Posts Tagged ‘Revive MS Support’

Ryan Mclaughlin will take the plunge for Glasgow MS Charity

Monday, February 1st, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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14 year old Ryan McLaughlin will do a Zip slide from Forth Road bridge to raise money for Glasgow MS Charity!

Ryan McLaughlin from the Shine on Scotland campaign has offered his support and help to the Glasgow based charity Revive MS Support. Ryan McLaughlin will be taking part in ‘Revive MS support’s ” zip line event and he is gathering people from all over Scotland to help him.

Ryan said – I’ve been working very hard on the campaign for the prevention of MS with vitamin D that I just haven’t had any free time to do anything lately for Revive MS support, but when my mum had  a big relapse a couple of weeks ago Revive MS support was right there for us offering support and treatments.

I know its very important that I don’t forget this amazing charity that looks after my mum and i am honored to help, they have been there for our family right from the day she was diagnosed and I can not and will not let them down.

I have asked all the people on my Facebook  group to help me and I’m proud to say that I’ve now got 14 people that offered to come along do the zip slide and raise at least £100 each which will go towards my target of raising £1500.

A lovely couple who have followed my campaign and have became online friends with my mum have even offered to come all the way from the Isle of Man and take part because they have been so inspired by what the ‘Shine on Scotland’ campaign has achieved in raising awareness of MS.

http://www.revivescotland.org.uk/get-involved/26-adrenaline-events/276-davidrevivemssupportorguk.html

Low Vitamin D levels are associated with greater risk of MS relapse

Thursday, January 21st, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,
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Low vitamin D blood levels are associated with a significantly higher risk of relapse attacks in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) who develop the disease during childhood, according to a study conducted by researchers from the University of California, San Francisco.

“We have known for some time that vitamin D insufficiency is a risk factor for developing MS, but this is the first study to assess whether vitamin D levels influence the disease course of those who already have MS,” said lead author Ellen Mowry, MD, MCR, a clinical instructor of neurology at the UCSF Multiple Sclerosis Center.

The study, which is now published online by the “Annals of Neurology” and is available at http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/123246501/abstract , demonstrates that an increase in vitamin D levels by 10 nanograms per milliliter of blood (ng/mL) corresponds with a 34 percent decrease in the rate of subsequent relapses.

In other words, raising the vitamin D level of a person with MS by 15 ng/mL, which requires about 2,000 international units of vitamin D supplementation a day, could theoretically cut a patient’s relapse rate in half, explained Mowry.

“Although we do not yet know if vitamin D supplementation will be beneficial for MS patients, the fact that there is a clear association between vitamin D levels and relapse rate provides strong rationale for conducting a clinical trial to measure the potential impact of supplementation,” she said.

“This is an exciting finding because it indicates that it is very possible for vitamin D supplementation to have a profound impact on the course of this disease,” said senior author Emmanuelle Waubant, MD, PhD, an associate professor of neurology at UCSF and director of the Regional Pediatric MS Center at UCSF Children’s Hospital. Waubant said she expects similar findings in adult patients with MS.

Multiple sclerosis is a chronic and often disabling disease that affects the central nervous system, which comprises the brain, spinal cord and optic nerves. A type of autoimmune disorder, MS causes the body’s own defense system to break down a substance called myelin, which surrounds and protects nerve fibers.

Although MS occurs most commonly in adults, a small proportion of cases are diagnosed in children and adolescents. According to the National MS Society, two to five percent of all people with MS experience their first symptoms before the age of 18.

The researchers measured vitamin D levels through blood samples from 110 patients whose MS symptoms began at age 18 or younger. The patients were seen at either UCSF Children’s Hospital or the State University of New York Stony Brook’s Regional Pediatric MS Center of Excellence – two of six multidisciplinary referral centers in the United States sponsored by the National MS Society.

After providing the initial blood sample, patients were followed for an average of 1.7 years, during which the researchers recorded the total number of relapses each patient experienced. According to Mowry, a relapse or flare-up of MS causes new neurologic symptoms or the worsening of old ones, such as impaired vision, problems with balance, or numbness. Relapses can be very mild or severe enough to interfere with a person’s ability to function.

