 patients with relapsing-remitting MS, performed a simple operation to unblock restricted bloodflow out of the brain - and two years after the surgery, 73% of the patients had no symptoms. Dr. Zamboni's thinking could turn the current understanding of MS on its head, and offer many sufferers a complete cure.
Multiple sclerosis, or MS, has long been regarded as a life sentence of debilitating nerve degeneration. More common in females, the disease affects an estimated 2.5 million people around the world, causing physical and mental disabilities that can gradually destroy a patient's quality of life.
It's generally accepted that there's no cure for MS, only treatments that mitigate the symptoms - but a new way of looking at the disease has opened the door to a simple treatment that is causing radical improvements in a small sample of sufferers.
Italian Dr. Paolo Zamboni has put forward the idea that many types of MS are actually caused by a blockage of the pathways that remove excess iron from the brain - and by simply clearing out a couple of major veins to reopen the blood flow, the root cause of the disease can be eliminated.
Dr. Zamboni's revelations came as part of a very personal mission - to cure his wife as she began a downward spiral after diagnosis. Reading everything he could on the subject, Dr. Zamboni found a number of century-old sources citing excess iron as a possible cause of MS. It happened to dovetail with some research he had been doing previously on how a buildup of iron can damage blood vessels in the legs - could it be that a buildup of iron was somehow damaging blood vessels in the brain?
He immediately took to the ultrasound machine to see if the idea had any merit - and made a staggering discovery. More than 90% of people with MS have some sort of malformation or blockage in the veins that drain blood from the brain. Including, as it turned out, his wife.
He formed a hypothesis on how this could lead to MS: iron builds up in the brain, blocking and damaging these crucial blood vessels. As the vessels rupture, they allow both the iron itself, and immune cells from the bloodstream, to cross the blood-brain barrier into the cerebro-spinal fluid. Once the immune cells have direct access to the immune system, they begin to attack the myelin sheathing of the cerebral nerves - Multiple Sclerosis develops.
He named the problem Chronic Cerebro-Spinal Venous Insufficiency, or CCSVI.
Zamboni immediately scheduled his wife for a simple operation to unblock the veins - a catheter was threaded up through blood vessels in the groin area, all the way up to the effected area, and then a small balloon was inflated to clear out the blockage. It's a standard and relatively risk-free operation - and the results were immediate. In the three years since the surgery, Dr. Zamboni's wife has not had an attack.
Widening out his study, Dr. Zamboni then tried the same operation on a group of 65 MS-sufferers, identifying blood drainage blockages in the brain and unblocking them - and more than 73% of the patients are completely free of the symptoms of MS, two years after the operation.
In some cases, a balloon is not enough to fully open the vein channel, which collapses either as soon as the balloon is removed, or sometime later. In these cases, a metal stent can easily be used, which remains in place holding the vein open permanently.
Dr. Zamboni's lucky find is yet to be accepted by the medical community, which is traditionally slow to accept revolutionary ideas. Still, most agree that while further study needs to be undertaken before this is looked upon as a cure for MS, the results thus far have been very positive.
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Old 08-22-2011, 10:42 AM
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I have been following this story for a year and a half, and my take is that most medical doctors are telling MS patients to wait til more tests are done. Just recently, the Canadian government issued a statement that they would fund a study, and that study is currently under way. However, they did this only because of alot of pressure from the public.

The point is simple, and is a no-brainer. If you have a blocked vein in your neck, regardless of whether it is associated with MS or not, wouldn't you want it fixed anyway???

The only thing I disagree with is the manner in which the vein is "repaired". They insert a stent ( or in some cases, a baloon)to open the blocked vein, and the problem I have with that is most stents tend to collapse with time, thus making the problem even worse, and in some cases, causing death.

There must be a way to reopen these blocked veins naturally, using diet, supplementation, and life style changes.

That, I totally agree with.
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Old 08-22-2011, 12:15 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pinballdoctor View Post
The only thing I disagree with is the manner in which the vein is "repaired". They insert a stent ( or in some cases, a baloon)to open the blocked vein, and the problem I have with that is most stents tend to collapse with time, thus making the problem even worse, and in some cases, causing death.

There must be a way to reopen these blocked veins naturally, using diet, supplementation, and life style changes.

That, I totally agree with.
This is my objection to the procedure.
We need to understand WHY the vein is blocked.
Upright Doctor has some idea as to why that might be

While I think there is something in what he says I think the reasons why people get blockages in arteries may also apply to veins.
I think the strategies that Dr Davis applies to his heart patients may also benefit those with MS.
The nutrition recommendations for MS from Direct ms org and their list of supplements are pretty much in line with what Dr Davis is suggesting for his patients.

I can't see any point in CCSVI STENTING if the cause of the blockage is likely to recur. The flow of blood into and out of the brain is regulated by astrocytes which involves signalling using calcium and magnesium ions.
So vitamin D status needs to be optimal to raise the absorption of both calcium and magnesium and while calcium is probably available in the diet sufficient magnesium generally isn't.
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