Thursday, April 17, 2008

I TAKE 2400MG A DAY-GLAD TO KNOW IT'S WORKING

http://www.npicenter.com/anm/templates/newsATemp.aspx?articleid=21043&zoneid=2

CBS-TV News Feature Reports on the Promising Results of a Recent Cognizin Study-2008/04/15 - Kyowa Hakko

(New York, NY) April 14, 2008 – A report by WBZ-TV, the CBS-TV affiliate in Boston, focusing on the most recent Cognizin Citicoline study, is being fed to all CBS-TV news affiliates nationwide. The news feature includes an interview with Dr. Perry Renshaw, director at McLean Hospital and professor at Harvard Medical School on the Cognizin study which demonstrated the patented supplement’s positive impact on the cognitive skills of healthy, middle aged adults. To view the CBS-TV report and accompanying article, visit www.cognizin.com.
Kyowa Hakko is an international health ingredients manufacturer and world leader in the development, manufacturing and marketing of pharmaceuticals, nutraceuticals and food products. The maker of the branded ingredients Cognizin® Citicoline, Resilen™ Hyaluronic Acid , Lumistor® L-Hydroxyproline, Kyowa CoQ10®, Setria® Glutathione and Sustamine™ Alanyl Glutamine, Kyowa offers manufacturers and formulators one of the industry’s most extensive lines of over 50 amino acids and related compounds, including D-Amino acids and branch-chain amino acids, as well as nucleic acids, bio-products and fine chemicals.
# # # #
Dr. Perry RenshawDr. Perry Renshaw, M.D., Ph.D. is director of the Brain Imaging Center at McLean Hospital and professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. He is the leading scientific researcher on the health benefits of Citicoline. Dr. Renshaw attended the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine where he received his Ph.D. in biophysics and his M.D.Media Note: For further information, or to schedule an interview, please contact Karen Todd at 734.214.2296 or todd@kyowa-usa.com. For more information about Kyowa Hakko visit www.kyowa-usa.com.

A RULE TO LIVE BY

"Life: It's a rugged road! But if we don't surf the waves, we are under them!"

Monday, April 14, 2008

In my own life "study",

I find that if I slow down, ALS speeds up.

Gotta keep movin'.

Resistance exercise slows functional decline in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Supervised Resistance Exercise Slowed Functional Loss in Small Study
by Amy Labbe
People with early-stage ALS who engaged in a supervised resistance exercise program had better muscle function after six months than a similar group that participated only in a stretching program, say U.S. and Canadian researchers who recently conducted a 27-person study.
Although the debate persists over whether or not exercise is beneficial or detrimental in ALS, these latest study results represent a potential first step toward resolving the long-standing controversy.
The research team, which included a physician and physical therapists associated with MDA/ALS Centers in New York and St. Louis, found that, even though exercise may not have any ultimate influence on disease progression, it may temporarily slow loss of strength and function and minimize muscle wasting that results from lack of movement.
In a paper published in the June 5 issue of Neurology, the investigators say they randomly assigned 13 out of 27 subjects with mild to moderate weakness to a regimen of stretching and resistance exercise. They assigned the other 14 to a control group that performed only stretching exercises. Eight people in the stretching-plus-resistance exercise group and 10 in the stretching group completed the trial.
Physical therapist Jeanine Schierbecker assesses the strength of a man with ALS.
The stretching routine was the same for both groups and was performed daily, while those in the resistance exercise group added individualized exercises using cuff weights three times a week.
After initial instruction, all exercises were performed at home, with telephone monitoring every two weeks and physical assessments every month.
After six months, those in the resistance exercise program had a smaller decline in muscle strength than those performing only stretching exercises.
"Our study, although small, showed that the resistance exercise group had significantly better function, measured by the ALS Functional Rating Scale and upper and lower extremity subscale scores, and quality of life without adverse effects as compared to subjects receiving usual care," said study author Julaine Florence, a physical therapist at Washington University in St. Louis.
Physical therapist Jeanine Schierbecker, also a study author and physical therapist at Washington University, said her "best recommendation is that, if a patient with ALS is interested in pursuing an exercise program, they should discuss it with their physician and be evaluated by a knowledgeable, ALS-savvy physical therapist."

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Neuratax: A unique Motor Neuron Disease product.

Good news for Motor Neuron Disease sufferers

http://www.neuratax.com/product.html

Fortunately for Motor Neuron Disease sufferers studies of the main and established traditional texts consistently highlight a number of plants and herbs for their ability to heal Motor Neuron Disease. Researchers at Botanical Sources having mined these texts finalized a list of the most effective plants and herbs for Motor Neuron Disease. A list of these plants and herbs with their specific properties can be found here (Please click). The most effective parts of the plants (e.g. stem, seed, leaves, roots etc) and the manner of extracting their inner content were established. As a result, we are now able to form a calculated mixture of these pure natural extracts in the form of an oral pill highly efficacious for Motor Neuron Disease. Where modern science has helped is firstly in establishing proper therapeutic dosage and secondly in testing the product for safety and side effects.
Following FDA and DSHEA guidelines at all stages of development we are now able to present what we believe is the most proven, effective, safe and easy to use product for healing Motor Neuron Disease and titled it Neuratax.

Friday, April 11, 2008

German lawmakers ease limits on stem cell research


German lawmakers ease limits on stem cell research
By Kerstin GehmlichFri Apr 11, 10:46 AM ET

German lawmakers voted on Friday to ease restrictions on stem cell research although the approved changes did not go as far as many scientists had hoped.
Under the bill approved by the Bundestag lower house of parliament, researchers will be allowed to import stem cells created before May 1, 2007, rather than only use cells existing before 2002, as current law prescribed.
Stem cell research is a divisive issue in Germany, in part due to Nazi genetic experiments linked to creating a "master race."
Scientists say stem cells offer the potential to treat conditions such as diabetes and Parkinson's disease and to regenerate damaged organs. Opponents of the research say it is unethical and involves the destruction of living embryos.
Following an emotionally-charged debate, 346 lawmakers voted in favor of the more recent cut-off date, and 228 against it.
Technology Minister Annette Schavan was among those who had backed the new 2007 deadline, saying Germany had to ensure its scientists could keep up globally.
"I think ... moving the date is right so as to maintain the small corridor for research which the 2002 stem cell law provided," she told parliament ahead of the vote.
Six years ago, the German parliament banned the production of embryonic cells from pre-existing stem cell lines.
To ensure foreign laboratories did not produce cell lines for the German market, it also barred German scientists from working on any lines created after January 1, 2002.
Scientists had complained that German restrictions prevented them from keeping up with global advances and some researchers had called for current restrictions to be scrapped altogether.
German laws are tighter than in some other European countries, including Britain and Sweden, and researchers have expressed frustration that they cannot take part in international projects using lines created after 2002.
The German Research Foundation (DFG) said young scientists were at risk of moving abroad if rules remained too restrictive.
"There are more than 500 cell lines worldwide, but German researchers are only allowed to use 21 old cell lines, which are in part contaminated and have developed in such a way that in some cases they are no longer comparable," DFG vice president Joerg Hinrich Hacker told ZDF television.
Many of those who believe life begins at conception say cells should be harvested from adults, not embryos. The German Bishops' Conference had warned against softening the law.
"Freedom of research must not be weighed against the fundamental protection of life," said Archbishop of Freiburg Robert Zollitsch, who heads the Conference.
German lawmakers on Friday voted against two other, more radical proposals on stem cell research -- one calling for a ban on all embryonic stem cell research, the other suggesting the cut-off date should not only be changed, but scrapped entirely.
(Reporting by Kerstin Gehmlich; Editing by Matthew Jones)

