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Waldwick boy with cerebral palsy gets VIP access to WWE holiday event at Prudential after long ordering process

Posted: Published on December 25th, 2013

WALDWICK An 8-year-old boy with cerebral palsy could have been shut out of Saturdays World Wrestling Entertainment holiday event at the Prudential Center in Newark if not for the perseverance of his parents. KEVIN R. WEXLER / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Brennan Macleod looks at the family Christmas tree beside his mother, Karen Macleod, on Monday. Chant and Karen Macleod and their son Brennan, who is wheelchair bound and non-verbal, are fans of professional wrestling. When Chant Macleod a member of the WWE Fan Council that provides feedback received notification in October that he could purchase tickets for the event, he jumped at the on-line pre-sale offer. Thats where the frustration started. The elder Macleod even though he had the pre-sale offer could not get access to tickets at the time the offer became available even though the event was wheelchair accessible at the Center. Macleod said he and his wife first noticed how Brennan reacted to wrestling when he was 2 years old. Brennan, in the hospital and acting restless and uncomfortable wearing electrodes during testing, zeroed in and became focused when wrestling appeared on a TV while his father was channel surfing. So when the opportunity came and we found … Continue reading

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Teen ordered off life support; family can appeal

Posted: Published on December 25th, 2013

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) A judge on Tuesday ruled that a 13-year-old Northern California girl declared brain dead after suffering complications following a tonsillectomy can be taken off life support. But Alameda County Superior Court Judge Evelio Grillo gave Jahi McMath's family until 5 p.m. Dec. 30 to file an appeal. She will stay on life support until then. Relatives said the family has not decided if they would keep fighting. "It's Christmas Eve, there is still time for a miracle," said Omari Sealey, the girl's uncle. He said the family would discuss and decide later whether to appeal or to allow Children's Hospital of Oakland to remove the girl from a ventilator. "Prayers are more important than ever before," Sealey said. "Because the clock is ticking." Jahi's mother, Nailah Winkfield, didn't attend the court hearing, remaining with her daughter in the hospital where she will spend Christmas Eve. Sealey said Winkfield and other family members have remained with the teen since complications arose Dec. 9 after a tonsillectomy. "Room 325 of Children's Hospital is our new home," Sealey said. Sealey held hands with Jahi's grandmother Sandra Chatman, Jahi's stepfather Martin Winkfield and the family's lawyer Christopher Dolan as the judge … Continue reading

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Court-appointed doctor says Calif. teen brain dead

Posted: Published on December 25th, 2013

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) A judge on Tuesday ruled that a 13-year-old Northern California girl declared brain dead after suffering complications following a tonsillectomy can be taken off life support. But Alameda County Superior Court Judge Evelio Grillo gave Jahi McMath's family until 5 p.m. Dec. 30 to file an appeal. She will stay on life support until then. Relatives said the family has not decided if they would keep fighting. "It's Christmas Eve, there is still time for a miracle," said Omari Sealey, the girl's uncle. He said the family would discuss and decide later whether to appeal or to allow Children's Hospital of Oakland to remove the girl from a ventilator. "Prayers are more important than ever before," Sealey said. "Because the clock is ticking." Jahi's mother, Nailah Winkfield, didn't attend the court hearing, remaining with her daughter in the hospital where she will spend Christmas Eve. Sealey said Winkfield and other family members have remained with the teen since complications arose Dec. 9 after a tonsillectomy. "Room 325 of Children's Hospital is our new home," Sealey said. Sealey held hands with Jahi's grandmother Sandra Chatman, Jahi's stepfather Martin Winkfield and the family's lawyer Christopher Dolan as the judge … Continue reading

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Family of Calif. girl on ventilator maintains hope

Posted: Published on December 25th, 2013

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) A Northern California family who lost their bid to keep their 13-year-old daughter on life support says "there is still time for a miracle." Alameda County Superior Court Judge Evelio Grillo has ruled that Jahi McMath, who was declared brain dead after suffering complications following a tonsillectomy, can be removed from the ventilator keeping her body functioning. But the judge gave Jahi's family until 5 p.m. Dec. 30 to file an appeal. Until then, she will stay on life support at Children's Hospital Oakland. Relatives said the family has not decided if they would keep fighting. "There is still time for a miracle," said Omari Sealey, the girl's uncle, said Tuesday. He said the family would decide later whether to appeal or to allow the hospital to remove the girl from a ventilator. "Prayers are more important than ever before," Sealey said. "Because the clock is ticking." Jahi's mother, Nailah Winkfield, didn't attend the court hearing Tuesday, staying by her daughter's side in the hospital. Sealey said Winkfield and other family members have remained with the teen since complications arose Dec. 9 after a tonsillectomy. "Room 325 of Children's Hospital is our new home," Sealey said. Sealey … Continue reading

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Judge: Calif. teen can be taken off life support

