“Light in the Shadows: Meditations While Living with a Life-Threatening Illness”

Someone on one of the MSA-related online support groups today recommended this book:

Light in the Shadows:  Meditations While Living with a Life-Threatening Illness
by Hank Dunn
Second Edition, 2005

The author says “living with a life-threatening illness is more than just medical treatment decisions, so I felt this book was necessary to expand on the emotional and spiritual struggles brought on by disease.”

You can order the booklet ($7) online.  At the present time, the PDF of the entire 80-page is available at no charge for download.  See:

www.hardchoices.com

There are four parts to this book:
Part One — Living Each Day Fully
Part Two — Walking the Valley of the Shadow of Death
Part Three — The Heart and Soul of Medical Decisions
Part Four — The Journey to Letting Be

I’ve copied parts of the booklet’s introduction below.

Robin

———————————-

Excerpts from
Introduction
Light in the Shadows:  Meditations While Living with a Life-Threatening Illness
by Hank Dunn

In my more than two decades of work with those living with a life-threatening illness I have learned some valuable lessons about living in the midst of difficult situations. I have served as a chaplain in a nursing home, with a hospice program and in as hospital as well as volunteer in a home for formerly homeless men with AIDS. As difficult as it is, what seems most important is to live each day as fully as possible. I have seen people live a life of meaning and purpose even while severely disabled and seriously ill.
In these few pages I have gathered the most helpful insights these patients have taught me. This book is about finding hope in hopeless situations; being grateful in the midst of great losses; experiencing a connection to things eternal; living a meaningful life while considering the possibility of death; and getting to the root issues in medical treatment decisions.

In my first book, ‘Hard Choices for Loving People,’ I outlined some of the medical treatment decisions we might face. But living with a life-threatening illness is more than just medical treatment decisions, so I felt this book was necessary to expand on the emotional and spiritual struggles brought on by disease.  …

Each of these selections is written as a meditation—some thoughts to be pondered. They are meant to be companions for those with a life-threatening illness and their families. At the end of each piece is a thought, indicated by a check mark, to carry with you through the day. My hope is that these words will help you live each day fully and that you can go into the future with courage and peace.

 

Nitrates – Possible Environmental Cause of AD, PD, etc

Here’s an article from yesterday’s MedicalNewsToday website about an association between nitrates (found in fertilizers) and Alzheimer’s Disease and Parkinson’s Disease.

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/156507.php

Researchers Find Possible Environmental Causes For Alzheimer’s, Diabetes
07 Jul 2009
MedicalNewsToday

A new study by researchers at Rhode Island Hospital have found a substantial link between increased levels of nitrates in our environment and food, with increased deaths from diseases, including Alzheimer’s, diabetes mellitus and Parkinson’s. The study was published in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease (Volume 17:3 July 2009).

Led by Suzanne de la Monte, MD, MPH, of Rhode Island Hospital, researchers studied the trends in mortality rates due to diseases that are associated with aging, such as diabetes, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, diabetes and cerebrovascular disease, as well as HIV. They found strong parallels between age adjusted increases in death rate from Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and diabetes and the progressive increases in human exposure to nitrates, nitrites and nitrosamines through processed and preserved foods as well as fertilizers. Other diseases including HIV-AIDS, cerebrovascular disease, and leukemia did not exhibit those trends. De la Monte and the authors propose that the increase in exposure plays a critical role in the cause, development and effects of the pandemic of these insulin-resistant diseases.

De la Monte, who is also a professor of pathology and lab medicine at The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, says, “We have become a ‘nitrosamine generation.’ In essence, we have moved to a diet that is rich in amines and nitrates, which lead to increased nitrosamine production. We receive increased exposure through the abundant use of nitrate-containing fertilizers for agriculture.” She continues, “Not only do we consume them in processed foods, but they get into our food supply by leeching from the soil and contaminating water supplies used for crop irrigation, food processing and drinking.”

Nitrites and nitrates belong to a class of chemical compounds that have been found to be harmful to humans and animals. More than 90 percent of these compounds that have been tested have been determined to be carcinogenic in various organs. They are found in many food products, including fried bacon, cured meats and cheese products as well as beer and water. Exposure also occurs through manufacturing and processing of rubber and latex products, as well as fertilizers, pesticides and cosmetics.

Nitrosamines are formed by a chemical reaction between nitrites or other proteins. Sodium nitrite is deliberately added to meat and fish to prevent toxin production; it is also used to preserve, color and flavor meats. Ground beef, cured meats and bacon in particular contain abundant amounts of amines due to their high protein content. Because of the significant levels of added nitrates and nitrites, nitrosamines are nearly always detectable in these foods. Nitrosamines are also easily generated under strong acid conditions, such as in the stomach, or at high temperatures associated with frying or flame broiling. Reducing sodium nitrite content reduces nitrosamine formation in foods.