Thursday, April 10, 2008

TELL-TALE PROTEIN CLUMPING IN ALS IS LESS COMPLEX THAN EXPECTED

From: alscenter@jhmi.edu
To: The ALS Community Date: April 10, 2008 Subject: Robert Packard Center ALS News
Network Article available online at:http://www.alscenter.org/news/briefs/080410.cfm

TELL-TALE PROTEIN CLUMPING IN ALS IS LESS COMPLEX THAN EXPECTED
That could be a good thing for potential therapies, researchers sayMore than a decade ago, when scientists uncovered a mutant gene for onetype of heritable ALS and saw that its resulting protein, calledsuperoxide dismutase (SOD1) was also flawed, they beheld their firstclue to the cause of the vile disease. More exciting, even, was the possibility * because of similarities inall forms of ALS * that the find would ultimately lead to therapy.Today, while cell and animal models of ALS engineered with the mutanthuman SOD1 gene have vastly advanced knowledge, the answers on howflawed SOD1 contributes to motor neurons' downfall lie just out ofreach. This March, however, a U.S. research team including Packard Centerbiochemist/neuroscientist David Borchelt brought the truth of theSOD1-ALS connection closer. In two studies reported in the Journal of Biochemistry, the scientistsperformed the first in-depth analysis of abnormal, microscopic clumps ofmutant SOD1 protein that form in motor neurons. They also clarifiedcell mechanisms that produce them. Protein aggregates are a hallmark of Parkinson's and Alzheimer's andother neurodegenerative diseases. Though the makeup and timing of thedeposits varies according to disease, the fact that they're toxic seemscertain. In ALS, aggregates appear both in animal models and in humanswith the disorder. And earlier animal model work in Borchelt's lab hasshown that clumped mutant SOD1 appears with the onset of diseasesymptoms. Until now, however, no one had closely analyzed the aggregates. Knowing their makeup could provide clues to the process that made themand, ultimately, perhaps, explain why they're toxic.In one study, Borchelt and a scientific team at UCLA, led by JulianWhitelegge and Joan Valentine, extracted aggregated SOD1 from spinalcords of three different varieties of mutant SOD1 mice, all of whichwere models for ALS. Using a variety of biochemical techniques, including mass spectroscopyand sophisticated chromatography, they showed mutant SOD1 to be the onlyprotein found consistently in the clumps. "This suggests thataggregating comes naturally to abnormal SOD1 molecules," Borchelt says;"by itself, then, mutant SOD1 could be responsible for the masses we seein cells." The clumping might be part of cell attempts to compact theprotein so its toxic portions are hidden. "We won't know what the clumps do, though, until we find how to keepthem from forming," he adds.
To that end, the scientists are investigating what triggers aggregates.Earlier work hinted that oxidative stress * the sort of insult that anumber of environmental events can deliver * might have a role inmaking mutant SOD1 "sticky." But this new research says that's unlikely,that something intrinsic in the molecule is at work. "These studies will help us identify the events crucial to generatingsubstances toxic to cells in ALS," says Borchelt, "while they'll alsoreveal chemical targets most likely to respond to therapy."
Packard scientist Borchelt heads the McKnight Brain Institute at the University of Florida, Gainsville.==========================About The Robert Packard Center for ALS Research at Johns Hopkins http://www.alscenter.org/

Knopp NeuroSciences Initiates Phase 2 Study of KNS-760704 in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

Apr. 07, 2008-

-Knopp Neurosciences Inc. ("Knopp") said it initiated the first Phase 2 study of KNS-760704 in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).

Additional study details are available www.clinicaltrials.gov

http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content~content=a788680908~db=all~jumptype=rss

http://www.knoppneurosciences.com

The study is designed as a two-part, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study to evaluate the safety and tolerability of KNS-760704 oral tablets. It will be conducted at approximately 20 centers in the U.S.
In Part 1 of the study, approximately 80 ALS patients from ages 21 to 80 whose symptoms started within the past two years will receive 12 weeks of treatment with low-dose, mid-dose, or high-dose KNS-760704 or matching placebo. Participants who complete Part 1 will be eligible for a Part 2 extension in which they will be re-randomized and will receive up to 28 weeks of treatment with either low-dose or high-dose KNS-760704.
Additional study details are available at www.clinicaltrials.gov.
Knopp said it plans to initiate a larger proof-of-concept study in 2009 if KNS-760704 is shown to be safe and well-tolerated in this Phase 2a study.
"Following the successful completion of our Phase 1 healthy volunteer studies in late 2007, we're pleased to be advancing KNS-760704 into clinical trials for ALS patients," said Michael Bozik, M.D., president and chief executive officer of Knopp. "This step represents another important milestone for Knopp in our efforts to develop an effective treatment for this relentless disease."
About KNS-760704
KNS-760704 is a chirally pure oral formulation of the synthetic amino-benzothiazole (6R)-4,5,6,7-tetrahydro-N6-propyl-2,6-benzothiazolediamine dihydrochloride monohydrate in clinical development for the treatment of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Like its S(-) optical enantiomer, pramipexole dihydrochloride (Mirapex(R)), KNS-760704 has been shown to be effective in a range of neuroprotective assays. Unlike Mirapex(R), a selective, high affinity dopamine agonist approved for the treatment of Parkinson's disease, KNS-760704 exhibits very limited dopamine receptor affinity, making it possible to clinically evaluate its potential neuroprotective activity over a broad dose range. The compound's use in ALS has received orphan drug designation from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Phase 1 studies in healthy volunteers have been completed.

I FOUND THIS ON THE PATIENTSLIKEME.COM SITE

IT MAKES YOU THINK...... AND ASK WHY.................


A man went to a shop, picked up a beautiful cup and said ‘My God! This cup is so beautiful’. Suddenly the cup started talking.
“Oh man, I am beautiful right now, but what was the state of my being before the pot-maker made me so beautiful? I was sheer mud when the potter pulled me out from mother earth. I felt wreathed in tremendous pain wile being separated from mother earth. But potter said, ‘just wait’. Then he churned me. I felt giddy when I was churned, and asked ‘why are you so cruel?’ he said ‘just wait’. Then he put me in an oven & heated me up. I felt completely burnt. There was tremendous pain and I asked again ‘why are you so cruel?He said ‘just wait’. After that he poured hot paint on me and I felt the fumes and irritation. I again asked ‘ why are you so cruel? He again said ‘just wait’. He put me into an oven and again heated me to make me strong, I felt life was so painful hence pleaded with the potter to leave me free. He said ‘ just wait’. And finally he took me to a mirror and said “now look at urself’. Lo, what a change! I found myself so beautiful.”
When you feel the pain, it means god is working on us to improve us-
THIS IS MY ANSWER-----------really, GOD, is that what you're doing?

Wednesday, April 9, 2008


FDA to take key stem-cell step


FDA to take key stem-cell step


Government advisors meet this week to discuss designs for embryonic stem cell testing in humans.

