Thursday, January 27, 2011

Maggot Therapy In Unhealing Wounds

Maggot Debridement Therapy (MDT) is the medical use of live maggots (fly larvae) for treating non-healing wounds.

In maggot debridement therapy (also known as maggot therapy, larva therapy, larval therapy, biodebridement or biosurgery), disinfected fly larvae are applied to the wound for 2 or 3 days within special dressings to keep them from migrating. The literature identifies three primary actions of medical grade maggots on wounds:
  1. They clean the wounds by dissolving dead and infected tissue ("debridement");
  2. They disinfect the wound (kill bacteria);
  3. They speed the rate of healing

    !! The video might be disturbing for some of you



    History of Maggot Therapy
      Maggots have been known for centuries to help heal wounds. Military surgeons noted that soldiers whose wounds became infested with maggots had better outcomes than those not infested. William Baer, while at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, may have been the first in the Northern Hemisphere to have intentionally applied larvae to wounds in order to induce wound healing. During the late 1920's, he identified specific species, raised them in the laboratory, and used their larvae to treat several children with osteomyelitis and soft tissue infections. He presented his findings at a surgical conference in 1929. Two years later, after treating 98 children, his findings were published posthumously.

The first modern clinical studies of maggot therapy were initiated in 1989, at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Long Beach, CA, and at the University of California, Irvine, to answer the following questions:
  1. "Is maggot therapy still useful today?"
  2. "Should maggot therapy be used as an adjunct to other treatments, not merely as a last resort?"
  3. "How does maggot therapy compare to other treatments at our disposal?" 

           The results of those controlled comparative clinical trials and the many studies and reports that followed, indicate that MDT is still useful today as a safe and effective treatment tool for some types of wounds. Those studies also demonstrated that there is no reason to withhold MDT until all other modalities have been exhausted, nor use it only as a “last resort.” Indeed, while published accounts of “pre-amputation MDT” show a limb salvage rate of over 40%, the success of MDT when used earlier in the course of treatment (say, as a 2nd or 3rd or 4th line treatment) is even more dramatic.
Current status of maggot therapy

In 1995, a handful of doctors in 4 countries were using MDT. Today, any physician in the U.S. can prescribe maggot therapy. Over 4,000 therapists are using maggot therapy in 20 countries. Approximately 50,000 treatments were applied to wounds in the year 2006.

In January 2004, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) began regulating medicinal maggots, and allowed the production and marketing of one particular strain of Phaenicia sericata larvae marketed under the brand name Medical Maggots (TM). In February, 2004, the British National Health Service (NHS) permitted its doctors to prescribe maggot therapy. Patients no longer have to be referred to one of a few regional wound-specialty hospitals to get maggot treatments.

The BioTherapeutics, Education & Research Foundation was established in 2003 for the purpose of supporting patient care, education, and research in maggot therapy and the other forms of symbiotic medicine (diagnosing and/or treating diseases with live animals, such as maggot therapy, leech therapy, honey bee therapy, pet therapy; sniffer dogs, ichthiotherapy, bacteriotherapy etc).

Biology of flies and maggots

Maggots are fly larvae, or immature flies, just as caterpillars are butterfly or moth larvae. Maggots do not appear all by themselves ("de novo"), as was believed 150 years ago; they hatch from eggs, laid by adult female flies.

Not all species of flies are safe and effective as medicinal maggots. There are thousands of species of flies, each with its own habits and life cycle. Some fly larvae feed on plants or animals, or even blood (i.e., mosquitoes). Others feed on rotting organic material.

Those flies whose larvae feed on dead animals will sometimes lay their eggs on the dead parts (necrotic or gangrenous tissue) of living animals. When maggots are infesting live animals, that condition is called “myiasis.” Some of those maggots will feed only on dead tissue, some only on live tissue, and some on live or dead tissue. The flies used most often for the purpose of maggot therapy are "blow flies" (Calliphoridae); and the species used most commonly is Phaenicia sericata, the green blow fly.

A diagram and photograph of a typical blow fly life cycle appears below (used with permission of the BTER Foundation)

Advantages and disadvantages of maggot debridement therapy (“MDT")
  • Efficacy, as demonstrated in several small but significant controlled clinical studies.
  • Takes about 15-30 minutes to apply a secure dressing to keep the maggots in place.
  • Excellent safety record.
  • Maggots are highly perishable and should be used within 24 hours of arrival.
  • Simple enough that non-surgeons can use it to provide thorough debridement when surgery is not available or is not the optimal choice. This means that it is also possible to provide surgical quality debridement as an outpatient or in the home.
  • Low cost of treatment.

