Archive for the ‘multiple sclerosis’ category

Shleppers Supports 2011 Walk MS Events

February 22nd, 2012

Top New York moving company Shleppers Moving & Storage is proud to announce its recent donation of time, trucks and support to the National Multiple Sclerosis Society which hosted four Walk MS events.

Rye, NY (PRWEB) February 21, 2012

These events are the premier fundraising events for the National Multiple Sclerosis Society in the NY Metropolitan area. To conduct four events at four different locations was a major challenge for the National Multiple Sclerosis Society and for its marketing partner, Lead Dog Marketing. Shleppers played a key role in transporting and storing goods for several days leading up to the events, and then Shleppers' expert movers unloaded tables and chairs for the event, set up tents, and helped to hang signage and banners around the event vicinity. For the events at Rye Playland and Bear Mountain State Park, Shleppers personnel assisted by handing out water and stacking trucks, and set up a Shleppers tent from which they also gave away Frisbees, T-Shirts, umbrellas, and more. The events were a huge success, attracting more than 6,000 participants, sponsors and volunteers. With seven Walk MS events happening throughout the tri-state area that same weekend, Walk MS will raise close to $3.0 million to create a world free of multiple sclerosis.

“All of us at the National Multiple Sclerosis Society want to extend our deepest gratitude to the Shleppers team for the exceptional job done with the logistical setup, storage, breakdown and route coordination for the 2011 Walk MS events” comments Barbara Evans, Vice President, Development for the National Multiple Sclerosis Society’s NYC-Southern NY Chapter. “Many thanks to the entire Shleppers team for a job well done, and for helping the National Multiple Sclerosis Society in its mission to create a world free of multiple sclerosis. Their donation of trucks and services truly helps us come closer to achieving this mission.”

“We were privileged and delighted to take part in supporting the National Multiple Sclerosis Society this year,” comments Shleppers President, Jason Friedland. “This is the second year we have helped and are very happy to be involved with our people and trucks–it's a truly worthy cause.”

About Shleppers Moving & Storage

Founded in 1978, Shleppers Moving & Storage began moving with one van and one vision–to serve its customers with commitment and integrity. By working in partnership with customers, New York's top movers have earned a reputation as the city's number one moving and storage company, offering a wide range of relocation services, including local, long-distance, and international moving, packing, unpacking, and private storage. With dedication, teamwork, and innovation, Shleppers is a NY moving company that puts customers first, creating a moving experience that's efficient and reliable from the first box to the last. Shleppers is also deeply committed to charity and community involvement, with its donation of trucks and logistical support for The March of Dimes, National Multiple Sclerosis Society, Memorial Sloan-Kettering, The Food Allergy & Anaphylaxis Network, The JCC Maccabi Games, The Catholic Charities of Brooklyn & Queens, UJA Federation, the Community Mayors Foundation, and others. For more information, quotes, supplies, or moving tips, please visit http://www.Shleppers.com.

About the National Multiple Sclerosis Society

The National MS Society is a collective of passionate individuals who want to do something about MS now—to move together toward a world free of multiple sclerosis. MS stops people from moving. The Society exists to make sure it doesn't. The Society helps each person address the challenges of living with MS through its 50-state network of chapters. The Society helps people affected by MS by funding cutting-edge research, driving change through advocacy, facilitating professional education, and providing programs and services that help people with MS and their families move their lives forward.

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Ed Eshel
VirtuosOnline
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Cleveland Clinic Neurologist Awarded Dystel Prize for MS Research

February 22nd, 2012

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Newswise — NEW ORLEANS – The American Academy of Neurology and the National Multiple Sclerosis Society are awarding the 2012 John Dystel Prize for MS Research to Richard M. Ransohoff, MD, with the Cleveland Clinic. Ransohoff, a member of the American Academy of Neurology and Associate Editor of Neurology®, the Academy’s medical journal, will receive the award at the Academy’s 64th Annual Meeting in New Orleans, April 21-28, 2012. The Annual Meeting is the world’s largest gathering of neurologists with more than 10,000 attendees and more than 2,300 scientific presentations on the latest research advance in brain disease.

The John Dystel Prize recognizes a significant contribution to research in the understanding, treatment or prevention of multiple sclerosis (MS).

Ransohoff’s research has focused on the central nervous system, which includes the brain, optic nerves and spinal cord.

“This award recognizes the superb research done by my colleagues in my laboratory, and I'm proud to receive it on their behalf. Support by the National Institutes of Health, the National MS Society and generous individual donors showed confidence in our research and inspired our work,” said Ransohoff. “During the past 15 years, we’ve identified several new molecules as potential targets for MS treatments by studying how MS lesions begin in the central nervous system. Our research fortifies the rationale for developing new MRI techniques to visualize brain damage in MS and will help us to identify new treatments to address inflammation in the central nervous system.”

The award is presented by the American Academy of Neurology and the National Multiple Sclerosis Society. It is made possible through a special contribution from the John Dystel Multiple Sclerosis Research Fund at the National Multiple Sclerosis Society. Learn more about Ransohoff’s contributions to MS research and the Dystel Prize at http://www.nationalmssociety.org/news/news-detail/index.aspx?nid=5975.

“Professor Ransohoff’s research has uncovered far-reaching insights on immune activity at work in the brain and spinal cord during the MS disease process,” said Timothy Coetzee, PhD, Chief Research Officer for the National MS Society. “He’s a distinguished thought leader whose discoveries could pave the way for totally new approaches to treating the disease.”

Learn more about multiple sclerosis at http://www.aan.com/patients.

The American Academy of Neurology, an association of more than 25,000 neurologists and neuroscience professionals, is dedicated to promoting the highest quality patient-centered neurologic care. A neurologist is a doctor with specialized training in diagnosing, treating and managing disorders of the brain and nervous system such as stroke, Alzheimer’s disease, epilepsy, Parkinson’s disease and multiple sclerosis.

For more information about the American Academy of Neurology, visit http://www.aan.com or find us on Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and YouTube.