By Aaron Smith, CNNMoney.

http://money.cnn.com/2008/04/08/news/companies/stem_cell/?postversion=2008040915

"THE LAST LECTURE"-RANDY PAUSCH

“We cannot change the cards we are dealt, just how we play the hand.”—Randy Pausch
BOY, IS THAT TRUE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
FOR THOSE THAT MISSED THIS LECTURE-HERE IT IS AGAIN-HE WAS ON TONIGHT--CH.7-W/ DIANE SAWYER

TREMENDOUS COURAGE-I WATCH THIS EVERY NOW AND AGAIN TO KEEP ME POSITIVE. IT'S ABOUT ACHIEVING YOUR DREAMS....................It's about the importance of overcoming obstacles, of enabling the dreams of others, of seizing every moment (because “time is all you have...and you may find one day that you have less than you think”). It's about living.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ji5_MqicxSo

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

ALS Therapy Development Institute Signs Collaboration Agreement with the Allen Institute for Brain Science

ALS Therapy Development Institute Signs Collaboration Agreement with the Allen Institute for Brain Science

Long-term arrangement between two leading non-profit research institutes designed to validate drug targets for the fatal neurodegenerative disease that affects 30,000 Americans

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - April 08, 2008 - The ALS Therapy Development Institute (ALS TDI) today announced it has entered into an agreement with the Allen Institute for Brain Science in Seattle, Wash. for in situ hybridization (ISH) services using diseased tissues from a preclinical animal model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis - ALS, or Lou Gehrig's disease. ALS is a progressive and fatal neurodegenerative disease with no known cause or cure. Under the terms of the agreement, the Allen Institute will perform ISH for genes, in the spinal cord, identified by ALS TDI researchers as being associated with the disease's progression. The aim of this work is to identify cells that are associated with changes in gene expression so that treatments can be directed towards those cells specifically. "The ongoing data mining efforts at the ALS TDI are identifying hundreds of therapeutic targets that need to be evaluated in vivo. Identification of cells to be targeted by treatments is a crucial step in therapeutic development," said Steven Perrin, Ph.D., Chief Scientific Officer of ALS TDI. "The publication of the Allen Brain Atlas-Mouse Brain project established the Allen Institute as leaders in ISH technologies and capabilities."At the end of 2007, ALS TDI completed an enormous database of transcriptome information for the SOD1 mouse model, the leading mouse model used internationally by ALS researchers. ALS TDI, a leader in translational research for ALS, has also initiated a similar project and experiment collecting blood samples from people living with the disease today and is expected to expand their collection project and experiments to include other tissues. Through a multi-year funding partnership with the Muscular Dystrophy Association and its Augie's Quest Initiative, ALS TDI expanded its research program to include the largest genomic research program in the history of the disease."The goal of the collaboration is to determine exactly where in the spinal cord the genes associated with the progression of ALS are active," said Elaine Jones, Chief Operating Officer of the Allen Institute for Brain Science. "Helping scientists worldwide accelerate their research programs is central to our mission. We're thrilled to be working with ALS TDI to help advance ALS research." The first samples will arrive from ALS TDI to the Allen Institute in April 2008. A progress report will be provided as part of an annual Leadership Summit and research symposium hosted by ALS TDI in Boston, Mass. on October 20, 2008.

About ALS Therapy Development Institute The ALS Therapy Development Institute (http://www.als.net/), based in Cambridge, Mass., operates the world's largest research and development program focused exclusively on ALS. Its staff of 30 scientists and research technicians work on behalf of ALS patients to discover and advance novel therapeutics for treating and ultimately curing ALS. The non-profit biotechnology institute excels in identifying novel disease targets, discovering compounds that may act against these targets, and screening potential treatments for clinical development. For more information, visit http://www.als.net/ or call 617.441.7200

About the Allen Institute for Brain ScienceLaunched in 2003, the Seattle-based Allen Institute for Brain Science is an independent, 501(c)(3) nonprofit medical research organization dedicated to advancing brain research. Started with $100 million in seed money from philanthropist Paul G. Allen, the Institute takes on projects at the leading edge of science-far-reaching projects at the intersection of biology and technology. The resulting data create publicly available resources that fuel discovery for countless other researchers worldwide. The Institute's data and tools are available on the web free of charge at http://www.alleninstitute.org/.

About Augie's Quest Fitness pioneer Augie Nieto started Augie's Quest (http://www.augiesquest.org/) in conjunction with MDA's ALS Division. Nieto is co-founder and former president of Life Fitness of Chicago, and chairman of Octane Fitness. He and his wife, Lynne, serve as co-chairpersons of MDA's ALS Division. Nieto received a diagnosis of ALS in March 2005.

About MDAMDA (http://www.mda.org/) is the world's largest provider of ALS services and funder of ALS research. Over the years, it has expended almost $200 million in this effort. It operates 225 neuromuscular disease clinics across the country and 37 ALS-specific research and care centers. __________________

Monday, April 7, 2008

Bidders up: Lou Gehrig's cap goes up for Internet bidding on May 6

HERE IS THE HAT

I THOUGHT THIS WAS COOL........

Bidders up: Lou Gehrig's cap goes up for Internet bidding on May 6
BY LARRY McSHANE DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Sunday, April 6th 2008, 8:17 PM


During a 1939 visit to the Mayo Clinic, where he was diagnosed with the disease that would kill him, Lou Gehrig presented one of his doctors with a gift - a game-worn Yankees cap.
It was a typical gesture by the gracious Gehrig, "The Iron Horse" surrendering his wool cap to Dr. Paul O'Leary. The rare vintage hat with its familiar interlocking "NY" is now going on the auction block.
The cap, worn by Gehrig during his 2,130 consecutive-game streak, comes with a presale estimate of $125,000 - more than triple his top annual salary of $39,000 during his Yankees career.
The hat was most likely presented to O'Leary during the 1939 visit when Gehrig was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. O'Leary continued to treat Gehrig afterward, with the two exchanging letters about his condition.
"You don't need me to tell you that game-worn Gehrig items are extremely hard to come by, and we are proud to offer this relic from one of the all-time Yankee greats," said Lelands.com Chairman Joshua Evans.
The Internet bidding on the hat begins May 6 and runs through June 6 at Lelands.com.
The cap, with a hard brim and a nicely worn look, was made by A.G. Spalding & Bros., according to the auction house. It is embroidered inside with the Yankee great's name and hat size: "7 1/8 L. Gehrig."
Gehrig, a two-time American League MVP, delivered the most memorable speech in stadium history after he was diagnosed with ALS, which is now also called Lou Gehrig's Disease.
"Today I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the earth," the dying Gehrig told a sold-out crowd on July 4, 1939.
Gehrig had ended his consecutive games played streak just two months earlier; he was dead less than two years later.
lmcshane@nydailynews.com
http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/baseball/yankees/2008/04/06/2008-04-06_bidders_up_lou_gehrigs_cap_goes_up_for_i.html

Saturday, April 5, 2008

A QUOTE THAT IS APPLICABLE FOR MY CHALLENGE

THIS IS AN OLD SPEECH-1993 ESPY'S BUT IT STILL IS APPLICABLE TODAY AND FOREVER. I LISTEN TO THIS ONCE A WEEK. GREAT STUFF....................

I WILL ECHO A QUOTE FROM JIM VALVANO AND I WILL CHANGE ONE WORD-CANCER TO ALS. IT IS SO TRUE!!

"ALS CAN TAKE AWAY ALL MY PHYSICAL ABILITIES--IT CANNOT TOUCH MY MIND--IT CANNOT TOUCH MY HEART--IT CANNOT TOUCH MY SOUL AND THOSE THREE THINGS WILL CARRY ON FOREVER"

HERE IS THE WHOLE SPEECH-IT WILL TUG AT YOUR HEART;

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ePXlkqkFH6s

Friday, April 4, 2008

MY SIS SENT ME THIS

"Fear is a Reaction, Courage is a Decision"

You can do very little with faith, but you can do nothing without it.

