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FALL 2012 GATEWAY AREA CHAPTER MS CONNECTION MAGAZINE INSIDE THIS ISSUE 04 EXCITING TIME FOR MS RESEARCHERS 14 MATRIARCH VOLUNTEER INSPIRES FAMILY 18 CHAPTER SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS 25 NOT YOUR TYPICAL SUMMER JOB Just as MS is a multifaceted disease, so must be our approach to developing solutions. Our commitment is a comprehensive strategy focused on three distinct results. Epidemiology Infectious triggers Genetics Tissue banks Pediatric MS Myelin repair Nerve function Symptom management Health care delivery and policy Central nervous system repair Rehabilitation FUNDING RESEARCH TO CHANGE LIVES NOW AND FOREVER. Genetics Health care delivery and policy Immunology Tissue banks Epidemiology Neuropathology Risk factors for progression Measuring disease activity and imaging OUR VISION: A world free of multiple sclerosis OUR RESEARCH FUNDRAISING GOAL: We will raise $250 million for MS research by the end of 2015 STOPPING THE DISEASE We have to stop all disease activity and prevent further progression for people who already have MS. ENDING MS FOREVER We are looking toward the future and are working to eliminate MS from our world and prevent it from ever occurring in the future. RESTORING WHAT’S BEEN LOST We must restore all function that has already been lost to nervous system damage.

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Page 1: MS Connection - Fall 2012

fall 2012 gateway area chapter

MS connection Magazine

inSiDe thiS iSSUe

04exciting tiMe for MS reSearcherS

14Matriarch volUnteer inSpireS faMily

18chapter ScholarShip winnerS

25not yoUr typical SUMMer job

Just as MS is a multifaceted disease, so must be our approach to developing solutions. Our commitment is a comprehensive strategy focused on three distinct results.

EpidemiologyInfectious triggers

Genetics

Tissue b

anks

Pedi

atric

MS

Myelin repair

Nerve functionSymptom management

Health care

delivery and policy

Central nervous

system repair

Rehabilitation

FuNdING RESEaRCH TO CHaNGE lIvES NOw aNd FOREvER.

Genetics

Health care delivery and policy

Imm

unologyTissue banks

Epidemiology

Neuropathology

Risk

fact

ors

for p

rogr

essi

on

Mea

suri

ng d

isea

se

activ

ity a

nd im

agin

g

Our VisiOn: a world free of multiple sclerosis

Our research Fundraising gOal: we will raise $250 million for MS research by the end of 2015

sTOPPingThe disease

we have to stop all disease activity and prevent further progression for people who already have MS.

ending Ms FOreVer

we are looking toward the future and are working to eliminate MS from our world and prevent it from ever occurring in the future.

resTOringWhaT’s Been lOsT

we must restore all function that has already been lost to nervous system damage.

Page 2: MS Connection - Fall 2012

2 MS connection: fall 2012

We’ve come a long way since I started with the Chapter 19 years ago when there were exactly ZERO treatments for people living with MS. Now we have eight FDA-approved disease-modifying drugs, including the first oral drug. But it is not enough.

We are putting our collective foot down and declaring this instant the time to take action. Now we have to move forward with the mindset that when it comes to a world free of MS, enough is not enough. Only all is enough.

We have reached the point where individual efforts can be made exponentially stronger through support and collaboration. Now we stand together as a National Society to raise $250 million to fuel MS research.

We will be everywhere at once with a focus on all the most promising opportunities. One path unexplored is one too many left behind. We will stop the progression of MS and restore everything people have lost. Anything less is not far enough. And now, we will end MS forever, so that every mother, father, son and daughter is safe in the future.

It will be an MS research revolution.

This is our chance to take down MS once and for all, so no opportunity will be wasted and no stone will be left unturned. Because even enough doesn’t cut it. We have to do it all. We have to do it together. And we have to do it now.

Please enjoy this issue of the MS Connection on research and do something about MS Research — tell someone about the MS NOW campaign, make a donation, sign up for a 2013 fundraising event, educate yourself at the John L. Trotter program in October.

Sincerely,

Phyllis Robsham, Chapter President

letter froM the preSiDent

MS Now Campaign ........................ 3

Exciting Time for Researchers ...... 4-5

Finding Future Researchers .......... 6-7

Research on the Road...................... 7

What We Can Learn from Kids ... 8-9

Trotter Program & Annual Meeting .. 9

CarePartner Column ......................10

For CarePartners Connections .......11

Ask the Professional .......................13

Matriarch Inspires Family .........14-15

Funding the Future ...................18-19

From Idea to Grant .................. 20-21

MS License Plate ............................21

About CCSVI ............................... 22

Clinical Trial Participants Key ...... 24

Not Your Typical Summer Job .......25

Family Weekend-Touch of Nature .. 26

Converting My Walker ................. 27

Talk MS Groups ...................... 28-29

Therapeutic Recreation ............. 30-32

Chapter Calendar .......................... 34

Deliver A Smile ............................. 34

Program Registration .....................35

Midwest Teleconference Series ...... 36

Wellness Network ......................... 36

INSIDE THIS ISSUE

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3gatewayMSSociety.org | 1-800-344-4867

aJ, diagnosed in 2000

YOur Financial cOnTriBuTiOns suPPOrT research PrOgress in ManY areas — in FacT, The sOcieTY’s cOMPrehensiVe aPPrOach TO Ms research is The OnlY sTraTegY ThaT Will deliVer sOluTiOns FOr everyone WiTh Ms.

TOgeTher, We’re Making a BOld cOMMiTMenT TO dO MOre nOW.

l More money to fuel MS research

l More research into progressive disease

l More scientists conducting MS research

aaron, diagnosed in 1995

We share this commitment with you; it’s reflected in the Society’s 5-year strategic plan — our strategic response to multiple sclerosis: 2011–2015 —and in our $250 million fundraising goal.

Our gOal: We are a driVing FOrce OF Ms research and TreaTMenT TO sTOP disease PrOgressiOn, resTOre FuncTiOn, and end Ms FOreVer.

here’s hOW We Will geT There

Pursue new avenues to discover how nerve cells are damaged and potentially repaired.

Expand and strengthen the quantity and quality of MS research worldwide to accelerate new discoveries and treatments.

Better understand the scientific mechanisms that lead to disease progression and accelerate the development of new therapies.

Pursue new rehabilitation techniques and symptomatic treatments to restore neurological function and enhance quality of life.

Identify risk and triggering factors that cause MS, and understand the biological interactions that lead to its development so that MS can be prevented.

Page 4: MS Connection - Fall 2012

4 MS connection: fall 2012

Dr. Anne Cross has been involved in the field of multiple sclerosis research for nearly 30 years and has seen plenty of changes in the field. When she started there were no treatments for multiple sclerosis. She also remembers being on committees reviewing research grants and having money to spend on research, but not enough worthwhile and relevant projects.

“It used to be when I was on the committees in the 90s, we had money to fund the projects that we thought were good,” Cross said. “If we got 50 grants we might only say that 15 were good enough to be funded. All of those that were recommended would get funded. Now it’s much more frustrating because we don’t have the money to fund all the grants that should be recommended.”

how projectS are revieweD Cross, a Professor of Neurology and Head of Neuroimmunology at the John L. Trotter MS Center at Washington University in St. Louis, serves on and will soon be the chair of the National MS Society’s Research Programs Advisory Committee (RPAC). This committee reviews and recommends new research grants for funding.

Subcommittees review, critique and rank all the research grants that are worthwhile, ready and relevant to be studied. Grants that aren’t quite ready are sent back to the investigator to rework them.

“If we think the idea is good but the project needs a little tweaking, we make a lot of constructive criticism,” Cross said. “I really like the MS Society’s way of reviewing. The committee will make suggestions and say please send it back in.”

Once the RPAC has all the recommended projects it has to determine which ones to fund.

“We get the rankings from the subcommittees, see how much money there is now, how much money there may be in 6 months and then we have to make some hard decisions,” Cross said. “We can’t study it all. There are a lot of grants that are worthwhile that don’t get funded.”

reSearch

exciting tiMe for MS reSearcherS

Dr. anne croSS will Serve aS the chair for the national MS Society’S reSearch prograMS aDviSory coMMittee that reviewS anD recoMMenDS grantS for fUnDing.

“the new DrUgS will be helpfUl for people who neeD theM anD they May tell US SoMething new aboUt the coUrSe of the DiSeaSe itSelf.”