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Cleveland Clinic Neurologist Awarded Dystel Prize for MS Research

Cleveland Clinic physician receives prominent award for outstanding contributions to MS research

February 22nd, 2012

Public release date: 21-Feb-2012
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Contact: Dan Doron
dorond@ccf.org
216-636-5874
Cleveland Clinic

Tuesday, February 21, 2012, Cleveland: Richard Ransohoff, M.D., a Cleveland Clinic physician and a researcher in the Neurosciences Department of Cleveland Clinic's Lerner Research Institute, has been awarded the 2012 John Dystel Prize for Multiple Sclerosis Research.

The award ? presented by the American Academy of Neurology (AAN) and the National Multiple Sclerosis Society since 1995 ? is given annually to one recipient, recognizing “outstanding contributions to research in the understanding, treatment, or prevention of multiple sclerosis” and “significant and exciting work that has influenced how we think about multiple sclerosis.”

Dr. Ransohoff's most recent contributions to the field of multiple sclerosis (MS) include the discovery that MS can progress from the outermost layers of the brain to its interior. Aiming to lower the risk/benefit ratio of multiple sclerosis therapy, he has also recently developed an experimental model that allowed his group to identify a novel mechanism for harmful infiltration of white blood cells into the central nervous system. With increased understanding of this process and how it is regulated, new therapeutic targets are possible.

“It is an honor to receive this award, which recognizes the research done by my colleagues and me. With support from the National Institutes of Health, the National MS Society and generous individual donors, this prestigious award inspires our daily work,” Dr. Ransohoff said. “During the past 15 years, we've identified several new molecules as potential targets for MS treatments and rationales for developing new MRI techniques to visualize brain damage in MS.”

Dr. Ransohoff will be awarded the prize at the 2012 AAN Annual Meeting in New Orleans. With Dr. Ransohoff and the 2003 recipient, Bruce Trapp, Ph.D., the chairman of the Neurosciences Department of the Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic joins Yale University and the University College London as the only institutions with two Dystel Prize awardees.

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Cleveland Clinic's Mellen Center for Multiple Sclerosis Treatment and Research is one of the largest and most comprehensive programs for MS care. Mellen Center physicians are national leaders in basic and clinical research related to MS pathogenesis and medical management and have made major contributions in the development of drugs to control MS disease activity and progression.

About Cleveland Clinic

Cleveland Clinic is a nonprofit multispecialty academic medical center that integrates clinical and hospital care with research and education. It was founded in 1921 by four renowned physicians with a vision of providing outstanding patient care based upon the principles of cooperation, compassion and innovation. Cleveland Clinic has pioneered many medical breakthroughs, including coronary artery bypass surgery and the first face transplant in the United States. U.S. News & World Report consistently names Cleveland Clinic as one of the nation's best hospitals in its annual “America's Best Hospitals” survey. About 2,800 full-time salaried physicians and researchers and 11,000 nurses represent 120 medical specialties and subspecialties. Cleveland Clinic Health System includes a main campus near downtown Cleveland, eight community hospitals and 16 Family Health Centers in Northeast Ohio, Cleveland Clinic Florida, the Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health in Las Vegas, Cleveland Clinic Canada, and opening in 2013, Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi. In 2010, there were 4 million visits throughout the Cleveland Clinic health system and 155,000 hospital admissions. Patients came for treatment from every state and from more than 100 countries. Visit us at http://www.clevelandclinic.org/. Follow us at www.twitter.com/ClevelandClinic.

Contacts:
Dan Doron, 216.636.5874, dorond@ccf.org
Halle Bishop, 216.445.8592, bishoph@ccf.org

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Easton concert to raise money for National Multiple Sclerosis Society

February 22nd, 2012

Pamela Taylor won't let multiple sclerosis stop the music.

The Wilson Borough woman, a music teacher of 34 years, plans a concert 2 p.m. Sunday at Trinity Episcopal Church in Easton to raise money for the National Multiple Sclerosis Society.

“Students don't have to be put down by issues and challenges in life,” said Taylor, who gives private flute and piano lessons to 21 students from ages 3 to 50. “I hope that what I do will help them see you can work through anything and achieve what you want to.”

Anyone can attend the concert at the church, 234 Spring Garden St., for a suggested donation of $15. The chamber music concert will feature pieces by composers Ernest Bloch, Claude Debussy, Giacomo Puccini, Stephen Sondheim, Otar Taktakishvili, and Louis Vierne.

Taylor will perform with viola player Dolores Dillon-Howlett, harpist Elaine Christy, and pianist and the director of music at Trinity Church, Dale Grandfield.

Multiple sclerosis is a chronic disease that attacks the central nervous system, the brain, spinal cord and optic nerves. Taylor experienced symptoms of MS when she was 8, but due to her wide range of symptoms wasn't diagnosed until she was 45.

The National Multiple Sclerosis Society has 13,000 members with MS in the Greater Delaware Valley Chapter, on the rise from 11,000 members just two years ago. With more patients with MS in the area, the organization needs more resources for MS education and research.

Judi Simmons, a development manager for the MS Society, said Taylor is “a tremendous partner in the fight.”

“The MS Society is truly grateful for Pam's efforts in the fight against MS,” she said. “To use her amazing talent goes above and beyond the call.”

Taylor uses music as more than just a way to raise money for MS. Over the years, performing and practicing the flute and piano has helped her deal with her disease.

“Music has amazing healing properties,” Taylor said. “There were times I went to a performance with no clue how I was going to get through the gig with fatigue, weakness and my face twitching. Yet after the concert I'm energized, rejuvenated. It's amazing the power music has.”

The physical and mental challenges of music have helped keep Taylor sharp over the years, she said, while also providing her with a means to raise money for MS.

But Taylor said there are many ways and reasons people can give back to the community.

“If everyone chips in a little bit in their own way,” Taylor said, “we can help make this world a better place.”

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Easton concert to raise money for National Multiple Sclerosis Society

A musical gift: Flutist raises money for multiple sclerosis

February 21st, 2012

Pamela Taylor knew she would become a professional flutist at age 4.

“I absolutely was passionately insistent that I would be a flutist,” says the Wilson borough woman and principal flute of the Orchestra of St. Peter by the Sea, in New Jersey.

Her parents discovered her musical gift when she turned 8. It would take much longer to find out she had multiple sclerosis.

Taylor, now 50, was a child when she began suffering from excessive fatigue. She would come home from grade school to crash on the couch for at least three hours. Although it was not normal behavior for a child her age, it didn't seem serious enough to merit a trip to the doctor.