2-way cell talk provides clues about neuromuscular disease

2-way cell talk provides clues about neuromuscular disease

It’s a scientific given that neurons tell other cells what to do, but new evidence suggests that, like with any good relationship, these target cells also have much to contribute, scientists say.
In an animal model, Medical College of Georgia researchers have shown that if a muscle cell fails to produce the protein beta-catenin, its neuron doesn’t develop or function properly. Their finding provides some of the first proof that in vertebrates such as man, this retrograde communication – from the target cell back to the neuron – is essential, says Dr. Lin Mei, corresponding author on research published online Sept. 17 in Nature Neuroscience. “Previously, we thought signals flow mainly from neuron to muscle. This shows they can be produced from muscle,” says Dr. Mei, MCG’s chief of developmental neurobiology and Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar in Neuroscience. “This is some of the first clear genetic evidence that when you disturb something in the muscle, you have a nerve problem.” Dr. Mei’s research team knocked out beta-catenin in the muscle cells of a developing mouse. As a result, nerve terminals, which reach out to target cells, were misaligned. Release of neurotransmitters, which enable cell talk, from the tiny vesicles inside nerve terminals was impaired. Mice died prematurely. “Two-way communication is absolutely essential,” he says. Interestingly when the researchers knocked beta-catenin out of neurons instead, neurons developed and functioned normally. “Theoretically the finding is very important in that it supports the retrograde hypothesis,” Dr. Mei says. “Practically it is also important because problems with motor neuron survival and differentiation cause many neuromuscular diseases, such as muscular dystrophy and ALS, where motor neurons need to survive,” noting that it’s unknown why neurons die in these diseases. “We believe there is a retrograde signal downstream of beta-catenin or regulated by beta- catenin,” says Dr. Mei. “If you don’t have beta-catenin in the muscle, that signal may be missing and motor neurons are not happy.” To find out what that signal is, his lab is comparing genetic expression in the beta-catenin knockout mouse to that of a normal mouse to see which genes are up- or down-regulated. “Those genes may be targeted by beta-catenin and may serve as this retrograde signal. If we can identify that, I can retire,” says Dr. Mei. Beta-catenin is a protein with many roles, including helping cells stick together, and regulating gene expression in the Wnt pathway, which is essential for development. Dr. Mei’s previous work has shown that at least in a Petri dish, when a signaling component of the Wnt pathway, called disheveled, is disturbed in muscle cells, it causes problems with their co-cultured neurons. In the early 1900s, German-born Scientist Viktor Hamburger provided some of the first evidence of the importance of retrograde communication in proper development of motor neurons: when he removed the budding limbs of chick embryos, motor neurons decreased in number. “ … (T)he use of transgenic animals has established the importance of muscle ß-catenin in (neuromuscular junction) formation in vivo,” write Drs. Amy K.Y. Fu, Zelda Cheung and Nancy Y. Ip, of Hong Kong University of Science and Technology in an accompanying News and Views. “These findings also underscore the emerging role of Wnt signaling proteins in the regulation of synapse development. The identification of muscle ß-catenin-dependent signals for motoneurons may also contribute to our understanding of neuromuscular disorders, including muscular dystrophy and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.”

Source: © 2008 Medical College of Georgia

Experiments Support Looking Outside Nerve Cells in ALS

Experiments Support Looking Outside Nerve Cells in ALS
http://www.als-mda.org/research/news/080306nerve_cells.html
Researchers in the laboratory of Don Cleveland at the University of California-San Diego have further extended the suspected role of astrocytes, a type of nervous-system “support” cell, in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).
The research team, which included MDA grantee Severine Boillee at UCSD and published its findings online Feb. 3 in Nature Neuroscience, found that diminishing production of a toxic protein in these support cells alone sharply slowed disease progression in ALS-affected mice, even when its production remained high in nerve cells.
When production of the toxic protein in astrocytes was high, the disease progressed more rapidly, and neighboring cells called microglia revved up their production of additional toxic compounds.
The toxic protein in astrocytes in these experiments was abnormal SOD1, a protein made from mutated SOD1 genes, a known cause of genetic ALS.
Until recently, many experts believed that the muscle-controlling nerve cells called motor neurons, which die and cause paralysis in ALS, were the central problem in the disease, and that mutated SOD1 genes caused ALS by their poisonous effects on motor neurons alone.
However, recent evidence from this set of experiments and many others, including those by investigators at the University of Iowa showing that mutated SOD1 protein in microglial cells causes major problems (see Unexpected Discovery), have made a good case for looking beyond motor neurons alone for causes and treatment targets in ALS.

Thursday, April 3, 2008

QUITE POSSIBLEY THE BEST QUOTE I EVER CAME ACROSS

"Stay still, Be quiet, and listen to your heart! Then when it speaks, get up and go where it takes you!"

- Susanna Tamaro

A PICTURE OF ME THAT I NEVER THOUGHT I WOULD SEE


Targeting astrocytes slows disease progression in ALS

The article below was published in April of 2008. What I find interesting and relative to this article as it relates to the treatment offered by Beike is that is has also been shown in the past by numerous researchers world wide is that Umbilical Cord Stem Cell’s also known as Hematopoietic stem cells have the ability to differentiate into astrocytes. In the 1960s, scientists studying rats discovered two regions of the brain that contained dividing cells, which become nerve cells. Despite these reports, many scientists still felt that new nerve cells could not be generated in the adult brain. However as science has advanced the views of many have changed and in 1990s scientists finally began to agreed that the adult brain does contain stem cells that are able to generate the brain's three major cell types—astrocytes and oligodendrocytes, which are non-neuronal cells, and neurons, or nerve cells. The world view of the plasticity of the Umbilical Cord Stem also referred to as an Adult Stem Cell and its ability when properly coaxed to transdifferentiate has changed dramatically since the 1990’s. A number of experiments performed over the years have suggested that certain adult stem cell types are pluripotent; this includes those stem cells taken for the umbilical cord. This ability to differentiate into multiple cell types is called plasticity or transdifferentiation.

FACT: Hematopoietic stem cells may differentiate into: three major types of brain cells (neurons, oligodendrocytes, and astrocytes); skeletal muscle cells; cardiac muscle cells; and liver cells.

February 4, 2008
Targeting astrocytes slows disease progression in ALS

In what the researchers say could be promising news in the quest to find a therapy to slow the progression of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig’s disease, scientists at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) School of Medicine have shown that targeting neuronal support cells called astrocytes sharply slows disease progression in mice.
The study, conducted in the laboratory of Don Cleveland, Ph.D., UCSD Professor of Medicine, Neurosciences and Cellular and Molecular Medicine and member of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, will appear in the advance online publication on Nature Neuroscience's website on February 3rd.
“Mutant genes that cause ALS are expressed widely, not just in the motor neurons,” Cleveland explained. “Targeting the partner cells like astrocytes, which live in a synergistic environment with the neuron cells, helps stop the ‘cascade of damage.’ Therapeutically, this is the big news.”

ALS is a progressive disease that attacks the motor neurons, long and complex nerve cells that reach from the brain to the spinal cord and from the spinal cord to the muscles throughout the body, which act to control voluntary movement. Degeneration of the motor neurons in ALS leads to progressive loss of muscle control, paralysis and untimely death. Estimated to affect some 30,000 Americans, most people are diagnosed with ALS between the ages of 45 and 65. Typically, ALS patients live only one to five years after initial diagnosis.
In findings published in Science in June 2006, Cleveland and his colleagues showed that in early stages of inherited ALS, small immune cells called microglia are damaged by mutations in the SOD1 protein, and that these immune cells then act to significantly accelerate the degeneration of the motor neurons. The new study demonstrates that much the same thing happens to astrocytes, support cells that are essential to neuronal function, and whose dysfunction is implicated in many diseases. The researchers speculate that the non-neuronal cells play a vital role in nourishing the motor neurons and in scavenging toxins from the cellular environment. As with microglia, the helper role of astrocytes is altered due to mutations in the SOD1 protein.
“We tested what would happen if we removed the mutant gene from astrocytes in mouse models,” said Cleveland . “What happened was it doubled the lifespan of the mouse after the onset of ALS.”
Astrocytes are key components in balancing the neurotransmitter signals that neurons use to communicate. To examine whether mutant SOD1 damage to the astrocytes contributes to disease progression in ALS, researchers in the Cleveland lab used a genetic trick to excise the mutant SOD1 gene, but only in astrocytes. Reduction of the disease-causing mutant SOD1 in astrocytes did not slow disease onset or early disease; however, the late stage of the disease was extended, nearly doubling the normal life expectancy of a mouse with ALS.

