Saturday, December 5, 2015

Chat MS - 11/30/2015

This last Chat MS was all about MS research, a topic dear to my little science heart!  Please don't hesitate to copy/paste to your own blog to keep the conversation going!

Q1 – Do you keep up to date with latest news and research articles?

I do a bit - since I am in the loop for new hearing science developments, I occasionally come across good Multiple Sclerosis treatments.  I do of course read the ones that get distributed by the National MS Society.

Q2 – What is your “go to” place for the latest in information?

National MS Society and, believe it or not, Twitter.  Unlike Facebook, I have found the Twitter is a really great way to stay up to date on the latest research and developments with MS because I follow a fair amount of heavy hitters.  I recommend it to anyone looking for regular answers and a real community.

Q3 – It seems each week there may be a breakthrough or “game changer” when it comes to treatment. What has you excited the most?

Ah man, I see this all the time, but honestly I haven't seen a lot of stuff that excites me.  However, my dad hears things all the time and is really excited about them for me.  He learned about the bee sting study and got really hyped up and told me about it every time we talked on the phone for a month.  My dad doesn't talk to me on the phone.  So yeah, he thought it was a pretty big deal!

Q4 – Have you or would you ever enroll in a clinical trial to see how something new may affect your MS?

ABSO-FREAKING-LUTELY.  I have been a part of a research study on physical ability and MRI correlates at the University of Colorado at Boulder.  I enrolled just after my diagnosis.  It is SO important to participate in research, even if it isn't a clinical trial.

Q5 – In many cases we see articles claiming breakthroughs but never seem to hear anything else. Why do you think this is?

This is the sad reality of science.  Single studies are not enough to effect real change.  Some studies look great on the surface, but repeat studies do not find the same thing.  There has to be a repeatable response for it to be transferred into a real FDA-approved treatment.

Q6 – There are trials on-going for treatments that repair myelin. Would you be interested in this? Or is it “just another drug”?

I think this is excellent!  But right now - - I am a bit skeptical.  I fear that medication that can increase myelin would be hard pressed to be controlled enough not to over produce and cause an adverse effect, specifically causing other diseases like neurofibromatosis, which is essentially the evil opposition to MS.

Q7 - What is a cure to you? Stopped progression forever? or complete reversal of symptoms? 

Both of course!  Stopped progression is incredibly important to me.  More research on medications and the JC virus.  More research on effective medications that don't cause OTHER problems.

Q8 – Do you think we will see a cure in the next 10 years?

.... realistically?
No.  I am not trying to be a bad news bear, but even if there was a major breakthrough in the progressing of MS and how to halt it in its tracks, it would most likely be over 20 years before we see that get distributed out to the masses.  Because of the nature of MS, the relapsing part of the disease makes it all the more difficult to understand the effectiveness of things such as 'cures.'  There's very much a difficulty here in how to determine what is really causing the relapses to halt - is it because that person's disease is just relaxing?  Or is it because of the medication?  This is why MS is so hard to pinpoint.

Thanks for reading, all!  MSloan

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