Welcome! This blog contains research & information on lifestyle, nutrition and health for those with MS, as well as continuing information on the understanding of the endothelium and heart-brain connection. This blog is informative only--all medical decisions should be discussed with your own physicians.

The posts are searchable---simply type in your topic of interest in the search box at the top left.

Almost all of MS research is initiated and funded by pharmaceutical companies. This maintains the EAE mouse model and the auto-immune paradigm of MS, and continues the 20 billion dollar a year MS treatment industry. But as we learn more about slowed blood flow, gray matter atrophy, and environmental links to MS progression and disability--all things the current drugs do not address--we're discovering more about how to help those with MS.

To learn how this journey began, read my first post from August, 2009. Be well! Joan

Showing posts with label hypoperfusion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hypoperfusion. Show all posts

Saturday, May 16, 2015

Blood flow matters

If you ever wondered whether blood flow was important to brain health, all you would have to do is read about three new MS drug trials announced in the past month.

All three of these compounds have been shown in EAE mouse trials to reduce symptoms, reduce inflammation and slow progression of MS.  All three have been touted as "neuroprotective."

But all three of these medications have a very similar known method of action (MOA) in humans.  All have been used for years for cardiovascular and stroke patients.  All have an effect on the endothelium and release nitric oxide and lower blood pressure.  All three deal with "hypoperfusion", or reduced blood flow.

They all widen blood vessels, and increase blood flow to and from the brain.

guanabenz-- relaxes blood vessels so that blood may pass through more easily.
http://www.mayoclinic.org/drugs-supplements/guanabenz-oral-route/description/drg-20064106

ibudilast-- increases cerebral blood flow, is a vasodilator
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18677969

biotin---decreases blood pressure, increases blood flow, treats ischemia (low O2) after stroke
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18179728
http://www.google.com/patents/WO2014016003A1?cl=en



That's right.  MS researchers have learned from Dr. Zamboni's discovery of CCSVI and slowed cerebral blood flow and hypoperfusion in the MS brain.

But they do not want patients to try "alternative treatments"; to have venous malformations treated, or to receive HBOT treatment,  or have atlas adjustments, or to eat better, quit smoking, get UV rays or exercise more.  All of these alternatives have been scientifically shown to increase cerebral blood flow and perfusion.  These alternatives will help people with MS live healthier lives.  But they will not help MS researchers.

MS researchers would prefer it if you would take a pill.  That way, their research labs will remain funded.  That way, they receive finders' fees when you are enrolled in a drug trial.
(Up to $5,000 per patient!)
http://ccsviinms.blogspot.com/2012/04/clinical-trials-and-finders-fees-april.html

That way, they can receive speakers' fees, and have wonderful conferences, and do not have to address the elephant in the room----that the EAE model of MS is not MS.  EAE has been used to create a $20 billion dollar a year drug industry, based on immune modulation and ablation, but has not stopped MS disease progression in humans.

There is most certainly a problem with cerebral blood flow and hypoperfusion in people with MS.  In fact, all diseases of neurodegeneration have hypoperfusion.
http://ccsvi.org/index.php/the-basics/ccsvi-in-other-neurological-diseases

I simply wonder when the MS industry will admit that the new target of "neuroprotection", simply means increasing blood flow to neurons and myelin in the hypoperfused MS brain.

Still waiting,
Joan


This picture on the left is from Dr. Zamboni and Dr. Simka---it illustrates how cerebral blood flow becomes blocked, refluxes up jugular veins and goes to less efficient, collateral veins in CCSVI,  creating hypoperfusion.  I know it's real, because it's what my husband had on MRV (see pic on right)  And there is no pill in the universe that could have restored Jeff's blood flow.  He needed venous repair, and a new lifestyle.  Six years later, no MS progression.  This is real.


Thursday, May 14, 2015

"Neuroprotection" and Ibudilast

The latest MS drug trials all have a new target.  The new buzzword in MS drug development is "neuroprotection."  What does this mean, and why the switch?

Neuroprotection simply means protecting neurons by reestablishing blood flow and perfusion after a loss of oxygen to the brain.  We see these drugs are currently marketed to those who suffer from stroke.

Neuroprotective agents are used in an attempt to save ischemic neurons in the brain from irreversible injury.[2]    http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1161422-overview

I wrote about this subtle shift from drugs which modulate the immune system to drugs which address blood flow in 2013.  Here's that post:
http://ccsviinms.blogspot.com/2013/08/medications-for-ms-addressing-blood.html

What MS researchers are now doing is working with pharmaceutical companies to test and prescribe new drugs which address the damage caused by slowed blood flow.  And these drugs are called "neuroprotective."

Which is exactly what Dr.  Robert Fox is doing now with Ibudilast.
How does ibudilast work?   
It relaxes blood vessels and increases blood flow by inhibiting phosphodiesterases and releasing nitric oxide from the endothelium.

Dr. Fox has been working on a clinical trial for those with progressive MS, using Ibudilast (MN-166) which has been prescribed to treat stroke and asthma patients for two decades-

Ironically, ibudiblast has already been studied in a phase II trial involving 292 patients with relapsing MS and was found to decrease relapses.

However, Dr. Fox's trial will only be looking at progressive MS.  This way, people with relapsing remitting MS can still be sold expensive immune modulating drugs, and the researchers do not have to change their EAE story line.  

When Dr. Zamboni discovered the link to slowed venous return, hypoperfusion and MS, he opened up a new way of looking at the MS disease process.  Although neurologists and MS specialists will not say this, he has changed how they are studying the MS disease process and how they are developing drugs to treat MS.