“Silencing the mutant gene in the astrocytes not only helps protect the motor neuron, but delays activation of mutant microglia that act to accelerate the progression of ALS,” said Cleveland .
The findings show that mutant astrocytes are likely to be viable targets to slow the rate of disease spread and extend the life of patients with ALS. Cleveland added that this may prove especially important news to researchers in California and elsewhere working with stem cells. “This gives scientists a good idea of what cells should be replaced using stem cell therapy. Astrocytes are very likely much easier to replace than the slow-growing motor neuron.”
Source: The University of California San Diego

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

HELP W/ TYPING

http://cnt.lakefolks.com/

FOR PEOPLE THAT FATIGUE WHILE TYPING OR FOR THOSE WHO CAN'T TYPE
IT'S A VIRTUAL KEYBOARD THAT IS NOTHING SHORT OF A MIRACLE. IT WORKS WITH A MOUSE. POINT AND CLICK AND TYPE................................

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

NEU2000 AND LITHIUM

Concurrent administration of Neu2000 and lithium produces marked improvement of motor neuron survival, motor function, and mortality in a mouse model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

http://www.amkorpharma.com/index.php

Shin JH, Cho SI, Lim HR, Lee JK, Lee YA, Noh JS, Joo IS, Kim KW, Gwag BJ.

Department of Pharmacology, Ajou University School of Medicine, Sawon, Korea 442-749.The Fas pathway and oxidative stress mediate neuronal death in stroke and may contribute to neurodegenerative disease. We tested the hypothesis that these two factors synergistically produce spinal motor neuron degeneration in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Levels of reactive oxygen species were increased in motor neurons from ALS mice compared with wild-type mice at age 10 weeks, before symptom onset. The proapoptotic proteins Fas, Fas-associated death domain, caspase 8, and caspase 3 were also elevated. Oral administration of 2-hydroxy-5-(2,3,5,6-tetrafluoro-4-trifluoromethyl-benzylamino)-benzoic acid (Neu2000), a potent antioxidant, blocked the increase in reactive oxygen species but only slightly reduced activation of proapoptotic proteins. Administration of lithium carbonate (Li(+)), a mood stabilizer that prevents apoptosis, blocked the apoptosis machinery without preventing oxidative stress. Neu2000 or Li(+) alone significantly enhanced survival time and motor function and together had an additive effect. These findings provide evidence that jointly targeting oxidative stress and Fas-mediated apoptosis can prevent neuronal loss and motor dysfunction in ALS.

Monday, March 31, 2008

THIS IS WHAT I NEEDED..........THANK YOU DAVE

eric said something to me last week . he said, " this is just a part of our lives that God needs us to get through. He's is in control of everything. there's going to be a day when we look back at this and we'll be able to laugh about it." what a lift that was for me. you keep that in mind too when you have a bad day.
MAN, I NEEDED TO HEAR THAT EMAIL THIS MORNING-I'M SO ANGRY THESE DAYS-I'M CARRYING A LOT OF GUILT FOR HAVING TO RELY ON PEOPLE. THAT IS MY EGO WRITING CHECKS MY BODY CAN'T CASH. AGAIN

Sunday, March 30, 2008

A VIDEO OF HOPE........

A FRIEND SENT THIS TO ME-THANKS YVONNE
CHECK THE VIDEO OUT
MIKKO FROM FINLAND-A FRIEND
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=210IHwqkdp8&feature=user

Saturday, March 29, 2008

ONE MORE-I FOUND THIS ON CLAUDI'S ALS BLOG

AND IT SUMS IT UP FOR ME TO ACCEPT THE LIFE CHOSEN FOR ME-BECAUSE SURE AS SHIT, I DID NOT PICK THIS LIFE. BUT IT IS WHAT IT IS-AND I CAN'T ACCEPT IT YET. I STILL WAKE UP EVERY MORNING THINKING I'M GOING TO BE CURED OF THIS F%#KING DISEASE. SEE, NOW I'M ANGRY SO WITH THAT SAID, HERE IS THE QUOTE:

"We must let go of the life we have planned, so as to accept the one that is waiting for us."

Friday, March 28, 2008

I know-I know. One more I PROMISE...........

I don't like that person - I better get to know them better.-- Jimmy Stewart
THIS IS ONE, BEFORE MY CHALLENGE, THAT I WOULD HAVE NEVER PRACTICED-BUT I DO NOW

it's late and i'm on a tangent

Strength does not come from physical capacity. It comes from an indomitable will.
Mahatma Gandhi

quote

there are no prizes given for suffering alone.
if someone wants to help you, accept it.
if you need help, ask for it.
if you lack joy, seek it.
do not try to hide from death or you will become invisable to life as well.

by joyce thompson, author

I am friends w/ this guy-he is Steve the architect in the video

IT'S INCREDIBLE WHAT HE HAS LOBBIED FOR AND WON!

IT'S A VERY HARD LOOK AT WHAT WE PALS ARE FACING. HE'S DOING A GREAT THING BUT I BROKE DOWN WATCHING THE VIDEO. IT'S NOT REALITY IT'S ACTUALITY.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xFmgQLG9X_o

Most of you probably know that I have been working on two projects - one in MA and one in GA - to create a ALS group home that will support people on a vent. Not only support a vented person, but provide the kind of residential living environment that makes the decision to go on a vent a no-brainer.The MA project has a big head start in that I found people who shared my dream who were well on the way to making it happen. Barry Berman is an out-of-the-box nursing home director who realized that, as good as his facilities are, the needs of a younger, disabled person will NEVER be met in a traditional senior center. With enormous support from the MA-ALSA, this project is 80% financed, architectural plans near completion, land owned, permitted, and ready to break ground this year.There will be two ALS residences in an urban mid-rise condo building. Each house will have 10 private bedrooms, each with their own private bathroom, organized around a central living room and accessible kitchen. Each resident will have the option to cook for themselves or have a live-in chef cook-to-order. We are teaming with UMASS-Lowell engineering so that each resident will have a custom fit communication and mobility package created that will offer the latest technology (Eye-gaze, Tobii) so that the pALS can regulate the climate controls within the bedroom, open and close doors, call the elevator, select the desired floor, etc, all from the computer on their wheelchair. Each room will have a track hoist system that will provide access to 100% of the bedroom and bathroom. Oxygen will be piped into every room for those that need it. Most importantly, when necessary to go on a vent, you don't get kicked out. All 20 rooms will have vent support provided.It doesn't stop there. Upon exiting the elevator on the ground floor, residents will spill onto "Main Street", not a lobby. There will be coffee shops and cafés, courtyards and gardens, and transportation available upon request to go to downtown Boston, the Boston Common, or any other desired destination. Friends and family are encouraged to visit and will be welcome to stay over for a night or two or three...So far, the facility itself is paid for. There is another $5 million needed for the ALS upgrades. To this end, there is a major gifts campaign underway to cover these costs. The video linked below is to be used in this fund-raising effort. As you will see, I am honored to help in this endeavor by using my past experience as an architect to consult with the project architect to make sure our unique needs are uniquely addressed.Hope comes from many places. Never give in to fear because good things are happening all the time. I like something Barry says - our first goal is to get this residence built; our second goal is to not need it anymore and close it down.Massachusetts, almost done. Next up, Georgia.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Possible New Treatment Strategy For Muscular Dystrophy/ALS

Possible New Treatment Strategy For Muscular Dystrophy/ALS
Main Category: Muscular Dystrophy / ALS

