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Old 07-16-2010, 08:15 PM
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alongcamejones alongcamejones is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Adelaide, Australia
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10 yr Member
alongcamejones alongcamejones is offline
Junior Member
alongcamejones's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Adelaide, Australia
Posts: 47
10 yr Member
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Well done. This kind of corruption is more common than people know. Flat Earthers holding on to their dogma. Trouble is many hold power. This reminds me of another Italian who found sodium bicarbonate shrinks cancer tumours, rapidly. Sodi Bic, so cheap its at the supermarket. He speculates an out of control Fungi (candida) causes many cancers and the change in PH from Sodi Bic applied directly kills the fungi.

They jailed him for some months for doing an unapproved procedure.

Keep getting the info out there.

Jak

Quote:
Originally Posted by reverett123 View Post
From http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/78...er-relief.html

"Now, an Italian surgeon, Professor Paolo Zamboni, director of the Centre for Vascular Diseases at the University of Ferrara, is urging a radical rethink on MS. What began as a labour of love for Zamboni could, he claims, “revolutionise” management of the disease.

In 2005, Zamboni’s wife Elena was diagnosed with MS and he embarked on a mission to find out everything about it, from poring over medical literature dating back 100 years or more, to using state-of-the-art body-imaging techniques. ...

...It was in October last year that Walker began his own research, drawing on the limited scientific literature and anecdotal reports on the web. He was sceptical, at first, and questioned Zamboni’s iron hypothesis, but he was open to the possibility that restricted veins may be a factor in MS.

A diagnosis, then, was his first objective and he assumed that it would not be a problem arranging the test known as colour doppler sonography. He found an interventional radiologist (who worked at the Radcliffe and in private practice) familiar with Zamboni’s work and willing to help. He was also a private patient, happy to pay for the test and surgery if restricted veins were confirmed.

However, the test was prevented by neurologists at the Radcliffe on the grounds that it was not ethical or prudent because of doubts about Zamboni’s work, which has yet to be formally approved by clinical trials. ...

...“Out of 1,000 or so procedures so far, it is just two cases,” he says. Both are a cause for concern, yes, but not for the hysteria neurologists have generated. Walker believes a “turf war” is under way between neurologists here who believe they “own” MS, and radiologists and vascular surgeons who may have something to contribute to its management. Patients are being caught in the crossfire.

“Neurologists have been treating MS with powerful drugs for decades. Despite this, many patients suffer continued progression of their disease. Others give up the drugs because of side-effects. Treating any CCSVI symptoms is worth a try for many people.’’ ...
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