Posted: Published on December 25th, 2013

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) A judge on Tuesday ruled that a 13-year-old Northern California girl declared brain dead after suffering complications following a tonsillectomy can be taken off life support. But Alameda County Superior Court Judge Evelio Grillo gave Jahi McMath's family until 5 p.m. Dec. 30 to file an appeal. She will stay on life support until then. Relatives said the family has not decided if they would keep fighting. "It's Christmas Eve, there is still time for a miracle," said Omari Sealey, the girl's uncle. He said the family would discuss and decide later whether to appeal or to allow Children's Hospital of Oakland to remove the girl from a ventilator. "Prayers are more important than ever before," Sealey said. "Because the clock is ticking." Jahi's mother, Nailah Winkfield, didn't attend the court hearing, remaining with her daughter in the hospital where she will spend Christmas Eve. Sealey said Winkfield and other family members have remained with the teen since complications arose Dec. 9 after a tonsillectomy. "Room 325 of Children's Hospital is our new home," Sealey said. Sealey held hands with Jahi's grandmother Sandra Chatman, Jahi's stepfather Martin Winkfield and the family's lawyer Christopher Dolan as the judge … Continue reading

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"Stem Cell Research" Rap Battle (Biology 2 Project) – Video

Posted: Published on December 25th, 2013

"Stem Cell Research" Rap Battle (Biology 2 Project) School project once again, this time talking about stem cells and ish. Since I post parody music on this channel, I thought I'd just upload it! Video edited ... By: guitarmandude7 … Continue reading

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Beware accuracy of mail-in genetic tests

Posted: Published on December 25th, 2013

The Perfect 46 is a coming movie in which people are routinely tested to find an ideal genetic partner with whom to create a child. In the real world, things are almost as far-out. Some companies can screen and alert you to DNA variants that might combine with your partner's to produce an offspring with a rare, single-gene disease, such as cystic fibrosis. Others look for genetic indications that you could develop a disease down the road, so you can make decisions about prevention or medical treatment. But there are lots of questions about how reliable these mail-in-a-vial-of-blood-or-saliva genetic tests are. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has ordered one big-buzz company to stop shipping its $99 spit kit. Seems the company can't prove the accuracy of its tests for 254 genetic problems and was suggesting what people might do with test results. That could have devastating consequences. For example, a false-positive result for a high-risk gene-linked condition such breast cancer might lead a woman to have a mastectomy when she didn't really need to consider having one. So whether you're curious about your genome or you have a family history of a disorder that you want to avoid passing … Continue reading

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‘I will walk.’ Kim Dennie’s journey of hope brings her closer to goal

Posted: Published on December 25th, 2013

Niagara This Week - St. Catharines THOROLD -- Following a month-long stay in China, Kim Dennie has more faith now than she ever did that her wheelchair will be a part of her past. On Jan. 13, Dennie left her home in Allanburg on a journey to China for stem cell therapy treatments not available in Canada. After an assessment, Dennie was told the words she has so longed to hear since her life was changed nearly four years ago. "They told me that my condition is not that bad and I should be able to walk again," Dennie told This Week. "With the right mindset and persistence and continued therapy, I will walk." In July 2003 Dennie, and her two children, 13-year-old Brittany and 12-year-old Jamie, were returning from a trip to Sudbury. The car she was riding in was broadsided by an oncoming vehicle. The car slammed into the passenger side door where she was sitting. Dennie broke her back, neck, shoulder and pelvis and hasn't been able to walk since. The initial diagnosis was complete spinal chord injury, leaving her paralyzed from the waist down. Three months later she was wiggling the toes on her left foot … Continue reading

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Nanotechnology and Medicine – Nanomedicine and Disease …

Posted: Published on December 25th, 2013

Nanotechnology refers to the use man-made of nano-sized (typically 1-100 billionths of a meter) particles for industrial or medical applications suited to their unique properties. Physical properties of known elements and materials can change as their surface to area ratio is dramatically increased, i.e. when nanoscale sizes are achieved. These changes do not take place when going from macro to micro scale. Changes in physical properties such as colloidal properties, solubility and catalytic capacity have been found very useful in areas of biotechnology, such as bioremediation and drug delivery. The very different properties of the different types of nanoparticles have resulted in novel applications. For example, compounds known to be generally inert materials, may become catalysts. The extremely small size of nanoparticles allows them to penetrate cells and interact with cellular molecules. Nanoparticles often also have unique electrical properties and make excellent semiconductors and imaging agents. Because of these qualities, the science of nanotechnology has taken off in recent years, with testing and documentation of a broad spectrum of novel uses for nanoparticles, particularly in nanomedicine. The development of nanotechnologies for nanomedical applications has become a priority of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Between 2004 and 2006, the NIH … Continue reading

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Study finds axon regeneration after Schwann cell graft to injured spinal cord

Posted: Published on December 24th, 2013

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE: 23-Dec-2013 Contact: Robert Miranda cogcomm@aol.com Cell Transplantation Center of Excellence for Aging and Brain Repair Putnam Valley, NY. (Dec. 23 2013) A study carried out at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine for "The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis" has found that transplanting self-donated Schwann cells (SCs, the principal ensheathing cells of the nervous system) that are elongated so as to bridge scar tissue in the injured spinal cord, aids hind limb functional recovery in rats modeled with spinal cord injury. The study will be published in a future issue of Cell Transplantation but is currently freely available on-line as an unedited early e-pub at: http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cog/ct/pre-prints/content-ct1074Williams. "Injury to the spinal cord results in scar and cavity formation at the lesion site," explains study corresponding author Dr. Mary Bartlett Bunge of the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine. "Although numerous cell transplantation strategies have been developed to nullify the lesion environment, scar tissue - in basil lamina sheets - wall off the lesion to prevent further injury and, also, at the interface, scar tissue impedes axon regeneration into and out of the grafts, limiting functional recovery." The researchers determined that the properties of a spinal … Continue reading

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