Also Included In: Liver Disease / Hepatitis; Biology / Biochemistry; GeneticsArticle Date: 18 Mar 2008 - 2:00 PDT
An investigational antiviral drug currently undergoing human trials in Europe for treating Hepatitis C infections may have potential to reduce muscle cell damage in Duchenne and other forms of muscular dystrophy (MD). A research team led by Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center reported their results using three different mouse models of MD in a letter posted online March 16 by the journal Nature Medicine. The investigational drug, Debio-025, is a known inhibitor of the protein cyclophilin D, which regulates the swelling of mitochondria in response to cellular injury. Researches decided to test the drug in mice engineered to carry MD after earlier laboratory tests showed deleting a gene that encodes cycolphilin D reduced swelling and reversed or prevented the disease's muscle-damaging characteristics. The mice were engineered as models of Duchenne muscular dystrophy and forms caused by a deficiency of two structural proteins, delta-sarcoglycan and laminin alpha2. "Similar to deleting the gene encoding cyclophilin D, we found that treatment with Debio-025 reduced mitochondrial swelling and necrotic manifestations in mice with muscular dystrophy. This is why we believe inhibiting cyclophilin D could be a new treatment strategy," said Jeff Molkentin, Ph.D., corresponding author of the study and a researcher in the Division of Molecular Cardiovascular Biology at Cincinnati Children's. "Debio-025 has already passed Phase II clinical trials in Europe and is considered safe in people, so we want to explore the possibility of conducting clinical trials in patients with Duchenne MD." During the onset of muscular dystrophy, the loss of certain proteins critical to muscle function - such as dystrophin - can lead to contraction-related micro-tears in muscle fibers and an influx of calcium around muscle tissue. When this happens, cyclophilin D is instructed to make the membranes of mitochondria more permeable. This causes mitochondria to be flooded by calcium and reorganize, swell and eventually rupture. This triggers cell death in muscle fibers and leads to the progressive muscle weakness, wasting and often early death associated with muscular dystrophy. Mice lacking the protein delta-sarcoglycan exhibited severe dystrophy and swelling in both skeletal and heart muscle. When Dr. Molkentin and his colleagues deleted the gene encoding cyclophilin D in these mice, the muscle cells returned to near normal and did not show appreciable signs of swelling and cell death. The investigators repeated the experiment with mice lacking a gene encoding laminin alpha2, which causes a more severe dystrophy, swollen skeletal muscle cells and premature death before the mice reach two months of age. In contrast, mice lacking both laminin alpha2 and cyclophilin D showed much healthier muscle cells, increased body weight and walked more. Also, 75 percent of the mice lacking laminin alpha2 and cyclophilin D lived more than three times longer than mice lacking only laminin alpha2. These findings led the research team to look for pharmacological treatments that also could inhibit cyclophilin D. The drug cyclosporine is a well-documented inhibitor of the protein, but its use is problematic because it also inhibits a protein, calcineurin, crucial to skeletal muscle cell repair after injury and to the development of skeletal muscle cells. The advantage of Debio-025 is that while it inhibits cyclophilin D and blocks cell death in a number of situations, the drug does not suppress the immune system or block calcineurin. The drug is manufactured by DebioPharm S.A. of Lausanne, Switzerland, which provided Debio-025 for use in the study. The researchers also found their study may have implications beyond skeletal muscle disease as cyclophilin D deletion reduced cardiac dysfunction caused by calcium-overload induced necrosis. This led the team to suggest that mitochondrial-dependent necrosis may also function as a common disease mechanism underlying a number of long-term degenerative disorders, something they plan to study in future research projects. Muscular dystrophies are inherited disorders that mostly affect striated muscle tissue and more commonly occur in boys. This disease results in progressive muscle weakness, wasting and in many instances death. There is no known cure for muscular dystrophy, although Cincinnati Children's is a recognized leader in disease-related research and a multi-disciplinary approach to patient treatment focused on maximizing ambulatory function and quality of life. ----------------------------Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.---------------------------- Also participating in the study were the Department of Molecular Genetics, Biochemistry and Microbiology at the University of Cincinnati; the Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine, Philadelphia; DebioPharm S.A.; and the Department of Physiology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia. Members of the research team include Douglas P. Millay, Michelle A. Sargent, Hanna Osinska, Christopher P. Baines, Elisabeth R. Barton, Gre'goire Vuagniaux, H. Lee Sweeney and Jeffrey Robbins. Funding support was provided by National Institutes of Health, the Jain Foundation, the Fondation Leducq and the Paul Wellstone Muscular Dystrophy Cooperative Research Center of the National Institutes of Health. Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, one of the leading pediatric research institutions in the nation, is dedicated to changing the outcome for children throughout the world. Cincinnati Children's ranks second among all pediatric institutions in the United States in grants from the National Institutes of Health. It has an established tradition of research excellence, with discoveries including the Sabin oral polio vaccine, the surfactant preparation that saves the lives of thousands of premature infants each year, and a rotavirus vaccine that saves the lives of hundreds of thousands of infants around the world each year. Current strategic directions include the translation of basic laboratory research into the development of novel therapeutics for the treatment of disease, and furthering the development of personalized and predictive medicine. Additional information can be found at http://www.cincinnatichildrens.org/. Source: Nick MillerCincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Cloned cells treat Parkinson's in mice

Cloned cells treat Parkinson's in mice
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science EditorSun
Mar 23, 2:06 PM ET
Researchers who used cloned embryonic stem cells to treat Parkinson's disease in mice said on Sunday they worked better than other cells.
The researchers were trying to prove that it is possible to make embryonic stem cells using cloning technology and use them to provide a tailor-made treatment.
But they found that a mouse's own cloned stem cells were far less disruptive to its body than cloned cells taken from other mice.
"It demonstrated what we suspected all along -- that genetically matched tissue works better," said Viviane Tabar of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Institute in New York, who worked on the study.
"When you give the other type of tissue, non-autologous tissue, you get more inflammation than we anticipated. This is in a lab animal where we expect it to be tolerant. Normally when you do this in mice, you don't give matched cells," Tabar added in a telephone interview.
The mice given non-matched brain cells did more poorly than the mice given cells from their own clones, the researchers reported in the journal Nature Medicine.
Stem cells are the master cells of the body and embryonic stem cells are the ultimate master cells, giving rise to all the other cells and tissue. Cloning researchers hope one day to be able to take a little piece of skin and grow embryonic stem cells from it for personal, tailor-made medical treatments.
One disease always named that may benefit from this technology is Parkinson's. The incurable, fatal illness is caused by the destruction of specific brain cells.
THERAPEUTIC CLONING
It is sometimes treated with transplants of brain cells from cadavers or aborted fetuses. Stem cell researchers have argued that cloning technology might provide a better source of cells for treatment.
Tabar and his team first created a Parkinson's-like disease in mice using chemicals to destroy their brain cells.
They took ordinary cells from the tails of the mice, transferred the nuclei from them into hollowed-out mouse eggs cells, and made clones of the mice. This process is called somatic cell nuclear transfer, or "therapeutic cloning."
The cloned embryos were harvested for their stem cells after a few days. The researchers grew these in the lab and coaxed them into becoming the so-called dopaminergic brains cells that are lost in Parkinson's.
They put these into the brains of the injured mice. These mice got better, Tabar said.
No one has done this before. "It's incredibly hard and it involves a series of inefficient steps," Tabar said.
Several researchers have made cells that look and act like embryonic stem cells by reprogramming their genes. Tabar said her team would try using these so-called induced pluripotent stem cells in the same way.
Some people oppose using cloning technology to make human embryonic stem cells, or to creating human embryos for this purpose. It is also difficult to obtain human egg cells.
Scientists hope the induced pluripotent stem cells might provide a short cut that no one would object to.
"This is an exciting step down the pathway of creating a self-specific stem cell and getting away from the ethical demands of traditional embryonic stem cells," said Richard Boyd, Deputy Director of the Monash Immunology and Stem Cell Laboratories in Victoria, Australia.
(Edited by Alan Elsner)

Saturday, March 22, 2008

true.................