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5gatewayMSSociety.org | 1-800-344-4867

new therapieS coUlD leaD to greater UnDerStanDing As incoming chair of the RPAC and a top researcher in the field, Cross certainly has her finger of the pulse of MS research. So what excites her?

“Some of the new drugs work differently than the ones we have now and so many of them are really fascinating,” Cross said. “The new drugs will be helpful for people who need them and they may tell us something new about the course of the disease itself.”

aDvanceD iMaging coUlD Make DoctorS’ jobS eaSier Another area of MS research that excites Cross is advances in imaging which can give doctors a greater understanding of the course of MS in individuals and how individuals respond to different therapies.

“I’m very interested in the very detailed imaging and trying to get at the pathology of the disease, but not invasively,” Cross said. “Advancement in imaging will be helpful to understand the disease process itself. If we can get ways we can non-invasively understand the disease, how it goes up and down, and what’s happening underneath the surface, then that will help us understand different types of MS. Now we just compare different types of MS clinically, which is not optimal. Better imaging will help provide a better understanding of what is going on over time at the cellular and high-resolution level. It’s not standard MRIs at all.”

The advanced imaging could also help neurologists better access how patients are reacting to therapies and be able to more effectively prescribe medications.

“This will be a much more useful way to look at whether drugs are effective both in testing new drugs in clinical trials and knowing how effective drugs are on individual patients,” Cross said. “Now prescribing medications is kind of trial and error. I think within 5-10 years we’ll have better ways to figure out what to put patients on from the get go and what would be better for patient A vs. patient B. We’ll know more quickly when to switch therapies. I think we’ll have a lot more choices of therapies also.”

exciting fUtUre Dr. Cross has seen quite a bit in the recent past and she’s excited about the future of MS research.

“When I started out we had no drugs. A lot of people were severely affected by MS in those days and were just treated with steroids because that’s about all we had. Basically we had nothing,” Cross said. “Now probably about 75% of newly diagnosed respond pretty well to the drugs we have. We’ve learned all sorts of things about lesions in the brain matter and about the disease. I think the battle against MS will eventually be won. I hope it’s during my lifetime.” n

“i think within 5-10 yearS we’ll have better wayS to figUre oUt what to pUt patientS on froM the get go.”

Page 6: MS Connection - Fall 2012

6 MS connection: fall 2012

At the John L. Trotter MS Center at Washington University in St. Louis researchers are working for a better future for people living with MS. The center is also training potential future MS researchers like Divya Gupta, a second year medical student at Northeast Ohio Medical University. She is studying under Dr. Anne Cross and Dr. Enrique Alvarez. She was born in India and raised in Dayton, Ohio. She earned her bachelor of science degree at the University of Akron.

what Drew yoU to neUrology? “In my first year of medical school, the most interesting course for me was Brain, Mind and Behavior. It was fascinating to me to learn about the pathways of the central nervous system and how they control every movement of our body. Multiple sclerosis is a disease that affects these pathways in many different ways. Knowing that MS affects a significant portion of the population, I wanted to learn more about the disease and possibly help in making a step forward towards finding a better treatment for it.”

what haS yoUr experience at waShington UniverSity been like? “I have had an exhilarating experience here. While the first week here was slightly overwhelming because I didn’t know much at all about MS, both Dr. Alvarez and Dr. Cross were welcoming and provided me with adequate resources to

learn more about the disease. As I started meeting patients and reading more about the research that has been done with MS, I became more accustomed to the environment.”

what waS the MoSt intereSting thing yoU’ve learneD ? “The most intriguing thing I have learned so far is the wide spectrum within MS. Before starting my work at Washington University, I knew MS is a demyelinating disease of the central nervous system, but never imagined the variety of symptoms that can be associated with it. Having been in the clinic only a couple of times I have seen individuals that are both young and old, different races, and both mildly and severely affected.”

reSearch

fUnDing fUtUre reSearcherSDivya gUpta, a 20-year-olD MeDical StUDent froM ohio, StUDieD UnDer Dr. anne croSS anD Dr. enriqUe alvarez at waShington UniverSity thiS SUMMer.

Page 7: MS Connection - Fall 2012

7gatewayMSSociety.org | 1-800-344-4867

reSearch

reSearch on the roaDcolUMbia, Mo SepteMber 22, 10 a.M. - noon Hilton Garden Inn3300 Vandiver Ave.Columbia, MO 65202

Dr. Mark Tullmann will provide up-to-date in-formation on:

•Research and new therapies for MS

•New data on disease modifying medication

FREE (INCLUDES BRUNCH)

Register at gatewaymssociety.org g Chapter Calendar.

aboUt the Speaker Mark Tullmann MD, Neurologist

The MS Center for Innovations in MS CareMissouri Baptist Medical Center

how will thiS experience help yoU? “This is allowing me to learn about MS in greater depth than I ever would have sitting in a classroom. Not only am I gaining knowledge about MS, but I will be able to spread the awareness of a fairly common disease among my peers by sharing my summer experience. I also believe this experience has given me a chance to think on my feet and seek knowledge on my own. Performing research in a lab has a different twist to learning than attending lectures and studying for tests. It requires you to be a lot more inquisitive and helps to develop problem solving skills.”

what DoeS thiS experience Mean to yoU? “I’m very fortunate to have been given the opportunity to work at such a prestigious university like Washington University. Coming from a smaller medical school, it is interesting to see the differences and similarities present within medical education.”

where Do yoU See yoUr career going? “While my experience so far at Washington University has reinforced my interest in neurology, I know I have still have a lot to explore and learn. One day, I would ideally like to practice as a neurologist but would still like to keep an open mind as I continue through medical school.” n

Page 8: MS Connection - Fall 2012

8 MS connection: fall 2012

While much has been learned about multiple sclerosis, several areas, including pediatric MS, need much more exploration.

Dr. Emmanuelle Waubant, PhD, Associate Professor of Neurology at the University of California – San Francisco, is currently running a large study aiming at unraveling the triggers of pediatric MS.

“We expect this study will provide key information on factors that trigger MS, not only in children but also in adults,” Dr.

Waubant said. “This study is leveraging the fact that it is easier to study risk factors closer to the time of exposure like in children as opposed to in adults. We expect it will provide many precious pieces of information on risk factors for MS in general, and maybe help develop new treatments or preventative strategies.”

“we expect that thiS StUDy will proviDe key inforMation on factorS that trigger MS, not only in chilDren bUt alSo in aDUltS.”

reSearch MS

Making aDvanceS in peDiatric reSearch

by StUDying peDiatric MS, reSearcherS are hoping to alSo learn More aboUt MS in aDUltS. yoU can learn More aboUt thiS topic at the john l. trotter reSearch prograM in october.

Page 9: MS Connection - Fall 2012

9gatewayMSSociety.org | 1-800-344-4867

The Regional Pediatric MS Center at UCF is a Center of Excellence that was initiated in 2006, along with five other centers, through a grant from the National MS Society. The goal was to provide multidisciplinary clinical services to families affected by MS. Since then, the pediatric MS Network has seen over 1,500 pediatric patients.

“Thanks to this multidisciplinary approach to pediatric MS, the pediatric MS Network team has unraveled key features of pediatric MS such as distinct characteristics of the disease on the MRI and spinal fluid of patients younger than 11, when the disease looks different and challenges doctors,” Dr. Waubant said. “Until this groundbreaking work, these atypical characteristics at disease onset resulted in delayed diagnosis and care, and thus, higher

chance of disability.”

Waubant’s team learned that MRIs of patients under 11 show larger and more poorly defined MS scars compared to adults and that MS scars in young patients often go away within a few months, which is very rare in adults. They also observed that spinal fluid of young patients can show more inflammation than in adults. Younger patients can also have problems thinking and are lethargic with the first MS attack.

“Now that these distinct features in younger patients have been identified, and that widespread education is delivered to care providers, accurate diagnosis in children with MS is made easier and early treatment can better prevent disability onset.” n

john l. trotter reSearch prograM

“what kiDS with MS are teaching US.”SatUrDay, october 6 10 a.M. hilton St. loUiS frontenac

“we expect by studying children with MS, it will provide many precious pieces of information on risk factors for MS in general, and maybe help develop new treatments or preventative strategies.”

