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For brain hemorrhage, risk of death is lower at high-volume hospitals

Posted: Published on October 24th, 2014

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE: 24-Oct-2014 Contact: Connie Hughes Connie.Hughes@wolterskluwer.com 646-674-6348 Wolters Kluwer Health @WKHealth October 24, 2014 For patients with a severe type of stroke called subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), treatment at a hospital that treats a high volume of SAH cases is associated with a lower risk of death, reports a study in the November issue of Neurosurgery, official journal of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons. The journal is published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, a part of Wolters Kluwer Health. After adjustment for other factors, the mortality rate after SAH is about one-fifth lower at high-volume hospitals, according to the report by Dr. Shyam Prabhakaran of Northwestern University, Chicago and colleagues. They write, "Our data suggest that experienced centers may provide more optimized care for SAH patients." Hospital Volume Linked to SAH Mortality Using data from a nationwide quality improvement program (the Get With the Guidelines-Stroke registry), the researchers identified nearly 32,000 patients with SAH treated at 685 US hospitals between 2003 and 2012. Subarachnoid hemorrhage is a type of stroke in which there is bleeding into the brain, most commonly caused by a ruptured aneurysm. The study compared mortality rates and other outcomes for patients treated at hospitals with … Continue reading

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Police Defend Treatment of Actress Before Death

Posted: Published on October 24th, 2014

Oct 23, 2014 2:32pm Jason LaVeris/Getty Images Police in Auburn, Wash., say they did nothing wrong in dealing with now-deceased actress Misty Upham in the days and weeks leading up to her death. The Native American actress, who appeared in August: Osage County, Frozen River and Django Unchained, was found dead in Auburn, a suburb of Seattle, on Oct. 16, more than a week after her familyreported her missing. Since her death, the family has criticized the Auburn Police Department for its handling of Upham and said the department bears some responsibility for her death. Webelieve that Mistys death wasaccidental. She did not commitsuicide, the actress father, Charles Upham, wrote in statement onFacebookthe day after her body was found. We believe she ran into thewooded area behind her apartmentto hide from the police. The area inquestion has a hidden drop off andevidence suggests that she slippedand fell off of the steepembankment when she tried to getout of a view from the road. Stars React to Misty Uphams Death Police: Body Found Near River Could be Missing Actress Misty Upham August: Osage County Actress Misty Upham Reported Missing Charles Upham wrote that his daughter was afraid of the Auburn police. More: … Continue reading

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Genomics Research Lab Planned For Branford

Posted: Published on October 24th, 2014

The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai is opening a satellite Genetic Testing Lab in Branford, in space formerly occupied by 454 Life Sciences. The managing director of Mt. Sinai Testing Lab-Connecticut was vice president of research and development at 454, and the director of laboratory operations was the director of the sequencing center at 454. The Icahn Institute for Genomics and Multiscale Biology announced the move in September, and Gov. Dannel P. Malloy toured the facility Thursday and talked about the government incentives offered to the medical school. The Department of Economic and Community Development gave it a $9.5 million subsidized loan and, if the institute meets hiring projections and reaches a staff or 142 people over the next five years, $7.25 million of the loan will be forgiven. 454 Life Sciences, the DNA sequencing machine company that had occupied the space, employed about 200 people in 2007, when it was bought by Roche for $155 million. Roche announced a year ago that it would close and lay off 100 employees. Glenn Farrell, a spokesman for the Icahn genomics institute, said Mt. Sinai has been working for months to renovate the former 454 space and has shipped equipment … Continue reading

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UCLA and UCI Awarded $8M Grant to Launch Collaborative Stem Cell Clinic "Center of Excellence"

Posted: Published on October 24th, 2014

Contact Information Available for logged-in reporters only Newswise In a first-of-its-kind collaboration, the University of California, Los Angeles, Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research and University of California, Irvine Sue & Bill Gross Stem Cell Research Center received a five year $8M grant from the California Institute of Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), the states stem cell agency, to establish a CIRM Alpha Stem Cell Clinic center of excellence to conduct clinical trials for investigational stem cell therapies and provide critical resources and expertise in clinical research. The $8M grant was one of three awarded today by CIRM as part of the CIRM Alpha Stem Cell Clinics (CASC) Network Initiative. The joint UCLA/UCI award under the direction of Dr. John Adams, a member of the UCLA Broad Stem Cell Research Center and professor in the department of orthopaedic surgery, will accelerate the implementation of clinical trials and delivery of stem cell therapies by providing world-class, state-of-the-art infrastructure to support clinical research. CIRM grant reviewers lauded the UCLA/UCI Consortiums impressive and multidimensional team of experienced personnel that will expand access to patients, attracting national and international clinical trials and accelerating future trials in the pipeline. The initial … Continue reading

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Cell transplant allows paralyzed man to walk again, researchers say

Posted: Published on October 23rd, 2014

STORY HIGHLIGHTS (CNN) -- A ground-breaking cell transplant has allowed a paralyzed man to walk again, researchers announced Tuesday. Polish man Darek Fidyka, 38, had been left paralyzed from the chest down after a 2010 knife attack caused an 8mm gap in his spinal cord. An initial 13 months of rehabilitation followed by an additional 8-month program before the experimental treatment had not produced an improvement in his condition, researchers said. But two years after the 2012 cell transplant he can walk with the aid of a Zimmer frame, also known as a walker. Scientists at University College London (UCL) developed the treatment, which saw olfactory ensheathing cells (OECs) from the nose transplanted to Fidyka's spinal cord. OECs are what allow the sense of smell to return when nerve cells in the nose are damaged. Surgeons at Wroclaw University in Poland led by Dr Pawel Tabakow injected the OECs above and below Fidyka's spinal cord gap, then used nerve tissue taken from his ankle to act as a bridge for spinal nerves to grow across, UCL said. The underlying idea is 'can we get something out of an area where repair works and transfer it into an area where repair … Continue reading

