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Archive for September 2010

Two Days of Voting Left for Helmet of Hope

Posted: September 28th, 2010 | By: Staff | No Comments
Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

Just a reminder: There are only two days of Helmet of Hope voting left!   Be sure to head to http://VoteForSMA.com to vote for the Gwendolyn Strong Foundation today (Tuesday, September 28) AND tomorrow (Wednesday, September 29).  Also, be sure to spread the word to everyone you know, and ask them to vote!  The charity with the most votes wins $20,000.  Let’s bring home the win for SMA research!

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Categories : Spinal Muscular Atrophy Families and Friends, Spinal Muscular Atrophy Science and Research

Researchers Confirm Prenatal Heart Defects in Spinal Muscular Atrophy Cases

Posted: September 28th, 2010 | By: Staff | No Comments
Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

University of Missouri researchers believe they have found a critical piece of the puzzle for the treatment of Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) – the leading genetic cause of infantile death in the world. Nearly one in 6,000 births has SMA, and it is estimated that nearly one in 30 to 40 people have the trait that leads to SMA.

In a new study in Human Molecular Genetics, Christian Lorson, professor in the Department of Veterinary Pathobiology and the Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, has found prenatal cardiac defects in mice with SMA. Lorson believes this discovery has implications for eventual treatment as clinicians can no longer concentrate exclusively on the nervous system when treating SMA.

Lorson’s research team, headed by Monir Shababi, research scientist, examined two animal models of SMA and discovered that cardiac defects are found throughout SMA development and include neonatal fibrosis in the heart, ventricle malformation, thinning of the cardiac wall and slower heart rates.

“It is likely that in severe cases of SMA, the disease is not limited to motor neurons; rather, it becomes a multisystem disease, and the cardiac contribution is just one of the systems,” said Lorson, who works in the MU Bond Life Sciences Center.   “These results are consistent with clinical reports of severe SMA cases that describe a number of cardiac defects. To fully address this disease, any new therapies or drugs must be effective in every tissue, not just motor neurons.  The more we understand the disease, the better off we will be in terms of developing therapeutics or better supportive care. What this conservatively means for humans is that therapies have to go beyond the nervous system in the most severe and most profound cases.”

Spinal muscular atrophy is caused by loss of a gene known as SMN1. Humans have an additional gene called SMN2 which only makes a small amount of the normal SMN protein – the protein required to prevent SMA. SMN1 and SMN2 are greater than 99 percent identical, but a small difference between the two causes the dramatic difference in the amount of functional protein produced by SMN2.

Typically, the disease moves from the outlying limbs into the trunk of the body. Most deaths are caused by respiratory failure in the lungs. Researchers have been targeting SMN2 – what Lorson calls the “partially functioning backup copy” – because any increase in SMN2 means better results.

“SMN2 is like a light that’s been dimmed, and we’re trying anything to get it brighter. Even turning it up a little bit would likely help dramatically,” Lorson said.

Source: News Release

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Categories : FightSMA Articles, Spinal Muscular Atrophy Science and Research

Strong Family Profiled in NY Times Insurance Article

Posted: September 27th, 2010 | By: Staff | No Comments
Monday, September 27th, 2010

New York Times readers may have noticed some familiar faces in a recent article.  FightSMA Board Member Bill Strong, along with his wife, Victoria, and daughter, Gwendolyn, were recently featured in an article about changes in the insurance laws due to healthcare reform.  Three-year-old Gwendolyn has SMA Type 1.

SMA parents know insurance issues all too well.  The Strongs, for example, have been very concerned about their insurance company’s $5 million dollar lifetime cap on claims.  Gwendolyn has already consumed $2 million in care.  However, that worry is alleviated due to new regulations that went into effect last week, banning lifetime caps.  From the NY Times article:

“I want my daughter to survive,” Mr. Strong said. “But nobody wants to have the threat of complete bankruptcy looming over their head. It’s just kind of inhumane the way the world works in these brutal situations.”

Bill and Victoria’s nonprofit organization, The Gwendolyn Strong Foundation, is a partner in our drive to raise $200,000 for gene therapy trials aimed at finding a treatment for SMA.
You can read the entire New York Times article here.

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Categories : FighterMom News, FightSMA Articles, Spinal Muscular Atrophy Families and Friends

SMA Blog Party: Do you know about SMA?

Posted: September 16th, 2010 | By: Staff | No Comments
Thursday, September 16th, 2010

Take two and a half minutes to look at just a few of the faces affected by spinal muscular atrophy (SMA):

Do you know about SMA?