During the follow-up period, the researchers assessed the patients’ relapse rates and vitamin D levels after controlling for such factors as age, gender, race, ethnicity, use of MS treatments and the duration of follow-up care.

“If we are able to confirm that vitamin D supplementation is an effective treatment, my hope is that it will help improve the quality of life for all MS patients,” Mowry said.

In addition to a randomized clinical trial of vitamin D supplementation in MS patients, Mowry said further studies are also needed to determine the mechanism by which vitamin D affects inflammatory processes and, in turn, eases symptoms of MS.

Additional co-authors from UCSF include Dorothee Chabas, MD, PhD; Jonathan Strober, MD; Jamie McDonald, BS; Jorge Oksenberg, PhD, and Peter Bacchetti, PhD. Co-authors from other institutions are Lauren Krupp, MD; Maria Milazzo, MS, CPNP, and Anita Belman, MD, all of the Pediatric MS Center, State University of New York at Stony Brook.

The study was supported by a National MS Society Sylvia Lawry Fellowship Award and an additional grant from the National MS Society.

Source: PRWEB (21/01/10)

Ryan Mclaughlin launches ‘Fortify Scotland’s school milk’ campaign

Sunday, January 3rd, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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Ryan McLaughlin launches ‘Fortify Scotland’s school milk’ campaign

14 year old Ryan McLaughlin of the Shine on Scotland campaign has launched a new social networking campaign to gain public support for his Idea of adding vitamin D to all school milk in Scotland. The 14 year old campaigner believes that vitamin D is so important to improving the health of scottish kids and wants to ascertain how many parents agree with him, using the social platform Facebook.

Ryan is asking scottish parents to join the group and have their say on the subject.

Figures compiled by Oxford University for a national supplementation program of vitamin D in scotland suggest 2000 cases of MS could be prevented over the next 10 years and save the UK economy £4 billion over 25 years.

The World Health Organisation have said that Scotland should start a national supplementation program.

The campaigner says ‘much work still has to be done to get the RDA of vitamin D raised significantly and I will work with the Scottish Government, SACN and the FSA to get that done, but I am positive that fortifying school milk with vitamin D offers the best solution to offering protection to all kids in Scotland’

I am proud to say that the Scottish Government have been amazing in supporting my goals, they have really listened and acted on the current evidence in support of vitamin D, as more evidence is put in place I believe that the case for fortification of school milk will increase, the Scottish government have not ruled out my proposal for fortified school milk they have said “Following advice from the FSA Scotland, the Scottish Government believes that it would not be appropriate to introduce fortified milk (or other fortified drinks) at school until such time as the evidence base is more conclusive about the impact on the population.

However this was said before new research released by the scottish government and the announcement that NHS Scotland said there was now an ‘urgent need to educate women and that all pregnant mothers and all children up to the age of 4 should be taking vitamin D everyday’ .

Now that BUPA have said that they believe vitamin D could prevent cancer and Israel announced all 3% milk is to be fortified I think we need to ask the Scottish Government to look at this again as the evidence is certainly more conclusive and it can only have a healthy impact on the population .

We are now aware that it will cost  £2.7 million if every pregnant mother and child takes up the Health Start vitamin’s on offer but what would it cost to fortify the school milk, I think some political will and some help with financial costs to the dairies could see this happen sooner rather than later.

Almost all milk in the US is fortified with vitamin D, Israel has just decided to fortify all 3% milk and we have heard rumors that both France and Ireland are also considering such a move.

http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=150104079977&ref=nf

Scottish Government to promote vitamin D message

Monday, December 7th, 2009 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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07.12.09

Pregnant women are to be educated about the importance of taking vitamin D supplements thanks to 14-year-old Ryan McLaughlin’s Shine on Scotland campaign.

Last year Ryan took a petition for more awareness of the benefits of vitamin D to the Scottish Parliament, following MS Society funded research which showed a link between vitamin D deficiency and the development of MS. Ryan’s mum Kirsten has the condition.