She began suffering from soreness in her right foot, which her parents attributed to growing pains. By the time she was 15, the discomfort had migrated to the right hip. This time her parents took her to the doctor, who diagnosed her with rheumatoid arthritis. But it went away after three years.

“All of these seemingly disconnected symptoms were occurring,” Taylor says, “and we were not for going to the doctor, so we would just explain it away.”

Taylor was vigilant about her symptoms and eventually noticed that there seemed to be a repetitive cycle to her fatigue. She would go through about three months of constant exhaustion and then ease into months of normal activity. She adapted to her ebbs and flows and continued to ignore doctors.

In 2003, she had a symptom she couldn't ignore.

She was sitting on the floor, leading a music lesson for a group of 3-year-olds. They were all singing and tapping their knees. As Taylor looked at each child, she realized she could only see half of their faces.

Taylor took turns covering each of her eyes with her hand, trying to make sense of the situation. The children saw what she was doing and began imitating her, alternating the tapping and singing with the hand and eye movements.

The problem was in both eyes. Taylor could only see half of her field of vision. She continued tapping her knee and noticed that her arm was now becoming unresponsive. She waited until the end of class to try to stand up and, when she did, she felt that “my right leg wasn't under me.”

Taylor leaned on the wall to make her way with the children down the hall to find help.

“I'm probably being paranoid,” she told a fellow teacher, “but did I just have a stroke?”

She was not being paranoid. The doctors confirmed that she indeed had a stroke but were baffled when they saw Taylor recover in little more than a day. They still didn't know what was wrong.

A year later, Taylor went through a really bad case of vertigo.

“I couldn't lift my head up off the pillow,” she remembers. “It was the most disconcerting experience I've ever had in my life.”

That was the first time that MS was mentioned as a possibility. Taylor was finally diagnosed with the condition in October 2006.

“Almost every MS-er you talk to will tell you this long path they took to their diagnosis,” she says. “Most not as long as mine because most people have their first symptom in their adult years. But it's always a road that is very challenging and confusing.”

Multiple sclerosis develops when the immune system mistakenly eats away at the protective shield that covers the nerves. This hinders the communication between the brain and the rest of the body and can ultimately damage the nerves.

It is a chronic disease that can affect any part of the central nervous system, including the brain, spinal cord and optic nerves. There is no cure, but treatments can address symptoms and modify the course of the disease.

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My Mom Talking About Her Multiple Sclerosis she had it for 20years – Video

February 21st, 2012


14-02-2012 13:53 I HOPE YOU ALL LIKE WHAT MY MOM HAS TO SAY WHAT SHE HAS TO GO THERW WITH HER Multiple Sclerosis www.youtube.com VOTE FOR THIS VIDEO PLZ kingofweb.com

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My Mom Talking About Her Multiple Sclerosis she had it for 20years – Video

Board announced for Multiple Sclerosis Quality Of Life Project

February 20th, 2012

The Multiple Sclerosis Quality of Life Project, a Monterey County nonprofit, has announced its 2012 board.

The board includes Andrea Dowdall, President; Gene Harter, Vice President; Marilyn Howell, Secretary; Tammy Jennings, Treasurer; and board members Jane Brown, Carieanna Hess, Dick Howell and Marie Swank.

MSQLP works with clients and their families for free to create comprehensive individual plans and programs supporting client independence.

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Board announced for Multiple Sclerosis Quality Of Life Project

Mount Olive music teacher battles back after low note of multiple sclerosis

February 20th, 2012

MOUNT OLIVE TWP. ? Melany McQueeny played her clarinet flawlessly last week as she joined with other members of the Allentown Symphony to play Sergei Rachmaninoff’s “Vocalise,”  Richard Wagner’s “Siegfried-Idyll” and finally, Richard Strauss’s “Rosenkavalier” suite.

To play such difficult music is impressive but it is all the more astounding because McQueeny has multiple sclerosis. She cannot feel the holes on the instrument and instead uses her muscular memory to find the notes.

“Mentally and physically it was a workout but it meant a lot to me,” said McQueeny, 29 who was diagnosed with the illness in 2009. “I got a lot of positive feedback. Music always has been something very healing to me. It is my life.”

She has taught instrumental band and general music at the Mount Olive Middle School since September 2006. Raised in a musical household, her late father, Steven Felsen, taught music at Mount Olive High  School. Her mother, Susan, played the piano, and McQueeny started playing piano when she was 4 and switched to clarinet in the fourth grade.

“Mom said I read music before I could read words,” McQueeny said.

Raised in Byram, she graduated from Lenape Valley High School and the College of New Jersey. She earned a master's in orchestral performance from the Peabody Institution of the Johns Hopkins Conservatory in Baltimore, Md.

She's played with the Eastern Wind Symphony, the Hanover Wind symphony and with various community bands while also being a substitute for the Allentown Symphony.

McQueeny has had several knee operations but no other significant health issues. Then in August 2009, she was with her future husband, Matthew, on their way to visit his family in the Thousand Islands area of New York.

“We were in the car and my ring finger and pinky finger on both hands were tingling,” she said.

That was on Thursday. By Sunday, she was feeling the same tingling from her neck down. She was home by then and told her mother who convinced her to get checked by her doctor. She didn't know it but she was having a flair-up of her multiple sclerosis.

“By now you could touch my stomach and I didn't feel it,” said McQueeny who was 26 at the time.

Tests for Lyme disease and lupus came back negative. But an MRI showed spots on her brain and cervical spine and multiple sclerosis was diagnosed. At first, it was a very lonely time for the attractive woman but she was buoyed by supportive friends and family.

 

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Mount Olive music teacher battles back after low note of multiple sclerosis

MS society schedules benefit walk for April 14

February 19th, 2012

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MS society schedules benefit walk for April 14

Fighting multiple sclerosis with acrylics

February 18th, 2012

BROUMANA, Lebanon: Vivid abstract paintings hang in each room of the Mufarrij household and it is surprising how they harmonize so subtly their elegant traditional furniture. In a small back room furnished with a bed and a desk, Khalil Muffarij sits by the window, speaking with elegant, gentle gestures.

