The ride from Land’s End to John O’Groats (or End to End) is one of the classic long distance cycle challenges. It is called LEJOG if ridden north, and JOGLE if ridden south. There are many routes and it has been cycled, walked, hopped, roller-skated and even driven on lawn mowers!
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David, Thirusha, and John at the start of a training ride |
On the 6 July 2014 a team comprising staff and patients from the UK National Amyloidosis Centre (NAC), led by John Plant (patient), Thirusha Lane (Lead Nurse) and David Hutt (Lead Nuclear Medicine Technician), will be cycling from Land’s End to John O’Groats to help raise funds towards the purchase of an MRI scanner. This epic challenge will cover 977 miles, climbing 50,300 feet (almost twice the height of Mount Everest), arriving in John O’Groats 14 days later on the 19 July. Others will join along the way. Rob Harvey, a patient with a rare disease called TRAPS who is a Fever Clinic patient at the NAC, will be joining the team for a day or two. Rob works for Evans Cycles and is a keen cyclist.
The route they will follow is shown below more detail is available on other pages
Date
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Start
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Passes
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Ends
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July 6
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Land’s End
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Penzance
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St Austell
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Fowey
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July 7
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Fowey
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Plymouth
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Moretonhampstead
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July 8
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Moretonhampstead
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Exeter
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Taunton
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Glastonbury
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July 9
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Glastonbury
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Wells / Chepstow
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Bristol / Tintern
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Monmouth
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July 10
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Monmouth
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Hereford
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Clun
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July 11
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Clun
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Shrewsbury
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Chester
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Runcorn
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July 12
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Runcorn
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Warrington
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Bolton
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Conder Green
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July 13
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Conder Green
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Lancaster / Ambleside
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Windermere
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Keswick
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July 14
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Keswick
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Carlisle
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Gretna
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Moffat
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July 15
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Moffat
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Glasgow
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Balloch
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July 16
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Balloch
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Crianlarich
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Fort William
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Glencoe
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July 17
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Glencoe
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Spean Bridge
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Inverness
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July 18
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Inverness
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Bonar Bridges
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Lairg / The Crask
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July 19
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Lairg / The Crask
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Altnaharra
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Thurso
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John O’Groats
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Why are we doing this?
We are raising funds towards the building of a new clinical and research MRI suite at the National Amyloidosis Centre. We have made great strides in developing new MRI techniques to specifically diagnose and quantify amyloid deposits noninvasively, in particular in the heart but also very helpfully in other organs.
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Magnetron Aera MRI Scanner |
The results from MRI are amazing and as the two video clips show.
The first video clip shows a ‘4 chamber view’ of the heart of a healthy volunteer. It is called 4 chamber view because we can see the four chambers of the heart in this view: the left and right atria (upper chambers), and the left and right ventricles (bottom chambers). Here the four chambers have normal dimensions and the thickness of the heart muscle is normal (i.e. there is no left ventricular hypertrophy). The contraction and relaxation of both ventricles are normal, i.e. the ‘pumping function’ of the heart is preserved
The second video clip shows a 4 chamber view of a patient with amyloidosis. Compared to the 4 chamber of the healthy volunteer both atria are enlarged, the thickness of the heart muscle is significantly greater and the capacity of both contraction and relaxation is reduced, i.e. the heart seems to be more ‘stiff'
As mentioned above, early diagnosis is essential and the MRI scanner will assist in this and it will also lead to the development and improvement of treatments.
We hope this cycling challenge will also help to create a “ribbon of awareness” amongst medical staff, and the general public from one end of the UK to the other. All too often patients are referred to the NAC after months of delay and misdiagnoses
If you want more information on the NAC please visit the website at http://www.ucl.ac.uk/amyloidosis/nac.