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My Email Interview with Dr. Les Simpson - Tests your doctor can do ;and a test Dr. Simpson can do for you - and further Q & A's - How and why of 'id', and this Website - Aletta's Basics - My thoughts on wheelchairs, accessibility, therapists doctors and the whole thing- Bren's Rant
On one of my reading jags on the internet, trying to answer the usual, "how do I stay alive in the face of this" question, came across an article on Mycoplasma (organism suspected in Gulf War Syndrome among other things).  I had questions, as it happened it mentioned a researcher in New Zealand who could test for this blood anomaly.  I sent email to both the author (never answered) and Dr. Simpson.

Dr. Simpson was agreeable to spending time to answer my questions and others the rest of you had.  He continues to be there to answer questions and do any tests that might be helpful.

Dr. Les Simpson, Ph.D. (pathology), now aged 77, has spent a lifetime in medical research, except for a little time out for sheep farming he lives in New Zealand. His Ph.D. is in Experimental Pathology. He has published about 70 papers, mainly on auto immune disease, kidney function and disease.

 
My Interview with Dr. Simpson - updated winter 2005

My Email Interview with Dr. Les Simpson

aletta: 
On one of my reading jags on the internet, trying to answer the usual, "how do I stay alive in the face of this" question, came across an article on Mycoplasma (organism suspected in Gulf War Syndrome among other things).  I had questions, as it happened it mentioned a researcher in New Zealand who could test for this blood anomaly.  I sent email to both the author (never answered) and Dr. Simpson. 

Dr. Simpson was agreeable to spending time to answer my questions and others the rest of you had.  He continues to be there to answer questions and do any tests that might be helpful. 

Dr. Les Simpson, Ph.D. (pathology), now aged 79, has spent a lifetime in medical research, except for a little time out for sheep farming he lives in New Zealand. His Ph.D. is in Experimental Pathology. He has published about 70 papers, mainly on auto immune disease, kidney function and disease. 

I was born in the Netherlands, my father was a research chemist with Shell Oil and Later the State Mines.  In 1964 we emigrated to Canada and my father took a position at Queen's University running the spectroscopy laboratory at Queen's University Geological Department.  My father also ran tests as an independent for a variety of government (Canadian and US programs including US Geological and NASA).  I often assisted my father in the lab preparing/running samples.  I taught deaf children to dance in Bellevile Ontario, lived in and around Kingston until 1974.  I had seizures in my teens, Bell's Palsy and diagnosed as epileptic.  My father died in 1974 from a brain tumour (as near I can tell, that information is second hand) he had been a fanatic about his health, just to drop dead at 46. 

The current working diagnosis for me is Shy-Drager, my earliest symptoms started in the mid eighties when I twice tested positively for AIDS (and the Red Cross would no longer let me donate), in 1987 with a newer test these were then considered false positives, by then I had hypoglycemia, thyroid irregularities.  I've had several calcified nodes removed from the base of my skull (1987, 1992), a hear attack in 1992, passed out often, polycythemia (of and on), tingling numbness, I've now been housebound and unable to work for four years, I am 48.  My daughter has trigeminal neuralgia, my son has both psychiatric and neurological problems, both are taking anti-seizure meds.  I have half jokingly said I have the slow release version of mad-cow, I believe in intuition.  If this can be either proved or disproved, I need to have that done, for myself and especially my children. 

Someone on the support group I run for people with a variety of rare neurological problems asked what I thought caused this SDS, I said prions, another member immediately sent me this article.  Now I need to deal with it. 

Dr. Simpson:

You should understand that red cells are not living cells - they lose the nucleus when the leave the bone marrow.  For that reason they respond to change in their environment by changing shape.  In 1969 it was shown that red cells reversibly changed shape when the ionic nature of their environment was changed.   So this is not an inherited feature - although  there may be genetic factors involved.   Children with Down Syndrome in NZ$, Australia, South Africa and India had changed red cell shape populations.  Australians and an Indian baby who took oil of evening primrose responded with greatly increased muscular function.  This in turn was associated with a reduction in body weight.  