Nitrosamines basically become highly reactive at the cellular level, which then alters gene expression and causes DNA damage. The researchers note that the role of nitrosamines has been well-studied, and their role as a carcinogen has been fully documented. The investigators propose that the cellular alterations that occur as a result of nitrosamine exposure are fundamentally similar to those that occur with aging, as well as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and Type 2 diabetes mellitus.

De la Monte comments, “All of these diseases are associated with increased insulin resistance and DNA damage. Their prevalence rates have all increased radically over the past several decades and show no sign of plateau. Because there has been a relatively short time interval associated with the dramatic shift in disease incidence and prevalence rates, we believe this is due to exposure-related rather than genetic etiologies.”

The researchers recognize that an increase in death rates is anticipated in higher age groups. Yet when the researchers compared mortality from Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s disease among 75 to 84 year olds from 1968 to 2005, the death rates increased much more dramatically than for cerebrovascular and cardiovascular disease, which are also aging-associated. For example, in Alzheimer’s patients, the death rate increased 150-fold, from 0 deaths to more than 150 deaths per 100,000. Parkinson’s disease death rates also increased across all age groups. However, mortality rates from cerebrovascular disease in the same age group declined, even though this is a disease associated with aging as well.

De la Monte notes, “Because of the similar trending in nearly all age groups within each disease category, this indicates that these overall trends are not due to an aging population. This relatively short time interval for such dramatic increases in death rates associated with these diseases is more consistent with exposure-related causes rather than genetic changes.” She also comments, “Moreover, the strikingly higher and climbing mortality rates in older age brackets suggest that aging and/or longer durations of exposure have greater impacts on progression and severity of these diseases.”

The researchers graphed and analyzed mortality rates, and compared them with increasing age for each disease. They then studied United States population growth, annual use and consumption of nitrite-containing fertilizers, annual sales at popular fast food chains, and sales for a major meat processing company, as well as consumption of grain and consumption of watermelon and cantaloupe (the melons were used as a control since they are not typically associated with nitrate or nitrite exposure).

The findings indicate that while nitrogen-containing fertilizer consumption increased by 230 percent between 1955 and 2005, its usage doubled between 1960 and 1980, which just precedes the insulin-resistant epidemics the researchers found. They also found that sales from the fast food chain and the meat processing company increased more than 8-fold from 1970 to 2005, and grain consumption increased 5-fold.

The authors state that the time course of the increased prevalence rates of Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and diabetes cannot be explained on the basis of gene mutations. They instead mirror the classical trends of exposure-related disease. Because nitrosamines produce biochemical changes within cells and tissues, it is conceivable that chronic exposure to low levels of nitrites and nitrosamines through processed foods, water and fertilizers is responsible for the current epidemics of these diseases and the increasing mortality rates associated with them.

De la Monte states, “If this hypothesis is correct, potential solutions include eliminating the use of nitrites and nitrates in food processing, preservation and agriculture; taking steps to prevent the formation of nitrosamines and employing safe and effective measures to detoxify food and water before human consumption.”

Notes:
Other researchers involved in the study with de la Monte include Alexander Neusner, Jennifer Chu and Margot Lawton, from the departments of pathology, neurology and medicine at Rhode Island Hospital and The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University.

The study was funded through grants from the National Institutes of Health. Two subsequent papers have been accepted for publication in the near future that demonstrate experimentally that low levels of nitrosamine exposure cause neurodegeneration, NASH and diabetes.

De la Monte, Suzanne M., Alexander Neusner, Jennifer Chu and Margot Lawton. “Epidemilogical Trends Strongly Suggest Exposures as Etiologic Agents in the Pathogenesis of Sporadic Alzheimer’s Disease, Diabetes Mellitus, and Non-Alcoholic Steatohepatitis.” Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, 17:3 (July 2009) pp 519-529.

Source:
Nancy Cawley Jean
Lifespan

Gait and Balance Webinar Notes (5-28-09)

Did anyone attend this webinar on gait and balance webinar on May 28, 2009 and take notes (especially during the Q&A and when some photos were shown) that you can share?  It was at 2am in the timezone where I was that day, so I was unable to call in.

Though CurePSP was the organizer of this webinar, it applied to all the disorders in our group.

Today, as a registered attendee of the webinar, I received a copy of the slides.  I don’t think these have been posted yet to the CurePSP website (psp.org).

