Experts disagree about the role of such protein clumps, which are common in many neurodegenerative disorders. Some observers have suggested that clumps and tangles of proteins could be beneficial, while others have suggested they may be neutral, and still others have said that they're probably harmful. (See "Solving the SOD1 Puzzle," The ALS Newsletter, vol. 6, no. 1; and "Why Motor Neurons Die" vol. 4, no. 6.) The new report, by Neil Bence, Roopal Sampat and Ron Kopito of the Department of Biological Sciences at Stanford (California) University, suggests that these clumps may play a key role in either starting or perpetuating cellular destruction in various neurodegenerative disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease. It doesn't specifically mention ALS. Protein clumps in cells, the researchers say, may preoccupy a cellular garbage-disposal mechanism called the ubiquitin-proteasome system that normally rids the cell of damaged or malformed proteins before they can do any harm. The protein clumps found in many diseases (including ALS) may overwhelm the detoxification system, leaving malformed proteins free to wreak havoc while the disposal system is busy with the clumps, the researchers suggest. The investigators tested the system by adding two different proteins known to lead to aggregates an abnormal protein found in Huntington's disease and another one found in cystic fibrosis. In a genetic form of ALS (not specifically addressed in the report), abnormal SOD1 protein appears to lead to protein aggregates. For some reason, such clumps are also seen in some people with sporadic ALS, in which SOD1 is theoretically normal. More research needs to be done to confirm or refute these findings with respect to ALS. |
| CALIFORNIA Loma Linda University University of California at Los Angeles California Pacific Medical Center University of California at San Francisco University of Colorado University of Miami Northwestern Medical School Johns Hopkins University Massachusetts General Hospital UMDNJ - Robert Wood Johnson Medical School |
NEW YORK Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center Carolinas Medical Center Wake Forest University Cleveland Clinic Foundation MCP - Hahnemann University Penn Neurological Institute Baylor College of Medicine University of Wisconsin |
If you have ALS, the right adaptive sports or recreation program, or an accessible state or national park, may be able to help you get outside for a while this summer, while supporting your physical needs.
Some private organizations located across the United States offer organized outdoor fun for people with disabilities. These accessible facilities, with specially trained staff members, can accommodate people who use power wheelchairs or those who need full transfer assistance.
For example, Disabled Sports USA has many affiliates across the country, each specializing in certain activities. At Donner Memorial State Park in northern California, the organization offers a program adapted for people who use power wheelchairs; those who want to water ski or jet ski must be able to wear life vests, right themselves in the water and breathe on their own. The adventurous can use water skis specially outfitted with a secure seat comparable to that of a wheelchair.
At the National Sports Center for the Disabled in Winter Park, Colo., prospective participants are screened by telephone for their interest in and suitability for adapted programs in sailing, horseback riding, fishing and rafting.
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While many places that offer adapted activities have recreational aides who also are trained to provide general assistance to people with physical disabilities, they generally expect people who need personal assistant services to provide their own or to pay extra for them.
Prices for activities vary from well under $100 per person per day to the low hundreds per day with additional attendant service.
If you prefer a less structured approach or a less strenuous excursion, you may choose day trips or camping at state or national parks, which offer a variety of outdoor choices amid spectacular settings.
At Yellowstone National Park, natural hot springs and geysers are the main attraction, and the Old Faithful area has accessible lodging, food service, camping and parking. In other areas of the park, visitors can find accessible fishing and wheelchair rental. Yellowstone offers a visitor's guide to accessible features.
At Acadia National Park on the rocky coast of Maine, campers can register at Blackwoods Camp-ground without leaving their cars, and some campsites have paved pathways leading to grills, picnic tables, water, restrooms and the amphitheater. And you can take in a view you'll always remember from the comfort of your own vehicle, driving the steep, winding road up to the top of 1,500-foot Cadillac Mountain, which overlooks the village of Bar Harbor and lovely coastal islands in Frenchman Bay.
Whichever of the hundreds of wildlife refuges, monuments, recreation areas, parks or historic sites you choose, the National Park Service offers its free Golden Access Passport to people with documented permanent disabilities. The pass entitles holders to free lifetime admission to facilities and 50 percent off camping, parking and more.
A recreation program, vacation or camping excursion should be chosen in consultation with your physician, and your plans should take into account your medical needs, level of ability and stamina.
To find out more about the accessibility of a national park near you, go to www.nps.gov/parks.html, and from the drop-down menu, select the park of your choice. From there, select "travel basics," then scroll down to "accessibility."
