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Thursday, October 21, 2010 7:19 PM | Ken Torbert Volg link

Teresa Lloyd wants to dream again. The 46-year-old mother-of-three has Multiple Sclerosis and the debilitating disease has robbed her of
dreams and aspirations for the future. She mitigates the pain and

overwhelming tiredness by managing her energy levels to carry out daily

tasks and provide quality time for her family. She knows a wonder drug

in her lifetime is unlikely, ?but after 10 years of ?worrying about what

?the future might hold?she has finally been ?given hope of staying ? in

control of this life-limiting and progressive disease. DEBBIE DAVIES

reports.


LIKE most MS sufferers, Teresa Lloyd experienced a myriad of signs and symptoms before she was
finally diagnosed with the disease which affects up to 2.5 million

people worldwide.


In her case it took almost 10 years before she was given a diagnosis, and even then she was told it was “probably MS”.


The first clue came in 1992 when she was pregnant with her first child. She
dropped the telephone after pins and needles shot up her arm, but

negative test results left her doctor to conclude the “baby was sitting

on a nerve”.


Over the next few years her energy levels dropped dramatically and some days the joint pain would be so bad that she would
literally have to thump her legs to get the circulation to return.


Then in the summer of 2003 she had more tests which suggested she had an
inflammation of the spine, which essentially is what MS is, and finally

she was given the confirmation that the pins and needles, joint pain and

debilitating tiredness that would suddenly and unexpectedly wash over

her, all combined to have a cause that had a name, MS.


Teresa admits that after years of frustrating symptoms and pain her first reaction was one of relief.


“I suddenly felt like I wasn’t going mad and all these things I had been feeling and experiencing were not in my head.”


Seven years on, she needs a daily cocktail of drugs to ward off the
tiredness, she can’t walk far without a stick and unless she paces

herself she will need days to recover from any over-exertion.


“I miss lots of things. I miss dancing and riding a motorbike and even
silly things like not being able to wear high heeled shoes,” she says.


“But the tiredness is the worst thing. I plan the day so that I have enough
energy for the children after school. That means doing simple thing like

dividing up the housework and doing the upstairs one day and the

downstairs the next. I just want to dream again. I don’t dream anymore.”


It was through this process of grieving for the life and energy she has
lost through MS that Teresa decided to look for answers outside the NHS.


“I was pulling my hair out; I thought there’s got to be more to life than
this so I started doing my own research. There are drugs out there, but

if they have not undergone clinical trials in this country then they are

just not available even if they are being used elsewhere in Europe or

America.”


Her research finally led her to Italian vascular surgeon Dr Paolo Zamboni and his discovery that 90 per cent of MS
patients also have a condition called Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous

Insufficiency (CCSVI) which can be treated with surgery. Zamboni, whose

wife has MS, realised that veins and the pathways that carry blood from

the brain back to the heart can become blocked or narrowed in MS

patients in a similar way to CCSVI patients. Zamboni’s clinical trial,

he carried out 65 operations on people with MS, resulted in 73 per cent

of his patients having no symptoms after two years after surgery.


Teresa will undergo a scan at a private clinic in Scotland next week to
determine whether she has any blockages or narrowing in her veins which

will make her eligible for surgery.


“CCSVI and MS are not the same but Zamboni’s research makes sense because most of the symptoms of MS
are circulatory – the pins and needles and the cold hands and feet – so

it makes sense that it would all be to do with blood flow.


There has been some negative press about this particular treatment, but in
this country we are prepared to spend £30,000 a year on drugs for MS

patients that are not even 90 per cent effective.


If the scan is positive, Teresa will then have to find £5,000 to have surgery in Italy.


“It does make me cross and it does frustrate me that if the test is
positive and I can have the operation that I will have to pay for it

myself.”


And while she knows the surgery offers her hope, she also knows the future may be bleak without it.


“I know that CCSVI doesn’t cause MS, but it is something that happens to
people with MS, and it is my body and I want to do this.


“It would be wonderful to be able to think more clearly and not have this horrible brain fog.


“I am realistic about the surgery. If it stops the MS from getting any
worse that will be great and anything else is a bonus. If someone with

MS is in a wheelchair, they are not going to undergo this procedure and

get up and walk, but for someone like me, it may mean I don’t end up in

the wheelchair. I don’t want to give into MS and this gives me hope.

I’ve got MS, it hasn’t got me.”


debbie.davies@archant.co.uk




FACT FILE


MS is an inflammatory disease in which parts of the brain and spinal cord
are damaged. The nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord fail to

communicate with each other. Nerve cells send electrical signals down

long fibres called axons, which are wrapped in and insulating substance

called myelin. In MS patients, the body’s own immune system attacks and

damages the myelin and when the myelin is lost the axons can no longer

conduct signals effectively. Although much is understood about the

mechanisms involved in the disease process, the causes remain unknown.

Theories include genetics, infections or even environmental risk

factors. There is no known cure and drug treatment is used to return

function after an attack, prevent new attacks and prevent disability.




http://www.elystandard.co.uk/home/breakthrough_surgery_hope_for_ms_sufferer_1_685783