Please read the Release, I guess I interpreted it wrong and I appologize.
Tag: Angioplasty, brain, ccsvi, CNS, Leasons, MS, Multiplesklerosis
Please read the Release, I guess I interpreted it wrong and I appologize.
Tag: Angioplasty, brain, ccsvi, CNS, Leasons, MS, Multiplesklerosis
I think you are a little confused in your terminology. CCSVI is a condition, and liberation or venoplasty is the procedure. The article is correct stating that having the condition CCSVI appears to increase the chances of having a clinical diagnosis of MS. If MS causes CCSVI or CCSVI causes MS is like the chicken and the egg proverb. Poor venous outflow cannot be good, and nobody can convince me that not correcting an venous abnormality is going to be better for the patient.
Best regards,
Craig
Interesting… bias? Get rid of Zamboni??
You got it backwards… The Neuro study revealed that people with ccsvi are nine times more likely to develop MS later in life.
The Neuro then tried to use this data to claim that ccsvi is not a trigger for developing MS later in life. The study data did not support his argument, in fact the study really supports Dr. Zamboni’s theory.
Sadly the Neuro tried to hide the data, because it showed that CCSVI is real.