Common misconceptions about maggot therapy


Common Misconceptions The Truth
“Patients would not want maggots on them” What patients do not want is a stinking, draining wound. What patients do not want is to lose their foot. What patients do not want is 4 more weeks of a treatment in which they do not see any benefit. To someone with a non-healing wound, wearing “baby flies” for 2 days is not too high a price to pay, if the potential for success is what is reported with MDT.
“It might not be possible to get out all the maggots after treatment” The maggot dressing is removed as soon as the maggots have finished secreting their proteolytic (tissue-dissolving) enzymes (within 48-72 hours). At that time, their natural instinct is to leave the wound and crawl away as quickly as possible. So when the dressing is opened, the maggots will be “at the gate,” eagerly awaiting their release. If any slow growing larvae remain, they can be removed with a simple wipe, wash, or irrigation.
“If one of the maggots is left in, it might bury itself in the tissue or crawl around” If any maggot is overlooked (for example, it was slow growing, and hid in the recesses of the wound when the dressing was opened), it will continue to feed on the dead tissue of the wound only as long as dead tissue is present, and probably only for a maximum of 12-24 hours. Medical grade maggots do not bury in or feed on healthy tissue. What’s more, they are obligate air-breathers. Therefore, they must remain where there is air, and they will leave the body as soon as they are finished feeding or as soon as there is no more dead, infected tissue left.
“Medicinal maggots are sterile, so they can not reproduce or turn into flies” Medical grade maggots are often called “sterile maggots,” but the use of the word “sterile” means germ-free. They are best called “disinfected maggots.” They can mature into flies (although it will take them about 3 weeks, and they can then reproduce. However, all larvae are immature, and can not reproduce until reaching adulthood.
“Medicinal maggots might reproduce in the wound, making even more maggots” Not true. Larvae of all species are immature, and can not reproduce.
“Medicinal maggots are no longer available” Medical maggots are readily available from several sources, in many countries. See below for a list of suppliers.
“Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurance will not cover maggots or maggot therapy” In the U.S., maggot therapy should be coded with an appropriate procedure code for “selective debridement without anesthesia” (i.e., CPT codes 97597 or 97598) or a CPT code for misc. skin procedures (i.e., 17999). While it is true that CMS declined to issue a national code (HCPCS code) for the maggots themselves, they can and should be billed as an additional expense, and will generally be covered by private and governmental third-party payers. When billing for the maggots themselves, consider using either the ABC code for maggots (EAACT) or the HCPCS code for misc. devices (A9270).

Appeal may be necessary. The BTER Foundation will assist with appeals. For those without financial resources, the BTER Foundation provides Patient Assistance Grants. Additional information can be found in the recent press release by the BTER Foundation.
“Maggot therapy might hurt if the maggots bite me” Maggots do not bite. They do not have teeth. They do have modified mandibles though, called “mouthhooks,” and they have some rough bumps around their body which scratch and poke the dead tissue, one of the mechanisms that debrides the wound. It is similar to a surgeons “rasper,” but on a microscopic scale. The maggots are so small when applied that they can not even be felt within the wound. Those patients who already have wound pain before beginning maggot therapy, perhaps due to exposed nerves or other reasons, may have some pain during maggot therapy when the maggots become large enough to be felt crawling over those nerves (usually at about 24 hours). Those patients should be given access to pain medications (analgesics); but if pain medication is inadequate to relieve the discomfort, the maggots can be removed early. Once the dressings are removed, the maggots will crawl out and the pain should cease immediately. If further debridement is necessary, another MDT dressing can always be applied later, but it should be used only for a brief period, again, until the patient is uncomfortable.
“Sure, medical maggots are cheap; but garbage maggots are even cheaper, and should be just as good” While it is true that the species used to make medical grade maggots are found in the wild, so too are thousands of other species; and not all species are safe and effective. In fact, the literature suggests that not all strains of the same species are equally safe and effective. What’s more, wild maggots may carry pathogens even more harmful than the ones already on the wound. Therefore, it is prudent to use medical grade maggots that have been demonstrated to be disinfected (germ-free), safe, and effective.

Information for health care providers

Medicinal maggots have three actions:
1) they debride (clean) wounds by dissolving the dead (necrotic), infected tissue; 2) they disinfect the wound, by killing bacteria; and 3) they stimulate wound healing.

In the U.S., indications listed on the package insert include: “. . . debriding non-healing necrotic skin and soft tissue wounds, including pressure ulcers, venous stasis ulcers, neuropathic foot ulcers, and non-healing traumatic or post surgical wounds.”

There are many reports about maggot therapy also being used for other wounds, suck as burns, osteomyelitis, fasciitis, clean but non-healing wounds . . . but these are not currently approved indications for any medicinal maggots currently on the market.

The BTER Foundation, in collaboration with community leaders, drafted a MDT Policies & Procedures template for hospitals and clinics to use when writing policies for their facility. The template is available for free download.


Information for patients

Maggot therapy is an effective, accepted method of treating chronic, non-healing wounds. Only specially selected, tested, disinfected larvae are applied to the wound surface and covered with a dressing that prevents the larvae from escaping. They are easily and completely removed 2 or 3 days later. Sometimes the wound is completely cleaned by then; sometimes additional treatments may be necessary. After maggot therapy, the wound may be clean enough to close, cover, graft, or flap. Your doctor will be able to suggest the best treatment to follow.


How to find a therapist

If you are looking for a therapist to evaluate your wound for maggot therapy, first ask your current physician or surgeon. S/he knows you already, and can provide local care and follow-up. The procedure is simple enough that most licensed therapists can do it with ease. Courses are available (see BTER Foundation) and your current doctor or wound care therapist may have already had experience.