It seems from the slides that it was a very good webinar.  I’ve copied below the text from some of the slides shown during the webinar.

Here are some highlights from my perspective:

  • Assistive Device Golden Rule:  If you find yourself reaching out to touch walls, furniture, friends or care partners (or they are reaching to you) while walking–you are in need of an assistive device.
  • If falls continue no matter what we do, then safety gear may be the answer:  helmets; HipSaver®; chair or bed alarm; wheelchair; geriatric recliner chair.
  • How can PT and OT help?  Assess & treat functional mobility and ADL abilities.  Perform home safety assessments.  Develop new and safer ways to perform activities.  Train care-partners to safely assist.  Recommend appropriate adaptive equipment for the home.  Recommend appropriate mobility devices.

 

Robin

—————————————————————————-

Gait & Balance Questions Answered
by Heather Cianci, PT, MS, GCS, Penn Neurological Institute
5-28-09 CurePSP Webinar

Causes of Gait Changes & Falls
..Rigid/Stiff Muscles and Joints
..Shuffling steps
..Narrow base of support (feet too close)
..Slowed or absent balance reactions
..Slowness of Movement
..Visual Changes
–Difficulty with scanning your surroundings
–Double vision
..Loss of Coordination
..Freezing
..Blurred vision
..Orthostatic hypotension –sudden blood pressure drop
..“Alien limb”
..Myoclonus–quick, jerky movements
..Sensation changes
..Impaired safety judgment

Common Places Falls Occur
..Walking
..Turning
..On Stairs or Curbs
..While Reaching
..Transferring:
–In & out of bed
–In & out of the shower/bath tub
–In & out of the car
–Up & down from a chair or the toilet

Tips for Walking Safely
..Slow down & concentrate
–You must now “tell”your body what to do
–If you are unable to do this, it is important to have a care partner remind you
..To avoid shuffling
–Focus on landing with the heel hitting down first, not the toes
..Do one thing at a time
–Do not reach for the refrigerator door while walking toward it
..Keep your hands free
..Be aware of changes in the floor surface
–Tilt your head down to look at the floor
–Stop before the surface change and step over the threshold

Assistive Device Golden Rule
If you find yourself reaching out to touch walls, furniture, friends or care partners (or they are reaching to you) while walking–you are in need of an assistive device.

Getting Out of Bed
..Bend up knees
..Roll completely on your side
..Grab rail
..Allow your legs to drop off of the side of the bed…
..While you push yourself up sideways into sitting
..If help is needed, care partner can lift under shoulder & push down at outer thigh

Getting In & Out of the Car
To Safely Transfer
–Slide seat back
–Back into car & then slide legs in, reverse to get out
–Plastic bag on seat can make moving on fabric seats easier
–Place cushion on low seats to help with standing

Handy Bar (for gettign in and out of the car)
Allows for a safe place to hold
www.handybar.com, 888-738-0611

Sit to Stand Transfer
..Scoot to front of chair
..Open legs wide
..Pull feet back under the knees
..Lean forward –“Nose over Toes”
..Push forward until butt lifts off of chair
..Then push up to stand

Protection Products/Devices
If falls continue no matter what we do, then safety gear may be the answer…
Helmets
•http://www.cpsc.gov/CPSCPUB/PUBS/349.pdf(US Consumer Safety Product Commission brochure)
•www.headsaver.com.au
•Local sporting goods store
HipSaver®(shorts with hip and tailbone pads)
•www.hipsaver.com
•www.alimed.com or 800-225-2610
Chair or Bed Alarm
•Posey Sitter II®Alarm Unit
•www.posey.comor 800-447-6739
•Features different alarms or voice recording when person moves from chair or bed
Wheelchair or Geriatric Recliner Chair
•Contact local PT/OT or Rehabilitation Center to find a “Seating Clinic”or Wheelchair specialist

Rehabilitation Strategies
Current Research is Supporting
..Balance exercises
..Balance exercises along with eye movement training
..Treadmill and weight-supported treadmill training
..Group exercise programs
Exercise needs to be ongoing throughout the course of the disease. Delays in the need for wheelchairs, less falls, improvements in gait & balance, and reduced gait changes are possible.