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Cell transplant sees paralyzed man walk again

Posted: Published on October 23rd, 2014

A ground-breaking cell transplant has allowed a paralyzed man to walk again, researchers announced Tuesday. Polish man Darek Fidyka, 38, had been left paralyzed from the chest down after a 2010 knife attack caused an 8mm gap in his spinal cord. An initial 13 months of rehabilitation followed by an additional 8-month program before the experimental treatment had not produced an improvement in his condition, researchers said. But two years after the 2012 cell transplant he can walk with the aid of a Zimmer frame, also known as a walker. Scientists at University College London (UCL) developed the treatment, which saw olfactory ensheathing cells (OECs) from the nose transplanted to Fidyka's spinal cord. OECs are what allow the sense of smell to return when nerve cells in the nose are damaged. Surgeons at Wroclaw University in Poland led by Dr Pawel Tabakow injected the OECs above and below Fidyka's spinal cord gap, then used nerve tissue taken from his ankle to act as a bridge for spinal nerves to grow across, UCL said. Three months after the surgery, Fidyka's thigh muscle began to grow and three months after that he started to walk with leg braces and the help of … Continue reading

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Paralyzed man walks after transplant

Posted: Published on October 23rd, 2014

STORY HIGHLIGHTS (CNN) -- A ground-breaking cell transplant has allowed a paralyzed man to walk again, researchers announced Tuesday. Polish man Darek Fidyka, 38, had been left paralyzed from the chest down after a 2010 knife attack caused an 8mm gap in his spinal cord. An initial 13 months of rehabilitation followed by an additional 8-month program before the experimental treatment had not produced an improvement in his condition, researchers said. But two years after the 2012 cell transplant he can walk with the aid of a Zimmer frame, also known as a walker. Scientists at University College London (UCL) developed the treatment, which saw olfactory ensheathing cells (OECs) from the nose transplanted to Fidyka's spinal cord. OECs are what allow the sense of smell to return when nerve cells in the nose are damaged. Surgeons at Wroclaw University in Poland led by Dr Pawel Tabakow injected the OECs above and below Fidyka's spinal cord gap, then used nerve tissue taken from his ankle to act as a bridge for spinal nerves to grow across, UCL said. The underlying idea is 'can we get something out of an area where repair works and transfer it into an area where repair … Continue reading

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Gigi Jordan Friend: Woman Talked About Killing Herself, Son

Posted: Published on October 23rd, 2014

TRI-STATE NEWS HEADLINES From our newsroom to your inbox weekday mornings at 9AM. NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) The longtime best friend of a former pharmaceutical millionaire accused of murdering her autistic son told jurors Wednesday that the woman talked about killing herself and her child years before she poisoned the boy to death. Rita Cristman tesified that Gigi Jordan told her if a stem cell transplant she was setting up to cure Jude Mirraof his autism did not work, she was going to end it all for both of them, WCBS 880s Irene Cornell reported. The witness also described a telephone conversation in 2006 in which Jordan blamed Cristman for her misery because her friend told her to have a babyin the first place. Jordan is on trial, accused of killing 8-year-old Jude with a mixture of prescription drugs in February 2010 at the Peninsula Hotel in Midtown. Jordan admitted on the witness stand earlier this month that she gave her son a fatal dose of drugs. But she denied the scenario prosecutors have painted: that she climbed on top of the comatose boy, forcibly opened his mouth and shoved a lethal dose of prescription medication down his throat with a … Continue reading

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Toronto Plastic Surgery: Dr. Ahmad Talks to the Persian Tribune – Video

Posted: Published on October 23rd, 2014

Toronto Plastic Surgery: Dr. Ahmad Talks to the Persian Tribune http://www.theplasticsurgeryclinic.com Dr. Jamil Ahmad, a respected Toronto plastic surgeon, joined The Plastic Surgery Clinic in 2010. He is the Director of Research and Education at the... By: The Plastic Surgery Clinic … Continue reading

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Study Published in Aesthetic Surgery Journal Finds Tummy Tuck Improves Stress Urinary Incontinence

Posted: Published on October 23rd, 2014

New York, NY (PRWEB) October 22, 2014 Findings from a study published in the Aesthetic Surgery Journal, the official clinical publication of the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ASAPS), indicate that a tummy tuck not only improves body contour, but may also alleviate symptoms of stress urinary incontinence, especially among patients who have not undergone previous cesarean section. The study surveyed women, who underwent a tummy tuck, to ascertain changes in their stress urinary incontinence symptoms. Ninety percent of the participants had at least one pregnancy. The authors also analyzed the demographic data, amount of weight gain with pregnancy, number of pregnancies, multiple vs. single pregnancies, history of cesarean sections, amount of weight loss before surgery, symptoms related to stress or urgency incontinence, and severity of incontinence following abdominoplasty. What we found was that a tummy tuck significantly alleviated the symptoms of stress urinary incontinence in 60% of our patients, especially in patients who hadnt undergone previous cesarean section. In some abdominoplasty procedures where we pull up sufficient soft tissue in the pelvic area, we may get enough of a pull to suspend the urethra, creating a slight bladder outlet obstruction to reduce incontinence, explained Dr. James McMahan, one … Continue reading

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