Life can only be understood backwards, but it must be lived forwards.- Soren Kierkegaard

Friday, March 21, 2008

ALS/LITHIUM UPDATE

HEY PEOPLE,

HOPE ALL IS WELL

IT'S BEEN 4 WEEKS ON LITHIUM AND I'M FEELING NO SIDE AFFECTS EXCEPT FOR MY EYES BURNING. THAT IS QUITE COMMON WITH THE PALS I'VE TALKED TO. MY DR. AT COLUMBIA SAID ABOUT 1 MONTH TO GET MY BLOOD LEVELS UP TO PAR-I GO TO COLUMBIA ON THE 25TH. PEOPLE I'VE TALKED TO THAT HAVE BEEN ON IT FOR OVER A MONTH HAVE REPORTED IMPROVEMENTS. AND THERE ALSFRS-R SCORE ARE THE SAME OR BETTER. THE ALSFRS-R SCORE IS HOW ALL OF US PALS ARE MEASURED. 48 BEING THE BEST 0 BEING THE WORST. I'M AT 42-- I WAS A 47 WHEN I GOT Dx IN SEPT 06'. IT WILL BE 2 YEARS IN JUNE THAT I FIRST NOTICED MY SPEECH WAS CONSISTENTLY WORSENING. THE DR. AT YALE GAVE ME 1.5 TO 2 YEARS TO LIVE IN JULY 07' AND I LAUGHED AT HIM AND TOLD HIM-NOT ME!! NO WAY I'M LEAVING THIS EARTH WITH OUT BEATING THIS F%$3ING DISEASE. AND LIKE I SAID BEFORE, I HAVE UNFINISHED BUSINESS W/ SOME OF YOU.

YOU CAN SEE WHAT THE QUESTIONS ARE ON THE ALSFRS-R TEST BY GOING TO: http://alslithium.atspace.com/alsfrs-r.html

HEY, I FOUND OUT ONE OF THE GUYS I KNOW FROM BACK IN THE DAY HAS ALS-HE IS 38. I EMAILED HIM-WE WERE LIKE HOLY SHIT. DECEMBER 06' WAS HIS Dx. MAN IT'S A SMALL WORLD. IT'S SO SAD WHEN YOU LOOK INTO THE FUTURE AND YOU SEE PEOPLE THAT ARE FURTHER ALONG IN THERE IN THE Dx. EVERYONE ENDS UP THE SAME WAY. AND WE PALS KNOW HOW THIS MOVIE ENDS. IT'S SCARY. BUT YOU HAVE TO LIVE IN THE DAY-RECENTLY MY FRIEND DAVE FROM MICHIGAN (A HUGE HOCKEY FAN AND PLAYER) SENT ME A BOOK AND A CD OF A PRIEST WHO HAS HAD ALS FOR 7 YEARS. HE PREACHES THAT THE FUTURE HOLDS NO GUARANTEES AND THAT WE SHOULD LIVE IN THE DAY. MAKES SENSE! THANKS DAVE.

LIVE- LAUGH AND HUG SOMEONE

quote someone sent me and it makes god damn sense

"I'm the one that has to die when it's time for me to die, so let me live my life, the way I want to." jimi hendrix.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Being on the tightrope is living; everything else is waiting.

--Karl Wallenda

In walking a tightrope, a person has to learn to relax while going forward in a situation filled with risk. If he is tense and keeps his body rigid, he will lose his balance and fall. But if he stays relaxed and keeps his muscles loose while remaining very focused, he can continuously respond and readjust his balance while walking. Then he will experience the exhilaration of success

Video: Bee Venom Therapy Used to Treat ALS, PLS, MS, Arthritis

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6bJ-A1ABuTw --IT'S IN FRENCH BUT YOU WILL GET THE JIST
THIS IS A LINK FOR THE USE OF HONEY AS A SOURCE FOR HEALING A BUNCH OF DIFFERENT WOUNDS/DISEASE'S
http://www.worldwidewounds.com/2001/november/Molan/honey-as-topical-agent.html

A new treatment with bee venom therapy in Franc... (more)
Added: March 09, 2008
A new treatment with bee venom therapy in France, is used to reduce the development of the ALS and PLS disease but also arthritis. A new treatment with bee venom therapy in France, is used to reduce the development of the ALS and PLS disease but also , arthritis pain and MS (less)
Added: March 09, 2008

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

THIS IS GREAT-IT HAS A SUBLUMINAL MESSAGE THAT I HOPE YOU ALL WILL GET!!!

-You don’t have to be no billionaire to get a ticket up to the moon

-We all know somebody up there

-You need a helping hand, look I’m right here--to help you see clearly now

-To help you see clearly now

US Upholds 2 More Stem Cell Patents

good article

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5gx0zqQ_DKfHcWkcNASNn89u0sc6gD8VBD96O0

US Upholds 2 More Stem Cell Patents
By RYAN J. FOLEY - 5 hours ago
MADISON, Wis. (AP) - The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has upheld a second and a third University of Wisconsin-Madison patent covering embryonic stem cell research at the school.
In rulings made public Tuesday, Federal examiners confirmed two patents for scientist James Thomson's work on isolating embryonic stem cells of primates and humans. The patent office last month upheld another patent stemming from the work, but that ruling can be appealed.
Thomson in the 1990s became the first researcher to isolate the embryonic stem cells of primates and humans, which have great medical potential because they can turn into any type of cell in the body.
Two consumer groups and some scientists had said Thomson's work was obvious, given previous research on animals, and therefore ineligible to be patented. The examiners rejected that argument in the latest rulings, which cannot be appealed.
All three of the patents - issued in 1995, 1998 and 2001 - are held by the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, a nonprofit that manages the university's patents.
The rulings mean the foundation will continue to control primary intellectual property rights to embryonic stem cell research in the United States. If that research leads to successful medical products or procedures before the patents expire in 2015, the school could win royalties.
The Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights and the Public Patent Foundation, which asked the patent office to throw out the patents in 2006, argued that their enforcement slowed U.S. stem cell research and drove some investment overseas.
The foundation agreed last year to waive some fees to encourage more industry-sponsored research and allow researchers to share their cells for free.
The foundation's stem cell affiliate has shipped cells to more than 560 researchers around the world since 1999. A vial of 6 million stem cells now costs about $500 for academic researchers.

Saturday, March 8, 2008

WE ARE ALL CONNECTED............

THE PLACES I HAVE RECEIVED HITS/EMAILS FROM HAVING MY BLOG-IT HAS BEEN INCREDIBLE-TO TOUCH SO MANY LIVES-IT MAKES IT ALMOST WORTH HAVING MY CHALLENGE (I WOULD RATHER NOT HAVE IT-BUT IT IS WHAT IT IS AND I'M EVER SO GRATEFUL). MY FRIENDS-PHIL & BARB AND MIKE, DONNA AND RYAN IN CANADA ARE ALWAYS IN TOUCH AND MY FRIEND FROM BRAZIL-HUMBERTO AND BORIS FROM MALDOVA AND CINZIA FROM ITALY. MIKE FROM ENGLAND AND MY FRIENDS FROM DOWN UNDER-MIKE & SHELAGH AND JODY & HAZEL. AND ALL OF YOU IN THE UNITED STATES-DAVE IN MICHIGAN AND ALL OF YOU IN STAMFORD, CT.

THANK YOU FROM MY HEART....

THIS IS ONLY IN THE PAST WEEK.......

