Archive for the ‘Heart News’ Category

CCSVI Liberation Procedure in Cabos San Lucas, Mexico

Sunday, June 27th, 2010

My story is the same as many others living with Multiple Sclerosis; it’s not pretty. MS is a chronic debilitating disease that lasts a lifetime. The only treatments available are unpleasant, expensive and the unfortunate reality is, they don’t work!
With MS, my life changed with symptoms like chronic fatigue, bladder control, and loss of mobility, balance and coordination. People often thought I was drunk; staring or making comments. Basic human functions (e.g. walking, balance, coordination, speaking, bowel and bladder control, etc.) become at times insurmountable tasks. Ultimately, these impediments affect virtually every area of life (work, getting a shower, driving, cognitive function, tolerance to heat, light, noise, etc.). Your abilities and life in general start to devolve and your scope of involvement in the world becomes much smaller, isolating you from friends, social activities, community events, physical activities, etc.; all the things that we identify with being a healthy, happy functioning human being. Everything becomes more difficult – period. You get the idea. Recently; I was told that I should not work and I am on the last treatment available to me. The next step of this devolution was going to be a wheelchair.
Thankfully, I was able to participate in a clinical trial of CCSVI and my life changes again in a very good way! I travel to the Clinic of the heart in Cabos SanLucas, Mexico with my friend (who has MS) and my sister-in-law, who is a Critical Care Nurse. I didn’t know what to expect going to a foreign country not knowing the language or the medical system. It turns out I had nothing to be afraid of; or anxious about!
At the Clinic of the Heart Dr. Moguel and his team of specialists are performing the CCSVI Liberation Procedure. I couldn’t have been more delighted and surprised with the small, clean and proficient clinic and its excellent staff. Everyone on staff was sincere, professional, attentive and caring. I felt reassured as soon as I walked through the door; language was no barrier even though I don’t speak a word of Spanish. The first day I was examined by a Neurologist, had an MRI and a Doppler Ultrasound. The day of my Liberation Procedure I was taken into the Cath Lab where it’s very cold because of the equipment. Dr. Moguel begins the cauterization going in through the groin; I could feel him unblocking the viens in my neck! After the procedure I went to recovery, I’m lying there and feel my feet and hands are hot! I started to think something’s wrong here!? Then as I became more awake I realize that’s what my hands and feet used to feel like years ago! The next day I didn’t need my cane, my fatigue was gone and my walking, balance, coordination, speaking, bowel and bladder control was much better!! My friend who used a cane since 1992 didn’t need her cane either! This is a truly amazing and life changing experience for me, I feel blessed. I would recommend this Clinic with its exemplary staff without hesitation I honestly have never met doctors like this in my life! I owe these beautiful people a debt of gratitude. Their skill, professionalism, and compassion made this a wonderful experience. Many thanks to Dr. Moguel and his team!!!
Sincerely,

Michelle MacNeil
7308 East Bay Hwy
Big Pond, Nova Scotia, Canada
B1J 1V3

TESTIMONIAL

Saturday, June 26th, 2010

As a 54 year old woman with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis I was getting really anxious to find something that would stop my MS and help give me a better quality of life.I began research into CCSVI information in November.
I began signing up for every place that was offering at least diagnosis,in the hopes it would lead me towards the procedure.
Suddenly,I found the clinic in Los Cabos.I signed in very quickly and was accepted to go on June 14th.

That was the trip that changed the course of my future!
Amerimed,Andres Brakke,and Dr.Raphael Moguel are my new found heros for sure.
I had blockages,and a valve problem which was corrected within no time.The staffing at the Clinic were all wonderful,very caring and excited for us all.
The next day I went out in the sun,swimming in the pool,for the first time in at least fifteen years. My intolerance to heat was gone.My balance was better,my feet were warm.I did not have tinnuitis,or brain fog. I felt like it must feel to be 100%,but to me it was 1000%.I could even jump.