All sorts of things (both physiological and pathological) which change the red cell environment induce red cell shape changes.  In the premenstrual week; after emotional upsets, after physical activity and during anaesthesia red cells change shape.  In any situation where the immune system is stimulated - infections, graft rejection, the presence of tumors - changes the shape populations and thus adversely affects the delivery of oxygen and nutrients to the tissues.  While I have been much more persistent in this field than other authors - since the first observations in 1967, many other authors have reported similar findings.  So my work is not entirely new.

My first thoughts on reading your brief medical history is the number of diagnoses you have had for conditions which do not have a known cause.  Let me float an idea.  Is it possible that your multi-system problems is the outcome of altered blood rheology which is manifested as impaired blood flow in the capillaries ?    Normal tissue function is ABSOLUTELY dependent upon normal rates of capillary blood flow because this is the only way in which tissues are supplied with oxygen and nutrient substrates. 

Are you aware that depressive illnesses have been shown to have reduced blood flow in the frontal regions of the brain ?   In manic depression I have found high values for flat cells - which explains why they benefit from the fatty acids in fish oil - as they increase red cell flexibility.

I have had a brief look at your website and am intrigued by the range of disorders you are addressing. BUT I cannot help but wonder if dysautonomias in general are a reflection of the adverse effects on nerve function of an inadequate rate of blood flow in the capillaries within the autonomic nerves.   In 1988 I published a long paper with 159 refs in which I considered peripheral neuropathies in terms of the adverse effects of altered blood rheology on intra-neural capillary blood flow.  While the main thrust considered diabetic neuropathy, I cannot see why the same argument would not prevail in the sympathetic nervous system. 

However, my experience is that neurologists seem not to recognize that blood rheology has any patho-physiological significance.

aletta: 
Just so I am clear please define what you mean by rheology??  I have suspected for some time (questions always met with raised eyebrow) that my blood volume goes up and down (that to me would explain the occasional bout of polycythemia and the edema and erratic heart rate) 

Dr. Simpson:
Blood rheology relates to those factors which influence the flow properties of blood.  Red cell number is the main determinant of whole blood viscosity - which would be high with polycythemia.   Plasma and serum viscosity are influenced by change in their chemistry.   Red cell deformability  (or lack of it) is the major determinant (after capillary diameter) of rate of flow in capillaries.  

Edema is a consequence of raised intra-capillary pressure - which occurs with poorly deformable red cells.  

If you have changed red cell shape populations then you have another potentially pathogenic factor to consider. If you do not - then unless there are accompanying vascular changes  - blood flow is not contributing to your problems.   In disorders in which patients are told it is all in their heads, patients tell me that to see altered red cells provides them with an understanding that it is NOT all in their heads. 

In conditions with chronic tiredness - who normally have normal lab tests - they have altered red cells and the usual expressions of dysfunctionality such as easy exhaustability and memory problems. 

A problem (which I addressed in New Jersey Med in 1992) is why some people get well in 10 days after a viral infection, while others become chronically unwell.   What I suggested is that the variability of presenting symptoms probably reflected regions which by chance had a preponderance of small capillaries.  ( In accordance with the Poiseuille formula flow through narrow tubes is related directly to the 4th power of the tube radius.  This means that even small variations in capillary size will have quite marked effects on flow potential. Such variations can be very localized.   When I studied pre-menstrual syndrome I was intrigued by one woman whose breast pain was confined to the left breast.)
 

aletta: 
Almost all of us have had to deal with the knee jerk reaction of nearly every physician is to blame it on 'it's in her head' syndrome (even when the heart attack was proved through testing).  It took years to be taken seriously enough to have orthostatic hypotension tested and proved.  since it is a blood pressure problem it should be obvious that blood flow plays 
a part, do You have any thoughts on the matter? 

Dr. Simpson:
Together, blood is a thixotropic system which means that its viscosity is flow-dependent.  In the main vessels where flow rate is high, viscosity is minimal, but in regions where flow rate is slow, viscosity is commensurately increased.   I have an idea that thixotropic phenomena play a role in orthostatic states. 

