CCSVI - 9
UK scientists win funding for new kind of anticoagulant drug
UK scientists win funding for new kind of anticoagulant drug
UK scientists win funding for [URL="http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/06/ ... JM20130616"][U]new kind of anticoagulant drug[/U][/URL]
[QUOTE]British scientists have won early financial backing for a new kind of anticoagulant drug they believe may prevent dangerous blood clots without causing bleeding - a previously unachievable goal.[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE]Called ichorcumab, the new drug is still miles from reaching the market - clinical trials are only slated to start within the next two years - but the product may create a stir in a commercially important field, given its unusual properties.[/QUOTE]
UK scientists win funding for [URL="http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/06/ ... JM20130616"][U]new kind of anticoagulant drug[/U][/URL]
[QUOTE]British scientists have won early financial backing for a new kind of anticoagulant drug they believe may prevent dangerous blood clots without causing bleeding - a previously unachievable goal.[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE]Called ichorcumab, the new drug is still miles from reaching the market - clinical trials are only slated to start within the next two years - but the product may create a stir in a commercially important field, given its unusual properties.[/QUOTE]
Vierde ISNVD meeting in San Francisco
Vierde ISNVD meeting in San Francisco
De [URL="http://www.isnvd.org/"][U]vierde Annual Meeting of the International Society for Neurovascular Disease[/U][/URL] wordt van 7 tot 9 februari in San Francisco gehouden.
De [URL="http://www.isnvd.org/"][U]vierde Annual Meeting of the International Society for Neurovascular Disease[/U][/URL] wordt van 7 tot 9 februari in San Francisco gehouden.
[QUOTE=Marsei;917368]De [URL="http://www.isnvd.org/"][U]vierde Annual Meeting of the International Society for Neurovascular Disease[/U][/URL] wordt van 7 tot 9 februari in San Francisco gehouden.[/QUOTE]
Interessant;
[QUOTE]Niggemannn, P. (Germany) Upright MR venography of internal jugular veins
[/QUOTE]
Interessant;
[QUOTE]Niggemannn, P. (Germany) Upright MR venography of internal jugular veins
[/QUOTE]
Voices of Progress CCSVI conference in Sherbrooke, QC will be held September 28-29
Voices of Progress CCSVI conference in Sherbrooke, QC will be held September 28-29
[url]https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php? ... 0796282297[/url]
[url]http://www.nationalccsvisociety.org/sherbrooke2013[/url]
[url]https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php? ... 0796282297[/url]
[url]http://www.nationalccsvisociety.org/sherbrooke2013[/url]
Zamboni - Cerebral venous return
Zamboni - Cerebral venous return
[URL="http://www.pagepressjournals.org/index. ... 013.1/1255"][U]Zamboni in de 'Veins and Lymphatics':[/U][/URL]
[QUOTE]Cerebral Venous Return is a novel, exciting field of research. As a pioneer, I would say that when I began investigating the intra and extra cranial cerebral veins, very few data were available something about 10-12 years ago. Cerebral venous return is very complex from embryological, anatomical and physiological point of view. Posture, respiration, atmospheric, hydrostatic, and intracranial pressure are important motor mechanisms. In addition, the venous system is closely related to cerebrospinal fluid dynamics, as well as to the arterial and lymphatic system of the head.
In the past 10 years, we began to give some initial explanations of physiology and pathophysiology of venous brain circulation. As usual in science, this contributed to open even more questions. Impaired cerebral venous return and the description of chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI) could open new perspectives in the understanding of neurodegenerative process, where a powerful regulator of chronic inflammation as the drainage is, was always absent among the pathogenetic mechanisms of this group of diseases. [/QUOTE]
[URL="http://www.pagepressjournals.org/index. ... 013.1/1255"][U]Zamboni in de 'Veins and Lymphatics':[/U][/URL]
[QUOTE]Cerebral Venous Return is a novel, exciting field of research. As a pioneer, I would say that when I began investigating the intra and extra cranial cerebral veins, very few data were available something about 10-12 years ago. Cerebral venous return is very complex from embryological, anatomical and physiological point of view. Posture, respiration, atmospheric, hydrostatic, and intracranial pressure are important motor mechanisms. In addition, the venous system is closely related to cerebrospinal fluid dynamics, as well as to the arterial and lymphatic system of the head.