- emmanuelle waubandt, MD, phD, faanjohn l. trotter keynote Speaker

associate professor of neurology, University of california San francisco

join US in perSon for jUSt $10 (inclUDeS brUnch) or via teleconference or live StreaM for free

regiSter now 800 344 4867 or

gatewayMSSociety.org

please join us as Dr. emmanuelle waubant discusses advances in MS research and how studying children with MS could help us understand the disease and develop new treatments.

anD annUal Meeting

Page 10: MS Connection - Fall 2012

10 MS connection: fall 2012

carepartner prograMS

“Love begins by taking care of the closest ones - the ones at home.” Mother TeresaCarepartners provide everyday assistance their loved ones with MS depend on. A carepartner can be anyone: a spouse, partner, friend, neighbor, even parent or child. Regardless of the relationship, this person has agreed to take on a very important role in their loved one’s life. Carepartners can help by providing assistance with the day-to-day life happenings, managing the household, and supervising doctor visits and medication. The new relationship built around the battle against MS can create a bond stronger than ever before and can be very rewarding. At the same time, the caregiver must be wary of his or her own health and needs.

In addition to carepartners being welcome at most programs for people with MS, the Gateway Area Chapter provides many programs and resources specifically for carepartners and there are many ways to get information and get involved with the various Carepartner groups. The Chapter provides limited services to help carepartners attend programs, including fee waivers for paid programs, and resources for respite care to help support the person with MS while the Carepartner attends a program, runs errands, or simply takes a break. To find out more information on Carepartner programs and resources in your area, call the National MS Society at 800-344-4867.

carepartner prograMS

aboUt carepartnerSMS together This couples social group provides an informal social opportunity to meet and talk. Events are organized by the couples themselves, including potlucks and ballgames. Expect to actively participate in planning and organizing, as well as having fun! Meets quarterly, location changes but is generally in the St. Louis area. If interested email Joe Salacki at [email protected].

new caregiver colUMn The MS Connection will now feature an advice column (see next page) specifically for those who care for someone who lives with MS. If you have a question for our advice columnist, Karen Tripp, please send it to [email protected] with the subject line CAREGIVER QUESTION or by mail to 1867 Lackland Hill Parkway, St. Louis, MO 63146 ATTN: Stacey.

carepartner anD faMily groUp This group covers a series of topics important to caregivers, for anyone who provides care for a loved one with MS. Meets the first Tuesday in February, May, August and November at 7 p.m. David C. Pratt Cancer Center Mercy Hospital 607 S. New Ballas Rd. St. Louis, MO 63147 Group is facilitated by Karen Tripp, counselor.

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11gatewayMSSociety.org | 1-800-344-4867

Being a caregiver isn’t easy.

Actually, it can be stressful, exhausting, infuriating, depressing and it can even make you sick. Statistics show caregivers typically have higher anxiety, more depression, lower immune systems

and a shorter life expectancy than their non-caregiving peers.1

Caregivers need to take care of themselves as they do their loved ones. On a good day this is difficult, other days it seems impossible. After all, how can you take care of yourself, when the needs of someone living with MS are so much greater? Just remember that being physically and emotionally healthy as a caregiver is an important gift for a loved one living with MS.

The first step is acknowledging stress before the body begins to show stress-related symptoms and to ask for help.

The second step is to accept help. If people say “Is there anything I can do?”, the correct answer is “YES!” By letting others assist with

simple daily needs and chores, caregivers can better care for loved ones.

The third step is to build a core support group. Two or three emotionally supportive people can make a world of difference in the life of a caregiver. These are not the people to help you with a broken car. These are the people who can help you with a tired and sometimes hurting heart.

To find your core support group, just answer this question: who can ask you, “How are you doing,” and give an honest answer? It’s important to talk about your difficulties and seek out caring people to listen. If you do not have the emotional support you need, locate an MS caregiver support group (see pages 26-27).

Don’t let the needs of the person living with MS overshadow the needs of the caregiver. Acknowledge the stress in your life and reach out for support now, before you become overwhelmed.

tipS for caregiverS

how to prevent caregiverS froM getting overwhelMeD

1 National Family Caregivers association. Ed. Sandy Rogers. N.p., n.d. web. 13 apr. 2010. www.thefamilycaregiver.org/who_are_family_caregivers/care_giving_statstics.cfm#7.

karen tripp Marriage anD faMily therapiSt

“to finD yoUr core SUpport groUp, jUSt anSwer thiS qUeStion: who can aSk yoU, ‘how are yoU Doing?’ anD give an honeSt anSwer?”

Page 12: MS Connection - Fall 2012

P a i d a d v e r t i s e m e n t

P a i d a d v e r t i s e m e n t

Know Your Treatment Options If you’re unsatisfied with your current treatment for MS relapses—because it doesn’t work well or causes side effects that are hard to manage—you’re invited to a presentation created especially for you.

You will learn from an MS healthcare professional about a different FDA-approved treatment option and hear a firsthand account of a patient’s experience with this treatment.

You will also learn:

How to distinguish between relapses and pseudo-relapses

About the importance of treating relapses

How to talk about relapses with your healthcare provider

About the available treatment options for MS relapses

TAKE CONTROL OF YOUR MS RELAPSES

©2012 Questcor Pharmaceuticals, Inc. PM-542-02 04/12

Location The Creek Grill and Sports Bar2000 Phoenix Center DriveWashington, Missouri 63090

Date Monday, October 15, 2012

Time 6:00 PMCheck-in 5:30 PM

Presented by Max Benzaquen, MDChesterfield, Missouri

Please register by Sunday, October 14, 2012.

To register for this program, call 877-219-0410, or go towww.msrelapseprogram.com, and refer to Program #2449.

A caregiver or friend is welcome to accompany you.

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13gatewayMSSociety.org | 1-800-344-4867

Well, it’s not for a lack of trying. We’ve used all of the FDA-approved drugs that are indicated for relapsing MS in progressive MS and so far they haven’t worked, although some of those trials are still ongoing. But I think the real issue is that progressive MS may be different than relapsing MS.

By that I mean that in relapsing MS we know there’s inflammation, and we know how to target inflammation. But in progressive MS there’s likely a different process going on. The nerves themselves become unhappy from the loss of myelin, and we need to figure out how to rescue those nerves and keep them happier and target remyelination.

Stopping MS progression is a challenging problem but we’re looking at how nerve cells survive and the signals that are required to keep them alive.

First, we’re screening drugs, compounds that may be already available in a drug that’s already indicated by the FDA for one disease. Second, we’re also trying to find out how we can repair the tissue, through remyelination, and really are just starting to get ideas about how to do that. We do know that within all of our brains there are cells that have the capacity to turn into myelin-making cells. If we can figure out how

to turn these cells on and get them to turn into myelin-making cells, we could actually repair the brain in progressive MS.

The idea with the Collaborative MS Research Center award presented by the National MS Society is we tap into expertise of scientists from other areas of medical research. We’re working with a biologist, Dr. Dwight Bergles, who specializes in how myelination happens in the first place. It’s a bit like dialing back the clock to make our bodies think we’re children again and we need to myelinate. And through understanding how it happens normally, we can perhaps trigger that to happen in patients with MS. We’re also working with Dr. Jeff Rothstein who is working on ALS, or Lou Gehrig’s disease, another disease where there’s brain degeneration. It’s very important that we understand lessons that have been learned from that disease and apply them to MS. It is an exciting time, and I think this kind of collaboration is really critical to making progress and moving forward quickly. n

Dr. peter calabreSi profeSSor of neUrology Director johnS hopkinS MS center

aSk the profeSSional

why aren’t there treatMentS for progreSSive MS?

Page 14: MS Connection - Fall 2012

MS connection: fall 2012

When our song, The Wind Beneath My Wings, plays I always think of Mom. An angel in the true sense and the wind beneath my wings, my mother, Judy Drury, was a friend to everyone, a stranger to none. She was a nurse, red hat queen, wife, mother, grandmother, friend, volunteer, and the most caring individual I have ever met. Everyone who came in contact with her would tell you their heart had been touched forever.

