Saskatchewan man chosen for MS liberation therapy trial in U.S.

Posted: Published on August 17th, 2012

This post was added by Dr Simmons

A Saskatchewan man who is going to the U.S. to see if he can take part in the so-called liberation treatment for multiple sclerosis says hes both terrified and excited.

Andrew Dahlen is the first Saskatchewan resident to go to Albany, N.Y., for the final eligibility screening in a two-year, double-blind clinical trial.

The province is putting up $2.2 million to have 86 Saskatchewan patients take part.

The nature of the double-blind study means half of those participating in the trial will receive liberation therapy and half will get a placebo procedure.

Dahlen says even if he were to get the placebo that would still be good research on the progression of MS.

The 28-year-old Saskatoon music lover, who lost the ability to play guitar because of the disease, also says the possible benefit would outweigh the risks.

The therapy was devised by Italian physician Paolo Zamboni, who has suggested MS may be caused by narrowed veins that prevent blood from properly draining from the brain.

He says that could result in iron deposits that damage neurons. Zamboni calls the condition chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency, or CCSVI.

Zambonis treatment uses balloon angioplasty to open the veins in the same way coronary arteries narrowed by plaque are unblocked.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a warning in May about liberation therapy.

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Saskatchewan man chosen for MS liberation therapy trial in U.S.

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