He is now delighted to have a written response from the Scottish government promising to put in place an action plan to increase awareness.

It said recent research had found there was an “urgent need” to provide information to all health professionals who work with pregnant women and young children about current guidance on vitamin D.

“There is also a need to educate women about the importance of taking vitamin D supplement when pregnant and the importance of giving their children a vitamin D supplement until the age of four,” the response added.

The Scottish government will now agree a co-ordinated programme of action with NHS Health Scotland, and has pledged to keep the McLaughlins informed of developments.

Ryan, from Drumchapel, said: “I am so happy to hear that the Scottish government are being so proactive and really getting behind my campaign.

“These actions will make a big difference to the health of generations of Scots, and it will go a long way to giving Scots children some protection against disease caused by vitamin D deficiency and gives parents proper advice.”

David McNiven, Director of the MS Society Scotland said:

“This is fantastic news for Ryan’s campaign. He has worked incredibly hard to get this result and has been an inspiration to all at the MS Society Scotland. Investing in research which will find answers to the cause, cure and care of MS is a priority for the MS Society Scotland, especially as Scotland has the highest prevalence of MS in the world.”

http://www.mssocietyscotland.org.uk/news_and_whats_on/news_whats_on/win_for_vit_d.html

Schoolboy Ryan McLaughlin wins vitamin D campaign

Saturday, December 5th, 2009 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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Pregnant women are to be educated about the importance of taking vitamin D supplements thanks to a campaign by a 14-year-old Glasgow schoolboy.

Ryan McLaughlin, whose mother Kirsten has the incurable disease, took his case to the Scottish Parliament’s petitions committee earlier this year.

He believes taking vitamin D can help prevent the condition.

In a written response, the Scottish government said it would put in place an action plan to increase awareness.

It said recent research had found there was an “urgent need” to provide information to all health professionals who work with pregnant women and young children about current guidance on vitamin D.

“There is also a need to educate women about the importance of taking vitamin D supplement when pregnant and the importance of giving their children a vitamin D supplement until the age of four,” the response added.

The Scottish government will now agree a co-ordinated programme of action with NHS Health Scotland, and has pledged to keep the McLaughlins informed of developments.

Mrs McLaughlin, a former European Taekwondo champion, was diagnosed with MS two years ago.

Ryan, from Drumchapel, said: “I am so happy to hear that the Scottish government are being so proactive and really getting behind my campaign.

“These actions will make a big difference to the health of generations of Scots, and it will go a long way to giving Scots children some protection against disease caused by vitamin D deficiency and gives parents proper advice.

“I am now looking forward to the summit next year when we’ll hopefully be able to tackle the recommended levels but this is such great news.”

Fortified milk

Ryan became the face of a YouTube campaign to publicise the use of vitamin D, and led hundreds of supporters down Edinburgh’s Royal Mile to Holyrood before he put his proposals to the petitions committee in June.

He told MSPs research into the genetic effect of vitamin D deficiency showed a link to the development of MS. Vitamin D, which the body needs for healthy, strong bones is largely gained through sunlight and food.

The Scottish government has already ruled out free vitamin D supplements for all pregnant and breastfeeding women, and said there were no plans to introduce the supplements in the form of fortified milk or other drinks at school.

Scotland is thought to have the highest rate of MS in the world.

Doc’s New hope for Tiger Tim

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,
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eveningtimesfrontpage

Radio Clyde legend hopes treatment will end his MS nightmare

RADIO Clyde legend Tiger Tim Stevens has revealed he is to begin a revolutionary new treatment that he hopes will end his MS nightmare.

Tim, 57, has been living with multiple sclerosis for 20 years, a condition which has confined him to a wheelchair and caused his energy levels to collapse.

But he believes there is fresh hope for the 10,000 Scots who suffer from MS. An Italian doctor claims to have come up with a revolutionary new theory for the research and diagnosis of the disease.

“He has turned around the whole theory on how MS develops,” says Tim.

“As a result, I’m now looking to embark upon a new treatment that I believe could produce some fantastic results.”