Frequently asked questions


How do you keep the maggots on the wound? Because the natural tendency of the maggots is to wander off before and after they have finished feeding, they must be kept in place by dressings that allow air to enter, allow liquefied necrotic tissue to drain out, and still keep the maggots securely over the wound. This can be done with a porous, mesh-like covering (i.e., nylon netting) affixed to the wound border (by tape, or glued to a hydrocolloid pad). It is removed 48-72 hours later, and the maggots removed.
How do you get all of the maggots out? Once the dressing is removed, all of the maggots should crawl out of the wound and away from the host because they will be satiated and ready to migrate. Remaining maggots can be wiped off with a wet gauze pad. If there are any young larvae still there that you can not remove, simply cover the wound with moist gauze and replace it three time/day; the remaining maggots will leave the wound and bury themselves in the gauze within 24 hours.
How do I dispose of the maggot dressings? Maggots are germ-free when applied, but become contaminated when they come into contact with the patient’s wound flora. Therefore, MDT dressings should be handled like all other infectious dressing waste. Place the maggot dressings in a plastic bag and seal the bag completely. Then place the sealed bag into a second plastic bag and seal completely. Place the bag with the other infectious dressing waste in an appropriate infectious waste bag and autoclave or incinerate within 24 hours, according to waste management policies.
How do I dispose of unused maggots? Unused maggots are germ-free. They may be discarded in regular trash bins. Seal their vial so that they can not escape.
How many treatment cycles are necessary? The number of treatment cycles depends on the size of the wound and the ultimate goal of treatment (debridement, wound preparation for graft, or wound closure). The average course is 2-4 cycles. Examine the wound after treatment (and 24 hours later, if possible), to determine if another treatment is necessary.
Does maggot therapy hurt? For those few patients who feel wound pain, they will likely also feel pain or discomfort with maggot therapy as the maggots become large enough to feel (about 24-36 hours into the treatment cycle. Use analgesics liberally, and remove the dressings if/when analgesics fail to control pain. The pain will abate immediately after the dressing is removed.
http://www.medicaledu.com/maggots.htm

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Daltonism/ Color blindness Tests

               Color blindness or color vision deficiency is the decreased ability to perceive differences between some of the colors that others can distinguish. It is most often of genetic nature, but may also occur because of some eye, nerve, or brain damage, or exposure to certain chemicals.

Click HERE  to take the Test 




Colorblindness Test for Children

     The image below can be used as a simple, non-medical test for red-greencolorblindness in children. Originally published in Field and Streammagazine, the test was intended for potential hunters. However, the animalshapes can usually be identified by young children who may not yet be ableto read numbers, which are used in standard colorblindness tests.



A larger version of the image, which can be printed on plain white paper (or photo paper), can be found here.

The image should be presented to a child in private. The child can be asked if they see any animals. There should be no prompting. The key for what can be seen with differing color vision can be seen below:



A larger image of the key can be found here.

This and any such test should be done individually without comment by the “tester.” Any color vision issues detected should first be discussed with the child’s parent(s) and not with the child. Further testing by a qualified ophthalmologist might be indicated.

Past use of this test indicates the following:
    Children with normal vision can see the bear, deer, rabbit, and squirrel. They cannot see the fox.
    Children with a red-green color vision deficiency see a cow (instead of the deer), a fox (in the lower left), and usually the rabbit and squirrel. They cannot see the bear. Red-green colorblindness apparently occurs in varying degrees--mild to severe. Children with severe red-green color vision deficiency may have difficulty seeing the rabbit and/or squirrel. Generally, anyone with a red-green color deficiency cannot see the bear, butcan see the fox.

Children (and adults) with a red-green color deficiency have difficultydifferentiating shades of the following colors from each other:
    red from green
    green from brown (especially beige)
    blue from purple
    pink from gray
Note that most color deficient children can identify pure primary colors.

In each of these cases, the color red (found in red, brown, purple, andpink) cannot be discerned, making the distinction difficult. Thus childrensee purple azalea or crepe myrtle blossoms as blue. They have difficultyseeing the browned pine needles among the green ones. A flashing trafficlight could be red or amber. Green traffic lights look white.

Because of the shift in the color vision of those with red-green colorblindness, those with the deficiency can more readily differentiate yellow and blue fromgreen. Yellow and/or blue are frequently the “favorite colors” of those witha red-green color deficiency.

Obviously once identified, tact must be used when informing a child of this vision issue. Care must also be shown when dealing with such children in agroup setting, so as not to call undue attention or create a reason for discriminationor ridicule.

The most common form of color vision deficiency (usually referred to asred-green colorblindness) occurs in about 7% of males in the United States.It is an inherited trait, carried by females but occurring in males. Colorblindness can be a complicated topic. Basic information can be found online, including this Wikipedia article. Suggestions for teachers can be found here.