Mufarrij was born in Beirut in 1947, the youngest and only son. As a young man he was an idealist and a committed Arab nationalist activist who felt that the Arab homeland needs to be modernized by revolutionary means. His role model was Kamal Ataturk, the founder of the Turkish republic.

At 17, Mufarrij and some fellow AUB students founded the political movement Al-Shaab al-Raii (the idea-holders), which later developed into a broad-based student movement.

Mufarrij obtained his BA in political science at the American University of Beirut in 1973. One semester before graduation, however, he was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. This did not prevent his pursuing work in the Middle East and Europe but the MS’s creeping symptoms prevented his traveling to the U.S. and gradually bound him to this Broumana house.

Here, starting in 1998, he chose a path of self-discovery through painting.

“Happiness, anger, sorrow, contradictory feelings,” Mufarrij says when asked how he feels about his illness. “This is how I feel.”

It’s hard to find any traces of anger and sorrow in his paintings, which radiate luminosity of color and dynamism.

“When I paint, I do what I feel,” he explains. “I start with the colors and don’t plan. I once drew and planned with pencil and then I got stuck … so this was the first and last time I planned. Now I let myself really feel my freedom.”

Mufarrij received little formal instruction in the arts and his early works were pencil and pen-and-ink drawings on paper, mostly portraits. His drawings were personal commentaries, both descriptive and suggestive, but always perfectly coherent.

He started experimenting with oil pastels in 2001 using them in some of this works in 2002. He was prolific from 1998 until 2002, completing an average of 17 pieces a year. After that he lost easy control of his pen and he dropped to two drawings a year, completing only one work in 2009.

Mufarrij shifted to acrylic on canvas in 2003, creating representational, often figurative, works. Figuration gradually drained from his work after 2006 as MS took hold and in 2009 the work became totally abstract. He now produces a work every few weeks.

His abstractions often have a subtle narrative intention. “I do name the painting and each painting has a story but that doesn’t mean that that is it,” Mufarrij says. “Everybody sees different things in it and I respect the viewer. As for myself, I leave the painting to tell me something.”

His paintings are expressive, subjective and wildly spontaneous creations. As he drifted toward abstract expressionism, he entered a domain where straight lines and geometric form are supplanted by the dynamic energy of color.

His paintings are the emotional response of a highly cultured spirit defiant of his bodily imprisonment. This is most evident in the internal dynamism of his painting, in the viscosity, speed and impact of his laying paint on canvas.

“I am trying to protest,” he says. “I am protesting about everything. I am tackling with God, not protesting just about the state of planet earth. Human nature is strong but with many loop-holes, as if God did not finish his work. For me this is the real civil war.”

Mufarrij himself grew up during Lebanon’s Civil War. “I lived the war,” he says. “The war affected me. I was against it. Some people believe in war like they do religion. I am often asked why I don’t paint my feelings about the war. But I did not wish to draw a Picasso’s ‘Guernica’ of screaming heads and broken bodies.”

In painting, Mufarrij seems to be searching for his own vocabulary, making his work an exhilarating discovery of different levels of self. “Religion is like sex,” he explains. “It is deeply personal, and spirituality, for me, is a constant tension between the spiritual and material. You do not know where to settle yourself.”

His restless brush stokes seem to transgress these dualistic tensions. Yet what is most striking is how he manages to fuse this intensity and range of color with such speed without destroying or muddying the purity of his colors.

He achieves this through a variety of experimental paint-application techniques, augmenting brushes with kitchen knives and tree branches, sometimes applying paint directly from the tube. There are no rules and no boundaries, especially in his constant exploration and experimentation with color. “I try to discover new colors, new methods. When I achieve this I fly out of earth.”

Mufarrij only uses acrylic paint. “Acrlylic dries quicker and I have no patience,” he explains. “It suits me and oil is clumsy. I try to expose it and give it more life by discovering the colors as the tube doesn’t give it to you. You have to prepare your colors and to do so you have to know your colors.”

Lebanese painting is renowned for its use of vivid and luminous colors, attributed to the quality of sunlight here. With his range of synchronized color combination, Mufarrij pushes the boundaries of color viscosity to a point where color seems to become sound. It is here that he enters unchartered territory.

“Talent is one thing but you have to educate it,” he says. “It is like a fountain. It does not stop.”

Mufarij’s talent is still being discovered. He acknowledges his influences and shows concern about mimicry. “You cannot but be influenced by painters but I do not want to imitate anyone,” he says. “I want to make something new. I feel I have something different.”

He says he never used to want to exhibit his work as he was not interested in the materialistic side of the art world. Art for him was therapeutic and he would give his paintings as gifts to friends and family.

Art critic Cesar Nammour argued that the public should see his work and published the artist’s full collection in his book “Khalil Mufarrij.” Last year, Mufarrij exhibited his paintings at the Surface Libre Gallery in his first and only exhibition, “Evolution.”

“You cannot have peace in the world without art,” he says. “It is the only solution to keeping an open mind. It teaches tolerance and how to be creative. It makes you try things. I for myself am no longer a nationalist. The whole planet is one village. We are all very close to feeling the same.”

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Fighting multiple sclerosis with acrylics

Ballarat bowls game back on for Multiple Sclerosis tournament

February 18th, 2012

BALLARAT and district bowlers and the MS Association will team up once again when the Multiple Sclerosis Mixed Bowls Tournament is revived next month.

Ballarat Bowling Club manager John Crawford said the event, which was once an annual tradition, would be staged for the first time in many years on March 31.

Mr Crawford’s wife Rhonda, who was diagnosed with MS 34 years ago, ran the event and has raised $25,000 in its 13-year history.

Ballarat MS Association president Fred Reus has now reignited the tournament by arranging for prize money on the day.

Entry in the fours event will be limited to 32 teams playing three games of nine ends, starting at 1pm.

“All profits on the day remain in Ballarat,” Mr Crawford said.

“Anything that’s raised stays here to help support people who have got MS.”

Ballarat Bowling Club had offered its greens and facilities to assist in making the day a success, he said.

To enter a team of four contact Fred Reus: 53313690 or

0421 346 335.

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Ballarat bowls game back on for Multiple Sclerosis tournament

Ballaarat bowls game back on for Multiple Sclerosis tournament

February 18th, 2012

BALLARAT and district bowlers and the MS Association will team up once again when the Multiple Sclerosis Mixed Bowls Tournament is revived next month.

