PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Definitive imaging study finds no link between venous narrowing and multiple sclerosis

UBC-Vancouver Coastal Health research casts doubt on CCSVI theory

2013-10-09
(Press-News.org) A study led by Dr. Anthony Traboulsee of the University of British Columbia and Vancouver Coastal Health to see whether narrowing of the veins from the brain to the heart could be a cause of multiple sclerosis has found that the condition is just as prevalent in people without the disease.

The results, published in the U.K. medical journal The Lancet, call into question a controversial theory that MS is associated with a disorder proponents call chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI).

The study used both ultrasound and catheter venography (an x-ray of the vein after injecting it with a dye) to examine the veins of people with MS, their unrelated siblings and unrelated healthy volunteers. Catheter venography is considered the most accurate, "gold standard" technology for revealing the size and shape of veins, says Traboulsee, an associate professor of Neurology at UBC and director of the MS Clinic at UBC Hospital of Vancouver Coastal Health.

By comparing the width of veins between the brain and the heart with a normal reference point taken from below the jaw, the researchers showed that at least two-thirds of each of the groups had narrowing of the extracranial veins that was greater than 50 per cent. Differences in rates of venous narrowing between the groups were not statistically significant.

"Our results confirm that venous narrowing is a frequent finding in the general population, and is not a unique anatomical feature associated with multiple sclerosis," Traboulsee says. "This is the first study to find high rates of venous narrowing in a healthy control group, as well as the first to show that the ultrasound criteria usually used to 'diagnose' CCSVI are unreliable. The connection between venous narrowing and MS remains unknown, and it would certainly appear to be much more complicated than current theories suggest."

The CCSVI theory, first put forth by Dr. Paolo Zamboni of Italy in 2009, holds that narrowing of the extracranial veins between the brain and the heart leads to MS, and that angioplasty to widen those veins – sometimes called the "liberation procedure" – can be an effective treatment for some people with the disease.

The researchers examined the extracranial veins of 79 people with MS, 55 of their unaffected siblings, and 43 unrelated healthy volunteers (controls), using both ultrasound and catheter venography.

Venous narrowing was present in 74 per cent of people with MS, 66 per cent of their unaffected siblings, and 70 per cent of the unrelated controls. Catheter venography found venous narrowing to be more widespread than Zamboni's criteria for measuring the condition with ultrasound. Ultrasound found narrowing in fewer than half of the cases that were detected by catheter venography.

In a related commentary in The Lancet, Dr. Friedemann Paul of Germany and Dr. Mike Wattjes of the Netherlands suggest that the new results sound a "death knell" for the hypothesis of CCSVI as a disease entity. "If chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency actually existed, the ultrasound findings of this study and previous studies would suggest that up to half of the general and otherwise healthy population should be judged to be seriously ill because of venous insufficiency of the cervical veins," they write. "The fact that some changes in the venous system have been described in association with multiple sclerosis does not imply causality."

Traboulsee, a member of the Brain Research Centre of UBC and Vancouver Coastal Health, is leading another pan-Canadian study focused on angioplasty, or "liberation therapy." His team is providing both angioplasty and a sham treatment to 100 MS patients; each group will "cross over" to the other treatment after a year, so all patients will receive the angioplasty at some point. Results from the trial are expected in late 2015. "Despite the negative findings of our diagnostic study, many patients want to know if the venous dilation procedure could be beneficial," Traboulsee says. "We are committed to evaluating this treatment with robust methods and utilizing patient-focused outcomes."

The UBC-Vancouver Coastal Health study was done in collaboration with the University of Saskatchewan and funded by the MS Society of Canada.

