Kevin, 
That is an interesting article.  Someone I work with has a son with Spina 
Bifida so I'll hang on to this website.  
Gary in Niles, MI
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: kevin weilacher 
  To: tmic-list@eskimo.com 
  Sent: Sunday, November 23, 2008 3:59 PM
  Subject: [TMIC] Interesting article I saw


  I was reading our local newspaper a couple of days ago and I came across an 
article about an 11 year old boy that has Spina Bifida. The article went on to 
describe how Spina Bifida affects the nerves in a persons spine and how it 
usually results in varying degrees of paralysis, absence of skin sensation, and 
poor or absent bowel and/or bladder control. I thought to myself, hmmmm that 
sounds familiar.

  Not knowing much about Spina Bifida, I started researching it and from what 
I'm understanding now it is a developmental birth defect involving the neural 
tube: incomplete closure of the embryonic neural tube results in an 
incompletely formed spinal cord. In addition, the vertebrae overlying the open 
portion of the spinal cord do not fully form and remain unfused and open. This 
allows the abnormal portion of the spinal cord to stick out through the opening 
in the bones. I also read that any nerve damage is permanent. Read more about 
Spina Bifida here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spina_bifida

  As far as the nerve aspect of Spina Bifida and TM are concerned, it sounds 
like there are some similarities.

  Anyway, this article I was reading described how this boy that had Spina 
Bifida was not able to urinate on his own because of the condition. He had to 
catheter himself. The article went on to tell of a medical procedure that was 
pioneered in China, that involved transplanting a nerve from a persons leg to 
an area near or around the bladder.

  It went on to say that when the patient needed to void, they would scratch or 
pinch an area of their leg or buttock and that would signal their bladder to 
urinate. Over time the bladder function actually got to a point where it 
basically worked on it's own and also bowel function increased.

  I started researching this procedure and I found an excellent article where 
it also describes where this procedure is also being tested on adults with 
spinal cord injuries...
  Read the whole article here..: 
https://www.beaumonthospitals.com/news-story-beaumont-results-urina...

  I've also written to the study coordinator to see if there is any possibility 
that this procedure might work on TM.

  I think I'd be up for this if it would help fix the bladder and maybe the 
bowel issue. At least that would lessen some of the daily discomforts.

  What do you folks think..?

  Kevin


------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Reply via email to