She lived with MS that attacked with vengeance. She was plagued with MS for 14½ years, but if you met her you wouldn’t know it. Mom rode her scooter like a 20-year-old race car driver, always with a smile, always willing to help anyone who needed it. Her disease began with a numb toe and then progressed, attacking her legs and her eyesight, but never her will to live. We also have an uncle and a family friend with MS so we know personally how devastating it can be, not only physically, but emotionally. Watching our mother, uncle, and family friend suffer the effects of this devastating

14

SiMone jacob bike MS volUnteer challenge walk MS participant

SiMone jacob (left), her brother john DrUry (top), Mother jUDy DrUry (right) anD DaUghter Morgan have been big partS of bike MS.

jUDy DrUry waS a fixtUre at the MeDical tentS at bike MS.

volUnteer colUMn

Matriarch inSpireS faMily to help create a worlD free of MS

Page 15: MS Connection - Fall 2012

gatewayMSSociety.org | 1-800-344-4867

disease motivated us, as a family, to volunteer at events to support the research of MS. We have walked and ridden bikes to support these efforts. Sometimes we participated by fundraising. I raised over $2,500 to participate in Challenge Walk MS which was the hardest, yet most rewarding, event I have ever participated in. Raising the money, the Circle of Strength, sleeping on the floor of a college gymnasium, the blisters, the camaraderie among people from all walks of life, are only a few memories I have of those three exhausting days.

Mom volunteered as a nurse at Bike MS the past 5 years as my brother, John Drury, fundraised, trained, and battled both back and knee injuries to ride every single mile that he could. He did this, not only for her, but for every individual with MS.

John devotes months each year to both training and fundraising for Bike MS and rides with Kaldi’s Coffee. He has raised more than $7,000. He has volunteered by setting up tent city, parking, and riding over 800 miles for Bike MS.

Amie, my sister-in-law, has volunteered as rest stop support, cheerleader, and breakfast server to hundreds of hungry riders. Morgan, our daughter, Jake, my husband, and our friends Sarah and Penny cheered and served Gatorade to riders at both of our rest stops.

Last year, my husband, daughter, sister-in-law, and close family friends found volunteering with Mom to be very rewarding. Watching

Mom as the rest stop nurse for two days brought tears to my eyes. I watched her interact with riders and other volunteers knowing that no one knew what pain she was enduring as she sat, stood, knelt, iced, bandaged, offered words of advice and comfort to each and every rider she came in contact with.

We pray that the funds raised and the awareness that MS events provide, will someday offer a cure for this crippling disease. I know this year has been, and will continue to be, challenging for my brother as Mom was his partner for five years, volunteering and supporting his efforts every step of the way. This year, our angel will be watching over us with love and adoration from above.

We love and honor you Mom, you are the wind beneath our wings, this year and every year…this ride is for you!

15

jUSt a reMinDer...MeDicare open enrolleMent beginS oct. 7The Medicare Open Enrollment Period this year is October 7 - December 15. During the Open Enrollment period, current or newly eligible Medicare beneficiaries, in-cluding people with Original Medicare, can review current health and prescription drug coverage, compare health and drug plan op-tions available in their area, and choose cov-erage that best meets their needs. For more information go to www.medicare.gov or call 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227).

Page 16: MS Connection - Fall 2012

P a i d a d v e r t i s e m e n t

P a i d a d v e r t i s e m e n t

Know Your Treatment Options If you’re unsatisfied with your current treatment for MS relapses—because it doesn’t work well or causes side effects that are hard to manage—you’re invited to a presentation created especially for you.

You will learn from an MS healthcare professional about a different FDA-approved treatment option and hear a firsthand account of a patient’s experience with this treatment.

You will also learn:

How to distinguish between relapses and pseudo-relapses

About the importance of treating relapses

How to talk about relapses with your healthcare provider

About the available treatment options for MS relapses

TAKE CONTROL OF YOUR MS RELAPSES

©2012 Questcor Pharmaceuticals, Inc. PM-542-02 04/12

Location Bella Italia Ristorante20 North Spanish StreetCape Girardeau, Missouri 63701

Date Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Time 6:00 PMCheck-in 5:30 PM

Presented by Lori Guyton, MD, MHSHerrin, Illinois

Please register by Tuesday, October 16, 2012.

To register for this program, call 877-219-0410, or go towww.msrelapseprogram.com, and refer to Program #2450.

A caregiver or friend is welcome to accompany you.

Page 17: MS Connection - Fall 2012

P a i d a d v e r t i s e m e n t

P a i d a d v e r t i s e m e n t

You’re invited to join us at a Novartis MS Education Link Event

Hear a medical specialist share information about multiple sclerosis (MS),

learn about a prescription treatment option, and connect with people in your

community living with MS.

Featured Specialist:

Featured Specialist:

Novartis Pharmaceuticals CorporationEast Hanover, New Jersey 07936-1080© 2012 Novartis 4/12 T-XMG-1137413

Space is limited.Please RSVP by calling 1-800-973-0362

Tell or bring a friend! Accessible to people with disabilities.

Light meal served. Parking will be validated.

at

at

at

at

Myles Goble, MD Barbara Green, MDSept. 18 6:00pm Sept. 19 6:00pm

44 Stone Public House Matt's Steakhouse3910 Peachtree Dr. 12200 Dillon Outer Dr.

Columbia, MO Rolla, MO

Barbara Green, MD Florian Thomas, MDSept. 30 11:30am Oct. 2 6:00pm

Trattoria Branica Pirrones Pizza10411 Clayton Rd. 1775 Washington St.

St. Louis, MO Florissant, MO

Page 18: MS Connection - Fall 2012

MS connection: fall 2012

fUnDing the fUtUre

chapter awarDS $41,000 in ScholarShipS

18

preSiDential Scholar thinkS oUtSiDe the boxThanks to her mom’s MS, Caterina Fedyk, the Society’s 2012 Presidential Scholar, learned early on how to think outside the box—or what she calls the “sandbox.” “Since my mom couldn’t play in the backyard, I was the only kid with a sandbox on the deck,” she says. “But she was there, helping me build sandcastles, and that was all that mattered.” As her mom transitioned from a cane, to a walker, to a wheelchair, both of them learned how to adjust—cre-atively. Caterina’s responsibilities at home increased, but she and her mom would find ways to make them fun, playing “waitress” for meals, “housekeep-er” for cleaning, “hair salon” and “makeup artist at the theater” for groom-ing—“My mom certainly had unique appearances at family events!” Caterina recalls. When her mother eventually had to spend more time in bed, they would lie there together, “watching stars on the ceiling from my planetarium set.” Caterina plans to use her scholarship to study photojournalism at Ball State University in Muncie, Ind. There, she’ll put her MS-spurred problem-solving abilities to good use, learning “to photograph social injustices and document efforts to resolve these issues.”

caterina feDyk won the the national MS Society preSiDen-tial top Scholar awarD.

MS shouldn’t stand in the way of an education. This is why the National MS Society’s scholarship program exists — to help highly qualified students who have been diagnosed with MS or who have a parent with MS achieve their dreams of going to college. The Society established its scholarship program in 2003 and the program continues to grow both in terms of support and scholarships awarded. In its first year of operation the program awarded 36 scholarships for a total of $68,000; in 2012 over $1 million was awarded to 646 scholars.

Support for the scholarship program comes from foundations, chapter donors, our own employee giving program and other sources.

This year the Gateway Area Chapter awarded more than $41,000 to 21 new college students including the Society’s 2012 Presidential Scholar, Caterina Fedyk. Each year, one student is awarded this four-year scholarship. The Chapter also gave renewal scholarships to 9 students continuing their secondary education.

Highly qualified high-school seniors who have been diagnosed with MS or who have a parent with MS are eligible for the scholarship program. Awards range from $1,000–$3,000 and a small number of four-year awards are offered. Applications for 2013 scholarships will be accepted (online only) between October 1, 2012, and January 15, 2013. For more info, visit nationalMSsociety.org/scholarship or call us at 1-800-344-4867.

Page 19: MS Connection - Fall 2012

gatewayMSSociety.org | 1-800-344-4867 19

Casey Baumgartner Fulton, MO

University of Missouri, Columbia

Megan Bradshaw Jackson, MO

Murray State University

Shelby Carpenter Arnold, MO

Missouri University of Science & Tech

Jenna Chwascinski Washington, MO

East Central College

Katelyn Cook Licking, Missouri

Southwest Baptist University

Nicole Draper Saint Peters, MO

Truman State University

Ryan Gross Kirksville, Missouri

Missouri State University

Kane Laks Hannibal, MO

Saint Louis University

Emma McDowell Macon, Missouri

Missouri State University

Savannah McMillan Schaefer Glasgow, MO

Columbia College

Elizabeth Miller Maryland Heights, MO

University of Central Missouri

Kaleb Mosley Macon, MO

Hannibal-LaGrange College

Siri Rigsby Carbondale, IL

University of Washington

Olivia Runyon Rolla, MO

Savannah College of Art and Design

Paige Simmons Litchfield, IL

Southern Illinois U. at Edwardsville

Andrew Snethen Fulton, MO

Linn State Technical College

Katherine Thomas Jefferson City, MO Evangel University

Krystal Van Houten Blackwell, MO

University of Missouri-Columbia

Whitney Webb Benton, IL

Rend Lake College

Lola Weiss Fulton, MO

Northern Michigan University

Page 20: MS Connection - Fall 2012

20 MS connection: fall 2012

reSearch

getting reSearch fUnDing: froM iDea to grantSay you are a researcher at a major university in the U.S. In the shower one morning, you get an exciting new idea about what might be happening in MS, and now you want to test this new idea as soon as possible.