### Post-embargo link to abstract of article, to go live when embargo lifts: http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(13)61747-X/abstract

NB: Due to travel, Dr. Anthony Traboulsee will only be available from Vancouver on Tuesday, Oct. 8, at the following times:

Main telephone-only press briefing: 3 p.m. London, 10 a.m. Toronto, 7 a.m. Vancouver
Toll-free access from Europe: 00-800-9358-7111
Toll free access from Canada/USA: 1-855-353-9183
Access from Vancouver: 604-681-8564 (In case of difficulty accessing toll-free service, journalists can dial directly at their own expense to Canadian telephone 403-532-5601)
Participant access code 25768#

In-person availability for TV outlets: 11 a.m. Vancouver time
University of British Columbia
Life Sciences Centre, 2350 Health Sciences Mall, Lecture Theatre 1002
Link to online map (This TV camera availability will include a very limited capacity for telephone calls from North American journalists: 1-877-385-4099,
participant access code: 2716744#)


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Research uncovers new details about brain anatomy and language in young children

2013-10-09
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Researchers from Brown University and King's College London have gained surprising new insights into how brain anatomy influences language acquisition in young children. Their study, published in the Journal of Neuroscience, found that the explosion of language acquisition that typically occurs in children between 2 and 4 years old is not reflected in substantial changes in brain asymmetry. Structures that support language ability tend to be localized on the left side of the brain. For that reason, the researchers expected to see ...

Debit cards deduct nutrition from school lunches

2013-10-09
ITHACA, N.Y. – School cafeterias that accept only electronic payments may be inadvertently promoting junkier food and adding empty calories to students' diets, say Cornell behavioral economists in the current issue of the journal Obesity. Paper and videos: http://foodpsychology.cornell.edu/op/debitcard To expedite long lunch lines and enable cleaner accounting, about 80 percent of schools use debit cards or accounts that parents can add money to for cafeteria lunch transactions, write David Just and Brian Wansink, co-directors of the Cornell Center for Behavioral Economics ...

Postpartum depression spans generations

2013-10-09
NORTH GRAFTON, Mass. (October 8, 2013) – A recently published study suggests that exposure to social stress not only impairs a mother's ability to care for her children but can also negatively impact her daughter's ability to provide maternal care to future offspring. Researchers at the Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University conducted a transgenerational study with female rats, examining the behavioral and physiological changes in mothers exposed to chronic social stress early in life as a model for postpartum depression and anxiety. A different ...

Geoscience Workforce Currents #77

2013-10-09
Alexandria, VA – Recent analysis of over 400 responses from the National Geoscience Student Exit Survey from 71 geoscience departments identified distinct trends for bachelor's-, master's- and PhD-level participants on quantitative classes and core science courses. Notably, 70% of all participants had taken Calculus I and II; following those courses, there was a significant drop in bachelor's- and master's-level candidates pursuing further mathematics coursework. Meanwhile, PhD candidates listed multiple courses past Calculus II. Other findings showed that all three groups ...

HIV vaccines elicit immune response in infants

2013-10-09
DURHAM, N.C. – A new analysis of two HIV vaccine trials that involved pediatric patients shows that the investigational vaccines stimulated a critical immune response in infants born to HIV-infected mothers, researchers at Duke Medicine report. The finding, reported Oct. 8, 2013, at the AIDS Vaccine 2013 meeting in Barcelona, Spain, examined samples from two previously completed pediatric HIV vaccine trials – called PACTG 230 and PACTG 326 - to determine whether they elicited a key immune response that has only recently been associated with reduced HIV infection. Searching ...

Juno slingshots past Earth on its way to Jupiter

2013-10-09
If you've ever whirled a ball attached to a string around your head and then let it go, you know the great speed that can be achieved through a slingshot maneuver. Similarly, NASA's Juno spacecraft will be passing within some 350 miles of Earth's surface at 3:21p.m. EDT Wednesday, Oct. 9, before it slingshots off into space on a historic exploration of Jupiter. It's all part of a scientific investigation that began with an August 2011 launch. The mission will begin in earnest when Juno arrives at Jupiter in July 2016. Bill Kurth, University of Iowa research scientist ...

Study: Women most often suffer urinary tract infections, but men more likely to be hospitalized

2013-10-09
DETROIT – While women are far more likely to suffer urinary tract infections, men are more prone to be hospitalized for treatment, according to a study by Henry Ford Hospital urologists. The first-of-its-kind research for the most common bacterial infection in the U.S. is important in providing predictors of hospital admission at a time when the health care industry is searching for ways to reduce costs. "We found that those patients who were hospitalized for treatment of urinary tract infections were most often older men, as well as those with serious kidney infections," ...