Dr. Moguel was able to restore all my functions,and send me home a new woman with a completely new outlook on my life.
The treatment I had at the clinic was amazing.Mr. Andres Brakke,the administrator was so helpful and sincere,and Dr. Moguel was incredibly professional while being very friendly,excited and concerned.

I strongly recommend going there for the CCSVI procedure if you get the chance. It is also a beautiful setting with beautiful people,so you can enjoy yourself while there.
Anne Mac Donald,Sydney,Nova Scotia,Canada

CCSVI Liberation Treatment story

Saturday, June 26th, 2010

On June 13, 2010 I was enlisted into a clinical trial for CCSVI evaluation and treatment by Dr. Rafael Moguel at Amerimed Hospital in Cabo San Lucas Mexico. Dr. Moguel and the other doctors and staff at Amerimed Hospital were completely professional and competent. In fact Dr. Moguel was so kind and caring. I felt completely at ease in his care. He performed a venogram and diagnosed a blockage in one of my jugulars and angioplasty was performed to open it. I would never hesitate to return to Dr. Moguel’s care. Mr. Andres Brakke the Clinic Coordinator who made all non medical arrangements was also a godsend. He was always on hand to make sure anything we needed was taken care of. I will be forever indebted to Dr. Moguel and his staff.

Anne Outhwaite

CCSVI Liberation procedure in Los Cabos, Mexico

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

Recently 10 MS patients participated in a CCSVI Liberation procedure pilot group, the treatment was performed by Dr. Rafael Moguel, Director of the Clinic of the Heart and his team of specialists at Amerimed Hospital in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. The procedures were deemed very successful as all patients showed immediate and meaningful signs of improvement in mobility, balance and circulation.
The Clinic is now scheduling patients seeking CCSVI liberation treatment beginning June 28th. And since it does not require nor accepts waiting list deposits, the waiting list is growing at a rapid rate. At this time the cost of the procedure has been established at $9,750.00USD.
CCSVI Liberation procedure ground services include:
7 Nights lodging in a Junior Suite for 2 people at the Marina Fiesta Hotel Resort at the Cabo San Lucas Marina. Cost per night is $111.00USD per night. Tax included. Minimun stay 7 nights.
Accomodation total: $777.00USD
Marina Fiesta Resort electronic brochure:
http://www.marinafiestaresort.com/Marina-Fiesta-Resort-ENG.pdf
Round trip airport transportation per person: $ 70.00USD
Scheduling of patients for the CCSVI Liberation procedure is done on a first come, first served basis. Treatments will begin starting June 28th, please contact Andrés Brakke/CCSVI Coordinator for the Clinic of the Heart to schedule your treatment, transportation and lodging needs.

Nightly rate does not include meals.

CCSVI Liberation treatment trial by Dr. Rafael Moguel in Los Cabos deemed successful in all MS patients.

Sunday, June 20th, 2010

Last week a pilot group of 10 MS patients that were selected at random on a first come first served basis arrived in Los Cabos, Mexico to participate in the first CCSVI Liberation treatment trial performed by Dr. Rafael Moguel and his team of specialists at the Clinic of the Heart at Amerimed Hospital in Cabo San Lucas. The results were extremely good and immediate. Testimonials of participating patients will be posted shortly. Dr. Moguel will be posting his findings online shortly and is now scheduling procedures to begin June 28th for MS patients seeking treatment. No deposit is required to be placed on the waiting list, patients must email info@cardioabroad.com and provide contact information as well as a brief clinical profile.

