Tuesday, June 26, 2012 3:20 AM
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Venöse Multiple Sklerose, CVI & SVI, CCSVI
The silent treatment: How Canada has failed MS sufferers - Internal documents show why Canada has not kept its promise to accelerate contentious clinical trials for MS, by Anne Kingston On June 3, 2010, Peter Liu, a scientific director of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) in Ottawa, sent an internal email outlining his thoughts on a procedure causing medical and political schisms—and inciting patient activism. Liu, head of the Institute of Circulatory and Respiratory Health, was responding to CIHR executives’ request for his opinion about chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency, or CCSVI, a condition identified by Paolo Zamboni in 2008. Zamboni, director of vascular diseases at the University of Ferrara in Italy, made headlines in Canada in November 2009 with his hypothesis that multiple sclerosis, long viewed as a neurodegenerative condition, had vascular roots and was linked to blocked veins draining blood from the brain and the spinal cord. He found venous angioplasty—sending a balloon to open an obstructed blood vessel—alleviated, even arrested, symptoms.... ….read more: http://www2.macleans.ca/2012/06/25/the-silent-treatment-how-canada-has-failed-ms-sufferers/The silent treatment: How Canada has failed MS suffererswww2.macleans.ca Internal documents show why Canada has not kept its promise to accelerate contentious clinical trials for MS
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