Given the frequency of this condition, it is surprising that testing isnot done on all children prior to entering pre-school or school. This condition should be identified early, so that parents, caregivers, and teachers can address it with understanding, patience, and respect. (via @http://freepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~hellmers/test/)





Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Sleeping Apart may be Benefic to Health and Relationship

If you think that sharing a bed with your partner boosts your relationship, you may be wrong. It may actually be doing harm to your health and your sex life studies show. 
Dr. Neil Stanley, a sleep specialist says that a good night's rest is more important than getting close to your significant other. He said that the idea of sleeping together is a relatively new idea. Before the industrial revolution it was not uncommon for couples to sleep in separate bedrooms but as people moved into the cities and were cramped for space it became a necessity.
  • In ancient Rome the marital bed was meant for a couple's sexual relationship, not for sleeping reports BBC News. One study found that the average couple had 50 % more sleep disturbances if they shared a bed. 
  • The University of Surrey professor said that sleeping apart could prevent couples from getting poor sleep that leads to depression, heart disease, strokes, lung disorders, traffic and industrial accidents, and divorce reports the Nerdy Science Blog. As reported by BBC News, Dr Stanley, who sleeps separately from his wife, was responsible for setting up one of Britain's leading sleep laboratories at the University of Surrey. He said that people of today should consider doing the same. He says, “We all know what it’s like to have a cuddle and then say ‘I’m going to sleep now’ and go to the opposite side of the bed. So why not just toddle off down the landing.”  
  • Recent research has shown that 20 % of British couple already sleep in separate beds and that as much as 40 % of couples in their 70's sleep separately reports the Mirror. A couple interviewed by the Mirror said of sleeping separately, "Sex isn’t a problem at all. We simply enjoy it in whoever’s bedroom we end up in before happily retreating to our own double beds to sleep." Simon Rutherford, 35 who also sleeps separately from his wife says, "A couple who sleep separately are seen as a failure, because people assume the intimacy between them has died. So it was great to hear scientists saying that a good sleep alone in your own bed is what keeps a marriage fresh," reported the Telegraph. As it turns out, a lot of couples are sleeping apart. 
  • A 2005 National Sleep Foundation survey found that 31% of couples are changing their sleep habits because of a mate's sleep problems reports WebMD. The survey found that 23% sleep in separate beds and that 38% said that their partner's sleep disorder has caused problems in their relationship. Louanne Cole Weston, PhD, a sex therapist and author of WebMD's Sex Matters message board says sleeping apart can be good for a relationship and "It does not signal the end of a relationship at all. In fact, it can be the beginning. If one person has been sleep-deprived, they begin to feel more interested in sex. If you've ever slept next to a person who snores, you have to cope with waking up several times during the night. It does not create good will in a relationship." 
  Source|:

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Is Organic Always Better than Conventional?

     These days, it seems more difficult to know what to shop for at the grocery store.

  • Is organic always better than conventional? 
  • What if it's an "organic" product that's been flown half-way around the world, burning up fossil fuels that contribute to global warming? How do you decide what's better: A conventional apple grown locally with chemical pesticides, or an organic apple from another continent?



How do you decide which grocery products are best for not just your own personal health, but also the health of the planet? 


Now here's the real kicker in all this: When you eat an apple, you absorb and assimilate the story that went into creating that apple! 
  • So eating an organic, locally-grown, consciously-harvested apple gives you not only nourishment and biochemical nutrition, it also gives you the positive energy of abundance, humility, harmony and happiness. 
  • A conventionally-grown apple, on the other hand, is more likely to give you the story of greed, desperation, depletion, fear and disease. Hmm.....
  • ! "I strongly recommend you grow it yourself or work with local farmers who you know are passionate about cooperating with nature to maximize abundance for themselves and those around them."


Source:
www.NaturalNews.com
http://www.naturalnews.com/022040.html#ixzz1C3kskHNV
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#Medical Case: 7-year old with Limbs Growing Out of his Chest

