Posts Tagged ‘national’

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

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

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

Financial Well-Being Series: Invest in Yourself – Video

January 29th, 2012


25-01-2012 07:16 The Multiple Sclerosis Association of America in coordination with the National Disability Institute are pleased to present “Invest in Yourself” – the fourth in a series of four webinars designed to assist the MS community in learning about strategies to protect and improve their financial well-being. These programs offer hands-on guidance specifically tailored to the unique needs and interests of people living with MS. The Multiple Sclerosis Association of America (MSAA) is a national nonprofit organization dedicated to enriching the quality of life for everyone affected by multiple sclerosis (MS). MSAA provides ongoing support and direct services to individuals with MS and the people close to them. The National Disability Institute is a nonprofit organization based in Washington, DC dedicated to improving the financial stability and mobility of persons with disabilities and their families.

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Financial Well-Being Series: Invest in Yourself – Video

Dina Tecimer Elected Chair of Local Chapter of National Multiple Sclerosis Society

December 22nd, 2011

Los Angeles attorney Dina Tecimer of Manatt, Phelps & Phillips LLP has been elected to serve as chair of the Board of Trustees for the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, Southern California & Nevada Chapter, her firm announced yesterday.

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Dina Tecimer Elected Chair of Local Chapter of National Multiple Sclerosis Society

Webinar: Get Out There and Flex Your Financial Muscles – Video

December 20th, 2011


The Multiple Sclerosis Association of America in coordination with the National Disability Institute are pleased to present “Get Out There and Flex Your Financial Muscles.” The Multiple Sclerosis Association of America (MSAA) is a national nonprofit organization dedicated to enriching the quality of life for everyone affected by multiple sclerosis (MS). MSAA provides ongoing support and direct services to individuals with MS and the people close to them. The National Disability Institute is a nonprofit organization based in Washington, DC dedicated to improving thefinancial stability and mobility of persons with disabilities and their families.

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Webinar: Get Out There and Flex Your Financial Muscles – Video

Utah firm developing blood tests for multiple sclerosis

December 15th, 2011

Utah firm developing blood tests for multiple sclerosis By Brian Maffly | The Salt Lake Tribune Published Dec 14, 2011 02:52PM MDT A Salt Lake City company has received a boost in its quest to develop diagnostic tests for multiple sclerosis, which could improve the lives of those with the devastating, unpredictable autoimmune disorder that disrupts nerve function. The National Multiple Sclerosis …

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Utah firm developing blood tests for multiple sclerosis

Ma named ‘Legislator of the Year’ by Multiple Sclerosis society

December 3rd, 2011

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – The Northern California Chapter of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society (NMSS) honored Assemblywoman Fiona Ma as the 2011 California State Assembly “Legislator of the Year.”

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Ma named ‘Legislator of the Year’ by Multiple Sclerosis society

UCI honored for MS research

December 2nd, 2011

IRVINE – The National Multiple Sclerosis Society certified UC Irvine as an official center for MS comprehensive care Thursday in the Gottschalk Medical Plaza. Dr. Michael Demetriou , UC Irvine health care program director and professor of neurology, received a plaque for his staff’s…

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UCI honored for MS research

NICE spurns Novartis MS pill despite new price cut

December 1st, 2011

LONDON (Reuters) – Novartis’s multiple sclerosis pill Gilenya, one of its top new drug hopes, has again been rejected by the health cost watchdog NICE, despite the offer of a price discount from the Swiss drugmaker. The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence said on Thursday it still believed the medicine was not cost effective, compared with other existing treatments. Gilenya …

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NICE spurns Novartis MS pill despite new price cut

UK spurns Novartis MS pill despite new price cut

December 1st, 2011

LONDON (Reuters) – Novartis’s multiple sclerosis pill Gilenya, one of its top new drug hopes, has again been rejected by Britain’s health cost watchdog NICE, despite the offer of a price discount from the Swiss drugmaker. The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence said on Thursday it still believed the medicine was not cost effective, compared with other existing treatments …

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UK spurns Novartis MS pill despite new price cut

National Multiple Sclerosis Society lauds UC Irvine Healthcare’s program

November 30th, 2011

— Irvine, Calif., November 29, 2011 — After a thorough review, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society has recognized UC Irvine Healthcare’s multiple sclerosis program for superior and innovative patient care by certifying it as an official Center for MS Comprehensive Care.

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National Multiple Sclerosis Society lauds UC Irvine Healthcare’s program

Multiple sclerosis group lauds health care program

November 30th, 2011

IRVINE — After a thorough review, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society has recognized UC Irvine Healthcare’s multiple sclerosis program for superior and innovative patient care by certifying it as an official Center for MS Comprehensive Care.

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Multiple sclerosis group lauds health care program

National MS Society Chapter Elects New Trustees

November 23rd, 2011

PHILADELPHIA, PA– – The Greater Delaware Valley of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society is pleased to announce the appointment of four new members to its Board of Trustees. The candidates were unanimously …

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National MS Society Chapter Elects New Trustees

MS society awards scholarships

November 21st, 2011

The Eastern N.C. Chapter of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society has awarded 10 local scholarships.

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MS society awards scholarships

Medina resident earns honor for MS Society volunteer efforts

November 15th, 2011

The National Multiple Sclerosis Society has honored Dale Salsbury of Medina with the Distinguished Volunteer of the Year Award.

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Medina resident earns honor for MS Society volunteer efforts

Medina resident receives award from National Multiple Sclerosis Society

November 8th, 2011

The National Multiple Sclerosis Society honored Dale Salsbury of Medina, with the Distinguished Volunteer of the Year Award.

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Medina resident receives award from National Multiple Sclerosis Society

Live Fully, Live Well — Financial Planning — National MS Society and Can Do MS

October 8th, 2011


Live Fully, Live Well is a wellness program for people living with multiple sclerosis and their support partners. Live Fully, Live Well is developed by the National MS Society and Can Do Multiple Sclerosis

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Live Fully, Live Well — Financial Planning — National MS Society and Can Do MS

Fatigue: Take Control Part 1 — National MS Society

October 5th, 2011


MS Learn Online is the National MS Society’s online educational webcast series. This video features part one of a six-part series about fatigue and multiple sclerosis.

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Fatigue: Take Control Part 1 — National MS Society






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