Blood vessel cells can repair, regenerate organs, say Weill Cornell scientists

2013-10-09
NEW YORK (October 8, 2013) -- Damaged or diseased organs may someday be healed with an injection of blood vessel cells, eliminating the need for donated organs and transplants, according to scientists at Weill Cornell Medical College. In studies appearing in recent issues of Stem Cell Journal and Developmental Cell, the researchers show that endothelial cells -- the cells that make up the structure of blood vessels -- are powerful biological machines that drive regeneration in organ tissues by releasing beneficial, organ-specific molecules. They discovered this by ...

From slowdown to shutdown -- US leadership in biomedical research takes a blow, says ASCB

2013-10-09
WASHINGTON, DC—OCTOBER 8, 2013—A senior researcher who can't get an answer from a shutdown NIH about a proposed clinical trial on a neurodegenerative disease, a Nobel Prize-winning scientist who fears that a generation of innovators will be lost, and a young investigator wearied at the lab by endless funding cuts and frustrated at home by the halt to promising research into a genetic disorder that affects her daughter—these are the leaders and members of the American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB) who today told a press conference at the National Press Club that the "temporary" ...

EARTH Magazine: New subduction zone may close Atlantic Ocean

2013-10-09
Alexandria, VA –Throughout the history of Earth, supercontinents have formed and ocean basins have opened and closed over timescales of 300 million to 500 million years. But scientists haven't found direct evidence of the in-between phase — an ocean basin that was opening, starting instead to close — until now. Thanks to new high-resolution surveys of the seafloor, scientists think they have evidence of that process starting in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Portugal. If they are right, this nascent subduction zone could close the Atlantic Ocean — in roughly 200 million ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Nearly one in ten unsure if they have Long Covid

Scientists unlock new dimension in light manipulation, ushering a new era in photonic technology

Current antivirals likely less effective against severe infection caused by bird flu virus in cows’ milk

Lassa fever vaccine enters phase 1 clinical trial

Institute for Healthcare Improvement Honors Hebrew SeniorLife’s Orchard Cove and NewBridge on the Charles

Dialing in the temperature needed for precise nuclear timekeeping

Fewer than half of Medicaid managed care plans provide all FDA-approved medications for alcohol use disorder

Mount Sinai researchers specific therapy that teaches patients to tolerate stomach and body discomfort improved functional brain deficits linked to visceral disgust that can cause of food avoidance in

New ACP guideline recommends combination therapy for acute episodic migraines

Last supper of 15-million-year-old freshwater fish

Slow, silent ‘scream’ of epithelial cells detected for first time

How big brains and flexible skulls led to the evolution of modern birds

Iguanas floated one-fifth of the way around the world to colonize Fiji

‘Audible enclaves’ could enable private listening without headphones

Twisting atomically thin materials could advance quantum computers

Impaired gastric myoelectrical rhythms associated with altered autonomic functions in patients with severe ischemic stroke

American College of Cardiology issues concise clinical guidance on evaluation and management of cardiogenic shock

Psychological prehabilitation improves surgical recovery, study finds

Neighborhood dispute among cells: Whichever successfully exerts force wins

Deadline extended for the fifth edition of the SWIM Award for Science Journalism

Unique dove species is the dodo of the Caribbean and in similar danger of dying out

Free University Brussels (VUB) opens its doors to censored American researchers

Neuroanatomy that sets humans apart from other primates

Stress and sex influence traumatic brain injury outcomes

Study: suppressing key protein may unlock immunotherapy for Glioblastoma

Early surgical intervention in children with sleep-disordered breathing reduces need for doctor visits, prescriptions

Statin use and risk of hepatocellular carcinoma and liver fibrosis in chronic liver disease

Gender-affirming hormone therapy and depressive symptoms among transgender adults

Surgery in kids with mild sleep-disordered breathing tied to fewer doctor visits, meds

Magnetic microalgae on a mission to become robots

[Press-News.org] Definitive imaging study finds no link between venous narrowing and multiple sclerosis
UBC-Vancouver Coastal Health research casts doubt on CCSVI theory