           A 7-year-old boy Deepak Kumar Paswaan, who lives in Buxar, Bihar, India, was born with extra arms, legs and buttocks of a parasitic twin protruding from his chest, which looks similar to the Indian man’s extra body.
    Parasitic twin
  • This case is similar to how conjoined twins are formed, except there is a malformation of one of those twins.As a result, the twin never fully develops and has caused the boy to live with extra arms and legs.The worst part is, the legs are growing at the same rate as the boy, adding to the weight the boy must carry.
  • As “usual,” he was worshipped as an incarnation of Lakshmi, the multi-limbed Hindu goddess of wealth and prosperity but there are also people who cast stones to him to driveout the “demon” in his body. 
When Deepak was born with the parasitic twin growing out of his abdomen the doctors in the village warned he wouldn’t have lived for more than a few days. However little Deepak fought through all the odds and survived as a healthy child though he was much behind his peers and led a socially restricted life. The contrasting ways in which he led is life is best exemplified by the fact that Deepak was treated as a religious icon and was worshipped by a set of villagers as God, while a few took him as a devil born to the village that would cast bad luck and attacked him with stones which left the little boy petrified and restricted his movement out of his home, mingling with his peers or even going to school with his brothers.
  • “It is heart wrenching for a parent to see his child suffer like this, though many people come from distant villages to worship him, offer money, sweets, flowers etc but I never had any intention of earning money through my child. I wanted to see my son like any other normal child being accepted by the society and so I decided to go for the surgery and get rid of the abnormal part of his body” says Viresh Paswan, Deepak’s father a construction worker at Bhelhari, a village 125 kilometers away from Patna.
Dr. Ramcharan Thiagarajan the lead surgeon of Deepak’s case felt that  the boy and the parasitic twin shared the chest wall and the abdomen. “I was concerned that there may be sharing of the thoracic organs such as heart or lungs in addition to the abdominal organs“. We were confident about providing care to this boy as we have an outstanding cardiac and liver unit at Fortis Hospitals Bangalore. The MRI scans which were sent to us showed that the parasitic twin was protruding from his lower chest and abdomen and was fused to Deepak with sharing of liver, intestine and possibly other structures. On clinical examination, the parasite was attached to the lower part of the chest and the most of the upper abdomen and it looked as if he was carrying a baby. It had two legs, a pelvis, abdomen and two poorly formed upper arms.
  • Once Deepak was brought into the hospital a CT scan was performed and it revealed that the sharing of the intestine, had vascular anomalies, a huge hernia and possible involvement of the liver. After an intensive discussion amongst the team of specialists which comprised of the liver and digestive surgical team, radiologist, anesthesiologist, neonatologist and child psychologist they concluded that the parasite can be safely removed without Deepak compromising his life. However there is always a possibility of complication after surgery either from excessive bleeding or from sharing of organs. The involvement of a neonatologist and a child psychologist was important because the physical disability affected Deepak’s social behavior; he seemed to have suffered from neurological imbalance and was mal nourished to a large extent as the parasite was taking most of the nutrition from his body.
  • According to Dr. Murali Chakravarthy, Chief Anesthesiologist “Anesthetizing parasitic twins is always a challenge. Deepak was no exception. We were not worried about gaining control of blood pressure fluctuations; because continuous monitoring of the hemodynamic parameters began from the word go. Grossly hypertrophied artery from the chest was supplying the parasitic twin. We had concerns about the management of the subsequent clamp of this while separating the twin. Thanks to the preparations, we could handle them without causing any danger to Deepak. Pain relief after a major surgery requiring a long surgical incision was yet another challenge, which was adequately taken care by insertion of the thoracic epidural catheter. Overall the job was well planned and executed. A beaming Deepak is a testimony to that.
“We were well prepared and started the surgery with an incision on the parasite to save skin and muscle to use for Deepak at the time of closure. We went into the parasites body and found that there were loops of intestine, piece of urinary bladder densely adhered to Deepak’s liver which was enlarged and also creating a huge hernia coming out through Deepak’s abdominal wall little bit below the fusion. The parasitic content was meticulous dissected off from liver and excised without compromising Deepak’s internal organs. The skin, muscle and the fascia (fused muscle providing strength) of the parasite was used to reconstruct Deepak’s abdominal wall” explained Dr. Ramcharan Thiagarajan. “What was originally seen as a sharing of the liver was found to an enlarged liver Deepak’s recovery has been quite fast, and he was moved out of the PICU on the first post op day and he started walking on his own on the 2nd post op day. He will be able to lead a normal life with pride and dignity like any other child without any physical difficulty in further”.
  • An emotionally charged Indu, Deepak’s mother says “I was initially not sure with the decision of Deepak’s surgery and was upset with my husband as I thought it would put my son’s life at risk. Though I wanted Deepak to have a normal life but as a mother my heart wept constantly with the fear of losing him in the process as I was scared by the villagers saying no surgery in this world can correct Deepak’s condition. But now when I see him smiling and playing with our 3 year old daughter just after two days of the surgery, my faith has strengthened and I believe that medical science has progressed so much that anything is possible if there is enough conviction”.
  • “I was confident that my child will fight a way out of this however an unknown fear was always there. I am eagerly waiting to go back to our village and show to all those people who considered my child as a devil, that my son is one of the luckiest and the bravest child in our village. I want to give him a good life and education so that he doesn’t remain a prey to society’s superstitious thoughts. The hospital and doctors have not only given my child a new life, they have restored his dignity” said Viresh.
Dr. Ramcharan added “Deepak has recovered very well and our entire team of doctors feels highly gratified that we have helped this child get back to a normal life just like any other boy of his age. It is sad that he could have been fixed long time back and not go through physical and emotional trauma all these years. He is also lucky that this one surgery will completely fix him and he would not require any more surgery contrary to other such where these children go through multiple remedial procedures.”
  • “At Fortis Hospitals our commitment in contributing towards clinical procedures which are truly life changing has always reflected in all our medical marvels. To us this case reflects the contribution that modern medicine can make in healing lives. Through our clinical expertise and our passion to be relevant to society we are glad to have given this little child from Bihar a new lease of life and free him of the social stigma. Deepak is a real hero for us who has fought the social and medical battle, he has won over the hearts of all the employees at hospital with his spark and brilliance. We wish him a good life and a great future ahead” said Mr. Vishal Bali, Chief Executive Officer, Fortis Hospitals.
Parasitic twin
Parasitic twin
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Parasitic twin
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Parasitic twin