And, not coincidently, one such researcher is Dr. Robert Fox.  In 2010,  Dr. Fox, a neurologist, received money from the MS Society to study CCSVI, a vascular disorder.   A medical student in his lab discovered never before seen venous malformations in the jugular veins of cadavers of people with MS.  And in 2011, the results of this study cause quite a stir at ECTRIMS.


Some results from the first 13 cadavers were presented during a platform session at ECTRIMS by Case Western University medical student Claudiu Diaconu. He confirmed that venous structures in the brain and brainstem appear to be far more complicated and variable than previously thought.
In fact, the postmortem study revealed the presence of a novel venous valve that had not been described in anatomy textbooks.
Perhaps the most important finding was that most of the stenoses identified in the study were not associated with vessel wall thickness or circumference.
As a result, Diaconu said, cerebrospinal vein scans in live patients "should focus on identifying intraluminal abnormalities, not just vessel wall narrowing or thickening.

What Diaconu found, and Dr. Fox knows---"intraluminal abnormalities with possible hemodynamic consequences were higher in MS patients compared to healthy controls."  
http://registration.akm.ch/einsicht.php?XNABSTRACT_ID=137778&XNSPRACHE_ID=2&XNKONGRESS_ID=150&XNMASKEN_ID=900

"Hemodynamic consequences from intraluminal abnormalities" simply means they found a mechanical reason for the slowed blood flow, also known as hypoperfusion, which exists in MS.  Blockages inside the veins.

This hypoperfusion and ischemia in MS is a fact.  But neurologists and MS specialists cannot make any money treating venous malformations, or understanding how to improve perfusion with nutrition, exercise and lifestyle adjustments.  Understanding the heart brain connection won't benefit them, or their labs.

That's right.  Dr. Robert Fox will never tell you that ibudilast is a post stroke treatment, already approved and shown to relax blood vessels, increase blood flow, oxygenation and perfusion in the brain.  And it helps people with RRMS, as well as progressive MS.  He will tell you it is "neuroprotective" and blood flow doesn't matter....

I am so sick and tired of this charade.  I hope everyone can understand this.  Medicalese is being used to keep people in the dark regarding the MS disease mechnisms.

Hypoperfusion and slowed blood flow are realities in MS.  

Make sense?

Joan









Monday, February 23, 2015

Cerebral Circulation---2x slower in people with MS

A brand new blinded study has found that it takes almost twice as long for blood to flow from the heart, through the brain, and back to the heart in people with MS, when compared to normals.

Cerebral Circulation Time is Prolonged and Not Correlated with EDSS in Multiple Sclerosis Patients: A Study Using Digital Subtracted Angiography 
http://www.plosone.org/article/fetchObject.action?uri=info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0116681&representation=PDF'

Cerebral circulation time (CCT) in people with MS was not tied to disability, or length of time with an MS diagnosis.  Slowed CCT was found in all people with MS, when compared to age matched controls.

Forty four control subjects showed a median time of 2.8 seconds for cerebral circulation.  The 80 patients with MS had a median time of 4.8 seconds.

This research was conducted by the neuroimaging and neurointerventional units of the University of Siena General Hospital, edited by neurologist Dr. Orhan Aktas of the University of Dusseldorf and published in PLoS ONE in February 2015.  Both the testing neuroradiologist and the data examiner were completely blinded as to whether the participants had MS or were healthy.

Cerebral hypoperfusion, or slowed blood flow, has been noted in multiple sclerosis for decades.  Many have theorized that this slowed blood flow is a result of damage to the MS brain.  That inflammation, lesions, edema and loss of neurons would lead to less perfusion.  But this has only been a theory.

What is revolutionary about this new, blinded study--is the evidence that cerebral hypoperfusion occurs in the earliest stages of MS, and precedes white matter lesions and neurodegeneration.  This slowed blood flow appears to be the very first step in the MS disease process.  Hypoperfusion is not a result of MS, it may be the cause.

The researchers state that slowed cerebral blood flow is "pathognomonic."  Pathognomonic (patho, meaning disease and gnomonic meaning judge) means that this is a specific marker for MS.

The absence of a significant association between CCT and disease duration, disease onset, lesion and brain volume, EDSS and age could suggest that the high intravascular resistance is a constant finding in MS patients, possibly taking place at an early stage of the disease. 

Therefore, cerebrovascular changes are not solely the result of a late chronic inflammatory process. Indeed, if the microvascular dysfunction was a consequence of lesion load or brain atrophy, high CCT values would be expected to increase with EDSS and disease duration.

In conclusion, the absence of a correlation between lesion volume and CCT confirms that hemodynamic alteration is not related to parenchymal lesion and other MS-linked clinical features, but rather, is a pathognomonic feature of disease. 

This is the second peer-reviewed, published and blinded study to show cerebral circulation time is markedly slower in pwMS when compared to normals.  The first study was published in 2012, and utilized doppler ultrasound, rather than angiography.   
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22357894

We know that hypoperfusion is damaging to delicate brain tissue.  We see links to neurodegeneration, white matter lesions and cerebral atrophy is hypoxic (lowered oxygen) situations where hypoperfusion is present--such in altitude sickness, carbon monoxide poisoning and cocaine overdose.  The brain needs a constant supply of oxygen and glucose, and when blood flow is disrupted, damage occurs. Researchers have seen hypoperfusion and ischemic injury in MS for many years.

