What is liberation therapy?

Until the last decade, the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis (MS) has been the life of potentially life -threatening symptoms. Although the drug has not yet been found, since 2011 one treatment has been slowly acquired as a revolutionary approach to fighting this predominantly misunderstood disease. In the mid -90s, Italian physician and Professor Paolo Zamboni, who was looking for a cure for his wife affected by Elena Ravalli, complicated sonographic technology to discover different veins in the skulls of mere MS patients. This situation called chronic cerebrospinal fluid insufficiency (CCSVA), which he believed to explain several more common early symptoms of World Championships such as lethargy, dough areas, dizziness and even temporary blindness. Shortly after this finding Zamboni began to treat the state of versions of angioplastic surgery called Liberation Therapy.

Zamboni, a vascular surgeon who taught at the Italian University of Ferrara, in his early research noticed that patients with MS MSVSvšD -responsible for carrying blood back to the heart from the head. He then used several types of ultrasonic machines using Doppler's radar technology to confirm these exact locations called strictures. Other studies led Zamboni to the discovery that these blockages were rich in iron and the largest in patients with the most advanced World Championship.

This knowledge led many scientists at the beginning of the 21st century to begin to think of the World Championship as a disorder of the vascular system and not immunity. Zamboni created liberation therapy to use his discovery - first by treating his wife and then thousands around the world. Several case studies have shown that the recurrence of MS symptoms and quality of life has improved in the vast majority of patients who have undergone procedures. Although liberation therapy has been adopted with optimism in many countries in the whole world, other governments are progressing with more skepticism, waiting for more definitive results and perhaps minorThe potential for illegal practices.

Liberated therapy, which Zamboni created to deal with its new discovery, is similar to angioplastic surgery used to treat the aortic passages of the heart. In general, this involves inflating a device similar to a balloon on the site of a reduction in an effort to stretch the vein. This then reduces the effect of blocking and restores the usefulness of the vein.

Since there has been no cure for MS since 2011, the regime of other physical therapies and prescription regimes has been used to at least contain the progression of the disease and fight its many symptoms. According to an American national sclerosis society society, it has been shown that nearly 10 prescription drugs will at least stop the Worldx® to Tysabri® process. It has also been shown that any number of other drugs in the fight against symptoms, including corticosteroids to reduce inflammation during particularly exhausting seizures with the disease.

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