How Can I Get More Help with Finding Assistive Devices?
RESNA (Rehabilitation Engineering & Assistive Technology Society of North America)
..www.resna.org
..“Projects”
..“Statewide AT Program”
..“State AT Program”or “Device Loan”
NATTAP (National Assistive Technology Technical Assistance Partnership)
..Locate programs available in each state
..703-524-6686

How Can I Find Someone to do Home Modifications?
Certified Aging-In-Place Specialist (CAPS)
..Certified specialist through The National Association of Home Builders
..Remodelers, Contractors, Interior Designers, Therapists
..800-368-5242
..www.nahb.org
–Resources –Online Directories –Find a CAPS

How Can PT and OT Help?
..Assess & treat functional mobility & ADL abilities
..Perform home safety assessments
..Develop new & safer ways to perform activities
..Train care-partners to safely assist
..Recommend appropriate adaptive equipment for the home
..Recommend appropriate mobility devices

Locating a PT or OT
..American PT Association
–1-800-999-2782
–www.apta.org
–“Find a Certified Specialist (Neurologic or Geriatric)”
..American OT Association
–301-652-2682
–www.aota.org
..LSVT®BIG
–888-438-5788
–www.lsvtglobal.com
–“Find a Clinician”
..Call Local Outpatient Rehab Centers
–Generally those associated with Hospitals (Regular & Rehabilitation), & non-sports oriented centers
–Ask if they have therapists who have worked with PSP or those who deal with neurological & balance problems
..We Move
–www.wemove.org
–“Find a Doctor”–Physical Medicine & Rehab
..National Parkinson Foundation
–800-327-4545
–www.parkinson.org
–Allied Team Training (ATTP)
–List of Graduates

Davunetide (aka, NAP, aka AL-108) trial now to focus on PSP

In November 2008, CurePSP, through the Pollin CBD Research Fund, awarded a research grant to UCSF and Dr. Boxer to study NAP (AL-108) in CBD. See:
http://forum.psp.org/viewtopic.php?t=7669

Within the last month or so I heard from a CBD family who plans to participate in the trial that UCSF would begin enrollment some time in the fall of 2009. There were to be at least two additional sites participating — Mayo Rochester and UPenn.

I heard a few days ago from Sharon, a local support group member, that the NAP trial would be open to PSPers. I received confirmation from UCSF today:

“After feedback from the European equivalent of the FDA, we were forced to focus on PSP, although we will still enroll a smaller number of CBD and FTD patients. The study will also be much larger than originally planned because of additional $ raised by the company that manufactures the drug. We are still the lead site and there will likely be 25 North American sites. More details about sites will be forthcoming in the next few months.”

UCSF emphasized that they have no further details to provide at this time. They did point me to a press release from Allon Pharmaceuticals, NAP’s manufacturer, that came out yesterday. I’ve copied that below.

One item I will clarify later is whether participating patients must have dementia or cognitive impairment.

Robin

http://allontherapeutics.com/ir_news_25Jun_2009.html

Allon Therapeutics forms Steering Committee for Phase II human trial

VANCOUVER — June 25, 2009 – Allon Therapeutics Inc. (TSX:NPC) reported today that leading neurologists and psychiatrists have joined a special Steering Committee to help the Company design and conduct a Phase II human clinical trial that will evaluate whether Allon’s lead neuroprotective drug candidate, davunetide intranasal (AL-108), has the potential to become the first effective treatment for a number of brain disorders broadly categorized as frontotemporal dementia (FTD). The study will evaluate the effect of davunetide for the treatment of Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP), one type of FTD. A smaller study in other related forms of FTD will be carried out in parallel.

PSP is a degenerative brain disease that is often characterized by progressive difficulty with balance and walking, eye movement abnormalities, and cognitive and personality changes. PSP affects approximately 20,000 people in the United States, a patient population size consistent with an orphan drug designation. The company expects that efficacy in PSP would define the opportunity to use davunetide (AL-108) in other FTD subtypes that are tauopathies.

Gordon McCauley, President and CEO of Allon, said the Company plans to begin the Phase II trial in FTD during the second half of 2009.

“Physicians and researchers who specialize in FTD are enthusiastic about evaluating davunetide intranasal (AL-108) in FTD patients, primarily because about 50% of FTD and related disorders are tauopathies, or tau-related diseases — and Allon’s technology is recognized as the most clinically advanced tau-related therapy,” McCauley said.

The Company identified some of the members of its FTD Steering Committee as:

• Adam L. Boxer, M.D., Ph.D., Director of the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Alzheimer’s Disease and Frontotemporal Dementia Clinical Trials Program and Assistant Professor of Neurology at the UCSF Memory and Aging Center, who specializes in Alzheimer’s Disease, Frontotemporal Dementia and related disorders such as Corticobasal Degeneration and Progressive Supranuclear Palsy.

• Rachelle S. Doody, M.D., Ph.D., Professor of Neurology and Effie Marie Cain Chair in Alzheimer’s Disease Research at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, who specializes in Alzheimer’s disease and memory disorders.