CCSVI Procedure now available in Los Cabos, Mexico for MS sufferers

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

MS sufferers are now able to receive treatment at the Clinic of the Heart in Los Cabos, Mexico. No longer will it be necessary to travel to distant lands pay exhorbitant prices or endure long waiting lists to receive the care that can enhance the quality of life. The “liberation procedure” a surgical intervention that is used to clear the blocked veins that are consistently found in MS patients and are the basis of  the findings of Dr. Paolo Zamboni regarding the cause of MS, called CCSVI (Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency), which states that MS is caused, in whole or in part, by the abnormal narrowing of veins in the vascular system that drains the central nervous system (the jugular and azygous veins). The procedure is now performed by an experienced team of specialists headed by Dr. Rafael Moguel, the Director of the Clinic of the Heart in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico who is an Interventional Cardiologist since 1992, with training and expertise on cardiac and extracardiac procedures including the brain.
Dr. Moguel is a fellow of the Society for Cardiac Angiography and Intervention (SCAI) among others. Need help? contact info@cardioabroad.com or Dr. Moguel directly at: cathboss@gmail.com
www.cardioabroad.com

CCSVI Clinical Trials are now being performed in Los Cabos

Monday, May 31st, 2010

Dr. Rafael Moguel, the Director of the Clinic of the Heart at the Amerimed Hospitals in Los Cabos is conducting CCSVI clinical trials for MS sufferers. If interested in participating in the trial contact:
Dr. Rafael Moguel at cathboss@gmail.com

CCSVI A Huge Breakthrough in MS

Monday, May 31st, 2010

Written by Ashton Embry PhD for New Pathways Magazine. Nº 57. September/October 2009 Since then, clinical testing is being performed by Dr. Rafael Moguel and his team of specialists at the Clinic of the Heart in the Amerimed Hospital in Los Cabos, Mexico

In August, I received a message asking me what I thought about CCSVI in multiple sclerosis. I had the same reaction most of you did when you read the title of this article – “What the hell is CCSVI?” A Google search told me it stood for “chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency” and a PubMed search led me to a handful of papers on CCSVI, all authored by an Italian vascular researcher/surgeon named Paolo Zamboni.

The papers provided solid and mind-expanding evidence that an entirely new disease process was part of MS. It soon became clear that the concept of CCVSI had the potential to completely change how we saw MS and how to treat it.

The Italian researchers discovered that, in persons with multiple sclerosis, the veins which acted as the main drainage pathways for blood flowing from the brain back to the heart were substantially narrowed and even blocked. These included the jugular veins, veins along the spinal column, and other veins I had not heard of before such as the azygous vein.

The researchers had never seen these problems in anyone before. Their equipment allowed them to study the blood flow in the veins and to also take pictures of the veins. They found that all the persons with MS they examined had impaired venous drainage from the brain and that such a problem caused the phenomenon of “reflux”. This means the venous blood would flow back toward the brain as it established new pathways around the blocked and narrowed veins. They labeled this compromised venous drainage as CCSVI.

Improper venous drainage is well known in the lower torso of many people (e.g. varicose veins, etc). In some cases, it has been demonstrated that poor venous flow in the lower body can result in iron deposition and associated inflammation. Furthermore, sclerosis and degenerative lesions can occur with the inflammation.

Knowing the problems that poor venous drainage can cause in the lower torso, Zamboni and his co-authors offered the reasonable interpretation that the reflux action of the blood flow into the veins of the brain resulted in iron deposition and inflammation of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Notably iron deposits have long been documented in MS lesions and it is well known that every MS lesion forms symmetrically around a vein. Such characteristics of MS lesions have never been satisfactorily explained before the Zamboni discoveries.

In the MS literature, there are two opposing hypotheses for how MS autoimmunity begins. The most popular one is that myelin-sensitive T cells are activated through molecular mimicry by a childhood virus such as EBV. The myelin-sensitive T cells then cross the BBB and lead an autoimmune attack on myelin.

The other hypothesis is that the initial event in the MS disease process is a breech of the BBB and the consequent exposure of the central nervous system to the immune system. This uncovering of previously hidden antigens not seen before by the immune system leads to an autoimmune attack on myelin.

