Getting the Best Services for your Loved Ones

Nov 29, 2011 Posted Under: Health Quotes  

In the early stages of the lifetime, individual must plan the life after retirement because in the current situation living at the spouse home is very difficult. Most of the time, people spend their time at their jobs and they get very less time for taking care of the parents. In this manner, availing the services offered by the institutes providing the various services of assisted living facilities to their residents is the best choice available with them. Most of the well-known companies providing assisted living facilities are offering customized services, in which the families got choice regarding what kind of services they want. Find more info…

Lobby group settles lawsuits over organic cosmetic labeling

Nov 29, 2011 Posted Under: Health Quotes  

Originally 34 separate lawsuits were filed in June of this year on the back of the California Organic Production Act (COPA), which states that such products should contain a minimum of 70 per cent organic certified ingredients.

The settlements with the 11 of the 34 companies calls for the products that they market with organic claims to be in compliance with the California law by the end of March 2012.

The organization says that it is hoping to strike up similar agreements with the remaining 23 companies that it has filed lawsuits against, although it did also stress the fact that certain businesses have reacted negatively, saying they will resist the legal action.

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Why doctors need Hollywood

Nov 28, 2011 Posted Under: Health Words  

Sex sells. US Weekly and People fly off the shelves with the latest reality star drama.  Unfortunately, the same does not apply to the diseases running rampant in today’s society.  Is there an answer?  I would like to say yes, but the ultimate answer remains to be seen.  After my four years of undergraduate work and four more years of medical school, I am confident that there are a myriad of professionals in the medical field dedicated and committed to finding cures. The problem comes when they ask for dollars to fund the journey.

Why not use sex? Hollywood has a power to sell a product or idea. Give Kim Kardashian a product and I’m nearly positive it will sell. Maybe n

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Big Injury Hazards for Firefighters: Exercise, Transporting Patients

Nov 26, 2011 Posted Under: Uncategorized  

Much of the research on work-related injuries to firefighters has been focused on what happens when theyre actually racing into burning buildings to put out blazes.

But when researchers from the University of Arizona and Johns Hopkins University looked more broadly at firefighters duties and obligations, they found far more injuries related to on-the-job physical exercise than actual firefighting operations.

According to the new study, covering the Tucson Fire Department and published in the journal Injury Prevention, there were about 17.7 injuries per 100 firefighters annually.

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1st Artificial Windpipe Made With Stem Cells Seems Successful (HealthDay)

Nov 25, 2011 Posted Under: Health Quotes  

A 36-year-old husband and father of two children with an inoperable tumor in his trachea windpipe has received the worlds first artificial trachea made with stem cells

A report published online Nov 23 in The Lancet described the transplant surgery, which was performed in June at the Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm, Sweden

Without the transplant, the authors of the report explained, the man from Reykjavik, Iceland would have died A golf ball-sized tumor on his trachea had begun to restrict his breathing In a 12-hour procedure, doctors completely removed the affected area of his trachea and replaced it with an artificial one

The artificial trachea was custom-made using three-dimensional imaging First, a glass model was built to help shape an artificial scaffold Stem cells were then inserted into the scaffold to create a functioning airway, the authors explained in a journal news release

The scientists said their technique is an improvement over other methods because they used the patients own cells to create the airway so there is no risk of rejection and the patient does not have to take immunosuppressive drugs

In addition, they noted, because the trachea was custom-made it would be an ideal fit for the patients body size and shape, and would eliminate the need to remain on a waiting list for a human donor

“The patient has been doing great for the last four months and has been able to live a normal life After arriving in Iceland at the start of July, he was one month in hospital and another month in a rehabilitation center,” a co-author of the study and the physician who referred the patient for the procedure, Tomas Gudbjartsson, of Landspitali University Hospital and University of Iceland, Reykjavik, said in the news release

The transplant team has since performed another transplant on a second patient from Maryland with cancer of the airway This patients bioartificial scaffold, however, was made from nanofibers They now hope to treat a 13-month-old South Korean infant also using this method

“We will continue to improve the regenerative medicine approaches for transplanting the windpipe and extend it to the lungs, heart and esophagus And investigate whether cell therapy could be applied to irreversible diseases of the major airways and lungs,” said Gudbjartsson

Although the technique shows promise, Dr Harald C Ott and Dr Douglas J Mathisen, from Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, cautioned that more research must to be done to fully evaluate its safety and effectiveness

“To be adjudged successful, bioartificial organs must function over a long time — short-term clinical function is an important achievement, but is only one measure of success Choice of ideal scaffold material, optimum cell source, well-defined tissue culture conditions, and perioperative management pose several questions to be answered before the line to broader clinical application of any bioartificial graft can be crossed safely and confidently,” Ott and Mathisen concluded in the news release

Surgery May Boost Survival With Dangerous Heart Condition

Nov 25, 2011 Posted Under: Health Words  

For patients with a condition called infective endocarditis, coupled with heart failure, heart valve surgery can reduce the risk of dying by nearly two-thirds, a new study suggests.

Infective endocarditis, an infection of the lining of the heart that often includes the heart valves, has been associated with a high risk of death. Previous studies have found that in-hospital mortality can be as high as 20 percent and death after a year can reach 40 percent.

“Cardiac surgery during hospitalization for infective endocarditis is associated with significantly lower in-hospital and one-year mortality, compared to medical therapy [drug therapy] alone, even for heart failure which is mild or moderate in severity,” said lead researcher Dr.

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