What now? First you will probably want to check published papers to make sure your idea or research question hasn’t already been resolved by other researchers. This is made pretty easy with the help of the federal government’s “PubMed,” a free-access, online database where you can search on topics and authors.

Then you will need to run some preliminary experiments to make sure you are on the right track. You might be able to shift some of your existing grant support to run one or two preliminary experiments, but maybe not. One option is to apply to the National MS Society for a small pilot research grant. This program is designed to help researchers gather evidence on novel ideas, and build a case for applying for larger-scale research funding to propel the idea forward.

Is the idea holding up? Then it’s time to apply for a research grant. The usual sources are the National Institutes of Health and the National MS Society. The Society receives some 400 or more proposals every year from researchers who

hope to explore particular aspects of multiple sclerosis.

paSSing MUSterResearch proposals are reviewed by panels of volunteer experts — called “peer reviewers” — who meet in person or by conference call to evaluate the research proposals. These panels include some 90 leading scientists, physicians and other professionals from virtually every field related to MS, who volunteer thousands of hours each year.

Proposals are evaluated for their scientific merit, their relevance to MS and Society research priorities, the novelty of their ideas, the experience and productivity of the applicants, their collaborators, and their institutional environment and resources.

The proposals are ranked in order of priority to be recommended for funding. The senior oversight committee (Research Programs

the Society receiveS SoMe 400 or More propoSalS every year froM reSearcherS who hope to explore particUlar aSpectS of MS.

Page 21: MS Connection - Fall 2012

21gatewayMSSociety.org | 1-800-344-4867

The Missouri General Assembly has approved the MS Awareness speciality license plate! Help spread MS awareness and show others that you support the National MS Society by purchasing an MS Missouri license plate! Apply for your li-cense plates now to help us reach our goal.

what thiS MeanSnEvery plate purchased = $25 directly to the

NMSS.

aDvocacy

yoU’re in the Driver’S Seat

nIncreased awareness about MS.

what yoU can DonWe need 200 applicants to start produc-

tion so apply for your license plate today! nGo to gatewaymssociety.org g Advocate g MO License Plate and fill out the ap-plication.

mov4ms

Advisory Committee) reviews the results of the other committees’ recommendations, and also helps to develop policy and set priorities for the research program. Final recommendations are made to the President and CEO for approval. Projections of Society income and research programs expenditures dictate the number of proposals that can be committed for funding.

Congratulations, your research proposal was favorably reviewed! But even if it wasn’t, you would receive written comments and suggestions on how to improve your research proposal to enhance your chances of being funded in the future.

for a list of peer reviewers, go to http://www.nationalmssociety.org/for-profession-als/researchers/scientific-peer-reviewers/index.aspx .

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22 MS connection: fall 2012

CCSVI, or chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency, has been the subject of scrutiny ever since Dr. Paolo Zamboni first put forth the theory that it could be connected to nervous system damage in people with MS. There appears to be a split amongst the scientific and medical community as to how much effect CCSVI really has on MS patients.

By 2010 more studies had been conducted on the topic, all with varying results. Some pointed to a potential connection, while others said there was no correlation between the two conditions whatsoever. These wide-ranging outcomes began raising questions and concerns amongst the MS community, so the National MS Society decided to take steps to better understand CCSVI. The National MS Society joined forces with the MS Society of Canada to provide over $2.4 million worth of funding for seven different studies in order to confirm the phenomenon originally described by Dr. Zamboni and to resolve the question as to whether CCSVI is a cause of MS or related to MS in some other manner.

Dr. Zamboni requested more research into a treatment for CCSVI, which he believes could be treated through an endovascular surgical procedure, which involves inserting a tiny balloon or stent into blocked veins in order to improve the flow of blood out of the brain and spinal cord. However, these studies are designed to be the first few steps into understanding CCSVI and its possible connection to MS, not

to find a treatment. For example, scientists hope to determine how frequently CCSVI occurs in MS, and how often it occurs in people who do not have MS.

The studies are currently in the beginning stages. They are expected to take two years, though there are no specific deadlines set. Most studies have recently earned approval and are in the recruitment stage. The MS Society has no role in the selection of patients for the studies, but it will post any openings at www.nationalmssociety.org/ccsvi.

The trials range in both subject matter and patient type. One is looking into potential genetic connections, while another is investigating CCSVI in young patients with MS.

Dr. Aaron Field, the lead researcher for one of the studies, points out the importance of this diversity.

“Currently, all the evidence for this theory has come from just one research group,” Dr. Field said. “It is now critical for other investigators, working independently, to confirm or refute this evidence.”

All research teams are required to conduct six month updates on their progress. If you are interested in learning more about any of these trials, or following their progress, please visit www.nationalmssociety.org/ccsvi. n

reSearch

Society DelveS Deeper into ccSvi

Page 23: MS Connection - Fall 2012

P a i d a d v e r t i s e m e n t

P a i d a d v e r t i s e m e n t

Know Your Treatment Options If you’re unsatisfied with your current treatment for MS relapses—because it doesn’t work well or causes side effects that are hard to manage—you’re invited to a presentation created especially for you.

You will learn from an MS healthcare professional about a different FDA-approved treatment option and hear a firsthand account of a patient’s experience with this treatment.

You will also learn:

How to distinguish between relapses and pseudo-relapses

About the importance of treating relapses

How to talk about relapses with your healthcare provider

About the available treatment options for MS relapses

TAKE CONTROL OF YOUR MS RELAPSES

©2012 Questcor Pharmaceuticals, Inc. PM-542-02 04/12

Location Agostino's Italian Restaurant130 Ludwig DriveFairview Heights, Illinois 62208

Date Thursday, November 15, 2012

Time 6:00 PMCheck-in 5:30 PM

Presented by Lori Guyton, MD, MHSHerrin, Illinois

Please register by Wednesday, November 14, 2012.

To register for this program, call 877-219-0410, or go towww.msrelapseprogram.com, and refer to Program #2451.

A caregiver or friend is welcome to accompany you.

Page 24: MS Connection - Fall 2012

24 MS connection: fall 2012

People with MS want to do all they can to create a world free of MS – even if it will only help in the future. That’s one of the main reasons people will get involved in clinical trials.

“I just wanted to help in any way that I could,” said Gail Love who was diagnosed with MS in 2003. “It was very important to me to be a part of it.”

Chet Bunnell has been part of three clinical trials.

“I want to do all I can to end this horrible disease and to make life easier for those afflicted,” Chet said. “I feel honored and privileged that I have been able to be involved in MS research. More than anything I want to end MS.”

Gail took part in a trial studying the affects of ampyra on optic neuritis and had to travel about 2 hours once a month for three months for the study.

“It made for some long days,” Gail said. “I left home at 6 in the morning and got home at 8, but I would definitely do another trial.”

While Gail had to travel and take pills daily for three months, Chet’s was very different as he didn’t have to travel and it wasn’t studying a new drug. He is part of the “Take Charge of My MS: Telephone Intervention Study.” It involved using clinical psychological counseling

over the phone to deal with pain, fatigue and depression.

“The major part of the study was a series of eight weeks of telephone discussions, conducted by clinical psychologists, of materials in the workbook that they provided,” Chet said. “Each week’s call would start with a discussion of and my reaction to the additional reading. Telephone surveys by either a staff member or a clinical psychologist were conducted before, during and after the eight week period in order to assess my feelings and effectiveness of the information provided.”

Gail didn’t know if she was going to be on ampyra or a placebo, but after noticing improved reading ability, she definitely thinks she was on the drug.

“I knew I had a 50/50 chance to be on the drug,” Gail said. “I could tell on my second visit that I was on the good stuff. My doctor asked me if I thought I was on the drug and I said yes and he said I think you are on it also.”

Chet learned quite a bit from his experience, but one aspect truly stands out.