Ballarat Bowling Club manager John Crawford said the event, which was once an annual tradition, would be staged for the first time in many years on March 31.

Mr Crawford’s wife Rhonda, who was diagnosed with MS 34 years ago, ran the event and has raised $25,000 in its 13-year history.

Ballarat MS Association president Fred Reus has now reignited the tournament by arranging for prize money on the day.

Entry in the fours event will be limited to 32 teams playing three games of nine ends, starting at 1pm.

“All profits on the day remain in Ballarat,” Mr Crawford said.

“Anything that’s raised stays here to help support people who have got MS.”

Ballarat Bowling Club had offered its greens and facilities to assist in making the day a success, he said.

To enter a team of four contact Fred Reus: 53313690 or

0421 346 335.

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Ballaarat bowls game back on for Multiple Sclerosis tournament

West Milford resident using blog to inspire others with Multiple Sclerosis

February 17th, 2012

Thursday, February 16, 2012    Last updated: Friday February 17, 2012, 1:26 AM

Diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS) in March of 2008, Lyndsay Wright refuses to let the disease stop her from living a full and productive life.

PHOTO COURTESY LYNDSAY WRIGHT

Lyndsay Wright has created a blog to help people who have been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.

MS Awareness Week is March 12 through 18. Wright said the annual walk to collect funds to do research and fight the disease is April 15. She hopes readers will join the over 12,000 participants who are expected for the Walk to Create a World Free of MS. Locations are Cranford, Jersey City, Ridgefield Park, Belmar, Flemington, Freehold, Hamilton, North Brunswick and Sandy Hook. The website to register for participation is walknjm.nationalmssociety.org/site/Page.

March, 2012 marks the fourth year of Wright’s diagnosis. Now 21, she has been faithfully taking medication for the past 3.5 years.

“The disease has not stopped me,” Wright told AIM West Milford. “I’ve graduated from Berkeley College in three years with my bachelor’s degree in marketing. I’ve been working and actively involved in events for work and the community.”

Wright has created a blog “Lyndsay’s Journey: Multiple Sclerosis” (Lyndsaysjourney08.blogspot.com).

“I recently was contacted by an individual who was diagnosed with MS at a young age like I was,” said Wright. “This individual was looking for advice for how to deal with the disease. For the longest time I have wanted to start a blog and share my story with everyone. I also want to offer advice to those who may have to go through a MS diagnosis at a young age.”

Wright said that after receiving the young person’s message she created her blog. She has been working to get the site up and running ever since. She recalled that she had no one to talk to other than doctors when she was diagnosed. Those doctors threw every single complicated medical term her way, she said.

“I guess I want everyone to understand that no matter what, there is always someone there to listen to you,” said Wright. “I think my blog is going to serve as a true inspiration to people who have to deal with an illness like MS. I never had a connection with someone who was going through the same thing, so everything that I was experiencing was a big deal to me and scared me.”

She said she was hesitant at first about sharing her story. What people might say about her as a result of going public was a concern.

“Then I realized that if I don’t speak up, how can anyone ever understand what I and other MS patients are going through?” Wright said. “The support I receive from my friends and family is what helps me push through this bump in the road. I want people to understand the effects of MS.”

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West Milford resident using blog to inspire others with Multiple Sclerosis

Progressive MS: The People’s Hot Topic – part one – Video

February 17th, 2012


15-02-2012 02:18 Dr Klaus Schmierer answers your questions on Progressive Multiple Sclerosis. Leave your questions below and watch the second vid.

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New molecular map to guide development of new treatments for multiple sclerosis and other diseases

February 17th, 2012

ScienceDaily (Feb. 16, 2012) — A team of scientists from The Scripps Research Institute, collaborating with members of the drug discovery company Receptos, has created the first high-resolution virtual image of cellular structures called S1P1 receptors, which are critical in controlling the onset and progression of multiple sclerosis and other diseases. This new molecular map is already pointing researchers toward promising new paths for drug discovery and aiding them in better understanding how certain existing drugs work.

The molecular structure, described in the February 17, 2012 issue of the journal Science, is unique as the first-ever-to-be-determined lipid G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR). Molecules of this type play important roles in everything from cancer to metabolism, and this recent success should pave the way for researchers to establish the structures of other family members.

“There's something special about the S1P1 receptor,” said Hugh Rosen, MD, PhD, a Scripps Research chemical biologist who co-led the work with Raymond Stevens, PhD, a structural biologist also from The Scripps Research Institute. “The biological consequences of even small changes with this receptor are profound. Understanding its structure provides clues about fundamental processes important in both health and disease.”

“Being able to finally look at a lipid GPCR and the occluded cell surface binding pocket was a surprise but explains many of the issues we wondered about,” said Stevens. “It is likely that other members of this subfamily will have a similar protein architecture.”

The study is a result of decades of research by the Stevens lab to develop methods to determine the structure of GPCRs, much work in the Rosen lab on the receptor biology and chemical tools to stabilize such molecules, and a multi-disciplinary collaboration between the two labs, which Rosen notes is one of the hallmarks of research at The Scripps Research Institute. The scientists acknowledge the support of the National Institutes of Health Common Fund as making the new findings possible.

“This work promises to underscore the importance of research collaboration to accelerate scientific discovery and development of new drug therapies,” said James M. Anderson, MD, PhD, director of the Division of Program Coordination, Planning, and Strategic Initiatives that guides the NIH Common Fund. “Combining structure-based analysis with small molecule screening serves as a model for effective drug design.”

Controlling Multiple Sclerosis

The new work reveals the structure of the S1P1 receptor, a protein embedded in the membranes of various cell types. When natural ligands such as the signaling lipid sphingosine 1-phosphate or potential drugs make specific interactions deep in receptor, portions of the receptor change shape to trigger cascades of chemical reactions inside the cell important to the maintenance of health.

Researchers have long known that S1P1 receptors play critical roles in controlling multiple sclerosis and other diseases. One way these receptors do this is by regulating the flow of certain white blood cells, or lymphocytes, out of lymph nodes.

This is critical because in patients with multiple sclerosis, auto-reactive lymphocytes attack the protective sheaths of nerve cells in the brain, causing malfunctions in the way the central nervous system transmits signals through the body. The S1P1 receptors are also involved in the progressions of harmful scarring and swelling in response to lymphocyte damages in the brain.