For detailed information on state-run outdoor facilities, contact your state park or conservation department. Other resources include:
Disabled Sports USA
www.dsusa.org (301) 217-0960
Disability Travel and Recreation Resources
www.makoa.org/travel.htm
Easy Access, the Sierra Club Guide
to National Parks for People with Disabilities,
by Wendy Roth and Michael Tompane
National Ability Center
www.nationalabilitycenter.org
National Center on Accessibility
www.indiana.edu/~nca/outdoor/outdoor.htm
National Park Service
www.nps.gov
(202) 208-6843
National Sports Center for the Disabled
www.nscd.org
(970) 726-1540
Wilderness Inquiry
www.wildernessinquiry.com
(800) 728-0719
In response to "Noninvasive Ventilation Can't Sustain Life Indefinitely in ALS" (vol. 6, no. 2), we received a few comments taking issue with Hiroshi Mitsumoto's cautions about long-term use of noninvasive ventilation (NIV) in ALS. The story was a report of a study published in Muscle & Nerve which found that use of noninvasive ventilation may hasten decline of respiratory muscles over time. Mitsumoto, director of the Eleanor & Lou Gehrig MDA/ALS Center at Columbia University's Neurological Institute in New York, was an author of the study. The article wasn't meant to provide medical advice only to report on a study.
This article adds to the conflicting information and misinformation reaching the ALS patient concerning respiratory care. Broad statements such as Dr. Mitsumoto's comment that BiPAP and other NIV systems are "not an answer" for long-term survival are simply incorrect. I am now in my sixth year of nasal ventilation and doing fine in a stabilized condition. Mitsumoto is incorrect, in my opinion, when he states that NIV won't be effective indefinitely in ALS.
Ed White
Fredericksburg, Texas
The question regarding whether it may be "worse" to provide NIV doesn't seem to be of much concern in ALS. The statement that pulmonary function declined over time despite the use of NIV is misleading, as this will occur as part of the disease process of ALS, regardless of the use of assisted ventilation, whether it be noninvasive or via trach. It is not the assisted breathing device causing the deconditioning of muscles, but ALS.
Pulmonary function will always deteriorate in time, so why not give the patient an extension of life and a better quality of life in any way possible? Although NIV cannot be used by every ALS patient, it can be a very effective long-term option.
Carolyn Moore, licensed vocational nurse
Blanco, Texas
Noninvasive ventilation can be delivered via mask. |
MDA's The ALS Newsletter is one of the best informational resources today for people with ALS. Nowadays, with the growing number of ALS ventilator users, the newsletter provides up-to-date and accurate information for making the best life choices.
Until the 1990s, people with ALS used tracheostomy ventilation, usually as a result of emergency hospitalization and decision making. This unplanned outcome often resulted in unwanted, long-term ventilator-dependent survival, with progressive immobility, substantial care and high costs. In recent years, however, the use of nasal ventilation has steadily increased and is currently the treatment of choice for respiratory insufficiency associated with ALS.
Pamela A. Cazzolli, R.N.
ALS Clinical Nurse Consultant
Canton, Ohio
I agree [with Dr. Mitsumoto] that tracheostomy ventilation provides the best long-term survival for people with ALS who are engaged in living, want to continue and have the needed resources. But usually noninvasive ventilation is used first if possible.
Until a larger, well-designed, prospective [looking forward] clinical trial is done, I do not think that people with ALS should worry about the speculation that nocturnal NIV may decondition the respiratory muscles.
I strongly agree with Dr. Mitsumoto's emphasis that attention to safety is critically important when using mechanical ventilation for 20 to 24 hours a day.
Many people with ALS are quite satisfied with the quality of life and survival benefit from NIV and do not want to ever go on to tracheostomy. An advance directive should be used to formalize one's goals and preferences.
Edward Anthony Oppenheimer, M.D.
Pulmonary specialist
University of California, Los Angeles
Reply from Hiroshi Mitsumoto:
There is no doubt that noninvasive, positive-pressure ventilation (NPPV) is the first line of treatment for respiratory symptoms that occur during the course of ALS, including frequent awakening due to nocturnal respiratory problems.
We were in fact one of the first physician groups to start using NPPV for patients with ALS in the 1980s. Our experience therefore allows us to recognize the promise, as well as the limitations,of NPPV.
Now, in the era of evidence-based medicine, what we need is "class 1" evidence (based on prospective following people through time and controlled studies) that NPPV really prolongs survival and improves quality of life. Such evidence is not only important for medical practice but also strongly influences insurance carriers.
At present, there is only class 2 evidence, which is based on retrospective (looking back at patient histories) studies to support NPPV in ALS. Therefore, the use of NPPV is recommended as a guideline but not yet as a standard of care.
Obviously, the more we understand the effects and mechanisms of NPPV on respiratory muscles, the greater will be our ability to effectively use NPPV for patients with ALS.