“The biggest lesson I learned was that it is my body, my MS, and there are things I can do to control my pain, fatigue and depression,” Chet said. “I need to take charge of my MS.” n

reSearch

trial participantS eye worlD free of MS

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25gatewayMSSociety.org | 1-800-344-4867

boarD of trUSteeS

not yoUr typical SUMMer jobSixteen-year old Parkway Central High junior Patrick Cannon has ridden in Bike MS since he was 9 with his father, Bob Cannon, group president at BJC and current Chair of the Gateway Area Chapter Board of Trustees.

While Patrick rode again this September, this summer he extended his efforts toward a world free of MS in quite a different way.

Always interested in science, Patrick was looking for volunteer experience and through Daniel Hawiger, M.D., Ph.D. he found an opportunity that few will be offered at his age.

Dr. Hawiger is an Assistant Professor in Molecular Microbiology & Immunology at Saint Louis University School of Medicine. Since September of 2010, Dr. Hawiger has been working on an MS Society-funded project at Saint Louis University entitled “The novel RhoGAP/Hop/Net tolerance-inducing pathway in myelin specific T cells”, exploring factors that contribute to the repeated immune attacks in MS in search of opportunities for interfering with these attacks to stop MS. After several e-mails back and forth, Dr. Hawiger interviewed Patrick and hired him as a volunteer to work in the lab during the summer. After an extensive tour of the lab and training on some of the equipment, Patrick worked closely with Dr. Hawiger’s senior research assistant, Cindy Gross and with graduate students Andrew Jones

and Jeffrey Ko on MS specific-T cells testing for genes by running PCRs (polymerase chain reactions) on mouse tissue cultures, where gene-specific DNA is first amplified and then run on a gel through an electric current.

According to Patrick, these PCR tests take a couple of hours each to run. He reports that he “learned a lot and was excited that he was able to tie in learning from his biology class the prior year on moving chemicals, liquids and DNA.”

Patrick is not sure what the future holds for him but he is confident that it will be something in a scientific or technical field. “It was a true delight to have Patrick working in my laboratory,” Dr Hawiger said. “Patrick is a bright student, keen on learning biology and interested in finding future solutions to current problems in medicine. The purpose of my research is to gain a better understanding of how immune T cells mistake the nerve fiber coating called myelin as a foreign tissue to be destroyed. We identified several molecules that can re-program the functions of myelin –specific T cells and we are now examining them using genetically modified animal models. Since the molecules we are studying share a close biological similarity between humans and mice, we expect that the results we gain from our studies could be later translated into patients.” n

Page 26: MS Connection - Fall 2012

26 MS connection: fall 2012

faMily prograMMing

toUch of natUreoctober 12-14, MakanDa, ilThe colors of fall will welcome you and your guests to a relaxing and rustic family getaway. Located approximately 2-1/2 hours from St. Louis in Makanda, just outside of Carbondale, Ill., Touch of Nature offers a secluded and accessible retreat.

weekenD activitieS inclUDe:•Accessible pontoon boat rides •Accessible hayrides•Arts & Crafts for all ages•Campfire and s’mores•Accessible horseback and pony rides•Owl prowling and catch and release fishing•‘Kids Only’ adventure activities and

Halloween fun•MS education sessions and activities

$80/per personRegistration Deadline: October 1Live in the area? Come join us for the day!Day only option: $25 per person (available for Saturday or Sunday).

A limited number of fee waivers are available for this program and/or transportation. Please have registration form to request a waiver to the Chapter by September 26. Kids 5 and younger are free. Registration includes meals, activities and lodging.

Page 27: MS Connection - Fall 2012

27gatewayMSSociety.org | 1-800-344-4867

Walkers are soooo not cool.

That was my first thought when I realized that just using my cane to help me get around wasn’t cutting it anymore. Then I had another onslaught of thoughts: I’m only 37 years old and I have to use a walker; people are going to stare at me like I’m some kind of weirdo; I actually have to acknowledge that my MS has gotten a lot worse. And on and on.

Never being the kind of person to take my MS lying down, I decided to embrace my new “assistive device.” After all, it was going to be my new best friend. I’m an active person. I’m a former Air Force officer, I have my own home-based consulting business, travel pretty often for work, and have two wonderful—and extremely active—young children with my active duty Air Force husband. Having trouble getting around is not an option for me.

So I asked myself, “How can I make this new rolling wonder as cool as possible?” Then it hit me: Get it custom airbrushed with flames! When my legs still worked normally, my husband and I both had motorcycles, and we watched a million shows about the beautiful work that airbrush artists could do with them. Some motorcycle frames have parts as thin as those on a walker, so I decided to start asking around and find out if a St. Louis artist wouldn’t think my request was too crazy.

After a short Google search, I found Darren

Williams at Liquid Illusions, a custom airbrush business in the city that not only does amazing work—he’s actually customized a walker before!

After a week, my new “ride” was finally ready. I couldn’t believe my eyes when I saw it! Rocket-flame orange with ghostly green flames licking up the sides of the legs; the work Darren did was exquisite. There was no way I could escape attention while using it, and I couldn’t have been happier!

I still hate that my body has gotten to a point where I need a walker. But if something as simple as beautiful artwork can make me look forward to using it rather than dreading it, then it’s well worth the trouble and small expense to make it happen.

living with MS

converting a walker to a Sweet riDe

Sylvia longMire, who haS liveD with MS for 8 yearS, DeciDeD to SprUce Up her walker with a cUStoM paint job to Make it, anD her, look anD feel cool.

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28 MS connection: fall 2012

MISSOURI

Camdenton 3rd Wednesday 4:30 p.m.

Camden County Library 99 Rodeo Road, Camdenton, MO 65020

Christy Bays, cell (573) 480-7932 [email protected]

Cape Girardeau

3rd Saturday 10 a.m.

St. Francis Health & Wellness Center Healing Arts Building, Conference Room 150 S. Auburn, Cape Girardeau, MO 63703

Sharon (573) 332-8148

Columbia 3rd Wednesday 6 p.m.

Rusk Rehabilitation Center315 Business Loop 70 WestColumbia, MO 65203

Rebecca Dykhouse, LSW(573) 817-4697, [email protected]

Crystal City/Festus

2nd Tuesday 1 p.m.

Disability Resource Association 420B S. Truman Bl.Crystal City, MO 63019

Marlene (636) 464-2533 Sharon [email protected]

Jefferson City 1st Monday 6 p.m.

Coca-Cola Bottling, Meeting Room605 Washington, Jefferson City, MO 65109

Rebekah Walters (573) [email protected]

Moberly 2nd Saturday 10:30 a.m.

Little Dixie Regional Libraries111 North 4th Street, Moberly, MO 65270

Lynelle David (660) 833-3175

New London 2nd Tuesday 7 p.m.

Ralls County Health Department Building405 W. 1st StreetNew London, MO 63459

Debby (573) 267-3365 [email protected]

O’Fallon Oct. 14, 2 p.m. Jan. 13, 2 p.m.

Conference Room A/B Barnes-Jewish Hospital, St. Peters, MO 63376 [email protected]

St. Charles 3rd Sunday 3 p.m.

Hardee’s Restaurant, 501 Mid Rivers Mall Dr., St. Peters, MO 63376 Jim (314) 602-4578

Washington 3rd Monday 6 p.m.

St. Peter’s United Church of Christ, 20 East 5th St., Washington, MO 63090 Anne (636) 359-6037

West Plains 3rd Wednesday 5 p.m.

Ozark Medical Ctr. Shaw Medical Bldg. 2nd Fl. 909 Kentucky St., West Plains, MO 65775 Sally (417) 469-4842

ST. LOUIS METRO

Affton 3rd Wednesday 7 p.m.

Weber Road Library 4444 Weber Rd, St. Louis, MO 63123 Linda (314) 544-5623

Generation OptiMiStic for people in their 20s, 30s & 40s

1st Saturday 10 a.m.

NMSS Office Gateway Area Chapter 1867 Lackland Hill Pkwy, St. Louis, MO 63146 Michelle (636) 447-5407

West County Prayer & Health

4th Wednesday 6:30-8 p.m.

Sachs Library 16400 Burkhardt Place Chesterfield, MO 63017

Rose [email protected]

Talk MS Groups bring together people who share a common life experience for support, education, and mutual aid. They are led by trained volunteers who also have a connection to MS.

talk MS groUpS

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29gatewayMSSociety.org | 1-800-344-4867

intereSteD in a kiDS’ or Men’S groUp? Please email [email protected] if you’re interested in either group. Please include which day/time would work best for you and how frequent you would like the meeting. Also, if you’re interested in the men’s group, please include whether you would prefer to have it be a face-to-face meeting or through a conference call. You can also call 1-800-344-4867 option 2 and ask for Stacey.