Gilenya, the first oral drug approved to treat multiple sclerosis, reduces this lymphocyte flow out of the lymph nodes in ways first identified by Rosen's lab about 10 years ago. Based on a screening lead from the National Institutes of Health Molecular Libraries Small Molecule Repository, Rosen and Scripps Research Chemistry Professor Ed Roberts discovered and optimized other modulators of S1P1 receptors. This led to RPC-1063, a compound in clinical trials for multiple sclerosis by Receptos, a company co-founded by Rosen and Stevens.

Rosen's lab has also shown that modulating S1P1 receptors can protect mice from a pandemic flu virus. This shows that the receptors may also be good drug development targets for other conditions tied to immune responses.

A Shifting Binding Pocket

The new study used the technique of x-ray crystallography to reveal the high-resolution three-dimensional image of the S1P1 receptor. The results provide scientists with important new details about the receptor's mechanism of action.

One aspect of the receptor structure that is of particular interest is the binding pocket for the natural ligand or potential drugs that activate the receptor responses. The structure revealed how the binding pocket shifts to activate signaling. Understanding how that occurs makes it easier to identify additional compounds that might have effects in controlling the receptors.

With this structural information in hand, the scientists can now advance efforts to understand the specific chemical transformations that drive the cellular responses tied to multiple sclerosis and other diseases. “Better understanding always allows you to think about applications in a variety of ways that you might not have thought about before,” said Rosen. “This is an area that will keep us busy for many years to come.”

The S1P1 receptor structure has already yielded benefits, according to Michael Hanson, a scientist and director at Receptos, and lead author of the new paper. “The structure has helped us understand the details regarding receptor-ligand interactions for this receptor and structural data can be used more routinely for drug discovery projects of other GPCRs,” he said.

In addition to Rosen, Stevens, and Hanson, authors on the paper, entitled “Crystal Structure of a Lipid G protein-Coupled Receptor,” were Euijung Jo, Stuart Cahalan, Stephan Schuerer, Germana Sanna, Gye Won Han, and Peter Kuhn, from Scripps Research, and Christopher Roth, Mark Griffith, Fiona Scott, Greg Reinhart, Hans Desale, and Bryan Clemons, from Receptos.

The research for this study at Scripps Research was supported by the National Institutes of Health, while work performed at Receptos was supported by Receptos, Inc.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by The Scripps Research Institute, via AlphaGalileo.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.

Journal Reference:

M. A. Hanson, C. B. Roth, E. Jo, M. T. Griffith, F. L. Scott, G. Reinhart, H. Desale, B. Clemons, S. M. Cahalan, S. C. Schuerer, M. G. Sanna, G. W. Han, P. Kuhn, H. Rosen, R. C. Stevens. Crystal Structure of a Lipid G Protein-Coupled Receptor. Science, 2012; 335 (6070): 851 DOI: 10.1126/science.1215904

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

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New molecular map to guide development of new treatments for multiple sclerosis and other diseases

Scripps research scientists create molecular map to guide treatment of multiple sclerosis

February 17th, 2012

Public release date: 16-Feb-2012
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Contact: Mika Ono
mikaono@scripps.edu
858-784-2052
Scripps Research Institute

LA JOLLA, CA ? February 16, 2012 ? A team of scientists from the Scripps Research Institute, collaborating with members of the drug discovery company Receptos, has created the first high-resolution virtual image of cellular structures called S1P1 receptors, which are critical in controlling the onset and progression of multiple sclerosis and other diseases. This new molecular map is already pointing researchers toward promising new paths for drug discovery and aiding them in better understanding how certain existing drugs work.

The molecular structure, described in the February 17, 2012 issue of the journal Science, is unique as the first-ever-to-be-determined lipid G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR). Molecules of this type play important roles in everything from cancer to metabolism, and this recent success should pave the way for researchers to establish the structures of other family members.

“There's something special about the S1P1 receptor,” said Hugh Rosen, MD, PhD, a Scripps Research chemical biologist who co-led the work with Raymond Stevens, PhD, a structural biologist also from The Scripps Research Institute. “The biological consequences of even small changes with this receptor are profound. Understanding its structure provides clues about fundamental processes important in both health and disease.”

“Being able to finally look at a lipid GPCR and the occluded cell surface binding pocket was a surprise but explains many of the issues we wondered about,” said Stevens. “It is likely that other members of this subfamily will have a similar protein architecture.”

The study is a result of decades of research by the Stevens lab to develop methods to determine the structure of GPCRs, much work in the Rosen lab on the receptor biology and chemical tools to stabilize such molecules, and a multi-disciplinary collaboration between the two labs, which Rosen notes is one of the hallmarks of research at The Scripps Research Institute. The scientists acknowledge the support of the National Institutes of Health Common Fund as making the new findings possible.

“This work promises to underscore the importance of research collaboration to accelerate scientific discovery and development of new drug therapies,” said James M. Anderson, MD, PhD, director of the Division of Program Coordination, Planning, and Strategic Initiatives that guides the NIH Common Fund. “Combining structure-based analysis with small molecule screening serves as a model for effective drug design.”

Controlling Multiple Sclerosis

The new work reveals the structure of the S1P1 receptor, a protein embedded in the membranes of various cell types. When natural ligands such as the signaling lipid sphingosine 1-phosphate or potential drugs make specific interactions deep in receptor, portions of the receptor change shape to trigger cascades of chemical reactions inside the cell important to the maintenance of health.

Researchers have long known that S1P1 receptors play critical roles in controlling multiple sclerosis and other diseases. One way these receptors do this is by regulating the flow of certain white blood cells, or lymphocytes, out of lymph nodes.

This is critical because in patients with multiple sclerosis, auto-reactive lymphocytes attack the protective sheaths of nerve cells in the brain, causing malfunctions in the way the central nervous system transmits signals through the body. The S1P1 receptors are also involved in the progressions of harmful scarring and swelling in response to lymphocyte damages in the brain.

