What Came First? The Medicine or the Egg?

There has to be a million puns here about chickens, eggs and potential medicines to treat MS!

If the movie does not start (I have had some trouble with the player stalling) then click HERE to have it start in a stand alone player.

Why Are YOU Here?

I know that I enjoy keeping this blog and supposedly it’s sole purpose is to make people aware of my fundraising effort at NetXperiment.com and to spread a little awareness about Multiple Sclerosis.

But why are YOU here? Did you follow a link? Were you interested in the subject matter? My sexy user picture? Followed a MyBlogLog link?

Please spend 1 minute adding a comment as to why you popped in and then I can return the favour. :)

why?

Dancing or MS?

You choose *laughs*

Actually I don’t think I could raise my arms up that high…so I say dancing (like no one is watching!)

This is my representation of me. Shame I couldn’t find where to change the hair colour…not that I think they have black with pink stripes like mine currently has.

Parasite Infection May Benefit Multiple Sclerosis Patients

A steady rise in autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS) has been noted in recent decades, and environmental factors could be the cause of this increase. One theory, similar to the “hygiene hypothesis” in which an excessively germ-free environment may contribute to an increase in allergies, holds that a decline in infectious diseases may play a role in increasing autoimmune disease incidence.

The first study examining the relationship between parasite infections and MS in humans suggests that such infections may affect the immune response in a way that alters the course of MS. The study was published in the January 2007 issue of Annals of Neurology, the official journal of the American Neurological Association.

Read the rest of the story here

This would solve 2 of my problems! If I could somehow get tapeworm (where do you “get” tapeworm) I could lose weight (and boy am I packing it on at the moment) and reduce potential flare ups.

I wonder what needle-phobic people would think

“it’s the needle or here swallow this worm!”

“um…umm, can I call a friend?”

Worms!

Look What I Found

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Seeing Is Believing?

See Allison’s brain
Think brain Think
Allison’s brain hurts
Why?

Multiple Sclerosis MRI Jan 2007

(click for larger image…warning image size 6meg)

Yep that’s what my multiple sclerosis looks like. Kind of spotty and not very impressive compared to say MRIs of end stage Alzheimers, but hey it’s my brain and it is not often you get to see into a woman’s mind *wink*

Hug An Aussie Today

If it is January 26th in your neck of the woods then it is Australia Day.

On Australia day Australians love to drink beer, get outside and watch strange sporting events like thong (flip flop) surfing or ferry racing. Then they will drink some more beer, have a BBQ, watch the Poms get thrashed in the cricket and drink some more beer. Wrestle a kangaroo or two*. Then they will watch some fireworks, drink beer and fall asleep in the hot hot evening.

ferry race

*for non-Australian readers, this may, or may not, be true

Brain Food

Time magazine cover

I spent most of yesterday (that’s most of the bit I didn’t spend in bed) reading up on how to make changes to improve my cognitive powers. I have known with absolute certainty that it is possible to permanently change, through practice, attitude*, so why not other parts of your brain’s workings. A good thing too, because science in the last 10 years apparently has also come to this conclusion.

This week Time Magazine (US version) has a special on the brain. Very interesting it is too. I found this article quite informative about rewiring the brain.

The doctrine of the unchanging human brain has had profound ramifications. For one thing, it lowered expectations about the value of rehabilitation for adults who had suffered brain damage from a stroke or about the possibility of fixing the pathological wiring that underlies psychiatric diseases. And it implied that other brain-based fixities, such as the happiness set point that, according to a growing body of research, a person returns to after the deepest tragedy or the greatest joy, are nearly unalterable.

But research in the past few years has overthrown the dogma. In its place has come the realization that the adult brain retains impressive powers of “neuroplasticity”–the ability to change its structure and function in response to experience. These aren’t minor tweaks either. Something as basic as the function of the visual or auditory cortex can change as a result of a person’s experience of becoming deaf or blind at a young age. Even when the brain suffers a trauma late in life, it can rezone itself like a city in a frenzy of urban renewal. If a stroke knocks out, say, the neighborhood of motor cortex that moves the right arm, a new technique called constraint-induced movement therapy can coax next-door regions to take over the function of the damaged area. The brain can be rewired.

Yes i know that the articles themselves are popular science and that my neurologist would scoff at the simplistic nature of the discussions, but it did inspire me to work harder at getting back to where I was.

The video found here would also make my father very happy as he is an exercise enthusiast. If the implication of what is suggested in this video is true, then I better get myself more mobile and increase my brain volume. The more you have, the more you can rewire to.

And if I ever get all pity potting about the damage in my MRIs then remind me to watch this video again and see what shocking brain injury Sarah Scantlin has rewired.

So plan of attack on my brain. Get back to the gym and get into as much aquarobic type activity as I can. Keep reading learning and doing as much mental activity as I can (a bit tricky with the permanent headache I have,but not impossible) and maintain my fish intake, because I eat fish at least 5 times a week.

* I get very impatient with people saying “I can’t change, that’s just me”. Bullsh*t I say. I have done it! I would rather they be honest and say “I choose not to change”

NBC TODAY Show 2006 8th Annual Signed Green Room Book - eBay Auction

eBay Australia: NBC TODAY Show 2006 8th Annual Signed Green Room Book (item 180077268759, end time 02-Feb-07 12:00:00 AEDST)

Throughout 2006, we at NBC News
“TODAY” have asked some of the notable guests visiting our studios in
New York and Washington, D.C. to sign an autograph book. The end result
is an interesting collection of signatures, notes, and doodles from
actors, singers, politicians and other newsmakers who have appeared on
“TODAY.” The eighth annual edition of this book contains over 400
signatures.

100% of the high bid for the “TODAY” 2006 Green Room Book Will Benefit The National Multiple Sclerosis Society.

Names of signatories http://media.kompolt.com/todayshow/grb07/grbsignature.html

Carbon monoxide may protect against MS symptoms

In a novel experiment, moderate doses of carbon monoxide protected against the symptoms of multiple sclerosis in mice.

Researchers believe that the poisonous gas prevents the development of symptoms, such as paralysis, by stopping harmful molecules called free radicals from forming in the nervous symptom.

Miguel Soares at the Gulbenkian Science Institute in Oeiras, Portugal, and colleagues injected the animals with a protein mixture known to cause experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, a mouse model of multiple sclerosis (MS).

Ten days later some of the mice were placed in a chamber where they breathed carbon monoxide (CO) at a concentration of about 500 parts per million for 20 days. Soares notes that while the mice functioned normally at this level of CO exposure, a similar concentration of the gas can cause headaches and fainting in humans.

At the end of the trial, the mice that had breathed CO showed much greater mobility than their control counterparts. While the experimental mice had limp tails, the control mice suffered complete hind limb paralysis.

More here

Carbon monoxide may protect against MS symptoms - health - 26 January 2007 - New Scientist Tech

I am glad that at the end of this article they point out that YOU SHOULD NOT INHALE CARBON MONOXIDE. It is poison and will kill you.

But still, the science is interesting.