A major problem (from my point of view) is that orthostatic intolerance  is simply something that is demonstrated.  During one visit to the USA  I raised the matter of midodrine for treatment - but this was unknown. 

aletta
I know several of us have been separately diagnosed with Raynauds, some with thrombocythemia as well, all related to blood flow, do your have any thoughts on that? 
 

Dr.Simpson:
You could suggest to those with Raynauds that they could benefit from taking 2 x 1000 mg capsules of salmon oil with food 3 times daily.  As Raynauds is associated with altered blood rheology it is not surprising that there are multi-organ problems.  The bleeding of thrombocythemia makes me wonder if the platelet change is accompanied by a change in red cell shape and blood rheology.   As far as I can determine it is another of those without knowledge of causation.

aletta
During the period of time I was also diagnosed as having "mild polycythemia", can you relate polycythemia to rheology? 

Dr.Simpson:
We have studied the urine of a polycythemic patient as part of a general study of the effects of blood viscosity on kidney function.   Before, and after his polycythemia was corrected by serial bleeding  we obtained urine samples and assessed the size of the proteins in the urine.  As the polycythemic state was reduced so too was there a reduction in the total amount of protein and the size of the protein molecules in the urine.  With a normal haematocrit there was normal urine and kidney function. 

An excessive intake of water in a situation where there was stiff red cells would have two predictable effects. The higher than usual intracapillary pressure would lead to edema.   Because there would be a rise in intraglomerular capillary pressure, kidney filtration would be increased.    Because of the effects of filtration, blood leaving the glomerulus would be more viscous and this would have an adverse effect on tubular re-absorption - so urine volume would increase.
 

aletta
Purpura and odd bleeding has been experienced by some of us, is there an explanation for this? 

Dr.Simpson:
In conditions with altered red cell shape populations, it is common for bruising to occur even after a light bump.   This indicates the higher than normal intra-capillary pressure which accompanies the presence of shape-changed, poorly deformable red cells.

The discoloration which indicates a "bruise" is simply an indication that during the knock or bump which caused the bruise, red cells have been forced out of their blood vessels.   Eventually the cells are removed by phagocytic white cells - and the discoloration is gone.   If easy  bruising is a common factor then I would expect the presence of abnormal red cell shape populations.

On diet: 
I presume that you are aware of the potential dangers in special diets.  There have been a number of reports recently which have drawn attention to the fact that vegetarians have a shorter lifespan than omnivores.

On Physicians: 
I have done a great deal of lecturing (Bellevile, Brockville and others) and during these I urge patients not to be too hard on doctors - they are following their training.   The problem is higher up - those who determine the content of medical school curricula are the real problem. 

Tests your doctor can do: 
whole blood viscosity;  
plasma viscosity;  
serum viscosity and  
red cell deformability. 
 

aletta:
I have been unable to sleep unaided with medication for four years, is it possible that a disruption or inadequate blood-flow could cause this to happen? 

Dr.Simpson:
A 1967 textbook on neurobiology reported that sleep problems can arise in situations where the hypothalamus has an insufficient rate of blood flow.   

aletta
Is there a test to assess capillary dimensions? 

Dr.Simpson:
Assessment of capillary dimensions is not a simple matter - and probably would be best done post-mortem. BUT it is possible that conjunctival capillaries would provide a good sample.  When I set out to explore this through the eye department, the cost of doing the necessary photography put the study beyond my reach. 

An ophthalmologist would be knowledgeable about conjunctival photography.  If you get your conjunctivas photographed please ask for a scale to be included so that vessel diameter can be measured.  (Please request a copy to bee sent to Dr. Simpson) As I understand it - the eye would be "blown up" allowing a larger area of the conjunctiva to be photographed. 

Even though the ME and FM papers relate to different disorders  I think that you should be able to discern the message - that tissue function cannot be normal if oxygen is not available.