Gilenya, the first oral drug approved to treat multiple sclerosis, reduces this lymphocyte flow out of the lymph nodes in ways first identified by Rosen's lab about 10 years ago. Based on a screening lead from the National Institutes of Health Molecular Libraries Small Molecule Repository, Rosen and Scripps Research Chemistry Professor Ed Roberts discovered and optimized other modulators of S1P1 receptors. This led to RPC-1063, a compound in clinical trials for multiple sclerosis by Receptos, a company co-founded by Rosen and Stevens.

Rosen's lab has also shown that modulating S1P1 receptors can protect mice from a pandemic flu virus. This shows that the receptors may also be good drug development targets for other conditions tied to immune responses.

A Shifting Binding Pocket

The new study used the technique of x-ray crystallography to reveal the high-resolution three-dimensional image of the S1P1 receptor. The results provide scientists with important new details about the receptor's mechanism of action.

One aspect of the receptor structure that is of particular interest is the binding pocket for the natural ligand or potential drugs that activate the receptor responses. The structure revealed how the binding pocket shifts to activate signaling. Understanding how that occurs makes it easier to identify additional compounds that might have effects in controlling the receptors.

With this structural information in hand, the scientists can now advance efforts to understand the specific chemical transformations that drive the cellular responses tied to multiple sclerosis and other diseases. “Better understanding always allows you to think about applications in a variety of ways that you might not have thought about before,” said Rosen. “This is an area that will keep us busy for many years to come.”

The S1P1 receptor structure has already yielded benefits, according to Michael Hanson, a scientist and director at Receptos, and lead author of the new paper. “The structure has helped us understand the details regarding receptor-ligand interactions for this receptor and structural data can be used more routinely for drug discovery projects of other GPCRs,” he said.

###

In addition to Rosen, Stevens, and Hanson, authors on the paper, entitled “Crystal Structure of a Lipid G protein-Coupled Receptor,” were Euijung Jo, Stuart Cahalan, Stephan Schuerer, Germana Sanna, Gye Won Han, and Peter Kuhn, from Scripps Research, and Christopher Roth, Mark Griffith, Fiona Scott, Greg Reinhart, Hans Desale, and Bryan Clemons, from Receptos.

The research for this study at Scripps Research was supported by the National Institutes of Health, while work performed at Receptos was supported by Receptos, Inc.


[ | E-mail | Share ]

 

AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.

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Scripps research scientists create molecular map to guide treatment of multiple sclerosis

MS Society Annie

February 16th, 2012


15-02-2012 13:13 About Multiple Sclerosis video for children

Go here to read the rest:
MS Society Annie

Scientists create molecular map to guide treatment of multiple sclerosis

February 16th, 2012

The molecular structure, described in the February 17, 2012 issue of the journal Science, is unique as the first-ever-to-be-determined lipid G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR). Molecules of this type play important roles in everything from cancer to metabolism, and this recent success should pave the way for researchers to establish the structures of other family members.

“There's something special about the S1P1 receptor,” said Hugh Rosen, MD, PhD, a Scripps Research chemical biologist who co-led the work with Raymond Stevens, PhD, a structural biologist also from The Scripps Research Institute. “The biological consequences of even small changes with this receptor are profound. Understanding its structure provides clues about fundamental processes important in both health and disease.”

“Being able to finally look at a lipid GPCR and the occluded cell surface binding pocket was a surprise but explains many of the issues we wondered about,” said Stevens. “It is likely that other members of this subfamily will have a similar protein architecture.”

The study is a result of decades of research by the Stevens lab to develop methods to determine the structure of GPCRs, much work in the Rosen lab on the receptor biology and chemical tools to stabilize such molecules, and a multi-disciplinary collaboration between the two labs, which Rosen notes is one of the hallmarks of research at The Scripps Research Institute. The scientists acknowledge the support of the National Institutes of Health Common Fund as making the new findings possible.

“This work promises to underscore the importance of research collaboration to accelerate scientific discovery and development of new drug therapies,” said James M. Anderson, MD, PhD, director of the Division of Program Coordination, Planning, and Strategic Initiatives that guides the NIH Common Fund. “Combining structure-based analysis with small molecule screening serves as a model for effective drug design.”

Controlling Multiple Sclerosis

The new work reveals the structure of the S1P1 receptor, a protein embedded in the membranes of various cell types. When natural ligands such as the signaling lipid sphingosine 1-phosphate or potential drugs make specific interactions deep in receptor, portions of the receptor change shape to trigger cascades of chemical reactions inside the cell important to the maintenance of health.

Researchers have long known that S1P1 receptors play critical roles in controlling multiple sclerosis and other diseases. One way these receptors do this is by regulating the flow of certain white blood cells, or lymphocytes, out of lymph nodes.

Enlarge

Scientists at Scripps Research and Receptos have created the first high-resolution virtual image of cellular structures called S1P1 receptors, which are critical in controlling the onset and progression of multiple sclerosis and other diseases. Credit: Image courtesy of the Rosen and Stevens labs, the Scripps Research Institute.

This is critical because in patients with multiple sclerosis, auto-reactive lymphocytes attack the protective sheaths of nerve cells in the brain, causing malfunctions in the way the central nervous system transmits signals through the body. The S1P1 receptors are also involved in the progressions of harmful scarring and swelling in response to lymphocyte damages in the brain.

Gilenya, the first oral drug approved to treat multiple sclerosis, reduces this lymphocyte flow out of the lymph nodes in ways first identified by Rosen's lab about 10 years ago. Based on a screening lead from the National Institutes of Health Molecular Libraries Small Molecule Repository, Rosen and Scripps Research Chemistry Professor Ed Roberts discovered and optimized other modulators of S1P1 receptors. This led to RPC-1063, a compound in clinical trials for multiple sclerosis by Receptos, a company co-founded by Rosen and Stevens.

Rosen's lab has also shown that modulating S1P1 receptors can protect mice from a pandemic flu virus. This shows that the receptors may also be good drug development targets for other conditions tied to immune responses.

A Shifting Binding Pocket

The new study used the technique of x-ray crystallography to reveal the high-resolution three-dimensional image of the S1P1 receptor. The results provide scientists with important new details about the receptor's mechanism of action.

One aspect of the receptor structure that is of particular interest is the binding pocket for the natural ligand or potential drugs that activate the receptor responses. The structure revealed how the binding pocket shifts to activate signaling. Understanding how that occurs makes it easier to identify additional compounds that might have effects in controlling the receptors.

