Stem cell therapy may well restore sight

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/8376433/Stem-cell-injection-reverses-glaucoma.html

The link above takes you to an article on how stem therapy might be able to help people with glaucoma in the future.

Rea and I are not experts on this, but we are assuming that if stem cell therapy can grow retinal cells for people with glaucoma, the same could be true for people with Birdshot.

It’s a “brave new world” development and we need to monitor and watch this development closely.  It could give hope to people with sight loss who, until now, thought there was nothing that could be done.

The Cambridge scientist and ophthalmologist involved in the research, Professor Keith Martin said:-

“We are doing it in animal models and results are so encouraging that we hope to move forward to testing on humans soon.

Stem cell treatment is moving forward very fast in many branches of the medicine and we are seeing some of the best results in eyes.”

He added: “We have concentrated on glaucoma because it is so common, but there are quite a few diseases that affect the optic nerve, such as inflammatory diseases, so it could be used here too.”

As we all know Birdshot Chorioretinopathy is an inflammatory disease of the eye. We don’t know how long these developments will take to progress, but we live in a fast moving world and it gives us hope.

This research has received funding from Fight for the Sight, a charity that raises money for research into sight threatening conditions.  We have a runner running for us in the London Marathon in aid of Uveitis Research that Fight for Sight is also supporting and if you want to make a donation towards this project you can do so at Ken’s Just Giving page. http://www.justgiving.com/Kenneth-Fitzmaurice

Annie and Rea

Moorfields Star awards Birdshot winner

About 220 staff and their friends and family members attended the annual Moorfields’ Stars ceremony on Wednesday 2 March. The event, which again received overwhelmingly positive feedback from those involved, was designed to recognise and reward staff for personal and professional achievements.

group-stars

Special awards were presented in recognition of academic success and long service as well as to the winners of the employee of the month scheme during 2010. Awards were also given to the winners of four special categories with the Birdshot Uveitis Patient Day Team receiving the Special Trustees’ team award for innovation in patient care, research or education.

We are absolutely delighted with this news particularly as we received a £1000 donation from the Special Trustees to go towards our next event.  This is great news!

At the risk of repetition:  “Long live Team birdshot!”

Give via your on-line Christmas shopping

Thinking about doing your Christmas shopping online? You might like to use the Easyfundraising site to do this. This is an excellent, easy, on-line way to help raise money for future  research and Birdshot days, while you do your normal on-line Christmas shopping and it doesn’t cost you anything. Retailers such as Amazon, Next, Argos, John Lewis, Comet, iTunes, eBay, M&S  and HMV, all give money when you shop-online via Easy-Fundraising. You shop directly with the retailer as you would normally do, but if you sign up to http://www.easyfundraising.org.uk/bus for free and use the links on the easyfundraising site to take you to the retailer before you shop, then a percentage of whatever you spend comes directly to us at no extra cost to yourself. This service is FREE to use and will give you access to hundreds of exclusive discounts and voucher codes, so not only will you be helping us while you buy your Christmas presents, you will also help to save money yourself.

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Please support the petition!

eurodis-80h We are members of EURODIS via the Uveitis information Group. We would like to ask our members to consider signing an appeal in support of the Telethon. Over 1,800 people have already signed and it is of utmost importance to reach 5,000 signatures!

The Telethon is organised by the AFM, the French Muscular Dystrophy Association. Although the Telethon is run in their name it raises over 100 million euros for research and services to aid the lives of people living with Rare Diseases generally.

Certain groups have for some time declared that the French Telethon supports only one disease area, this is not true. The AFM Telethon contributes yearly to the French Rare Disease Alliance, EURORDIS and Orphanet, it supports vital services and funds medical research programmes covering many rare diseases. In fact a number of European researchers work in collaboration with those funded through the Telethon, so any threat to this event will impact on the development of rare disease research right across the continent and beyond.

Thanks to the AFM Telethon:

  • 2,700 genes identified
  • 34 clinical trials ongoing

With this in mind, we ask you to sign our appeal at
http://telethon.soutien.eurordis.org/en

LONDON Marathon 2011 – We need your donations

KEN FITZMAURICE, OUR HERO, RUNNING A MARATHON FOR UVEITIS


We are really excited to tell you that Ken Fitzmaurice, a qualified Pilates instructor, is running in the 2011 marathon to raise funds for Uveitis research. Please dig deep and donate to this cause – it should help us find more targeted and less toxic medication. To donate, just go to:

http://www.justgiving.com/Kenneth-Fitzmaurice

Ken wanted to run for BUS (Birdshot Chorioretinopathy Uveitis Society), but because we are so small (just Annie and Rea) and we have concentrated on working to support people with Birdshot and raising the profile of the disease, rather than raising funds, we do not have the money to pay the very large entrance fee for marathon runners.

