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What is the TVAM (Transvascular Autonomic Modulation) Procedure?

Kyla

ᴀɴɴɪᴇ ɢꜱᴀᴍᴩᴇʟ
Messages
721
Location
Canada
Eeeeep.
Please don't do this :eek::eek::eek:

I'm on a dysautonomia message board that has thoroughly discussed this doctor and this procedure.
People have died from it. It is not safe. It is not an approved treatment. And there is no evidence it works for ANY disease.
The doctor you mention is apparently being investigated for fraud.
I'll see if I can find some links.
 
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SDSue

Southeast
Messages
1,066
Eeeeep.
Please don't do this :eek::eek::eek:

I'm on a dysautonomia message board that has thoroughly discussed this doctor and this procedure.
People have died from it. It is not safe. It is not an approved treatment. And there is no evidence it works for ANY disease.
The doctor you mention is apparently being investigated for fraud.
I'll see if I can find some links.
So Arata changed the name of his practice from "Synergy Health" to "Autonomic Specialists", and the name of the procedure from "CCSVI Procedure" to "TVAM" to run from his past? Yikes.

This seems similar to the procedures being done by Dr. Danny Chan in Dallas, albeit his focus is on the pelvis and legs. He's working with POTS and EDS patients and claiming to have some success. While his website doesn't mention dysautonomia, he does talk quite a lot about it in this presentation, titled "Pelvis Congestions Syndrome in the Presence of EDS and Dysautonomia":




Thoughts?
 
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2
http://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/Newsroom/PressAnnouncements/ucm303538.htm


"...the FDA has learned of death, stroke, detachment and migration of the stents, damage to the treated vein, blood clots, cranial nerve damage and abdominal bleeding associated with the experimental procedure. Balloon angioplasty devices and stents have not been approved by the FDA for use in treating CCSVI."

Kyla, the procedure they're talking about in your link seems to be different from TVAM. TVAM does not use any stents, which can be a major intrusion on the body. From what I see, TVAM seems quite a bit safer.

Also, what makes you think the same doctor is involved?
 

Kyla

ᴀɴɴɪᴇ ɢꜱᴀᴍᴩᴇʟ
Messages
721
Location
Canada
Kyla, the procedure they're talking about in your link seems to be different from TVAM. TVAM does not use any stents, which can be a major intrusion on the body. From what I see, TVAM seems quite a bit safer.

Also, what makes you think the same doctor is involved?

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3948189/

Dysautonomias are a heterogeneous group of disorders with pathologic changes confined to the central nervous system, the peripheral nervous system or both, depending on the underlying condition [13]. Autonomic dysfunction, including postural tachycardia syndrome (POTS), Parkinson’s disease, multiple system atrophy and autonomic neuropathies are major public health problems with a large unmet clinical need [4, 5]. However, advances in therapies that have an immediate impact on quality of life and outcomes in patients with autonomic disorders have been limited.

Due to the limitations of many treatment options, particularly in disorders such as POTS, novel treatments have been considered. Into this therapeutic void a therapy for modulation of autonomic function is being advocated as a clinical treatment for autonomic dysfunction of all types. This therapy, described as transvascular autonomic modulation, utilizes an endovascular approach to dilate the thoracic venous system, resulting in mechanical stretching of the autonomic nerves and ‘resetting’ of the autonomic nervous system.

The scientific rationale for this procedure is not well described, nor does there appear to be any clear evidence supporting the use of this technique in a diverse group of autonomic disorders. This method reports mechanical disruption of baroreceptors in the venous system using transvenous balloon inflation as a method to improve autonomic dysfunction. There are several major scientific concerns with this statement. First, there is no evidence of such venous baroreceptors. Second, patients with Parkinson’s disease have progressive autonomic nerve fiber dysfunction due to axon loss. There is no evidence, practical or theoretical, to suggest that inflating a balloon in a vein would halt or reverse the loss of nerve fibers secondary to alpha-synuclein deposition in a progressive neurodegenerative condition [68]. Promoting a single therapy to treat a group of diseases such as multiple sclerosis, postural tachycardia syndrome and Parkinson’s disease suggests a serious deviation from scientific understanding of disease pathophysiology [9].

We performed an exhaustive review of all available literature describing this procedure through a search of Pubmed and Google Scholar (covering articles published from 1 January 1970 to 9 January 2013). We did not find a single published report describing this procedure. A number of reports have been published describing a similar procedure that has been proposed for the treatment of chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency. Originally developed as a possible treatment for multiple sclerosis, this therapeutic approach currently has a negative FDA advisory statement because of complications that include stroke, blood clots, nerve damage and death [10].

We strongly encourage the development of novel approaches and therapeutic interventions for dysautonomia, but only when they are based on scientific rationale and supported by evidence of both safety and efficacy. At this stage, there are no data at all to support the clinical utility of transvascular autonomic modulation and there is no scientific rationale for the procedure. Until randomized blinded trials are completed to ensure adequate understanding of safety and efficacy, we cannot recommend transvascular modulation, or any other unproven surgical procedure, as a treatment for autonomic dysfunction.
 
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1
I did the TVAM procedure with Michael Arata in February 2015. I'm a 33-y.o. female with benign RRMS, Dx in 2008, although I think I had undiagnosed symptoms before; not taking any MS medication, only vitamin D and occasionally B. The first 1-2 months, while I was on Xarelto for blood thinning, I felt better - more energy, better balance, better eye movements. Now almost all of the symptoms returned - balance issues, tingling in fingertips, stumbling, spasticity, fatigue, lack of energy, leg dragging. Almost everything except L'Hermitte's sign. The MRI shows 3 new brain lesions since 3 years ago. I'm attributing the effects to Xarelto - I think it's an under-researched steroid, which helped MS and made me gain weight; as soon as it got out of my system the symptoms returned.
 
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