With this structural information in hand, the scientists can now advance efforts to understand the specific chemical transformations that drive the cellular responses tied to multiple sclerosis and other diseases. “Better understanding always allows you to think about applications in a variety of ways that you might not have thought about before,” said Rosen. “This is an area that will keep us busy for many years to come.”

The S1P1 receptor structure has already yielded benefits, according to Michael Hanson, a scientist and director at Receptos, and lead author of the new paper. “The structure has helped us understand the details regarding receptor-ligand interactions for this receptor and structural data can be used more routinely for drug discovery projects of other GPCRs,” he said.

More information: “Crystal Structure of a Lipid G protein-Coupled Receptor,” Science, February 17, 2012.

Provided by The Scripps Research Institute (news : web)

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Scientists create molecular map to guide treatment of multiple sclerosis

Krevolin & Horst's David A. Sirna Named MS Leadership Class Nominee

February 16th, 2012

More Topics: Choose a Sector Accounting Firms Advertising/Media/Communications Capital CEO/Board General Business Health/Biotech Internet/Technology Investment Firms Law Firms Mergers & Acquisitions Money Managers People Private Companies Public Companies Venture Capital

Posted February 15, 2012

ATLANTA – Krevolin & Horst, LLC announced today that David A. Sirna, Member, has been selected by The National Multiple Sclerosis Society as one of 42 corporate leaders nominated to Atlanta's MS Leadership Class. Class graduates will be honored with the National Multiple Sclerosis Society's coveted MS Leadership Award, an honor reserved for a stellar group of men and women across the U.S. aspiring to greater achievements in their field and making significant contributions in their community. Tom Bell, Chairman, Mesa Capital Partners and former Chairman and CEO of Cousins Properties, is the Honorary Chair for the MS Leadership Class of 2012.

“The MS Leadership Class of 2012 offers exciting possibilities for rising business men and women to socialize, network and contribute to an ever changing community. It is designed to connect well-known and highly respected members of the business community to increase awareness and the fundraising capacity for the National MS Society. Equally important is the opportunity to continue to develop personal and leadership skills while making worthwhile contributions,” said MS Leadership Class co-chair Wight Mixon, past President of Atlanta Board of Realtors and Sales Associate, Beacham and Company REALTORS. “It's not often that one finds a group of professionals so dedicated and committed to promoting success in their own career that they engage their talent and financial resources to make a difference in the welfare and well-being of others.”

David is a partner and experienced litigator at Krevolin & Horst, one of the top litigation and trial practices in Atlanta, encompassing a broad spectrum of complex civil and criminal matters. David is the Past President of The University of Michigan Club of Atlanta. He is also a member of the Georgia Lawyers for the Arts, the Lawyers Club of Atlanta, and the Primerus Business Law Institute. He has been selected on multiple occasions by Atlanta Magazine and Georgia Super Lawyers Magazine® as a Rising Star as one of the top litigators in Georgia.

David handles a wide variety of business litigation and has represented clients in a wide array of complex litigation matters including contract disputes, business torts, intellectual property, shareholder disputes, trade secrets, common law fraud claims, professional liability, copyright and trademark protection, and corporate governance.

David's clients include large, publicly traded companies, closely held corporations, limited liability companies, partnerships and individuals whom he has represented in federal and state judicial proceedings, as well as in mediation and arbitration proceedings.

About the National Multiple Sclerosis Society – Georgia Chapter:

Multiple sclerosis stops people from moving. The National Multiple Sclerosis Society exists to make sure it doesn't. The National MS Society believes that moving is not just something you can or can't do, but rather who you are. This is why we sponsor events like Bike MS and Walk MS – to raise funding for the care and research needed to keep people with MS moving – while moving the world closer to a future free of MS.

The Georgia Chapter assists clients by providing financial assistance, respite care, MS centers, self-help groups and peer counseling, community information and referrals, education, chapter publications, and recreational and social programs. On the healthcare front, the Georgia Chapter conducts in-service training for healthcare professionals to advance their knowledge of MS. Learn more by visiting www.nationalMSsociety.org/gaa or by calling 678-672-1000 or 1-800-FIGHTMS.

About Krevolin & Horst, LLC:

Krevolin & Horst offers highly credentialed and experienced lawyers in a small firm environment, providing our clients with personalized attention and exceptional representation in a cost effective manner. We are agile, creative, and responsive. All of our partners have been recognized as tops in their field by various publications such as BestLawyers, Georgia Trend Magazine's Legal Elite, Chambers USA America's Leading Business Lawyers, and Super Lawyers. Our practice focuses on corporate, technology, commercial real estate, environmental, and civil and criminal trial and appellate litigation.

Our clients include individuals, entrepreneurs, and companies nationwide ranging from start-ups to large, publicly traded and privately held businesses. Although based in Atlanta, our firm provides services to clients with business activities and litigation throughout the country. Our transactional lawyers provide regional representation for several clients. Our litigation lawyers handle significant, cutting edge issues and have tried cases in several states. We have been involved in a number of high profile cases that have been written about in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Atlanta Journal & Constitution, Tampa Tribune, Raleigh News & Observer, National Law Journal, the Fulton County Daily Report, the Gainesville Times, the Atlanta Business Chronicle and others.

To learn more about Krevolin & Horst, visit www.khlawfirm.com.

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Krevolin & Horst's David A. Sirna Named MS Leadership Class Nominee

Doctor accused of fondling multiple sclerosis patient

February 16th, 2012

WGN News

8:15 a.m. CST, February 15, 2012

OAK LAWN, Ill.—

A Chicago area doctor has been accused of fondling a Multiple Sclerosis patient.

Dr. Rajat Prakash has been placed on leave from Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn after the claims surfaced.

A 32-year-old female patient claims the doctor fondled her while she was in a semi-conscious state and tried to place her hands on his groin last November. This incident happened while she was being treated for multiple sclerosis, according to the Chicago Sun-times.

She also said Dr. Prakash sent her inapproptiate texts and asked her to meet him at a hotel for drinks.

Dr. Prakash reportedly turned himself over to police on February 11. He now faces a misdemeanor battery charge.

The rest is here:
Doctor accused of fondling multiple sclerosis patient






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