Hiroshi Mitsumoto, M.D.
Professor of Neurology
Columbia University Neurological Institute,
New York
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After a lifetime of serving others, Sister Monica LaFleur of the Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word is now receiving care herself. Her career as an educator and historian had spanned nearly four decades when she first experienced unusual symptoms in 1999. In January 2000, she learned they were the result of ALS, and in May of that year she retired.
Sister Monica has received services at the MDA clinic in Houston. She's also attended the local MDA/ALS support group and obtained advice on equipment such as BiPAP and feeding tube.
Anne Swisher, MDA program services director in Houston, has become acquainted with Sister Monica and many of the other convent members. Swisher describes her as "a very gentle person with a great sense of humor. She's just a very caring person. She's part of a big family birthwise and adoptionwise" (as a convent member).
Sister Monica was born in 1928, 25 miles north of Lafayette, La., one of 10 children. She remains in contact with her siblings and receives monthly visits from her birth sisters.
To interview Sister Monica, who doesn't speak, we e-mailed questions to St. Placidus Director of Nursing Anne McVey, who relayed the questions to Sister Monica, who answered in longhand. Special thanks to Anne McVey for facilitating the interview. |
A member of Houston's Villa de Matel (named for the congregation's founder), Sister Monica recently helped to dedicate the Heritage Center, the congregation's new archives building. An educator by vocation, she joined the order in 1946. She taught and served as principal and superintendent, grades K-8, for the Diocese of Houston and Galveston for 26 years. For 12 more she worked as archivist (historian) for the congregation of the Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word.
Having lost the ability to speak, she misses her role in sharing the events of the day with other members of her community. With assistance, she still goes to mass each morning and participates in a regular exercise group, but her days contain much more silent reflection and prayer.
After years of serving others, she's now receiving others' service, yet she has no complaints. She says, "I get the best. My congregation provides all needs."
St. Joseph's Hospital in Phoenix and the Neurology Clinic of the University of Arizona Health Sciences Center in Tucson have been designated as the sites of the newest MDA/ALS research and clinical centers. The new centers the 23rd and 24th such facilities to receive the MDA/ALS designation were announced during a recent Perspective on ALS seminar in Tucson, sponsored by MDA's ALS Division.
The comprehensive, multidisciplinary facilities are expected to serve more than 150 people in Arizona with ALS.
The UA Neurology Clinic, at 707 N. Alvernon Way, Suite 201, houses the Tucson center, operating under the direction of Valerie Cwik, UA assistant professor of neurology. Cwik heads a team that offers a multidisciplinary approach to ALS treatment. The center provides ALS patients with care from physicians, a nurse coordinator, a physical therapist, an occupational therapist, a speech therapist and a genetic counselor.
In addition to its clinical services for patients, Cwik's team also conducts ongoing ALS research. To schedule an appointment, call (520) 694-8888. For other inquiries about the center, call (520) 694-1450.
The director of the new Phoenix center, called the MDA/ALS Neuromuscular Research Center, is Kumaraswamy Sivakumar. The center provides ALS patients with care from physicians, a nurse coordinator, a physical therapist, an occupational therapist, a speech therapist and a genetic counselor. Because of its affiliation with St. Joseph's Hospital, the Phoenix center will also feature a pulmonologist, a cardiologist and a gastroenterologist all on-site.
Sivakumar's team also conducts ALS research. The facility is located at 240 W. Thomas Road, and can be reached by calling (602) 406-6360.
For a complete list of MDA/ALS centers, see The ALS Newsletter, vol. 6, no. 1, or go to www.als-mda.org.
Many people who know the devastating effects of ALS are providing lasting support for MDA's battle against the disease. Through your will, you can designate a gift to MDA earmarked to support ALS research or services.
To give what remains of your estate after other bequests have been satisfied, just include the following language in your will:
"I give, devise and bequeath all (or a specified fraction of) the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, whether real or personal, of every kind and description, and wherever situated, to Muscular Dystrophy Association Inc., a New York not-for-profit corporation having its principal office at 3300 East Sunrise Drive, Tucson, Arizona, 85718-3208, for its program of research and services related to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis."
To give a dollar amount or percentage of your estate:
"I give, devise and bequeath the sum of $________ (or ________ percent of my estate) to Muscular Dystrophy Association Inc., a New York not-for-profit corporation having its principal office at 3300 East Sunrise Drive, Tucson, Arizona, 85718-3208, for its program of research and services related to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis."
Your attorney or financial adviser can help you work out the details of a bequest to MDA's ALS Division. For more information, call MDA's Planned Giving Department at (800) 572-1717.
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