Dr Paolo Zamboni, a professor of medicine at the University of Ferrara in Italy, believes that MS is not, as widely believed, an autoimmune condition, but a vascular disease.

The vascular surgeon began investigating the illness back in 1995 when his wife revealed symptoms of MS and he found repeated references, dating back a century, to excess iron as a possible cause of the debilitating condition.

Using ultrasound to examine the blood vessels leading in and out of the brain, Dr. Zamboni discovered that in more than 90% of people with MS, including his wife, the veins draining blood from the brain were malformed or blocked.

Read the full story on the Evening Times website :

Story by Brian Beacom

http://www.eveningtimes.co.uk/news/display.var.2536119.0.0.php

Ryan McLaughlin to ask for a meeting with the Prime Minister

Monday, November 30th, 2009 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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Ryan Mclaughlin of the Shine on Scotland campaign for vitamin D as a preventitive measure against MS will step up his campaigning this week for a meeting with the UK Prime Minister Mr Gordon Brown.

The bravehearted 14 year old tried to get sneaky meeting with him a few weeks back when he visited North Glasgow College to support Willie Bain but unfortunately there just wasn’t enough time but he was promised a meeting at a later date, although a little disappointed he knew that Mr Brown was a very busy man and was happy to get a promise of a meet at a later date.

Mrs Sarah Brown is a great supporter of MS and he hopes that Mr Brown will support him.

Ryan says ” this is so important to my cause if we can get the UK government support we may be able to move forward in the prevention of  MS through vitamin D supplementation,  there are loads of people from all over the UK wanting this now – I get emails almost every day from Mum’s wanting to protect their kids , it is so cheap to supply it so why delay it’s introduction – a clinical study would cost a 100 times more than just doing it now and would take years to show results  and we must protect kids from MS now.

He say’s the  Scottish Government have been amazing and so supportive and he hopes to open the eyes of the UK  Government in a similar fashion to the Scottish Government but said he has no plans to dress as William Wallace again on any visit and it will be kept very low key.

www.shineonscotland.org.uk

Vitamin D – the missing link for multiple sclerosis sufferers

Monday, November 23rd, 2009 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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Vitamin D – the missing link for multiple sclerosis sufferers

By Hilary Freeman

Sunlight provides Vitamin D – but is weaker in northern countries like Iceland.

Scientists have uncovered increasing evidence of the significance of Vitamin D in the development of multiple sclerosis. Now, Australian researchers have found that Vitamin D may actually reduce its symptoms.

Professor Bruce Taylor, a principal research fellow at the Menzies Institute in Hobart, studied 145 patients in southern Tasmania and tracked their seasonal susceptibility to the disease. He looked at how Vitamin D levels influenced their risk of having an attack of MS.

‘We found that the higher your Vitamin D level, the lower your chance of relapse, and for each ten nanomole [a standard measure of concentration of Vitamin D in the blood] increase in Vitamin D, you can reduce your risk of having an attack of MS by about ten per cent. Doubling your Vitamin D will reduce your risk by up to 50 per cent – a major result.’

Helen Yates, the Multiple Sclerosis Resource Centre’s chief executive, says: ‘It has long been believed that Vitamin D has a role to play in the risk of developing MS but this new research opens up the strong possibility that this vitamin could impact on relapse rates.’

The MS Society’s research communications officer, Dr Susan Kohlhaas, says: ‘These results are very early-stage and need to be reviewed and validated before we draw any firm conclusions.’

It has been known for many years that the further you live from the Equator, the more likely you are to develop MS. For example, Malaysia has hardly any sufferers but in Scotland and Scandinavia MS is relatively common.

It is believed this is due to a shortage of Vitamin D; countries far from the Equator, such as those in Northern Europe, enjoy less sunshine, the main source of Vitamin D.

Research has shown that babies born in May – who developed in the womb during the Vitamin D-scarce winter months – are the most likely to get MS in later life, while those born in November are at much lower risk.

Another study this year found evidence that Vitamin D deficiency during pregnancy and infancy could increase a child’s risk of developing MS in later life. The researchers concluded that taking Vitamin D supplements during these times could reduce the risk, although this has yet to be proven.