Dr. Zamboni and Dr. Zivadinov published a study in 2010 showing how severity of CCSVI was linked to severity of hypoperfusion:

To the best of our knowledge, this pilot study is the first to report a significant relationship between the presence and severity of CCSVI and hypoperfusion in the brain parenchyma. These preliminary findings should be confirmed in a larger cohort of MS patients to ensure that they generalize to the MS population as a whole. Reduced perfusion could contribute to the known mechanisms of virtual hypoxia in degenerated axons.

I've been summarizing the research of MS as a disease of primary hypoperfusion for six years now.
http://ccsviinms.blogspot.com/2009/12/hypoperfusion-decreased-blood-flow-in.html

Dr. Bernhard Juurlink proposed MS as a disease of hypoperfusion in 1998
http://ccsviinms.blogspot.com/2010/08/blood-flow-and-white-matter-lesions.html

Neurological researchers can no longer claim that cerebral blood flow is not important.  New technologies are allowing us to see how hypoperfusion and slowed cerebral circulation time is impacting the brain.

There is a very real and measurable vascular connection to MS and diseases of neurodegeneration.
And new research is showing us how important the heart-brain connection is.

Why does it take a full two seconds longer for blood to return to the heart in people with MS?  We need answers.

Joan




Thursday, October 2, 2014

Systems Approach to healing-- Alzheimer's reversal!


Published in the September issue of Aging, "Reversal of cognitive decline: A novel therapeutic program", a new study at UCLA shows exactly how a personalized "Systems Approach" helped Alzheimer's patients recover memory and health.

Dr. Dale Bredesen, Professor of Neurology at UCLA, authored the new paper.  Dr. Bredesen is one of many researchers who has questioned the pharmaceutical model of inhibiting beta amyloid plaques in Alzheimer's.  


In the case of Alzheimer's disease, Bredesen notes, there is not one drug that has been developed that stops or even slows the disease's progression, and drugs have only had modest effects on symptoms. "In the past decade alone, hundreds of clinical trials have been conducted for Alzheimer's at an aggregate cost of over a billion dollars, without success," he said.

The model of multiple targets and an imbalance in signaling runs contrary to the popular dogma that Alzheimer's is a disease of toxicity, caused by the accumulation of sticky plaques in the brain. Bredesen believes the amyloid beta peptide, the source of the plaques, has a normal function in the brain -- as part of a larger set of molecules that promotes signals that cause nerve connections to lapse. Thus the increase in the peptide that occurs in Alzheimer's disease shifts the memory-making vs. memory-breaking balance in favor of memory loss.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/09/140930143446.htm?utm_source=feedburner

Dr. Bredesen believed that using a multiple target lifestyle therapy with his Alzheimer's patients might improve brain signaling.  Here are the main features of the program he created, which was adjusted for each individual patient.

(1) eliminating all simple carbohydrates (breads, pastas, baked goods)
(2) eliminating gluten and processed food, with increased vegetables, fruits, and non-farmed fish
(3) reducing stress with yoga
(4) as a second measure to reduce the stress, meditation for 20 minutes twice per day
(5) melatonin each night
(6) increasing sleep from 4-5 hours per night to 7-8 hours per night
(7) methylcobalamin (vitamin B12)
(8) vitamin D3
(9) omega 3 fish oil
(10) CoQ10
(11) Exercising for a minimum of 30 minutes, 4-6 days per week.

(Long time readers of this blog will notice that this program shares a lot with the Endothelial Health Program)
http://ccsvi.org/index.php/helping-myself/endothelial-health

The results for 9 patients was better overall health, better body mass index, and a reversal of memory loss.   That's Alzheimer's Disease reversal!   Something no one drug has been able to achieve.

I've written about the difficulty in conducting double-blind, placebo control trials for lifestyle.   As Dr. Roy Swank, Dr. George Jelinek and Dr. Terry Wahls could all attest,  the "gold standard" trial approach works best for drugs. But that doesn't mean a holistic approach to healing is invalid, or cannot be trialled.  It just means it takes more work for both patient and researcher.  

There is no way to patent or monetize a new lifestyle, so drug companies won't be paying for these studies.   However, a holistic approach addresses many different aspects of health.

Yes, this is a small study, and yes, it is still anecdotal evidence.  But this program can be used in clinical trials.  It will be costly, and take time---but it may save brains.

What does this Alzheimer's research have to do with MS?  When we consider the link of the heart to the brain and the importance of cardiovascular health to cerebral perfusion, we can understand the need for endothelial health.  An oxygenated, perfused, cleansed and fed brain is a happy and healthy brain.

All diseases of neurodegeneration share hypoperfusion, or simply, reduced cerebral blood flow.  

There are lifestyle changes that can be made to aid healing.  Please note that I did not use the word "cure."  For more on how the "cure mentality" can hamper our efforts to heal--read 

The era of a "brain in isolation" research is ending.  More and more researchers, like Dr. Bredesen, are considering the body as a whole unit, and addressing cardiovascular function in brain health.

Thanks to Dr. Bredesen and UCLA for going up against the pharmaceutical companies, and bringing hope and healing to his Alzheimer's patients.