Source:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk
http://www.telegraph.co.uk



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Friday, January 21, 2011

Digital Drugs- Latest drug trend

Forget about bongs, mirrors and crack pipes. Kids are getting high using headphones. Certain MP3 music downloads available online supposedly induce a state of ecstasy.
  • This new practice is called i-Dosing and requires a pair of headphones and something to play music. Proponents of i-Dosing say the ecstatic feeling listeners supposedly feel is caused by the binaural beat effect.
  • This effect is the result of two slightly different audio waves being heard separately by the left and right ear. The two tones played at slightly different frequencies makes the listener think they are hearing a quick beat.
The video I watched is called  the Leviticus Green, named not only for everyone's favorite Old Testament book but also for a sound drug developed in 1993 as a pain killer for wounded soldiers, or so says the intro to the video. It also claims that the project was abandoned a year later after soldiers who were listening to the music reported having Biblical hallucinations.
  • There is some research in the area of binaural beats for scientific and therapeutic uses, including research for hearing and sleep cycles and reducing stress and anxiety. But using it as a drug is new.
Messing with perception
Dr Brian Fligor, director of diagnostic audiology at the Boston Children's Hospital, thinks the idea of digital drugs is as far-fetched as the plot of a horror film."I found it to be a somewhat amusing story”

"To my knowledge there is no science that backs it up," Dr Fligor told the BBC. "They are experiencing an auditory perception."



"It's just kind of messing with your perception of the sound," Dr Fligor says.
"It's neat and interesting, but it has absolutely no effect on your perception of pleasure or anything else that was claimed."
The teens, he says, may have been faking or may have been experiencing a placebo effect, unconsciously convincing themselves that they were indeed high.
But doctors would find no real physical effects of this supposed intoxication, he says.
I-dosing, Dr Fligor says, is "neither good nor bad. It's completely neutral. It's not the least bit harmful and so I found it to be a somewhat amusing story."








Read more:
WBFF FOX45

http://news.discovery.com/tech/teens-get-high-off-digital-drugs.html
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-10668480
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/07/digital-drugs/

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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Risks Associated with Body Piercing

        Body piercing, a form of body modification, is the practice of puncturing or cutting a part of the human body, creating an opening in which jewellery may be worn.
       The word piercing can refer to the act or practice of body piercing, or to an opening in the body created by this act or practice.


Before you have your body pierced
If you choose to have a body piercing, get advice from people who have used a reputable, licensed body-piercing shop or piercer before. Ask them how much information they were given about looking after their piercing and taking jewelery out safely. Check that the staff were helpful and professional, the premises were clean and the equipment was properly sterilized.

Checklist:

A few days before having your piercing, visit the shop to check for any potential health risks. Make sure that you can answer yes to the following questions before going ahead:
  • Do they use a clean pair of disposable surgical gloves for each customer?
  • Do they wash their hands regularly and use disposable paper towels to dry them?
  • Is the shop clean, with wipe-clean surfaces throughout (including the floor)?
  • Do they use single-use needles and discard them after each piercing?
  • Are instruments kept in sealed packaging ready for use, or in an autoclave (steriliser) until needed?
  • Have the earrings been pre-sterilised?
  • If the piercer is piercing just one ear, will they take the earring from an unopened, presterilised pack of two (rather than using a loose earring left over from a previous piercing)?
  • Do they ask the customer if they have a medical condition such as HIV/AIDS or hepatitis?
  • Is the piercer wearing clean, practical clothing, with long hair tied back?
  • Have they covered any cuts or wounds on their hands with waterproof dressings?
  • Is the jewellery used appropriate for the type of piercing?
  • Is it made of non-nickel metal?
  • Does the piercer have a clear policy regarding age restrictions and parental consent? (See box, left.)
  • Is the piercing area a no-smoking zone?
  • Are animals kept well away from the piercing area?
!! If you are taking medication, have heart disease or any other medical condition and are in doubt, talk to your doctor about the risks before getting a piercing.

! Like a surgical operation, body piercing is an invasive procedure. It carries with it the same risks and healing periods.

General risks

  • Bacterial infection

Bacterial infection is the main risk associated with body piercing. Sometimes an abscess (accumulation of pus) forms around the piercing site, which can develop into septicemia (blood poisoning) or toxic shock syndrome if left untreated. This can be very serious and even fatal. Tongue piercings carry a higher risk of bacterial infection because of the high number of bacteria already present inside the mouth.
  • Transmittable diseases

All professional body piercers use sterile instruments, so it is rare to catch conditions such as hepatitis and HIV/AIDS through body piercing.
However, if you are somewhere where hygiene standards are poorer, you are at risk of infection from hepatitis (B or C) or HIV, which can be caught from dirty needles. Hepatitis is known for its resilience and some strains can live for several months on dirty instruments in normal room temperatures.
  • Other risks

Other general risks that come with body piercing are:
  • Bleeding and blood loss, especially in areas of the body with a lot of blood vessels such as the tongue.
  • Swelling of the skin around the piercing.
  • Scarring and the formation of keloid (a type of oversized scar). Tell your body piercer if you know that your skin has a tendency to form keloid scars. See Useful links for more information. 
  • Endocarditis (inflammation of heart valves), which is very serious and more common in people with existing heart valve problems.