ILLINOISAlton/River Bend

3rd Tuesday 7-9 p.m.

The United Presbyterian Church, 2550 Rock Hill Rd., Wood River, IL 62095 Lisa (618) 258-0615

Belleville/ O’Fallon

2nd Sunday 2:30 p.m.

First United Methodist Church 504 East Highway 50, O’Fallon, IL 62269 Amy (618) 235-4226

Central Illinois

4th Monday 7 p.m.

Richland Memorial Hospital 800 East Locust St., Olney IL 62450

Tony (618) [email protected]

S’myelin Gang of Litchfield

4th Tuesday 6:30 p.m.

Christian Church of Litchfield 131 Yaeger Lake Trail, Litchfield, IL 62056 Meredith (217) 556-4418

Metro East Oct. 24, 7 p.m.Dec. 19, 7 p.m.

LINC, Inc. #1 Emerald Terrace, Swansea, IL 62226

Diane (618) 235-8823 [email protected]

Southern Illinois

2nd Monday 6 p.m.

Heartland Regional-Medical Center Classroom #1, 3333 West DeYoung, Marion, IL 62959

Robert (618) 983-0321

SPECIALIZED GROUPSCouples Group

Varies, contact for information Varies, contact for information [email protected]

Creative Art Experience

3rd Saturday10 a.m.

NMSS Office1867 Lackland Hill ParkwaySt. Louis, MO 63146-

[email protected]@juno.com

MS Fun, Friends & FoodPotluck

Nov. 7, 6 p.m.Feb. 5, 6 p.m.

David C. Pratt Cancer Center Mercy Hospital 607 S. New Ballas Rd.St. Louis, MO 63147

Michelle (314) 251-6400Debbie (636) [email protected]

Veterans with MS

2nd Wednesday 10 a.m.

Veterans Admin. Medical Center 1 Jefferson Barracks Dr., St. Louis, MO 63125

Penny (314) 652-4100 ext. 63274

CarePartner and Family Group

1st Tuesday in Feb., May, Aug. & Nov.6 p.m.

David C. Pratt Cancer CenterMercy Hospital607 S. New Ballas Rd., St. Louis, MO 63147

Stacey (800) 344-4867 [email protected]

talk MS groUpS

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30 MS connection: fall 2012

St. LouIS ADDReSS ContACt ACtIvItIeS offeReDBridgeton Community Center

4201 Fee Fee Road Bridgeton, MO 63044 314-739-5599

Carondelet Park Rec Plex

930 Holly Hills AveSt. Louis MO 63111 314-768-9622

Center of Clayton 50 Gay AvenueClayton , MO 63105 314-290-8511

JCC 2 Millstone Campus Drive St. Louis, MO 63146 314-432-5700

Downtown YMCA 1528 Locust Street St. Louis, MO 63103

314-436-4100

Dragonfly Health Spa & Yoga

1272 A JungermannSt. Peters, MO 63376

636-498-5544

Edward Jones Family YMCA

12521 Marine Avenue St. Louis, MO 63146 314-439-9622

Emerson Family YMCA 3390 Pershall RoadSt. Louis, MO 63135 314-521-1822

Jefferson College 1000 Viking DriveHillsboro, MO 63050

Christina 636-789-3000

Kirkwood Family YMCA

325 N. TaylorSt. Louis, MO 63122

314-965-9622

Maryland Heights Centre

2344 McKelvey Road Maryland Heights, MO 63043 314-738-2599

therapeUtic recreation SiteS

Studies show exercise not only improves your overall health and well-being, but also helps manage many MS symptoms. Move forward through exercise and find a program in your community or become an expert in using a healthy lifestyle to help manage MS. The Chapter offers financial assistance for attendance and transportation to therapeutic recreation programs. Financial assistance is available to help you pay for therapeutic recreation classes and memberships. In some cases, assistance with transportation may also be available. To apply, a completed financial assistance application and confirmation of MS diagnosis from your doctor is required. Amount of financial assistance is derived from a sliding scale based on the information from the financial assistance application. Please note the Gateway Area Chapter makes every effort to ensure all facilities listed provide services to meet the needs of people living with MS. Please contact the facility of choice and determine if the facility will meet your desired needs to ensure a rewarding visit. If you think the your facility would like education on MS please contact the Chapter office at 1-800-344-4867 option 1.Applications are accepted year-round, however completed applications will only be approved during January, April, July and October. For more information go to www.gatewaymssociety.org g Stay Healthy with MS.