Where are the MS specialists ready to take on this challenge?
We're waiting,
Joan


Saturday, June 14, 2014

Columbia Researchers Provide New Insight into How the Brain Regulates Its Blood Flow

A group of multi-disciplinary researchers at Columbia University have made an exciting discovery.  They have witnessed how the vascular system regulates blood flow to the brain.
http://engineering.columbia.edu/columbia-engineers-provide-new-insight-how-brain-regulates-its-blood-flow 

The vascular endothelium maintains the lining of all 60,000 miles of our blood vessels, even the vessels inside the brain.  It is the largest secreting organ in the human body.  Neurological researchers had postulated that endothelial cells were not as important in maintaining blood flow inside the brain--that the brain itself was responsible for initiating cerebral blood flow according to neuronal health.  But this theory was wrong.

The brain relies on healthy blood vessels to maintain healthy cerebral blood flow.

The brain was thought to use a different mechanism--and this has lead neurological researchers to focus on the cells surrounding blood vessels in the brain.

According to researcher and professor of biomedical engineering, Elizabeth M.C. Hillman, this supposition has lead to incorrect ideas on brain health.

“Once we realized the importance of endothelial signaling in the regulation of blood flow in the brain,” Hillman adds, “we wondered whether overlooking the vascular endothelium might have led researchers to misinterpret their results.”

Dr. Hillman has spent the past 10 years using advanced medical technology, to study how blood flow is controlled in the brain.  Her research team was comprised of a multi-disciplinary members.  Other lab members who assisted with the study included PhD and MD/PhD students from Columbia Engineering, Neurobiology and Behavior, and Columbia University Medical Center. The group combined their engineering skills with their expertise in neuroscience, biology, and medicine to understand this new aspect of brain physiology.

To tease apart the role of endothelial signaling in the living brain, they had to develop new ways to both image the brain at very high speeds, and also to selectively alter the ability of endothelial cells to propagate signals within intact vessels. The team achieved this through a range of techniques that use light and optics, including imaging using a high-speed camera with synchronized, strobed LED illumination to capture changes in the color, and thus the oxygenation level of flowing blood. Focused laser light was used in combination with a fluorescent dye within the bloodstream to cause oxidative damage to the inner endothelial layer of blood brain arterioles, while leaving the rest of the vessel intact and responsive. The team showed that, after damaging a small section of a vessel using their laser, the vessel no longer dilated beyond the damaged point. When the endothelium of a larger number of vessels was targeted in the same way, the overall blood flow response of the brain to stimulation was significantly decreased.

The researchers damaged the endothelial layer of cells, causing oxidative stress.  After this damage, the blood vessel was no longer able to dilate past the damaged point.  This process restricted blood flow to the neurons.

The damaged endothelium is what initiated lowered blood flow, also known as hypoperfusion.   We see hypoperfusion in MS, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and dementia.

MS experts have maintained that it is the death of neurons in the brain caused by the unknown disease process we currently call "multiple sclerosis", which leads to a lowered need for cerebral blood flow.   Their assumption has been that the hypoperfusion of the MS brain (which is a scientifically documented fact) is due to MS.  
http://ccsviinms.blogspot.com/2010/08/blood-flow-and-white-matter-lesions.html

But what if this chicken and egg supposition has been wrong?  Have 70 years of EAE postulation and drug development placed the focus on the wrong cells?

Dr. Hillman is urging other researchers to join her in the pursuit of understanding how the vascular endothelium and brain health are connected.  

“Our latest finding gives us a new way of thinking about brain disease—that some conditions assumed to be caused by faulty neurons could actually be problems with faulty blood vessels,” Hillman adds. “This gives us a new target to focus on to explore treatments for a wide range of disorders that have, until now, been thought of as impossible to treat. The brain’s vasculature is a critical partner in normal brain function. We hope that we are slowly getting closer to untangling some of the mysteries of the human brain.”
I share her urgency.  It was seven years ago when I first began looking at the correlation of endothelial dysfunction and neurodegenerative disease.  Blood flow to and from the brain matters.  Understanding how we can reverse endothelial dysfunction and oxidative stress--not only through future drug development---but through present day lifestyle, exercise, nutrition, UV rays, smoking cessation and other means-- is critical in helping those who are suffering from cerebral hypoperfusion found in MS, Parkinson's, Alzheimer's and dementia.

Here's the program I created for Jeff.  I hope it can help you, too!
Time equals brain,
Joan
Full paper A Critical Role for the Vascular Endothelium in Functional Neurovascular Coupling in the Brain  http://jaha.ahajournals.org/content/3/3/e000787.full



Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Stenting carotid artery stenosis improves cognition

While neurologists continue to insist that cerebral blood flow isn't all that important to brain health---vascular surgeons are finding out that a simple endovascular treatment can help their patients' memory and cognitive function.

25 patients were treated with carotid artery stenting.  These patients were elderly and had carotid artery stenosis, but were asymptomatic (since they had not had strokes.)   Their arteries were simply
closed off and the blood flow going to their brains had been slowed, resulting in hypoperfusion.  These patients showed cognitive impairment in a variety of functions, which were assessed before their treatment.

Six months after carotid artery stenting treatment there was significant improvement in neuropsychological testing for all patients. 

RESULTS:  There were no neurological complications during the procedure or during hospitalization in any patient. No deaths or cardiac complications occurred in any patient. 
The pre-procedure neuropsychological study showed cognitive impairment in: information processing speed in 15 patients (62.5%), visuospatial function in 14 (56.0%), memory in 18 (72.0%), executive functions in 14 (56.0%), language in three (12.0%), attention in 10 (40.0%), and global cognitive performance in eight (32.0%).
Comparison of these scores with those obtained 6-month post-procedure showed significant improvement in GCS in all patients (p = .002), with a particularly marked gain in information processing speed (p = .018). Although significant improvement was not found for the remaining cognitive functions assessed, some gain was documented, and there was no deterioration.
CONCLUSIONS:
Revascularization by transcervical CAS with flow reversal for cerebral protection results in improved neurocognitive performance in asymptomatic elderly patients with severe carotid artery stenosis.