Vitamin D can save half million babies each year: study

Saturday, October 17th, 2009 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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Friday Oct 16, 2009 (foodconsumer.org) — Results of a new trial presented at an international research conference in Bruges suggest that vitamin D supplementation can reduce the risk of premature births and boost the health of newborn babies, the Times reported Oct 10.

Vitamin D deficiency, which is common everywhere, has been linked in many previous studies to a variety of illnesses from heart disease, cancers,  multiple sclerosis and many others.

In the trial, Dr. Bruce Hollis and Dr. Carol Wagner of the Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, gave one group of pregnant women 4,000 IUs per day of vitamin D at about three months of pregnancy. They gave a second group 400 IUs per day, amounts recommended by U.S. and UK governments.

Trial participants were monitored by testing their blood and urine samples to make sure calcium and vitamin D levels were within safe ranges. No side effects were observed in either group and vitamin D levels in the women’s blood increased by about 50 percent.

The researchers found pregnant women who took 4000 IUs of the sunshine vitamin per day reduced their risk for premature birth by half compared to the controls and they were less likely to have small babies.

Women on the high-dose vitamin D3 supplements compared with those on low dose-vitamin D supplementation were at a 25 percent reduced risk for infections, particularly respiratory infections such as colds and flu as well as infections of the vagina and the gums.

Women taking high doses of vitamin D also showed reduced risk for diabetes, high blood pressure, and preeclampsia. In addition, babies getting the most vitamin D after birth were less likely to experience colds and eczema.

In another trial, the researchers found that supplementation of 6,400 IUs per day in breastfeeding women provided infants with sufficient vitamin D for their babies, 400 IUs per day.

“I’m telling every pregnant mother I see to take 4,000 IUs and every nursing mother to take 6,400 IUs of vitamin D a day,” said Dr Hollis. “I think it is medical malpractice for obstetricians not to know what the vitamin D level of their patients is. This study will put them on notice.”

The March of Dimes said Sunday, cited by CNN News, that “more than 1 million babies born

prematurely die each year before they are a month old.” Globally, about 12.6 million babies are born prematurely or before 37 weeks of development in the womb.

This means that taking high dosages of vitamin D, like 4,000 IUs per day as used in the current trial, can save the lives of at least half million babies each year.

Vitamin D is rarely found in foods except in a few fortified with vitamin D and a few in nature such as fatty fish, mushroom and egg yolk. No one should expect to get enough vitamin D from fortified foods like orange juice or milk.

The best source of vitamin D is ultra-violet rays in sunshine which trigger synthesis of vitamin D. Fears of getting skin cancer should out weigh vitamin D deficiency which results in at least 17 types of more serious cancers.

Vitamin D deficiency syndrome is a condition in which a person is found to have less than 25 ng/mL of 25 (OH)D in their blood and also have two or more of the following health conditions: osteoporosis, heart disease, hypertension, autoimmune diseases, certain cancers, depression, chronic fatigue, or chronic pain, according to Dr. John Cannell, a vitamin D expert

US experts Meet To Evaluate Vitamin D’s Role In MS

Thursday, October 15th, 2009 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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On Saturday, Oct. 17, leading multiple sclerosis (MS) researchers from around the country will meet at the Hyatt Regency, Boston, to evaluate the feasibility of conducting what would be the largest clinical study ever undertaken to explore the role that vitamin D may play in MS. The meeting will be led by Dr. Benjamin Greenberg, deputy director of the MS program and director of the new Transverse Myelitis and Neuromyelitis Optica Program at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, and is being organized under the auspices of the nonprofit organization Accelerated Cure Project for Multiple Sclerosis.

The purpose of this meeting is to discuss the feasibility of designing a large-scale study around vitamin D supplementation to evaluate its potential effects early in the course of the disease. This study would also result in the banking of thousands of additional blood samples into the Accelerated Cure Project’s MS sample and data repository for future use in understanding the causes and disease mechanisms of MS.

Source:

AcceleratedCure.org: Multiple Sclerosis Researchers To Meet In Boston To Design Largest-Ever Vitamin D Study