With the work of Dr Zamboni, it now appears that the second hypothesis, the breech of the BBB due to impaired venous drainage, is the best explanation for the initiation of MS autoimmunity. In support of this, the researchers found that, of the 109 persons with MS studied, every last one of them had impaired venous drainage. Furthermore, of the 177 control subjects, a group that included persons with other neurological diseases and healthy people of various ages, not a single one had impaired venous drainage from the brain. Such a 100% separation of persons with MS from controls on the basis of impaired venous drainage leaves little doubt that such a phenomenon is very important in the MS disease process.

Another important observation made by Zamboni’s team is that the pattern of reflux, that is, the specific pathway the blood uses to flow back to the brain, showed a strong correlation to the type of MS. Persons with PPMS had a different reflux pattern that those with RRMS and SPMS. Furthermore, the PPMS reflux pattern provided a good explanation why this form of MS is more aggressive and problematic.

The other convincing data that demonstrates that CCSVI is a key part of MS are the results from the use of a treatment which relieves the venous drainage problems. This treatment is called „the liberation procedure”. The problematic veins are first identified by venography. Then, balloon angioplasty is used to open up the problematic veins and, in some cases, stents are inserted in non- responding sections. The procedure is relatively non-invasive and is done in day hospital under local anesthesia. Access to the veins is through the left femoral vein in the thigh. Total time in the hospital is usually less than 6 hours and the subject has a compression dressing on for 24 hours.

Dr Zamboni has described the results of the use of the liberation procedure on 51 patients with relapsing-remitting MS. Eighteen of the subjects were treated in emergency with an acute attack and all of them had their symptoms completely resolved within a few hours to a few days. The other subjects had a greatly reduced yearly attack rate and, notably, the only ones experiencing an attack following the procedure were those who had a recurrence of the impaired venous drainage problems. The subjects also reported a dramatic improvement in chronic fatigue. In summary, it would appear that the relief of venous drainage problems results in major improvements of MS symptoms. This is further evidence of the major role that CCSVI plays in MS.

Finally the researchers noted that there was no difference in the severity of venous drainage problems between those using an MS drug and those not on a drug.

Given that CCSVI explains why PPMS differs from RRMS, as well as the occurrence of previously inexplicable features of MS lesions (e.g. venocentricity, iron deposits), CCSVI becomes a very compelling explanation for the initiation of CNS autoimmunity which drives MS. Further research is needed to confirm this.

Perhaps the most important question that remains is “what is the ultimate cause of the venous drainage problems?” Zamboni and colleagues did not offer any explanations/speculations on this. Hopefully, this question will be the subject of an intensive research effort. It is worth noting that, given adequate vitamin D in childhood prevents MS in most cases, vitamin D supply must have a substantial effect on the venous drainage system.

This new understanding of the MS disease process makes the use of the recommended nutritional strategies even more imperative. These strategies enhance blood flow, strengthen the BBB, counteract autoimmune reactions and quite possibly improve venous drainage from the brain. Overall, the Zamboni work provides further insight into why nutritional strategies work so well for many people.

In answer to the question in the title of this article, I am convinced that CCSVI is a huge breakthrough for MS. Correction of this problem with a relatively simple procedure may well turn out to be a very effective, long lasting, drug- free treatment for MS at the time of diagnosis. However, a great deal of research and clinical testing will have to happen before CCSVI is widely accepted as a key part of MS and the liberation procedure becomes standard procedure. In the past, non-drug treatments for MS have been marginalized, mainly for financial reasons. I predict it will be a long, hard fight to get the treatment of CCSVI from the laboratory to the clinic.