• Murray Grossman, M.D., Professor of Neurology and Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, who specializes in the diagnosis and treatment of non-Alzheimer’s forms of dementia such as frontotemporal dementia, corticobasal degeneration, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and Lewy body disease.

• Anthony E. Lang, M.D., Director of the Division of Neurology and Jack Clark Chair for Parkinson’s Disease Research at the University of Toronto, and Director of the Morton and Gloria Shulman Movement Disorders Centre, Toronto Western Hospital.

• Bruce L. Miller, M.D., Professor of Neurology at the University of California, San Francisco, A.W. & Mary Margaret Clausen Distinguished Chair, and Clinical Director of the UCSF Memory and Aging Center, which treats patients with diseases that cause dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease, corticobasal degeneration, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and frontotemporal dementia.

• Lon S. Schneider, M.D., Professor of Psychiatry, Neurology and Gerontology at the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California, whose specialization includes Alzheimer’s disease and dementia.

FTD encompasses several cognitive disorders, including Behavioral Variant-Frontotemporal Dementia, Semantic Dementia and Progressive Nonfluent Aphasia, and the movement disorders, Corticobasal Degeneration and Progressive Supranuclear Palsy. No effective treatment is currently available for FTD, and several FTD syndromes are fatal within three to five years. FTD is often incorrectly diagnosed as Alzheimer’s disease.

In 2008, Allon reported efficacy results from a Phase IIa clinical trial that demonstrated that davunetide intranasal (AL-108) improved short-term and working memory performance in patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment, a precursor to Alzheimer’s disease.

The pathology of Alzheimer’s disease and many forms of FTD has some similarities, including the presence of altered forms of the brain protein tau. In Alzheimer’s, altered tau forms tangles, part of the well-established plaques and tangles hallmarks of Alzheimer’s pathology. PSP is associated with “pure” tau pathology, unlike Alzheimer’s disease in which both amyloid and tau pathology is identified. This provides additional rationale for the use of AL-108 which targets tau in PSP.

Allon has shown that decreasing the levels of altered forms of tau with davunetide intranasal (AL-108) preserved the memory of mice bred to replicate Alzheimer’s or FTD pathology. Allon’s preclinical studies have also shown that davunetide intranasal (AL-108) preserved the memory and learning function of mice bred to replicate the altered tau pathology associated with FTD.

This trial at UCSF is now recruiting. Trial info was posted to clinicaltrials.gov about two weeks ago. See:
http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01056965

This is a 12-week study of davunetide (NAP, AL-108) or placebo is those with PSP, CBD, or two frontotemporal lobar degeneration disorders associated with tau pathology (FTDP-17 and PNFA). The drug and the placebo are both administered via nasal spray.

I noticed these two inclusion criteria may disqualify some:
* Subject resides outside a skilled nursing facility or dementia care facility. Residence in an assisted living facility is allowed.
* Able to ambulate with or without assistance.

And this exclusion criteria may disqualify some:
* Early, symptomatic autonomic dysfunction
* Within 4 weeks of screening or during the course of the study, concurrent treatment with memantine, acetylcholinesterase inhibitors, antipsychotic agents or mood stabilizers (valproate, lithium, etc.) or benzodiazepines (other than temazepam or zolpidem).
* Treatment with lithium, methylene blue, tramiprosate, ketone bodies, Dimebon or any putative disease-modifying agent directed at tau within 90 days of screening.
* Subject not willing to attempt LP [Robin’s note: LP probably means lumbar puncture.]

The UCSF trial contacts are:
Mary Koestler, RN, PhD, phone 415 476 0661, mkoestler AT memory.ucsf.edu
Arielle Lasky, phone 415 476 8333, alasky AT memory.ucsf.edu [Robin changed this from Nicholson to Lasky, as clinicaltrials.gov got updated]

Dr. Adam Boxer at UCSF’s MAC is the principal investigator.

I’ve heard from a few people (including one member here) that Mayo Jax intends to participate in this trial. Presumably this will happen later in 2010.

Robin

Will speech deteriorate over time?

I received this email earlier today:

“Mother seems to have all the major symptoms described with PSP except her speech. I can still understand everything she says easily (although her voice is weaker). Will this change over time too?”

Here’s my answer:

Probably though no one can be certain. People with the PSP-parkinsonism type of PSP don’t have dysarthria as a primary symptom. But these people often develop speech problems later on.

In a woman in our local support group who has PSP-P, her speech was understandable by me for the last couple of years. Now her voice has gotten so quiet that I can’t hear her, and no one else can either. She hardly speaks any more now.