Italy's Vialli e Mauro Cup, a
fundraising pro-am celebrity golf competition to raise money for
research into ALS or Lou Gehrig's Disease set up by former
soccer players Gianluca Vialli and Massimo Mauro, is returning
this May after a two-year absence due to COVID-19.
On May 23 professionals, celebrities and amateurs will face off
at the 2023 Ryder Cup venue, the Marco Simone Golf & Country
Club outside Rome, in the 17th edition of the event.
"After a period that has been complicated and uncertain for
everyone, also for those like us who are engaged in
philanthropy, the key word is never give up," said former Samp,
Juve and Italy star striker Vialli and former Juve player Mauro,
who teamed up in 2003 to raise funds for research into
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis or Motor Neurone Disease (MND),
which has been found to hit former soccer players much more than
the general population.
"This stoppage enforced by the pandemic has made us even more
motivated than ever to pursue our goal.
"The causes of ALS are not known and there is no effective
therapy to fight it but thanks to scientific research important
steps forward have been made which have enabled us to better
understand certain mechanisms underlying the disease, and so
ensuring funds for researchers is the only hope for the
patients".
So far the Fondazione Vialli e Mauro has raised and devolved
almost four million euros for research into the disease, which
in America is known for the baseball great who died of it at
almost 38 in 1941, Lou Gehrig.
Presenting Partners at the event are RF Celada S.p.A. and ERG
S.p.A., historic friends and supporters of the two former
players' foundation.
In the latest research advance, an Italian study in January said
the lack of an enzyme in the body causes the fatal nerve-wasting
disease.
The study by Milan's Mario Negri Institute and Turin's Citta'
della Salute, published in the journal Brain, shows that the
lack of cyclophillin A induces the terminal condition.
Conducted in animal models and on humans, the breakthrough
"could be a first important step towards developing a therapy,"
said the researchers.
"We have to go back to the lab and assess whether this is the
right path to stop the onset and progression of the disease,"
said Mario Negri researcher Valentina Bonetto.
"If it proves to be so, it would be a very important first step
towards developing a therapy for ALS".
ALS is a neurodegenerative disease that results in the
progressive loss of motor neurons that control voluntary
muscles.
The affected muscles are responsible for chewing food, speaking,
and walking.
Motor neuron loss continues until the ability to eat, speak,
move, and finally the ability to breathe is lost.
ALS eventually causes paralysis and early death, usually from
respiratory failure.
There is no known cure for ALS, and the goal of treatment is to
improve symptoms.
The disease became well known in the United States in the 20th
century when in 1939 it affected Gehrig and later worldwide
following the 1963 diagnosis of cosmologist
Stephen Hawking.
The average survival from onset to death is two to four years,
though this can vary, and about 10% survive longer than 10
years.
In Europe, the disease affects about two to three people per
100,000 per year.
It hits professional soccer players on average two times
more than the general population and Serie A players are hit six
times more, a study from Milan's Mario Negri Institute said in
2019.
There have been several high-profile cases in Italy of
right-to-die ALS sufferers committing suicide due to the
hopelessness and physical incapacitation of the condition,
shifting the debate on assisted suicide and boosting
parliamentary moves to legalize it.
The flag-bearer in Italian soccer's campaign to explain the high
rate of Lou Gehrig's Disease among former players, ex-Fiorentina
and AC Milan striker Stefano Borgonovo, died of the incurable
nerve-wasting condition at 49 in June 2013. "Ciao Stefano,
hero", tweeted former Fiorentina teammate
and Italy great Roberto Baggio while ex-Juventus and Italy
forward Alessandro Del Piero called Borgonovo on his Web site "a
great fighter who loved soccer and life".
At the time of Borgonovo's death, other figures were released
saying that the Lou Gehrig death rate among ex-players in Italy
is 12 times that of the general population.
Top anti-doping prosecutor Raffaele Guariniello has been
probing more than 40 deaths for nearly 20 years.
Doping, other performance enhancers, repetitive head trauma and
pitch fertilizers have been touted as possible causes but
scientists have yet to pin down the origin of the disease.
Former Chelsea boss Vialli, who recently recovered from cancer,
and former Sky TV pundit Mauro, teamed up with the aim of
helping solve the riddle and achieve effective treatment.
photo: Vialli at 2019 edition at Rho north of Milan
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