Liberation Procedure for MS sufferers

Saturday, May 29th, 2010

“I am confident that this could be a revolution for the research and diagnosis of multiple sclerosis,” Dr. Zamboni said in an interview.
Not everyone is so bullish: Skeptics warn the evidence is too scant and speculative to start rewriting medical textbooks. Even those intrigued by the theory caution that MS sufferers should not rush off to get the surgery – nicknamed the “liberation procedure” – until more research is done.
U.S. and Canadian researchers are trying to test Dr. Zamboni’s premise.
For the Italian professor, however, the quest was both personal and professional and the results were stunning.
Fighting for his wife’s health, Dr. Zamboni looked for answers in the medical literature. He found repeated references, dating back a century, to excess iron as a possible cause of MS. The heavy metal can cause inflammation and cell death, hallmarks of the disease. The vascular surgeon was intrigued – coincidentally, he had been researching how iron buildup damages blood vessels in the legs, and wondered if there could be a similar problem in the blood vessels of the brain.
Using ultrasound to examine the vessels leading in and out of the brain, Dr. Zamboni made a startling find: In more than 90 per cent of people with multiple sclerosis, including his spouse, the veins draining blood from the brain were malformed or blocked. In people without MS, they were not.
He hypothesized that iron was damaging the blood vessels and allowing the heavy metal, along with other unwelcome cells, to cross the crucial brain-blood barrier. (The barrier keeps blood and cerebrospinal fluid separate. In MS, immune cells cross the blood-brain barrier, where they destroy myelin, a crucial sheathing on nerves.)
More striking still was that, when Dr. Zamboni performed a simple operation to unclog veins and get blood flowing normally again, many of the symptoms of MS disappeared. The procedure is similar to angioplasty, in which a catheter is threaded into the groin and up into the arteries, where a balloon is inflated to clear the blockages. His wife, who had the surgery three years ago, has not had an attack since.
The researcher’s theory is simple: that the underlying cause of MS is a condition he has dubbed “chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency.” If you tackle CCSVI by repairing the drainage problems from the brain, you can successfully treat, or better still prevent, the disease.
“If this is proven correct, it will be a very, very big discovery because we’ll completely change the way we think about MS, and how we’ll treat it,” said Bianca Weinstock-Guttman, an associate professor of neurology at the State University of New York at Buffalo.
The initial studies done in Italy were small but the outcomes were dramatic. In a group of 65 patients with relapsing-remitting MS (the most common form) who underwent surgery, the number of active lesions in the brain fell sharply, to 12 per cent from 50 per cent; in the two years after surgery, 73 per cent of patients had no symptoms.
“ I am confident that this could be a revolution for the research and diagnosis of multiple sclerosis ”— Dr. Paolo Zamboni
Augusto Zeppi, a 40-year-old resident of the northern Italian city of Ferrara, was one of those patients. Diagnosed with MS nine years ago, he suffered severe attacks every four months that lasted weeks at a time – leaving him unable to use his arms and legs and with debilitating fatigue. “Everything I was dreaming for my future adult life, it was game over,” he said.
Scans showed that his two jugular veins were blocked, 60 and 80 per cent respectively. In 2007, he was one of the first to undergo the experimental surgery to unblock the veins. He had a second operation a year later, when one of his jugular veins was blocked anew.
After the procedures, Mr. Zeppi said he was reborn. “I don’t remember what it’s like to have MS,” he said. “It gave me a second life.”
Buffalo researchers are now recruiting 1,700 adults and children from the United States and Canada. They plan to test MS sufferers and non-sufferers alike and, using ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging, do detailed analyses of blood flow in and out of the brain and examine iron deposits.
Another researcher, Mark Haacke, an adjunct professor at McMaster University in Hamilton, is urging patients to send him MRI scans of their heads and necks so he can probe the Zamboni theory further. Dr. Haacke is a world-renowned expert in imaging who has developed a method of measuring iron buildup in the brain.
“Patients need to speak up and say they want something like this investigated … to see if there’s credence to the theory,” he said.
MS societies in Canada and the United States, however, have reacted far more cautiously to Dr. Zamboni’s conclusion. “Many questions remain about how and when this phenomenon might play a role in nervous system damage seen in MS, and at the present time there is insufficient evidence to suggest that this phenomenon is the cause of MS,” said the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada.
The U.S. society goes further, discouraging patients from getting tested or seeking surgical treatment. Rather, it continues to promote drug treatments used to alleviate symptoms, which include corticosteroids, chemotherapy agents and pain medication.
Many people with multiple sclerosis, though, are impatient for results. Chatter about CCSVI is frequent in online MS support groups, and patients are scrambling to be part of the research, particularly when they hear the testimonials.
Kevin Lipp, a 49-year-old resident of Buffalo, was diagnosed with MS a decade ago and has suffered increasingly severe attacks, especially in the heat. (Heat sensitivity is a common symptom of MS.) His symptoms were so bad that he was unable to work and closed his ice-cream shop.
Mr. Lipp was tested and doctors discovered blockages in both his jugular and azygos veins. In January of this year, he travelled to Italy for surgery, which cleared five blockages, and he began to feel better almost immediately.
“I felt good. I felt totally normal. I felt like I did years ago,” he said. He has not had an attack since.
As part of the research project, Mr. Lipp’s siblings have also been tested. His two sisters, both of whom have MS, have significant blockages and iron deposits, while his brother, who does not have MS, has neither iron buildup nor blocked arteries.
While it has long been known that there is a genetic component to multiple sclerosis, the new theory is that it is CCSVI that is hereditary – that people are born with malformed valves and strictures in the large veins of the neck and brain. These problems lead to poor blood drainage and even reversal of blood flow direction that can cause inflammation, iron buildup and the brain lesions characteristic of multiple sclerosis.
It is well-established that the symptoms of MS are caused by a breakdown of myelin, a fatty substance that coats nerve cells and plays a crucial role in transmitting messages to the central nervous system. When those messages are blurred, nerves malfunction, causing all manner of woes, including blurred eyesight, loss of sensation in the limbs and even paralysis.
However, it is unclear what triggers the breakdown of myelin. There are various theories, including exposure to a virus in childhood, vitamin D deficiency, hormones – and now, buildup of iron in the brain because of poor blood flow.
While he is convinced of the significance of his discovery, Dr. Zamboni recognizes that medicine is slow to accept new theories and even slower to act on them. Regardless, he can take satisfaction in knowing that the woman who inspired the quest, and perhaps a dramatic breakthrough, has benefited tremendously.
Dr. Zamboni’s wife, Elena, has undergone a battery of scans and neurological tests and her multiple sclerosis is, for all intents and purposes, gone.
“This is probably the best prize of the research,” he said.