I was invited to speak in Berkeley, California by a well known psychologist -Sheila Bastien.   At the end of question time I asked her " Do you think that normal psychology can occur when there is sub-normal blood flow in the brain ?"  Her reply "No chance."
 

other q&a
This from Belinda, she's been diagnosed with CGBD and lives in Atlanta, Georgia, 41 years old, one last wobble away from a wheelchair, the pains she describes, I also experience, no doubt more of us as well:  
When you speak with Dr Simpson again will you ask him if he knows why I have different places on my head at different times that feels a little swollen but also bruised. It hurts horribly for a few days and then it is gone. A few days later I will get another place on my head that feels the same way. I wonder if that has anything to do with my blood running through my head.  I also have times when it feels like someone is taking a knife and stabbing me with it. It just is in one area on my head. After a while it stops. Strange, I know.  

Dr.Simpson:
Belinda's problems  certainly COULD be related to altered blood rheology manifesting as easy bruising because of stiff red cells.   The focal stabbing pains might also be blood flow related  but need to be explored by  PET scanning to see if a cause can be determined.
 
 

the next round: 

aletta:
Does it make a difference which kind of fish oil you use?  Still gag at the thought of it, was given so much cod liver oil with a lump of sugar nightly as a child, at least it is in pills now.  The pharmacy here has cod, salmon or halibut. 
  
Dr.Simpson:
I have never had the option of having 3 species of oil - in this part of the world I suspect that a number of different species are involved.  Without any other reason - if prices are not different I would go for the salmon oil - but that is a personal preference.   Note that you are not using LIVER oil.  The omega-3s come from the flesh of the fish.

aletta:
What does it do? plump up flat cells or just make them more slippery? 
The oil has the effect of increasing the fluidity of the lipid bilayer of the red cell membrane - possibly through the action of PGE3.  PGE1 which is increased by evening primrose oil has the same effect.   As the action takes place within the red cell membrane I have the impression that the cells become more deformable without necessarily changing shape.

aletta:
In plain language deformable = pliable/flexible, less likely to plug things up? 
  
Dr.Simpson:
The key point is that red cells are larger than most capillaries, which means that they must change shape , i.e. to deform , in order to traverse the capillary bed. So poorly deformable red cells may cause a variety of problems by their ability to "plug things up" or more commonly to slow down the rate of passage through the capillaries. This means that the rate of delivery of oxygen and nutrients will be reduced and that wastes such as carbon dioxide are not removed.  

This means that "flexibility and pliability" are not QUITE the same. 

Would you believe that one of the papers which I quote concerning red cell shape changes is a Japanese report of the red cells in spinocebellar degeneration - which could well be spinocerebellar ataxia !! 

In early idiopathic Parkinsonism there is Loss of energy, easy fatigability, muscle pains, joint pains, cramps - all of these are symptoms of ME, CFIDS, CFS - where there are shape-changed red cells - mainly flat cells. In a report I sent recently to Gerontology of the red cells in people 60 years of age and older - high values for flat cells were found.  

There is much evidence of hypometabolism ( which I interpret as a consequence of inadequate blood flow) by PET scans and the few comments re SPECT scans showed reduced blood flow in the frontal regions of the brain - as has been reported in 3 studies relating to depression.  

All this leaves me with the very strong impression that altered blood rheology manifested as altered red cell shape populations are a significant feature of these neurodegenerative disorders.

aletta:
The lack of funding in your research and a general disinterest in RBC related illness is due to what - in your opinion?? 

Dr.Simpson:
You asked "Is that due to a general disinterest in RBC related illness ?" I think the primary problem is that blood rheology is not taught at medical schools - therefore to the medical profession it does not exist. So there is a significant component of the medical literature which is unknown to, and therefore unused by the medical profession. 

Diabetes is a good example. There is a very large literature which describes the abnormal blood rheology of the diabetic state - which is totally ignored by physicians. Although the first scanning electron microscopy of red cells was published in 1967 and showed different shapes of red cells, the current teaching is that all red cells are biconcave discocytes. In 1989 I published in the Br Journal of Haematology a report showing that the red cells of man and animals can be classified into 6 different shape classes that paper has never been quoted in a medical journal. 

