Multiple etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
Multiple etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster

8 Mart 2017 Çarşamba

Multiple sclerosis treatment is debunked by researchers in Canada

A surgical treatment pioneered in Europe that was sought out by thousands of desperate people with multiple sclerosis has been categorically debunked by Canadian researchers.


“Liberation therapy” to widen narrowed veins from the brain and spinal cord was devised by the Italian surgeon Dr Paolo Zamboni, who suggested in 2009 that the neurological disease could be triggered by a build-up of iron where the blood did not flow freely.


Zamboni called this condition chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI or CCVI) and widened the veins of people with MS using stents. Many in the medical community were sceptical, and his trials of the technique did not compare people given the procedure with those who were not. But other doctors’ doubts did not stop people with MS from joining the waiting list.


In 2013, a paper was published in the Lancet medical journal by Dr Anthony Traboulsee from the University of British Columbia and colleagues, funded by the MS Society of Canada, which found that Zamboni’s hypothesis was fundamentally flawed. The researchers’ study showed that narrowing of the veins that run from the brain to the heart was as common in people without MS as in those with the condition.


The same team has now carried out a more ambitious study. They performed the vein-widening venoplasty procedure on 49 people, inserting a catheter and inflating their veins with a small balloon and a “sham” operation on 55 others, who just had the catheter insertion. Neither the patients nor the researchers knew which people had undergone which operation.


One year later, assessments involving brain imaging and doctors’ and patients’ own assessment of their symptoms, showed that there was no difference between the disease progression of the two groups.


“We hope these findings, coming from a carefully controlled, ‘gold standard’ study, will persuade people with MS not to pursue liberation therapy, which is an invasive procedure that carries the risk of complications, as well as significant financial cost,” said Traboulsee, a UBC associate professor of neurology.


“Fortunately, there are a range of drug treatments for MS that have been proven, through rigorous studies, to be safe and effective at slowing the disease progression.”


In spite of the earlier Lancet paper, people are still seeking liberation therapy, Traboulsee said. “It is less popular. But there is still an advocacy group that has a conference once a year with guest speakers such as Dr Zamboni,” he said. “There are still researchers dedicated to the topic, not just Dr Zamboni. It has been proposed as important for treatment of Ménière’s [disease] and for dementia diseases.”



Multiple sclerosis treatment is debunked by researchers in Canada

24 Temmuz 2016 Pazar

Research Suggests there are Multiple Paths Towards Autism

A new study has challenged the long-held belief that alterations in the social brain networks have an influence on autism development. The new research suggests that variations in the brain of infants with autism risk, may be widespread and may influence multiple systems.


What is Autism?


A neurodevelopmental disorder, autism is characterized by impairments in non-verbal and verbal communication, social interaction, and repetitive and restricted behavior. The signs of autism are usually noticed by parents during the first two years of a kid’s life. The development of these signs often occurs gradually. However, some autistic children reach the milestones of development at normal pace, but then regress. The criteria for diagnosis requires the symptoms to be apparent during early childhood, usually before the age of 3 years.


The diagnosis of autism is done on the basis of impairments in communication and social behaviors. The symptoms usually surface when the child is 2 years old. Research conducted over the last decade, was focused on detecting autistic abnormalities during early infancy.


Experts are of the belief that improved knowledge about how the development of autism occurs can potentially enable clinicians to predict autism prior to its emergence.


Attempts for identifying precursors have concentrated primarily on social behaviors, on the basis of the assumption that social brain network abnormalities occur early in life, and they compound throughout development.


Now, Dr. Mark Johnson of Birkbeck, University of London and Dr. Mayada Elsabbagh of McGill University, Canada, believe that the recent studies don’t support the idea that there’s a singular pathway to autism development.


The studies evaluating infants with autism risk were reviewed by Johnson and Elsabbagh, as published in Biological Psychiatry, a journal. They uncovered behavioral research that supported evidence for some general abnormalities in the first year of a child’s life.


These abnormalities include poor attention flexibility, higher perceptual sensitivity, and motor maturation. The authors have also highlighted studies of brain imaging that offer evidence of broad alteration throughout the brain networks, instead of focal deficits inside the social networks.


The imaging and behavioral studies have challenged the assumption of social network abnormalities occurring early in life that continue throughout one’s development, and result in occurrence of autism.


Elsabbagh stated that their review discloses low support for localized deficits within the social brain network, during the first year of one’s life. Instead, their review is in favor of the opinion that atypical development that involves social, motor, attentional, and perceptual systems precede the emergence of autism, and result in noticeable behavioral symptoms by second year of life.


The review shows that it may not be enough to focus on only one deficit to detect the early warning signs, and is likely to adjust the way researchers conceptualize autism.


Editor of the journal Biological Psychiatry, Dr. John Krystal, said that efforts have been put to identifying the common, final neural pathways lying underneath the deficits and symptoms of psychiatric disorders.


Yet the opinion of Johnson and Elsabbagh indicate that widespread disturbances exist in brain development in ASD (Autism Spectrum Disorder), and the social deficits either show that the circuits beneath social behaviors are one among the many affected circuits, or that some of the functional deficits are properties emerging from multiple affected circuits.



Research Suggests there are Multiple Paths Towards Autism