Specific risks

Any piercing that interferes with normal function of the body carries a higher risk. Specific piercings each present their own risks. For example:
  • Oral (tongue) piercings can cause speech impediments and chipped teeth, if the jewellery wears away tooth enamel. There is also a higher risk of bleeding, and the risk that your airways will become blocked.
  • Genital piercings can obstruct the functions of the genitals, making sex and urination difficult and painful. This is particularly common with piercings on and around the penis.
  • Earlobe piercings are generally safe. A deformed ear is a rare but possible complication.
  • Ear cartilage piercings (at the top of the ear) are riskier than ear lobe piercings. If the site becomes infected, the complications are much more serious. The main risk is a painful abscess, following a bacterial infection. It happens because the skin is very close to the underlying cartilage and pus can become trapped. Antibiotics are not successful in treating this problem and surgery is usally required to remove the affected cartilage.
  • Nose piercings are riskier than earlobe piercings as the inner surface of the nose (which cannot be disinfected) holds bacteria that can cause infection.  


Preventing and treating infection 

If your body has been professionally pierced following the correct procedures , no specific aftercare is necessary.
  • Cleaning the piercing site with saline solution increases your risk of infection.
  • You will need to keep the piercing dry for three days after the procedure. If you have an ear or facial piercing, having baths rather than showers will help you to keep the piercing dry. Lower body piercings are harder to keep dry, so it may be best to sponge-clean your body for the first three days.
  • Wash your hands with warm water and antibacterial soap before touching or washing your piercing.
  • Ensure that any clothing and bedding that may come into contact with the area around the piercing is clean.

If you get an infection

-If your piercing becomes infected, the surrounding skin may be red and swollen. It will probably hurt when you touch it and may produce a yellow discharge.
-If you have a fever or any of the above symptoms, see your doctor immediately. A delay in treatment can result in a serious infection. -Leave your jewelery in unless your doctor tells you to take it out. This will ensure proper drainage and prevent an abscess from forming.
-In many cases, the infection can be treated without losing the piercing. Minor infections may be treated with antibiotic cream, and a more serious infection may need antibiotic tablets. Your doctor will be able to give you advice about which treatment is best for you.



Sources:
 http://tv.ku.edu/news/2006/10/26/tongue-piercing-poses-problems/
http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=114994
 Body-piercing-problems-topic-overview   http://www.webmd.com/skin-problems-and-treatments/tc/body-piercing-problems-topic-overview
All About Genital Piercing http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=52117

East Side Medicine http://www.eastsidemedicine.net/index.cfm?fuseaction=site.content&type=aafpsc&destination=/online/famdocen/home/articles/881.membersite.html&print=1

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Caffeine Content of Food & Drugs

  •  Caffeine is the only drug that is present naturally or added to widely consumed foods (quinine is the other drug used in foods). It is mildly addictive, one possible reason that makers of soft drinks add it to their products. Many coffee drinkers experience withdrawal symptoms, such as headaches, irritability, sleepiness, and lethargy, when they stop drinking coffee. 