2
Italy-San Severino Marche, Marche
4
United States-Fort Lauderdale, Florida
5
Australia-Brisbane, Queensland

34
Brazil-Aracaju, Sergipe

35 GermanyFreiburg, Baden-Wurttemberg
36
United States Jersey City, New Jersey
37
Canada Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island
38
South Africa-Pretoria, Gauteng
39
Poland-Warsaw, Warszawa
40
United States-Oshkosh, Wisconsin

26
United Kingdom-Leigh, Lancashire

8
Turkey-Zonguldak, Bolu
9
Canada-Taber, Alberta
10
United Kingdom-Ipswich, Suffolk
11
Canada-Courtenay, British Columbia

63
Australia-Hobart, Tasmania
64
United States-Wyoming, Michigan
65
United States-Norwalk, Connecticut
66
Canada-Kensington, Prince Edward Island
67
Lithuania-Vilnius, Vilniaus Apskritis
68
Canada-Georgetown, Ontario
69
United States-New York
70
United States-Stamford, Connecticut
71
United States-Fort Wayne, Indiana
72
Poland-Warsaw, Warszawa

81
Hungary-Vrpalota, Veszprem

41
Canada-Abbotsford, British Columbia
42
United States-Lawrence, Kansas
43
United States-Stamford, Connecticut
44
United States-Wyoming, Michigan
45
United States-spanola, New Mexico
46
United States-Chelmsford, Massachusetts
47
United States-Virginia Beach, Virginia
48
United States
49
United States-Kearny, New Jersey
50
United States-Savannah, Georgia
51
United States-Stamford, Connecticut
52
United States
53
Canada-Victoria, British Columbia
54
United States-Tunkhannock, Pennsylvania

LITHIUM/ALS UPDATE

HEY PEOPLE,


HOPE ALL IS WELL.


IT'S BEEN THREE WEEKS ON LITHIUM AND I'M FEELING NO SIDE AFFECTS EXCEPT FOR MY EYES BURNING. THAT IS QUITE COMMON WITH THE PALS I'VE TALKED TO. MY DR. AT COLUMBIA SAID ABOUT 1 MONTH TO GET MY BLOOD LEVELS UP TO PAR. PEOPLE I'VE TALKED TO THAT HAVE BEEN ON IT FOR OVER A MONTH HAVE REPORTED IMPROVEMENTS. AND THERE ALSFRS-R SCORE ARE THE SAME OR BETTER. THE ALSFRS-R SCORE IS HOW ALL OF US PALS ARE MEASURED. 48 BEING THE BEST 0 BEING THE WORST. I'M AT 42-- I WAS A 47 WHEN I GOT Dx IN SEPT 06'. IT WILL BE 2 YEARS IN JUNE THAT I FIRST NOTICED MY SPEECH WAS CONSISTENTLY WORSENING. THE DR. AT YALE GAVE ME 1.5-2 YEARS TO LIVE IN JULY 07' AND I LAUGHED AT HIM AND TOLD HIM-NOT ME!! NO WAY I'M LEAVING THIS EARTH WITH OUT BEATING THIS F%$3ING DISEASE. AND LIKE I SAID BEFORE, I HAVE UNFINISHED BUSINESS W/ SOME OF YOU.


YOU CAN SEE WHAT THE QUESTIONS ARE ON THE ALSFRS-R TEST BY GOING TO:

http://alslithium.atspace.com/alsfrs-r.html


HEY, I FOUND OUT ONE OF THE GUYS I KNOW FROM BACK IN THE DAY HAS ALS-HE IS 38. I EMAILED HIM-WE WERE LIKE HOLY SHIT. DECEMBER 06' WAS HIS Dx. MAN IT'S A SMALL WORLD. IT'S SO SAD WHEN YOU LOOK INTO THE FUTURE AND YOU SEE PEOPLE THAT ARE FURTHER ALONG IN THERE IN THE Dx. EVERYONE ENDS UP THE SAME WAY. AND WE PALS KNOW HOW THIS MOVIE ENDS. IT'S SCARY. BUT YOU HAVE TO LIVE IN THE DAY-RECENTLY MY FRIEND DAVE FROM MICHIGAN (A HUGE HOCKEY FAN AND PLAYER) SENT ME A BOOK AND CD OF A PRIEST WHO HAS HAD ALS FOR 7 YEARS. HE PREACHES THAT THE FUTURE HOLDS NO GUARANTEES AND THAT WE SHOULD LIVE IN THE DAY. MAKES SENSE! THANKS DAVE.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Brazil court to rule on stem cells


Brazil court to rule on stem cells
By STAN LEHMAN, Associated Press Writer2 hours, 7 minutes ago
Brazil's Supreme Court is set to decide if scientists in Latin America's largest country can conduct embryonic stem cell research, which many say can lead to cures for degenerative diseases such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.
The court's 11 justices are scheduled to rule Wednesday on a 2005 petition by then-Attorney General Claudio Fontelles, who argued that a new law allowing embryonic stem cell research was unconstitutional because it violates the right to life.
The law opened the way for research with embryos resulting from in-vitro fertilization that are frozen for at least three years.
"Brazil has the potential to be a significant leader in this field," said Bernard Siegel, the executive director of the Florida-based Genetic Policy Institute. "And if the Supreme Court decides to allow this kind of research, then Brazil will become the Latin American leader in this field."
He said Brazilian scientists have done "pathfinding" work with adult stem cells for the treatment of cardiovascular diseases and Type 1 diabetes. If given the green light to use embryonic stem cells, "then there is no reason why they won't be able to make important breakthroughs," he added.
Roman Catholic Church officials have urged the court to ban such research because the process results in the destruction of embryos, which it and other groups say ends human life.
"Our position is not against science," Archbishop Geraldo Lyrio Rocha, president of the National Conference of Brazilian Bishops, said last week. "It is in favor of life."
He noted that the church supports adult stem cell research, which he described as "ethically acceptable."
Adult stem cells, which are harvested without destroying an embryo, can be used to recuperate damaged tissue. But scientists say they are less flexible than embryonic stem cells, which can develop into different types of cells.
"Adult stem cells are excellent and have generated a lot of valuable knowledge," said Mayana Katz, a University of Sao Paulo geneticist. "But embryonic stem cells are more powerful and offer many more possibilities to find cures for diseases like Parkinson's and Alzheimer's."
She said that while embryonic stem cell research is legal, scientists have put most projects on the back burner pending the Supreme Court's ruling.
"We want the chance of conducting the kind of research being done in developed countries like Great Britain, Sweden, Japan and Israel," she added.
Meanwhile, a January survey conducted by the Public Opinion Research Institute, or Ibope, shows that 95 percent of those interviewed favor embryonic stem cell research.
___
Associated Press writer Marco Sibaja contributed to this report from Brasilia.

Monday, March 3, 2008

A FELLOW MEMBER OF THE ORDER OF MALTA SENT ME THIS

YOU SAY- -GOD SAYS
BIBLE VERSES
'It's impossible'
All things are possible
Luke 18:27
'I'm too tired'
I will give you rest
Matthew 11:28-30
'Nobody really loves me'
I love you
John 3:1 6 & John 3:34
'I can't go on'
My grace is sufficient
II Corinthians 12:9 , Psalm 91:15
'I can't figure things out'
I will direct your steps
Proverbs 3:5- 6
'I can't do it'
You can do all things
Philippians 4:13
'I'm not able'
I am able
II Corinthians 9:8
'It's not worth it'
It will be worth it
Roman 8:28
'I can't forgive myself'
I Forgive you
I John 1:9 & Romans 8:1
'I can't manage'
I will supply all your needs
Philippians 4:19
'I'm afraid'
I have not given you a spirit of fear
II Timothy 1:7
'I'm always worried and frustrated'
Cast all your cares on ME
I Peter 5:7
'I'm not smart enough'
I give you wisdom
I Corinthians 1:30
'I feel all alone'
I will never leave you or forsake you
Hebrews 13:5

Saturday, March 1, 2008

AN ANONYMOUS COMMENTOR SENT ME THIS

IT'S A GREAT READ....
The story is on Patty Izzo. A 12 year old diagnosed with ALS in 1999. "ALS Research Paper"
(347 KB)Denise Kurowski wrote this research paper to raise ALS awareness at her school Friend of ALS patient
http://www.lesturnerals.org/pdf/Denise%20Kurowski.pdf