Heart Attack in Mexico

Saturday, March 20th, 2010

A lot has been written regarding the great care provided by Dr. Rafael Moguel and the Amerimed Hospital in Cabo San Lucas, I for one can’t even begin to express my gratitude to Rafael for saving my life allowing me to continue caring for my family, being a husband to my wife and a dad to my son, things we take for granted when we are healthy and cherish when we encounter a brush with tragedy. I came accross this recent testimonial from a man who like myself met Rafael Moguel under dire circumstances and have since been privliged with his friendship as he continues to be my primary heart ard cardiovascular physician.

Andrés Brakke

Phoenix, Arizona

I am writing you to give my testimony for the excellent and timely care that you and your staff gave me during my heart attack on our recent trip to Cab San Lucas. Your fully equipped hospital, Amerimed, with a Cath Lab and cardiologists, enabled me to survive this severe heart attack. You and your team responded quickly, completing the treatment and the procedure of installing two stents within the critical 90 minute window. Your communication with my wife and me was excellent and compassionate, explaining my condition, what procedures you would take and why, and continued during my 5 day stay there. You were competent and knowledgeable about specific issues regarding the stent choice and my conditions, and your recommendations for treatment for me upon returning to Oregon. My wife was very calm during this stressful ordeal inpart to the excellent care and quality of service I received from you and your team.

We also appreciated you quickly forwarding all records and images to our doctors in Oregon so that we could meet with them the day after we returned. My Cardiologist agreed with all that you did. He wants my heart to recover for two weeks, and then I will have additional tests to determine the need for a third stent at that time. I am recovering my strength and feeling well, thanks to you and your team.

I am very happy with the outstanding care I received from you and the staff at Amerimed, Cabo San Lucas.

Cordially,
Dick Dunnahoe