What this implies is that the progressive nature of neurodegenerative disorders will continue while abnormal blood rheology exists. This raises the question about the POTENTIAL benefits of improving blood rheology to slow down a progressive process. A long-term French study (4 years) used a drug (pentoxifylline) which reduces blood viscosity and increases red cell deformability in diabetics. At the end of the 4 years none of the complications of the diabetic state had developed. Would early OPCA respond similarly ????? 

aletta:
It also means to me that we are lumped together and swept nicely under the rug, the numbers small enough not to need bother.  Once Pakinsonian symptoms appear there are avenues available but not before. 
  
No, the classification does not lump you all together - Shy-Drager was discussed separately. I think that the replacement of OPCA by MSA-C was based upon similarity of histological findings.  

I agree that when the symptoms of Parkinson's appear it MAY be too late - BUT it is also possible that by reversing the altered blood rheology, the rate of progression can be very greatly reduced.  

It seems to me that the progressive destruction of neurones could be the consequence of an inadequate rate of blood flow leading on to cessation of blood flow with resulting cell death. And neurones cannot be replaced. 

aletta
What are the likely triggers for these RBCs gone bad?  Could it be the disease process itself that is to blame (altered programming, faulty DNA), and exhausted, depleted body trying to cope? 
  
Dr.Simpson:
All sorts of events may alter the red cell environment sufficiently to stimulate red cell shape change. Infections through to toxins could have such effects. Maybe the problem could be a faulty biochemical pathway. You should understand that the changes are not fixed and immutable - red cell shape is dynamic, so at least in theory -given the correct agent - it would be able to restore red cell shape to normal. 

aletta:
What has been the obstacle??  Is it uniformly so or are there countries (France perhaps) who are adding it in to the curriculum?? 

Dr.Simpson:
For the life of me I cannot understand why blood rheology should be ignored. Blood flow is necessary for life - but n o information provided by haematology labs is relevant to blood flow. If you are aware of the writings of Thomas Kuhn, then you would know that what we are seeing is the strength of support enjoyed by the existing paradigm. To retain their place in the sun supporters of the current concept of red cell shape simply ignore anything to the contrary. They KNOW they are correct !!!!! In most countries there are small pockets of blood rheologists but their critical mass is not sufficient to push for recognition and a change. 

aletta:
Is there a geographic pattern for these different cell shapes??  The Netherlands is notoriously high in Neurodegenerative disorders?  

To the best of my knowledge there is no geographic pattern I have had samples from Australia, Britain, Canada, Denmark, France, Holland, Ireland, Poland, South Africa and the USA, and they all showed the same cell shapes albeit in different proportions depending upon their diagnosis. 

aletta:
Is pentoxifylline past testing and on the market, anywhere??  

Dr.Simpson:
Yes, pentoxifylline is marketed as TRENTAL and has been around for many years.  

aletta:
I did check my reference book "the Canadian Medical Association Guide to Prescription and Over the Counter  Drugs) - not a terribly up to date - 1995, which does indeed list Trental or Pentoxifylline, mentions making red blood cells more flexible, part of the drug group vasodilators, wondering why no doctors had thought this worth mentioning since my DX of peripheral vascular disease has been in my file for about 6 years

aletta:
Perhaps we can get a study done here?  If we scream loud enough. 

Dr.Simpson
You are absolutely correct with regard to tests. Convincing any authority is a numbers game - and until there is a substantial body of data relating to the blood of ataxic people it is unlikely anything will happen. 

aletta;
Is it possible that untreated CFS, ME etc. progresses to neurodegenerative illness?  Much like an untreated cold can turn to pneumonia?  Most if  not all of our group are very driven work-oriented individuals (the type to put off seeing a doctor) who were diagnosed after many years of being belittled and trivialized, could that plus a predisposition to neurological illness be the cause?? 

Dr.Simpson:
With regard to your query re the disease process - it is possible that diabetes may provide some information.  

In that disorder there is evidence of blockage and subsequent re-canalisation of capillaries. This type of change is manifested as "onion-skin" type changes in the walls of capillaries. The "onion-skins" are successive wall layers (basement membranes) which simply accumulate because they are not degradeable. My concepts concerning basement membranes challenged existing concepts - and although others have published observations supporting my concept I think it remains buried because of an important proffessor at Harvard. In other words the messenger is of greater significance than the message.  