Joe and Martha Slay, FightSMA’s founders, have described their introduction to spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) this way:

Our history began, as yours may have as well, in the pediatrician’s office where we took our then 14-month-old son, Andrew, because he was not yet walking. He had had a picture-perfect first year, with no indications whatsoever of any problems. But we, and the pediatrician, wanted to make sure that at 14 months (and not yet walking) all was in order. The doctor thought an ankle felt weak, and he recommended a specialist take a look. That specialist showed a higher level of concern and began throwing out names of terrifying diseases for us to eliminate as reasons. He sent us to yet another specialist, a brilliant and kind man, who did more tests, then pulled out a yellow legal pad and slowly, line by line, bulleted out his logic for why he thought Andrew had a disease we had never heard of called “spinal muscular atrophy” or SMA. He said it was “not a nice disease.” Crippling. Wheelchairs. Often fatal in a child’s early life. “I can give you no hope,” he said. “Now you have to get on with parenting.”

So, there we were.

Our greatest source of happiness was threatened, practically handed a death sentence. There was nothing that could be done. There was virtually nothing going on with SMA research. It was genetic, but no one knew what the gene was. That was unknown.

All of the happy colors drained out of the world. It assumed shades of grey.

As they met more families affected by SMA, especially after founding FightSMA (originally known as “Andrew’s Buddies”), the Slays discovered that like themselves, most people never hear about SMA until it affects a member of their family or circle of friends. And this is something the SMA community as a whole is working to change – especially through online efforts like the first SMA Blog Party.

Why? Because:

  • Currently, there is no known cure or treatment for SMA.
  • SMA kills more babies than any other genetic disease.
  • Historically, nearly half of babies born with the most severe form of the disease have died before age two.
  • And, seven million potential parents carry the gene that causes SMA – and most don’t know it.

For a patient with SMA, the simple acts of coughing or swallowing can become difficult or even impossible. This may lead to a blocked airway or pneumonia – both potentially lethal. In the most severe form of SMA, symptoms present before the age of six months and these children never acquire the power, the strength, and the endurance to sit independently, to crawl, or to walk. Despite the physical weakness SMA inflicts on the body, the mind remains unaffected. Intelligence is unaffected, and in fact, many physicians who have worked with children with SMA are impressed that they tend to be unusually alert, interactive, and socially gifted.

Now that you know about SMA, there are multiple ways to help in the fight to defeat it. Here are just a few:

  • Contact your Representatives and Senators about the SMA Treatment Acceleration Act.
  • Join the effort to fund SMA gene therapy – including voting (for free) to Help SMA Win $20,000 in Samsung Helmet of Hope (For More) Contest.
  • Learn more about SMA and help spread awareness.

Meet another family affected by SMA:



Watch the full 13-minute version here.

It has been hard to keep up with all the SMA Blog Party post. Here are just a few of the many:

  • Strong Family
  • Byrd Family
  • Butler Family
  • Fuorvito Family
  • For the Calise Family
  • For the Kennedy Family
  • For the Hawn and Strong Families
  • Lucas Family
  • Schmid Family
  • Hatchard Family
  • For the Webster Family
  • Baldwin and Schaefer Families
  • O’Neill Family
  • For the Horton Family
  • Mastin Family
Comments (0)
Categories : Spinal Muscular Atrophy Families and Friends, Spinal Muscular Atrophy Videos

Details of 12th Annual Hannah’s Buddies Charity Classic Announced

Posted: September 13th, 2010 | By: Staff | No Comments
Monday, September 13th, 2010

2011 Hannah's Buddies Charity Classic logoFightSMA Tampa Bay has released the details of the 12th Annual Hannah’s Buddies Charity Classic to be held January 21-22, 2011. The event began in 2000 when John Bell of the band Widespread Panic decided to help his goddaughter Hannah and tens of thousands of children in their fight against spinal muscular atrophy (SMA).

The Classic will begin January 21st with a four-person scramble golf tournament at the Grand Cypress in Orlando, Florida followed by an award reception with live music from Galactic and The Bobby Lee Rodgers Trio. The next day, golfers and supporters will gather again at the House of Blues for a dinner and auction before the John Bell and Friends Benefit Bash kicks off. John Bell and the Drive-by Truckers will be joined by Special Guests Nickel and the Polar Bears.

For all the details, including how to register, buy tickets, become a sponsor, and make a donation, visit www.hannahsbuddies.org

Hannah Elliott and her godfather John Bell
Hannah Elliott and her godfather John Bell
at the 2010 Hannah’s Buddies Charity Classic

Comments (0)
Categories : FightSMA News, Spinal Muscular Atrophy Events, Spinal Muscular Atrophy Families and Friends
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