In the past 10 years, we began to give some initial explanations of physiology and pathophysiology of venous brain circulation. As usual in science, this contributed to open even more questions. Impaired cerebral venous return and the description of chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI) could open new perspectives in the understanding of neurodegenerative process, where a powerful regulator of chronic inflammation as the drainage is, was always absent among the pathogenetic mechanisms of this group of diseases. [/QUOTE]
CCSVI Weekly News Digest
CCSVI Weekly News Digest
[URL="http://paper.li/CCSVI_Society/1306484186"][U]CCSVI Weekly News Digest[/U][/URL]
[URL="http://paper.li/CCSVI_Society/1306484186"][U]CCSVI Weekly News Digest[/U][/URL]
Fibromyalgia Mystery Finally Solved!
Fibromyalgia Mystery Finally Solved!
[URL="http://guardianlv.com/2013/06/fibromyal ... ly-solved/"][U]Fibromyalgia[/U][/URL] Mystery Finally Solved! Researchers Find Main Source of Pain in Blood Vessels
[QUOTE]Neuroscientist Dr. Frank L. Rice explained: “We previously thought that these nerve endings were only involved in regulating blood flow at a subconscious level, yet here we had evidences that the blood vessel endings could also contribute to our conscious sense of touch… and also pain,” Rice said. “This mismanaged blood flow could be the source of muscular pain and achiness, and the sense of fatigue which are thought to be due to a build-up of lactic acid and low levels of inflammation fibromyalgia patients. This, in turn, could contribute to the hyperactivity in the brain.”[/QUOTE]
[URL="http://guardianlv.com/2013/06/fibromyal ... ly-solved/"][U]Fibromyalgia[/U][/URL] Mystery Finally Solved! Researchers Find Main Source of Pain in Blood Vessels
[QUOTE]Neuroscientist Dr. Frank L. Rice explained: “We previously thought that these nerve endings were only involved in regulating blood flow at a subconscious level, yet here we had evidences that the blood vessel endings could also contribute to our conscious sense of touch… and also pain,” Rice said. “This mismanaged blood flow could be the source of muscular pain and achiness, and the sense of fatigue which are thought to be due to a build-up of lactic acid and low levels of inflammation fibromyalgia patients. This, in turn, could contribute to the hyperactivity in the brain.”[/QUOTE]
Funding CCSVI research is/was a waste of valuable time, money and intellectual energy
Funding CCSVI research is/was a waste of valuable time, money and intellectual energy
[URL="http://msj.sagepub.com/content/19/7/855.full"][U]Funding CCSVI research[/U][/URL] is/was a waste of valuable time, money and intellectual energy: Yes - Angelo Ghezzi
[URL="http://msj.sagepub.com/content/19/7/858.full"][U]Funding CCSVI research[/U][/URL] is/was a waste of valuable time, money and intellectual energy: No - Robert Zivadinov en Bianca Weinstock-Guttman
[QUOTE]In conclusion, although the CCSVI concept has raised a great deal of controversy and debate in the neurological community, it has also stimulated the need for studies that should contribute to a better understanding of the function and role of the extra-cranial venous system. The introduction of quantitative criteria that can define the degree of extra-cranial venous structural and hemodynamic impairment in future multimodal approach studies should be preferred to the use of a binary CCSVI diagnosis. The ability to define and reliably detect extra-cranial venous anomalies that may cause significant hemodynamic changes with clinical consequences is an essential necessary step toward a better understanding of their potential role in aging and CNS neurodegenerative and inflammatory disorders like MS.[/QUOTE]
[URL="http://msj.sagepub.com/content/19/7/855.full"][U]Funding CCSVI research[/U][/URL] is/was a waste of valuable time, money and intellectual energy: Yes - Angelo Ghezzi
[URL="http://msj.sagepub.com/content/19/7/858.full"][U]Funding CCSVI research[/U][/URL] is/was a waste of valuable time, money and intellectual energy: No - Robert Zivadinov en Bianca Weinstock-Guttman
[QUOTE]In conclusion, although the CCSVI concept has raised a great deal of controversy and debate in the neurological community, it has also stimulated the need for studies that should contribute to a better understanding of the function and role of the extra-cranial venous system. The introduction of quantitative criteria that can define the degree of extra-cranial venous structural and hemodynamic impairment in future multimodal approach studies should be preferred to the use of a binary CCSVI diagnosis. The ability to define and reliably detect extra-cranial venous anomalies that may cause significant hemodynamic changes with clinical consequences is an essential necessary step toward a better understanding of their potential role in aging and CNS neurodegenerative and inflammatory disorders like MS.[/QUOTE]