My interpretation of this type of disorder (based upon my findings from the aging study) is that a lack of treatment of an inadequate blood flow will be a continuing loss of more peripheral tissue in the brain - or in those parts of the brain which by chance have small capillaries. So there will be a progressive deterioration of function.. 

part 2-3 continued

30/01/03
aletta:
While poking around the Internet, I also found this article and the one below it on Shy-Drager (cured by a name change).  Perhaps it would not be too great a jump for him to consider that hypo perfusion due to RBC anomalies might be at the root of neuronal loss in SDS and the like.  The last completed task on my part was the /dizzydancers.shtml where I'm collecting some of a growing theory why dancers can deal with this better, live longer, or become stricken with this paticularly.
*******************
articles referred to:

Mean Red Cell Volume as a Correlate of Blood Pressure

Dan S. Sharp, MD, PhD; J. David Curb, MD, MPH; Irwin J. Schatz, MD; Herbert J. Meiselman, ScD; Timothy C. Fisher, MD; Cecil M. Burchfiel, PhD; Beatriz L. Rodriguez, MD, PhD; Katsuhiko Yano, MD

From the Honolulu Epidemiology Research Unit (D.S.S., C.M.B.), Field Studies and Clinical Epidemiology Scientific Research Group, Epidemiology and Biometry Program, Division of Epidemiology and Clinical Applications, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Honolulu, Hawaii; Honolulu Heart Program (J.D.C., B.L.R., K.Y.), Kuakini Medical Center, Honolulu, Hawaii; Department of Medicine (J.D.C., I.J.S., B.L.R.), John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawaii at Manoa (Honolulu); and Department of Physiology and Biophysics (H.J.M., T.C.F.), University of Southern California School of Medicine (Los Angeles).

Correspondence to Dr Dan S. Sharp, Honolulu Heart Program, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, 347 N Kuakini St, Honolulu, HI 96817. E-mail dan@hhs.cba.hawaii.edu.

Background Clinical studies suggest that hypertensives have lower mean corpuscular volume (MCVs) than do normotensives. Epidemiological studies show no relation or higher MCVs. In the present study of elderly men (71 to 93 years of age) of the Honolulu Heart Program, elements of both findings are confirmed.

Methods and Results Three groups are identified: (1) those receiving no hypertension treatment, (2) those receiving treatment with any diuretic, and (3) those receiving treatment with nondiuretics only. MCV is lower in group 3 than in group 1 (-0.85 fL, P<.001) but the same in groups 1 and 2. Within groups 1 and 3, inverse relations of -0.22 and -0.09 mm Hg/fL (P<.05) are noted for systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) blood pressures. No relations are observed in group 2. MCV and red blood cell count (RBC) are inversely correlated (r=-.45). In group 2, adjustment for RBC unmasks a direct relation between MCV and SBP (0.5 mm Hg/fL, P=.02) and DBP (0.3 mm Hg/fL, P=.02). In groups 1 and 3, relations between SBP and MCV are lost after adjustment for RBC (0.005 mm Hg/fL). For DBP, adding RBC plus an MCVxRBC interaction is significant (P<.001). DBP is 5 mm Hg greater in the highest RBC quartile than in the lowest. A +3 mm Hg difference between extreme MCV quartiles is noted only at high RBC levels.

Conclusions The relation between blood pressure and red cell measures is probably mediated by whole blood viscosity. Hematocrit is a determinant of whole blood viscosity. Viscosity affects peripheral resistance to blood flow, and peripheral resistance affects DBP. At high RBC levels, MCV may be "downregulated." This may lower whole blood viscosity and partially reduce DBP without compromising flow.

Key Words: blood pressure • blood viscosity • erythrocytes • vascular resistance

Copyright © 1996 by the American Heart Association.

Dr. Irwin Schatz, Chair Queen's University Tower, 7th Floor 1356 Lusitana St. Honolulu, HI 96813 Ph: (808) 586-2910 Fax: (808) 586-7486 [an error occurred while processing this directive]


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