How does this relate to CCSVI?  

People with MS have cerebral hypoperfusion.  This is scientific fact.

http://ccsviinms.blogspot.com/2010/08/blood-flow-and-white-matter-lesions.html

There has been an association found between slowed venous return, hypoperfusion and MS. 

Improving cerebral bloodflow through balloon angioplasty, exercise, nutrition, supplements, UV rays and lifestyle changes such as smoking cessation can truly make a difference.  The heart and brain are connected.  The brain is nourished by the arterial delivery of blood, and cleansed by the venous return back to the heart. Stenotic blood vessels, on both the arterial and venous sides, harm the brain. We ignore this connection to the detriment of our health.

The research continues to come in, from all over the world, in a variety of specialties.  
Cerebral bloodflow matters.
Joan







Saturday, November 16, 2013

What has Changed?

In the five years since Dr. Zamboni's first publication on the connection of MS to extracranial hemodynamics, there have been many changes in mainstream MS treatment and new discoveries made by researchers around the world.

The relationship of the vascular system in MS is being explored, and dealt with in a sideways manner by neurologists.  I do not expect we will ever hear that CCSVI is valid science from neurologists--they will attempt to rename it, requantify slowed venous return and hypoperfusion, and make it their own.  They will call Dr. Zamboni's discovery of CCSVI junk science- while they are working on patenting drugs to address blood flow in pwMS.  This is because neurologists work with pharma and write prescriptions.  They do not deal with the mechanistics of the brain's circulation or with the venous malformations Dr. Zamboni has discovered.  They are not phlebologists or vascular surgeons. For MS specialists, this discovery of hemodynamic alterations goes beyond their practical expertise.

However, one neurologist recently published a paper on the vascular connection to MS, and said this:

"...vascular contributions in MS do appear to support the notion of the vasculature being an initiating target in MS etiology and not simply a bystander presentation of other disease processes. Perhaps the strongest support for this is the number of MS therapies that have been developed, which target leukocyte binding to activated endothelial cells, a central component of the blood-brain barrier (BBB)."
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7015/11/219

Here are drugs being developed by neurologists to address blood flow:
http://ccsviinms.blogspot.com/2013/08/medications-for-ms-addressing-blood.html


What have we learned since Dr. Zamboni first began publishing his research on CCSVI?  

1. People with MS (pwMS) have slower cerebral hemodynamics than normal people.  Their blood flow exits the brain at a slower rate. There are hemodynamic differences between normal people and those with MS. Hypoperfusion is real, it opens the blood brain barrier and it damages the brain.  Whether it is a cause or effect of MS will be debated for decades, however vascular researchers have shown better perfusion and cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) flow after venoplasty for CCSVI.

2. People with MS do better with exposure to UV rays, which may explain the long-established link of MS rates and northern latitudes. UV ray exposure relieves symptoms in many.  This may be due to increased vitamin D levels, but it might also be due to the way in which UV rays release nitric oxide, change the endothelium and increase blood flow. 

3. People with MS are being advised to consider their nutrition and to eat more fruits, vegetables and whole foods and less saturated fats and processed foods.   When Dr. Swank suggested this 60 years ago, it was called "junk science" and people with MS were told it wouldn't do them an ounce of good.  It is now given as helpful advice by the NMSS and the AAN.   

Same thing with exercise.  Only a few years ago, pwMS were advised not exert themselves, but to rest and conserve their energy.  Now we know that physical exercise and activity delays progression, and reverses gray matter atrophy.  Same thing with smoking cessation, stress reduction, and better sleep.  All of these cardiovascular lifestyle changes can make a difference.

4. Oxidative stress and inflammation are recognized as driving forces in MS progression.  This has lead to exploratons of new modalities of treatment, like the Nrf2 pathway. 

5. Gray matter health has been recognized as a more accurate biomarker of MS progression than white matter lesions.  Gray matter atrophy will become the new target for MS therapies.

6. PwMS have much higher levels of the clotting proteins- fibrin and endothelin-1 in their serum than normals. These are markers of endothelial dysfunction.

7. Upright MRI has allowed us to see how cerebrospinal fluid and blood return to the heart is slowed and impeded in pwMS.

8.  The venous endothelium is being studied, and researchers are noting that there are changes happening to the lining of the veins in people with neurodegenerative disease.
9.  CCSVI is being explored around the globe.  There are literally hundreds of papers published in vascular and neurological journals.  New papers come to press every day.  The connection of blood flow and diseases of neurodegeneration continues, as doctors admit that lifestyle interventions and prevention are staving off Alzheimer's and dementia, while none of the drugs have helped one bit.
http://www.ccsvi.org/index.php/component/search/index.php?option=com_search&task=search

10.  The ISNVD has been established.  There is now an international society of researchers working on understanding the venous connection to neurovascular disease.  Their fourth conference will be held in San Francisco in February, 2014.  The International Society for Neurovascular Disease is convening, publishing, and moving this research forward.
http://isnvdconference.org


All of these connections between MS and the cardiovascular system are new.  And this has happened in just the past five years.  

For those waiting for venoplasty to be accepted as an MS treatment, we have to step back and view the other changes that have happened in MS care.  

