The Zamboni Multiple Sclerosis Treatment. Why Won't Doctors Touch It?
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My buddy is obsessed with information on medicine. Whenever she's online, she loves to look up details about rare diseases I had never even heard about before. I have teased her relentlessly about that - and the fact that it is an extremely nerdy thing to do. My pettiness was revealed as just that, though, when she found out her father had multiple sclerosis. When she heard about her father's sad diagnosis, she brought him to live with us straightaway. Then she remembered reading something about a new treatment for multiple sclerosis.
Italian vascular surgeon, Dr. Zamboni (not to be confused with the maker of ice hockey rink equipment) created the science that is the basis of this new approach to multiple sclerosis treatment. Multiple sclerosis, in traditional physicians' understanding, happens when the body's immune system starts to attack the nervous system. Basically there hasn't been any actual explanation for this. However, the doctors think it may be possible that the degradation of the nervous system is caused by an inadequate supply of blood. As a patient ages, the blood vessels in the chest, shoulders and neck may narrow and constrict. This may prevent blood from flowing away from the brain correctly. If only angioplasty (the opening of veins with a balloon) could be used to unblock the arteries, perhaps the symptoms of MS would regress. Evidence supports that it is an effective multiple sclerosis treatment, and patients from around the globe will vouch for that.
It is always the same with new ideas. Some people love it, while others hate it. What is the reason for disagreeing with Dr. Zamboni? What you must understand is that there's no pattern to how MS progresses or retreats. This disease has no rhyme nor reason. It attacks without warning and goes into remission just as unpredictably. How can a researcher know that MS has gone into remission because of the treatment rather than as a natural part of its capricious course? Even though researchers have not expressed a lot of enthusiasm about trying this new theory, activists worldwide have. They're using social networking sites to almost force the Multiple Sclerosis Society to take notice and spend what it takes to look into this. YouTube and Facebook have all the power.
Even though much research has been done, things haven't been verified either one way or another. This has been a very inspiring idea for people who are interested in the welfare of a loved one. It's stunning that there's a multiple sclerosis treatment out there that is both easy and inexpensive. Many wonder why the hospitals don't just go ahead and provide this option, regardless of the fact that it is an unproven theory. Despite doctors' warnings about side effects, many MS patients are equally skeptical about the large amounts of drugs that traditional multiple sclerosis treatment methods make them take. Thousands of people expect to have treatment from Dr. Zamboni personally, who come to the University of Ferrara where he is employed.
You will see ads all over the newspapers in the US about experimental MS treatment that are routinely done at very fine hospitals in India. This procedure has been dubbed "The Liberation Package". It is named for the procedure used by doctors to open constricted veins. While individuals are always attempting the unproven treatment, the good news is that no cases with negative effects have actually occurred. The only known problems are procedures that failed quite badly with two women at Stanford University. Do success stories exist?
For this sort of multiple sclerosis treatment, there are some success stories out there, limited as they may be. While patients experience amazing improvements, they are sadly only short-term. In "the liberation procedure, the physician opens up the patient's veins, but after two weeks the veins just close right back. A method has not been located to keep them opened up. We might have something when that occurs.
About the Author
New M.S. Treatment described at HealthCern.com
Article Source: Articlelogy.com
Word Count: 666
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