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Friday, April 22, 2011 7:28 PM | CCSVI in MS Toronto Volg link

"The data emerging from the study by Prof. Zivadinov does not contradict the work of Prof. Zamboni ... They support rather strongly that CCSVI has every right to be included in a multifaceted idea accepted by all scientists, among the causative factors of multiple sclerosis." And 'what is said in a press release issued today by the Foundation Hilarescere.

 

"CCSVI - continues the statement - is rightfully considered among the causative factors of MS, having been seen in 60% of pediatric forms of multiple sclerosis (MS) and nearly 40% of people with clinically isolated syndrome (CIS). Obviously it is difficult to consider the CCSVI a consequence of MS even when it is present in most forms of pediatric."

And this is the "key to different" that offers the Hilarescere Foundation, the Foundation with Professor Paolo Zamboni, Dr. Fabrizio Salvi and Dr. Roberto Galeotti carries out research on CCSVI. Published on the study day past in Neurology by Robert Zivadinov and colleagues at the University of Buffalo (UB), in an official press release referred to the UB study data in question had anzavato the hypothesis that "CCSVI may be a consequence, not the cause of multiple sclerosis, "emphasizing that" although the data may suggest an association between MS and CCSVI, this association does not imply causalit" (see article BrainFactor of 18/04/2011).

But, according Hilarescere, "published data had already been released in 2010 and then considered data confirm" and "converge with those presented April 14 at the 2010 Live Web Forum in Toronto, organized by the National MS Society and attended the Prof. Paolo Zamboni, director of the Vascular Disease Center, University of Ferrara and the CSSVI discoverer, Dr. Robert Zivadinov University of Buffalo, Dr. Andrew Common, radiologist at St. Michael's Hospital University of Toronto, and Dr. Aaron Miller, professor of Neurology and Director of the MS Center at Mount Sinai in New York during the live web forum, broadcast live on 5 continents by doctors and patients, these four experts is that scientists in the room had considered study of Buffalo as a confirmatory study, data analysis and indeed led to assert that the CCSVI was also a negative prognostic factor in the progression of MS."

Translated from Brain Factor:

http://brainfactor.it/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=510%3Accsvi-hilarescere-zivadinov-non-smentisce-zamboni&catid=33%3Ahealthcare&Itemid=3

Fondazione Hilarescere:

http://www.fondazionehilarescere.org/eng/index.html