The American Academy of Neurologists has several papers featured on their page which connect slowed blood flow and neurodegenerative disease.  They have a patient outreach branch--The American Brain Foundation-- and they have a yearly Brain Fair to discuss diet and lifestyle changes people with neurodegenerative diseases, including MS, should consider.  So much for Dr. Swank's junk science.

Here's a wonderful video Christopher Alkenbrack found on Dr. Roy Swank's work.  It was made in 1989 as part of a Canadian news investigation into the success of Dr. Swank's diet in pwMS as compared to a vastly more expensive and failed chemotherapy trial.  If you haven't seen it, it's a must watch.  

Because today, 25 years later, the NMSS is making these very same dietary and lifestyle recommendations to pwMS.  Yet when asked about dietary changes for pwMS, the neurologist in this video from 1989 says there is "little to no benefit."


When reporters, scientists, neurologists, MS specialists and others say, "Oh, the connection of CCSVI to MS, that's junk science."  We've investigated it, and there's nothing there"---remind them about Dr. Roy Swank.  Remind them how long it took his observations of "capillary fragility", slowed blood flow, increased fibrin and hypercoagulation to be accepted as part of MS.    

He was noting endothelial dysfunction decades before scientists knew about nitric oxide and how environmental factors contributed to blood flow.  And he has never once been credited by mainstream neurology.  You won't see his name or read his research in their journals.  But he was right.

Dr. Zamboni's discovery has revolutionized how we look at cerebral blood flow, by studying the under-researched extracranial venous system, and utilizing doppler ultrasound to understand venous malformations which alter cerebral hemodynamics.  Like Dr. Swank, Dr. T.J.Putnam and others, he is decades ahead of his time.  His discovery of CCSVI may very well be the rest of the equation in understanding the slowed venous return and endothelial dysfunction found in pwMS.   To say that it is junk science, and that there is no connection of venous return in MS, is to negate scientific fact.  


Joan

Monday, June 25, 2012

Multiple Sclerosis: Hypoperfusion/Reperfusion Theory


June 25, 2012 at 1:47pm

I wanted to put together the research I've compiled considering multiple sclerosis as a disease of primary neurodegeneration due to hypoperfusion, with secondary reperfusion injuries.  I felt it was important to document and organize the scientific research. I also want your input and thoughts.

The reason why MS relapses and remits during the onset of the disease has been difficult to understand, and impossible to replicate in animal models of MS.  EAE, the current animal model for MS, is not like MS.  EAE is more akin to ADEM, in that it does not relapse and remit.  EAE is an ongoing immune reaction.  https://www.msard-journal.com/article/S2211-0348(14)00063-7/fulltext

I believe stroke and cardiovascular researchers may be better able to create models of MS using perfusion--or blood flow.  Stroke specialists, like Dr. Peter Stys, have been questioning the autoimmune theory of MS, and suggesting that the immune reaction may be secondary.    link

Most of us have heard the word hypoperfusion in relation to multiple sclerosis.  The slowed perfusion or less than normal blood flow we see in the MS brain has been documented.  Researchers have shown how people with MS have less cerebral blood flow than normal people, which creates an ongoing low level ischemic environment.  

And researchers are finally now discussing how the hypoperfused MS brain is responding to lowered blood flow.

The relatively new concept of neurovascular unit (NVU) helps to clarify the hemodynamic changes due to the intricate interplay between cerebral blood flow (CBF) and vasoactive factors. Several studies have demonstrated the importance of endothelial factors, their neurovascular interaction, and that vascular changes are also highly conducive to neurodegenerative changes and clinical impairment.1013 Cerebral hypoperfusion and vascular factors are strictly involved in neurovascular dysfunction, vascular oxidative stress, and relative tissue hypoxia, well in advance of any demyelinating lesions. Changes in capillary resistance and neurovascular function may, in fact, represent important common denominators for conditions that increase the risk of developing both demyelinating lesions and progressive MS forms. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1177271918774800


Stroke researchers understand the process of ongoing cerebral ischemic stress causing white matter damage. 

Compared with gray matter, white matter of the brain is more sensitive and susceptible to ischemic stress because of its relatively limited blood supply.73 In addition, DM can induce white matter damage, as well as aggravate white matter injury after stroke.73 DM stroke patients are prone to developing earlier and exacerbated white matter hyperintensities compared with non-DM patients.74 Vascular dysfunction including BBB disruption that leads to leakage of serum components into the white matter can also induce white matter damage.75The white matter in the brain is also highly sensitive to inflammatory responses, which can injure the white matter directly as well as indirectly by damaging the BBB and/or creating an inhospitable environment for axonal/myelin regeneration.76 https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/pdf/10.1161/JAHA.117.005819


It was a published theory of Dr. Bernhard Juurlink which first prompted my exploration into hypoperfusion and MS.  I read his 1998 hypothesis paper in 2007, after Jeff returned from a trip to high altitude with dozens of lesions and an MS diagnosis.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9824835


After ischmic events, the brain is reperfused.  Reperfusion simply means to redeliver blood. Reperfusion is a good thing and a bad thing.  Reperfusion can be a natural occurrence; it returns blood to tissue after there is an event which slows blood flow, like a stroke or ischemia.  Reperfusion brings essential O2 and glucose to cells after such an event, but it also brings inflammation and the immune system with it.  Blood returns to the area of tissue where it had been absent, at a cost.
http://www.ajnr.org/content/25/8/1342


Dr. Michael Dake mentioned in a presentation at International Society for Neurovascular Disease (ISNVD) how "hyperperfusion" (otherwise known as reperfusion injury) occurs BEFORE an MS lesion forms.   He referenced this paper, which discusses how this perfusion change happens before the break in the blood brain barrier, before the immune system entry, before demyelination. The very first step is a change in perfusion.  I wanted to know--why?