So, in a unique and first ever partnership, Fight For Sight has entered Ken into the London Marathon under their membership, on our behalf. Fight For Sight is a large charity that raises money for research, and we have been working with them for some time now. The money raised by Ken will be going towards research being undertaken by Dr John Curnow and Professor Phil Murray. Below is a description of the research project, which we are hoping will lead to less toxic medication for all of us. You may know that Professor Murray is one of the several prominent ophthalmologists that works with us through our Mother charity, UIG (Uveitis Information Group), and has been enormously helpful to BUS too. We are so pleased to be able to raise money for this project, so please dig deep – you never know – this might just be the research that helps us get a better quality of life.

Description of research: Ocular regulatory T cells in Uveitis: Uveitis is the 5th commonest cause of visual loss in the developed world and is characterised by a large increase in the number of white blood cells (T cells) entering the inflamed eye. Some of these cells are aggressive (effector T cells) and cause damage to the eye. However another group of cells are designed to switch off the aggressive cells, and are termed regulatory cells (regulatory T cells). The role of these regulatory cells in uveitis is not well understood.

This project aims to determine if the regulatory cells and aggressive cells use different mechanisms to be recruited to the eye in inflammation. In addition it is possible that the inflamed eye may prevent the regulatory cells from functioning properly. The data generated will further our understanding of how regulatory cells control inflammation in uveitis. In addition it is hoped to identify new therapeutic targets that will either prevent recruitment of pathogenic cells while still allowing regulatory cells to go to the eye, or allow the regulatory cells to switch off aggressive cells more efficiently.

This may ultimately lead to the development and testing of appropriate new biological therapies for the treatment of patients with sight-threatening Uveitis, such as Birdshot Chorioretinopathy.

Eye Clinic Poster

Hospital Plain final large

We will be trying to place our new A4 hospital poster in eye clinics where uveitis is treated, so people who have a diagnosis of Birdshot can contact us for information and support.

If you want to make sure that the eye clinic you attend displays the poster, we would be grateful if you could write to us at Birdshot@live.co.uk with the name and address of your clinic/eye hospital and the name of your consultant.  We want to make sure we get the posters to the right person.  Alternatively, if you would like to take the poster in yourself, write to us at Birdshot@live.co.uk and we will send you copies.  There is also a version in  yellow and black.

Please help us to spread the word.

Once again our thanks must go to  David Bethell,   (our logo designer) , who has designed this striking poster for us.  We are very grateful for his valuable contribution in helping to get BUS and Birdshot better known.

New BUS leaflet

Birdshot Uveitis Society’s first leaflet has recently gone to print and we are due to receive a 1000 copies shortly.

The printers,  Docuprint Limited,  have very kindly agreed to sponsor the costs of our first leaflet and we are extremely grateful to them for this generosity.  We would particularly like to thank Sarah Thompson my account manager who managed the leaflet from start to finish.    This is a really helpful and useful form of support and we are truly grateful for it in this economically difficult climate.

We hope to be distributing the leaflet to birdshot patients via hospital  eye clinics.  Please do get in touch with us if you would like us to send you a supply or you know anyone who would like to receive a copy.  Our email address is  birdshot@live.co.uk.

Annie

Postscript

 

Easy Fundraising

We’ve signed up to Easy Fundraising so that  you can give to Uveitis Information Group (Birdshot Uveitis Society’s affiliated charity)  simply by shopping on-line via Easy Fundraising’s website or using their search engine.

Easy Fund-Raising

This is an easy on-line  way to help raise money for Uveitis Information Group.  Retailers such as Amazon, Next, Argos, John Lewis, Comet, iTunes, eBay or HMV, give money when you shop-online via Easy-Fundraising.  All you need to do is  to sign up for free to raise money while you shop!Have you heard about easyfundraising yet? It’s the easiest way to help raise money for Uveitis Information Group. Continue reading

The Giving Machine

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We have recently signed up to the Giving Machine  so that you can make donations on-line while you shop.  Its easy – you just have to register and choose Uveitis Information Group as the charity that you support.

You can now generate free cash donations for Uveitis Information Group (BUS’s affiliated charity)  every time you shop online.

The Giving Machine

It will not cost you anything extra – the online shop pays the donation on your behalf. Just go to www.TheGivingMachine.co.uk :

  • JOIN as a shopper/giver
  • CHOOSE to support Uveitis Information Group
  • REMEMBER to shop at TheGivingMachine every time you buy online

TheGivingMachine™ You Shop, They Give.