Stay healthy with MS

AQUATICS PILATES TAI CHI YOGA ZUMBA

Page 31: MS Connection - Fall 2012

31gatewayMSSociety.org | 1-800-344-4867

therapeUtic recreation SiteSSt. LouIS Cont. ADDReSS ContACt ACtIvItIeS offeReD

Mid-County YMCA 1900 Urban DriveSt. Louis, MO 63144 314-962-9450

Olivette Community Center

9723 Grandview Drive St. Louis, MO 63132

314-781-9020 800-344-4867

Mercy Medical Building 12348 Old Tesson, Suite 220St. Louis, MO, 63128

Linda 314-729-0181

Show Me Aquatics 2085 Bluestone Drive St. Charles, MO 63303

Jeff636-896-0999

South City Family YMCA

3150 Sublette AvenueSt. Louis, MO 63139 314-644-3100

South County Family YMCA

12736 Southfork RoadSt. Louis, MO 63128

314-849-9622

St. Charles County YMCA

3900 Shady Springs Lane St. Peters, MO 63376

636-928-1928

The Cancer Support Community

1058 Old Des Peres RdSt. Louis, MO 63131

Kathryn 314-238-2000

The Lodge in Des Peres 1050 Des Peres Road St. Louis, MO 63131 314-835-6150

The Pointe at Ballwin Commons

1 Ballwin Commons Circle Ballwin, MO 63021 636-227-8950

Riverchase 990 Horan Dr Fenton, MO 63026 618-343-0067

Washington Four Rivers Family YMCA

400 Grand AvenueWashington, MO 63090 636-239-5704

Webster Groves Family YMCA

226 East Lockwood Avenue Webster Groves, MO 63119 314-962-9622

Wellbridge Athletic Club

7620 Forsyth BoulevardClayton , MO 63105 314-746-1500

Wellbridge Athletic Club

998 Woods Mill RoadTown & Country, MO 63131 636-207-3000

West County Family YMCA

16464 Burkhardt Pl Chesterfield, MO 63017 636-532-3100

Yoga Saint Louis 3305 Jamieson Ave. St. Louis, MO 63139

Bruce 314-645-9785

Z Power Fitness 233 Lamp & Lantern Village Town & Country, MO 63017

Nancy314-378-8639

AQUATICS PILATES TAI CHI YOGA ZUMBA

Page 32: MS Connection - Fall 2012

32 MS connection: fall 2012

MID-MISSouRI ADDReSS ContACt ACtIvItIeS offeReDColumbia Activity and Rec. Center

1701 W. Ash StreetColumbia, MO 65203 573-874-7700

Elm Street Yoga 904 Elm St. Suite 210. Columbia, MO 65201

Linda 573-657-2614

Jefferson City YMCA 424 Stadium Boulevard Jefferson City, MO 65101 573-761-9021

Mexico Family YMCA 1127 Adams StreetMexico, MO 65265 573-581-1540

Pilates & Yoga at Chapel Hill

2010 Chapel Plaza Ct. Suite AColumbia, MO 65203 573-446-0224

ILLInoIS ADDReSS ContACt ACtIvItIeS offeReD

Edwardsville YMCA 1200 Esic DriveEdwardsville, IL 62025 618-656-0436

Jerseyville Wellness Center

400 Maple Summit Rd Jerseyville, IL. 62052

Jennifer 618-498-6402

John A. Logan College 700 Logan College RoadCarterville, IL 62918

Chris 618-985-3741

Maryville YMCA 1 Town Center Drive Maryville, IL 62062 618-346-5600

Mascoutah Senior Center

227 N. Market Mascoutah, IL 62258 618-566-8758

O’Fallon Community YMCA

284 North 7 Hills RoadO’Fallon, IL 62269

618-628-7701

One-O-One Yoga 101 S Graham Ave # 1 Carbondale, IL 62901

Sarah618-457-8186

Sukha Yoga Center 18 South High Street Belleville, IL 62220

Sarah618-236-9642

SoutheASt MISSouRI ADDReSS ContACt ACtIvItIeS offeReD

Black River Coliseum 301 South 5th Street Poplar Bluff, MO 63901 573-686-8001

Cape Girardeau Municipal Pool

1920 Whitener Street Cape Girardeau, MO 63701

Pat573-335-4040

PARC Fitness Center 2620 N. Westwood Blvd.Poplar Bluff, MO 63901

Mindy 573-686-5985

Simply Yoga 1504 Preacher Roe #2 West Plains, MO 65775

Vicki 417-293-1184

Xtreme Gymnastics Cheer and Dance

422 West Pine Street Poplar Bluff, MO 63901

Christi 573-785-3780

therapeUtic recreation SiteS

AQUATICS PILATES TAI CHI YOGA ZUMBA

Page 33: MS Connection - Fall 2012

P a i d a d v e r t i s e m e n t

P a i d a d v e r t i s e m e n t

You’re invited to join us at a Novartis MS Education Link Event

Hear a medical specialist share information about multiple sclerosis (MS),

learn about a prescription treatment option, and connect with people in your

community living with MS.

Featured Specialist:

Featured Specialist:

Novartis Pharmaceuticals CorporationEast Hanover, New Jersey 07936-1080© 2012 Novartis 4/12 T-XMG-1137413

Space is limited.Please RSVP by calling 1-800-973-0362

Tell or bring a friend! Accessible to people with disabilities.

Light meal served. Parking will be validated.

at

at

at

at

Mary-Kay Fink, RN Barbara Green, MDOct. 4 6:00pm Oct. 11 6:00pm

Old Spaghetti Factory Cowan's Restaurant17384 Airport Rd. 114 Elm St.Chesterfield, MO Washington, MO

Heather Popham, NP Heather Popham, NPOct. 18 6:00pm Nov. 8 6:30pmBartolino's Osteria Spiro's Restaurant2103 Sulphur Ave. 2275 Bluestone Dr.

St. Louis, MO St. Charles, MO

Page 34: MS Connection - Fall 2012

34 MS connection: fall 2012

What is Deliver a Smile?Deliver a Smile is an opportunity to brighten the day of a person living with MS!

In December MS Society staff and volunteers make friendly visits to individuals living with MS and bring a “little something” with them. The Chapter delivers gifts specifically requested by individuals living with MS.

Who Qualifies?Deliver a Smile serves individuals living with MS who are homebound or living in long-term care facilities. These individuals are usually socially isolated and unable to go out without assistance.

Most individuals are referred to the program by friends, neighbors and family members.

Sponsor a Smile!We need your help! Please consider a donation in the form of cash, check, credit card and/or gift cards to these retailers: Walmart, Kohl’s, Kmart, Target or Walgreens.Deliver a Smile!We have Deliver a Smile recipients in 90 counties in Missouri and Illinois. We need volunteers like you to help deliver these smiles! To volunteer, contact the Chapter.

DATE PROGRAM/EVENT

PG. #

ST. LOUIS METRO

ILLINOIS SOUTHERN ILLINOIS

MID- MISSOURI

SE- MISSOURI

Sept. 22 Research MS 7 P

Sept. 27 Wellness Network 36

Oct. 6John L. Trotter

Research Program & Annual Meeting

9 P

Oct. 12-14

Family Weekend at Touch of Nature 26 P

Oct. 15 Teleconference 36Oct. 25 Wellness Network 36Nov. 12 Teleconference 36Nov. 15 Wellness Network 36Dec. 17 Teleconference 36Dec. 27 Wellness Network 36

chapter calenDar Available via telephone

Available via live-stream

Program located in this area. P

Page 35: MS Connection - Fall 2012

35gatewayMSSociety.org | 1-800-344-4867

Share what yoU know - MSconnection.org Multiple sclerosis destroys connections inside us. It disconnects the mind from the body and people from each other. Maybe, by connecting all of our knowledge, and hope, and experience, we can gain a new understanding of how to move forward.

SHARE WHAT YOU KNOWFind, store and share meaningful updates, posts, videos, articles and other content about the topics you care about most. Connect with people, groups and discussions that relate to the topics that shape your world. Join conversations with others who share your experiences, challenges, and interests, and put the best resources available to work for you, so you can move your life forward in the way that feels right for you.

prograM regiStrationName _________________________________Address ________________________________City/State/Zip __________________________Home phone ___________________________Work phone ____________________________E-mail ________________________________Date of Diagnosis ________________________Payment Information( ) Fee waiver requested( ) Check enclosed payable to NMSS( ) Visa ( ) MC ( ) Disc ( ) Am. ExCard # _____________________________Expiration Date: ______________________Send to: National Multiple Sclerosis Society 1867 Lackland Hill Parkway, St. Louis, MO 63146 or Fax to 314-781-1440Register online go to www.gatewaymssociety.org, g “Chapter Calendar.”[ ] Research MS, Columbia, MO September 22 COST: FREE PROGRAM[ ] Wellness Network September 27 COST: FREE PROGRAM[ ] John L. Trotter Research Program & Annual Meeting October 6 COST: $10/person[ ] Family Weekend, Carbondale, IL October 12-13 COST: $80/person[ ] Teleconference October 15 COST: FREE PROGRAM[ ] Wellness Network October 15 COST: FREE PROGRAM[ ] Teleconference November 12 COST: FREE PROGRAM[ ] Wellness Network November 15 COST: FREE PROGRAM[ ] Teleconference December 17 COST: FREE PROGRAM[ ] Wellness Network December 27 COST: FREE PROGRAM

Publication of the national Multiple Sclerosis SocietyContact us at: National MS Society, Gateway Area Chapter1867 Lackland Hill Parkway, St. Louis, MO 63146314-781-9020 | 1-800-344-4867 | www.gatewaymssociety.org MS Connection © 2012 A quarterly magazine published by the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, Gateway Area Chapter.Chapter President • Phyllis RobshamWriters •Dr. Peter Calabresi • Joe Cavato •Sylvia Longmire •Kelsey Smith • Kathi Taylor

NOTICE: The Gateway Area Chapter of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society is proud to be a source of information about multiple sclerosis. Our comments are based on professional advice, published experience, and expert opinion, but do not represent therapeutic recommendations or prescriptions. For specific information and advice, consult a qualified physician. The National Multiple Sclerosis Society does not endorse products, services, or manufacturers. Such names appear here solely because they are considered valuable as information. The National Multiple Sclerosis Society assumes no liability whatsoever for the contents or use of any product or service mentioned.

Page 36: MS Connection - Fall 2012

NON-PROFITORGANIZATION

U.S. POSTAGEPAID

Permit No. 3914St. Louis, MO

Gateway Area Chapter1867 Lackland Hill ParkwaySt. Louis, MO 63146

The Wellness Network connects people who have an interest in or who are actively participating in exercise programs through a monthly teleconference. These monthly calls are an opportunity to share ideas and encouragement about exercise and include special guest speakers. Sept. 27, 7-8 p.m. Tai Chi

Oct. 25, 7-8 p.m. Movement, Posture & Breathing: The Feldenkrais Method & MS

Nov. 15, 7-8 p.m. Eating Right During the Holidays

Dec 27, 7-8 p.m. Martial Arts & MS: How to Stay Safe

The Wellness Network is free and provides resources to a wide variety of people with MS of all abilities. If you are interested in becoming a member of the Wellness Network, please call 1-800-344-4867 or visit our website to register for the monthly calls.

Midwest Teleconference Series

Midwest Teleconference Series

Midwest Teleconference Series

Midwest Teleconference Series

wellneSS network Dial. liSten. learn.

Mark your calendars on every second Monday of the month for the Midwest Teleconference Series. Managing Cognitive Changes in MS Oct. 15, 7-8 p.m.Learn strategies for dealing with cognitive symptoms from someone who faces these challenges daily.Speaker: Jeffrey GingoldExercise: Maybe a Pain, But a Lot of Gain Nov. 12, 7-8 p.m.Learn what research tells us about the long-term benefits of regular physical activity Speaker: Robert Motl, MD, PhDDon’t Quit Your Day JobDecember 17, 7-8 p.m.Learn what the Americans with Disability Act means for you and your workplaceSpeaker: John Murray, Shareholder, Lindner & Marsack, S.C.