I believe reperfusion injury explains the relapsing remitting course of early MS and ties together research into collateral circulation and hypoperfusion in the MS brain. There will be an explanation as to how this theory functions in progressive MS at the end of this note. 

We are learning more and more that gray matter loss, or brain atrophy,  is a reliable method for monitoring the neurodegenerative process in MS.  Gray matter loss and death of neurons begins from the inception of the disease and continues with increasing disability.  It is linked, only modestly, with white matter lesions. This is why the current medications which suppress the immune system do not stop MS, and are not effective in progressive MS.
We already know that pwMS have lower levels of glucose and O2 being delivered to their brain and spinal tissue, due to hypoperfusion, which can cause neurodegeneration and mitochondrial dysfunction.

Right now, the debate as to whether this hypoperfusion is primary, or hypoperfusion is simply a result of an unknown disease process we call "MS".    On that note, here is research stating the hypoperfusion seen in the MS brains looks like primary ischemia, or low oxygen.

Lower levels of O2 and glucose delivery can be correlated to hypoperfusion caused by venous insufficiency.

I think that on top of this ongoing process of neurodegeneration,  there are intermittent ischemic events which take these glucose and O2 levels dipping even lower--  events like an illness, a trip to high altitude, stress, an injury, giving birth, a bacterial infection--and when the event is over, the reperfusion cycle begins--this is what we call an exacerbation or "MS flare."  

I believe this is why many pwMS can directly tie their relapses to times after viruses, stress, lack of sleep, etc. These events become the straw that break the camel's back.  And once these events end, reperfusion injury happens. It's a damaging one/two punch.

Reperfusion injury is NOT the complete disease.  It is a reaction to an event.  MS relapses are not MS. Relapses are a reaction to an event.  The MS neurodegenerative process continues underneath.  Let's look at how an MS relapse is like reperfusion injury.

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Reperfusion Injury and Multiple Sclerosis relapses share:

1.  Demyelination -- Loss of myelin occurs after nerves have blocked blood flow, low O2 and glucose, and then a return of blood flow.  Reperfusion causes demyelination of nerves.
Perivascular demyelination and intramyelinic oedema in reperfusion nerve injury.
Acute inflammatory demyelination in reperfusion nerve injury

2.  Blood brain barrier disruption--the blood brain barrier becomes permeable, and endothelial tight junctions are altered in reperfusion injury.
Reperfusion-induced injury to the blood-brain barrier after middle cerebral artery occlusion in rats.

Blood-brain barrier disruption and matrix metalloproteinase-9 expression during reperfusion injury: mechanical versus embolic focal ischemia in spontaneously hypertensive rats.

Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury in Stroke

3. An excessive innate immune response--immune cells are called in 
Association of immune responses and ischemic brain infarction in rat.
Naturally Occurring Autoantibodies Mediate Ischemia/Reperfusion-Induced Tissue Injury
http://www.landesbioscience.com/curie/chapter/5117/

4. An excess of free radicals, oxidative stress and partially reduced oxygen species are found in both reperfusion injury and Multiple Sclerosis
Oxidative Stress in Multiple Sclerosis
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20120717
Mechanisms of Oxidative Damage in Multiple Sclerosis 
The role of oxidants and free radicals in reperfusion injury

5. Endothelial Dysfunction as evidenced by elevated levels of endothelin-1 in plasma 
Increased endothelin-1 plasma levels in patients with multiple sclerosis.
Extraocular blood flow and endothelin-1 plasma levels in patients with multiple sclerosis.
Endothelin-1 is involved in the pathogenesis of ischemia/reperfusion liver injury

6. NEW RESEARCH 2019 which considers newly discovered CNS lymphatic vessels.  Impaired cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drainage in the central nervous system, due to malfunction of neurovascular unit (NVU) after ischemia, may lead to neuronal cell death and reperfusion injury.

In the adverse event of ischemia, pericytes around capillaries constrict, eventually leading to pericyte death in rigor and could cause neutrophil trapping in the arterioles. These findings suggest reconsideration of neutrophil involvement in ischemia and reperfusion. Rather than acting neurotoxic, neutrophil accumulation in arterioles may have an impact on the vascular function including CSF drainage recently shown to occur along these pathways., In fact, cerebral ischemia results in impaired fluid clearance along the perivascular spaces in the affected cortex underscoring a neutrophil-induced malfunction of the NVU in I/R.

Functional impairment of lymphatic drainage from the CNS after ischemic stroke may lead to rapid neuronal cell death due to the accumulation of toxic metabolites in the brain parenchyma.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6111395/

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Reperfusion has been studied extensively on the arterial side.  However, the all important lymphatic drainage mentioned in the paper linked above, occurs on the venous side.   Like most medical research, the study of the veins and venous return is lacking, and stroke researchers admit this is a problem in understanding the full impact of reperfusion injury. 
Although most experimental studies target arterial aspects of recirculation in stroke, a few have focused on the venous side. In contrast to studies of cerebral artery occlusion, which are methodologically more consistent among different laboratories, studies of venous thrombosis models are at an early stage of development and lack standardization, which greatly complicates comparison of results from different laboratories. Furthermore, most published studies have focused either on arterial or venous components, and very few have examined both arterial and venous components in studies of recirculation. Therefore, a goal of the present commentary is to emphasize that both arterial and venous components should be considered in studies of acute ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke.
Overall, the “recirculation” concept strongly suggests that stroke treatment paradigms need to address venous outflow from the brain in relation to arterial inflow. Therefore, to minimize potential brain swelling and reperfusion injury for severe stroke patients, we need to consider carefully venous pressure and outflow, potential arterial smooth muscle and venous endothelial phenotype changes, possible pre-existing venous sinus hypoplasia, and in particular, if nimodipine will be used.

I did find one animal study which looked at venous hypertension as a complicating factor in reperfusion injury

Elevated venous pressure can be associated with severe tissue injury. Few links, however, between venous hypertension and tissue damage have been established. We examined here the effects of micropressure elevation on the outcome of venular occlusion/reperfusion in the mesenteric microvasculature of male Wistar rats. One hour of venular occlusion (diameter approximately 50 microm) by micropipette occlusion followed by reperfusion were carried out with sham surgery without occlusion as control. Leukocyte rolling, adhesion, and migration, oxygen radicals detected by dichlorofluorescein (DCF), and parenchymal cell death detected by propidium iodide (PI) were recorded simultaneously in the same vessel at a location upstream of the occlusion site with elevated micropressure and at a downstream location with low micropressure.
The number of rolling, adhering, and migrating leukocytes increased on the upstream side of the occlusion to a higher level than downstream of the occlusion site.

Microhemorrhages of blood cells into the mesentery interstitium were observed only on the upstream side of the occlusion. These results indicate that an elevation of the venular blood pressure during occlusion/reperfusion exacerbates the inflammatory cascade and tissue injury. Venous occlusion may constitute an important mechanism for tissue injury.
(note the upstream microhemorrhages caused by venous hypertension in this study.  These tiny, pinpoint spots of blood escaping into tissue might be linked to the iron deposition and hemosiderin we find in the MS brain.)

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This theory continues--when MS becomes progressive and relapses no longer occur,  it is because the body has been conditioned--- trained from years of hypoxia and low levels of O2 and the recurrent reperfusion. Eventually, as the body ages, this reperfusion response no longer happens.  It burns out.  There is no more white matter damage---but the low levels of O2 and glucose are still causing mitochondrial dysfunction, neuronal and axonal death.  

Hypoperfusion becomes worse, as the body ages and becomes more inactive.  MS continues to progress, even without the reperfusion injury seen during the RRMS days.  Gray matter continues to atrophy- even if there is no demyelination, inflammation or damage to white matter. 

The underlying disease process---low levels of O2 and glucose to CNS tissue, causing neurodegeneration--has remained the same.  MS progresses.  Gray matter atrophies.   But the period of reperfusion injury eventually stops happening, due to conditioning.  There are no more relapses.  The disease moves into the progressive phase.

In the past, MS has largely been considered a chronic inflammatory and demyelinating disease, driving most of the research and treatment development towards targeting the immune system. As of now, disease modifying therapies for MS are limited to various anti-inflammatory agents that reduce acute inflammatory lesions, clinical relapses and disability progression in RRMS. These anti-inflammatory agents, however, do not completely prevent axonal injury and are largely ineffective in treating progressive MS.
The recent resurgence of MS research focused on axonal degeneration mechanisms has resulted in convincing experimental evidence and potential treatment targets. As reviewed above, mitochondrial function is crucial in preserving axonal integrity in both acute inflammatory and progressive stages of MS. Therefore, therapies that protect mitochondria and enhance their functioning warrant investigation.

The current drugs are treating the body's natural response of reperfusion, and the resultant immune activation.  But they do not address the diffuse cerebral hypoxia and lowered glucose transport which remain.  And that's why MS continues to progress.  

Dr. Zamboni sought to treat this hypoperfusion caused by venous malformations and collateral circulation.  He used venoplasty to increase perfusion and blood flow by allowing the body to use the jugular veins, rather than less efficient collaterals.  It's worked for many people, but not all---we obviously need more research.  

This hypoperfusion/reperfusion theory also explains why HBOT treatment, nutrition, antioxidants,  smoking cessation, exercise, stress reduction and vascular approaches help those with MS to receive stability and remission.  These measures provide balance to the body, enable more energy and O2 to be delivered to the central nervous system and help the body avoid these ischemic events which call in the reperfusion response.  These treatments directly address cardiovascular health and the heart-brain connection.

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A brief recap:

Venous insufficiency, arterial issues, or cardiovascular problems cause primary hypoperfusion of the MS brain. This leads to lowered glucose and O2 delivery to the CNS.  During the RRMS stage of the disease, the body responds to events which lower levels of O2 with reperfusion. This creates venous hypertension and reperfusion injury. The immune system is activated. Lesions form. MS progresses.  As the body slows down with increasing disability and age, hypoperfusion worsens, axons and neurons continue to die.  Gray matter atrophies.  It's a vicious cycle.

How to stop the cycle?  Addressing venous insufficiency or cardiovascular issues. Oxygen therapy.  A whole food diet full of nutrients and plant-derived antioxidents.  Regular exercise to improve cardivascular health.  Lifestyle modifications including stress reduction, meditation, smoking cessation.  Potential immuno therapy to avoid reperfusion injury during RRMS stage.

But, as you all know by now---I'm not a doctor.  I just hate MS.  And I want more answers.
Please, let me know your thoughts, and please share with medical people and researchers you may know,  what part of this theory is lacking?  Does this make any sense?  How should research move forward?

Joan