Coffees Service Size Caffeine (mg)
Coffee, generic brewed 8 oz. 133 (range: 102-200) (16 oz. = 266)
Starbucks Brewed Coffee (Grande) 16 oz. 320
Einstein Bros. regular coffee 16 oz. 300
Dunkin' Donuts regular coffee 16 oz. 206
Starbucks Vanilla Latte (Grande) 16 oz. 150
Coffee, generic instant 8 oz. 93 (range: 27-173)
Coffee, generic decaffeinated 8 oz. 5 (range: 3-12)
Starbucks Espresso, doppio 2 oz. 150
Starbucks Frappuccino Blended Coffee Beverages, average 9.5 oz. 115
Starbucks Espresso, solo 1 oz. 75
Einstein Bros. Espresso 1 oz. 75
Espresso, generic 1 oz. 40 (range: 30-90)
Starbucks Espresso decaffeinated 1 oz. 4
Teas Service Size Caffeine (mg)
Tea, brewed 8 oz. 53 (range: 40-120)
Starbucks Tazo Chai Tea Latte (Grande) 16 oz. 100
Snapple, Lemon (and diet version) 16 oz. 42
Snapple, Peach (and diet version) 16 oz. 42
Snapple Raspberry (and diet version) 16 oz. 42
Arizona Iced Tea, black 16 oz. 32
Nestea 12 oz. 26
Snapple, Just Plain Unsweetened 16 oz. 18
Arizona Iced Tea, green 16 oz. 15
Snapple, Kiwi Teawi 16 oz. 10
Soft Drinks Service Size Caffeine (mg)
FDA official limit for cola and pepper soft drinks 12 oz. 71
Vault 12 oz. 71 (20 oz. = 118)
Jolt Cola 12 oz. 72
Mountain Dew MDX, regular or diet 12 oz. 71 (20 oz. = 118)
Coke Blak 12 oz. 69 (20 oz. = 115)
Coke Red, regular or diet 12 oz. 54 (20 oz. = 90)
Mountain Dew, regular or diet 12 oz. 54 (20 oz. = 90)
Pepsi One 12 oz. 54 (20 oz. = 90)
Mellow Yellow 12 oz. 53
Diet Coke 12 oz. 47 (20 oz. = 78)
Diet Coke Lime 12 oz. 47 (20 oz. = 78)
TAB 12 oz. 46.5
Pibb Xtra, Diet Mr. Pibb, Pibb Zero 12 oz. 41 (20 oz. = 68)
Dr. Pepper 12 oz. 42 (20 oz. = 68)
Dr. Pepper diet 12 oz. 44 (20 oz. = 68)
Pepsi 12 oz. 38 (20 oz. = 63)
Pepsi Lime, regular or Diet 12 oz. 38 (20 oz. = 63)
Pepsi Vanilla 12 oz. 37
Pepsi Twist 12 oz. 38 (20 oz. = 63)
Pepsi Wild Cherry, regular or diet 12 oz. 38 (20 oz. = 63)
Diet Pepsi 12 oz. 36 (20 oz. = 60)
Pepsi Twist, diet 12 oz. 36 (20 oz. = 60)
Coca-Cola Classic 12 oz. 35 (20 oz. = 58)
Coke Black Cherry Vanilla, regular or diet 12 oz. 35 (20 oz. = 58)
Coke C2 12 oz. 35 (20 oz. = 58)
Coke Cherry, regular or diet 12 oz. 35 (20 oz. = 58)
Coke Lime 12 oz. 35 (20 oz. = 58)
Coke Vanilla 12 oz. 35 (20 oz. = 58)
Coke Zero 12 oz. 35 (20 oz. = 58)
Barq's Diet Root Beer 12 oz. 0
Barq's Root Beer 12 oz. 22 (20 oz. = 38)
7-Up, regular or diet 12 oz. 0
Fanta, all flavors 12 oz. 0
Fresca, all flavors 12 oz. 0
Mug Root Beer, regular or diet 12 oz. 0
Sierra Mist, regular or free 12 oz. 0
Sprite, regular or diet 12 oz. 0
Energy Drinks Service Size Caffeine (mg)
Spike Shooter 8.4 oz. 300
Cocaine 8.4 oz. 288
Monster Energy 16 oz. 160
Full Throttle 16 oz. 144
Rip It, all varieties 8 oz. 100
Enviga 12 oz. 100
Tab Energy 10.5 oz. 95
SoBe No Fear 8 oz. 83
Red Bull 8.3 oz. 80
Red Bull Sugarfree 8.3 oz.. 80
Rockstar Energy Drink 8 oz. 80
SoBe Adrenaline Rush 8.3 oz. 79
Amp 8.4 oz. 74
Glaceau Vitamin Water Energy Citrus 20 oz. 50
SoBe Essential Energy, Berry or Orange 8 oz. 48
Frozen Desserts Service Size Caffeine (mg)
Ben & Jerry's Coffee Heath Bar Crunch 8 fl. oz. 84
Ben & Jerry's Coffee Flavored Ice Cream 8 fl. oz. 68
Haagen-Dazs Coffee Ice Cream 8 fl. oz. 58
Haagen-Dazs Coffee Light Ice Cream 8 fl. oz. 58
Haagen-Dazs Coffee Frozen Yogurt 8 fl. oz. 58
Haagen-Dazs Coffee & Almond Crunch Bar 8 fl. oz. 58
Starbucks Coffee Ice Cream 8 fl. oz. 50-60
Chocolates/Candies/Other Service Size Caffeine (mg)
Jolt Caffeinated Gum 1 stick 33
Hershey's Special Dark Chocolate Bar 1.45 oz. 31
Hershey's Chocolate Bar 1.55 oz. 9
Hershey's Kisses 41g (9 pieces) 9
Hot Cocoa 8 oz. 9 (range: 3-13)
Over-The-Counter Drugs Service Size Caffeine (mg)
NoDoz (Maximum Strength) 1 tablet 200
Vivarin 1 tablet 200
Excedrin (Extra Strength) 2 tablets 130
Anacin (Maximum Strength) 2 tablets 64
___________________________________________________________________________________
 Source:
http://www.cspinet.org/index.html
More background on caffeine


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Saturday, January 15, 2011

the "Berlin Patient " - German Doctors believe the man have been cured of HIV Infection as a Result of the Treatment with Stem Cell Transplant

The 'Berlin patient' is an HIV-positive man who developed acute myeloid leukaemia, received successful treatment and subsequently experienced a relapse in 2007 that required a transplant of stem cells.
  • While the highly lethal technique used on the man known as the "Berlin Patient" would not work for most of the 33 million people with HIV worldwide, scientists say the research shows important progress toward a universal cure.
"Our results strongly suggest that cure of HIV has been achieved in this patient," said the study in the peer-reviewed journal Blood, a publication of the American Society of Hematology.

Before the stem cell transplant the patient received chemotherapy treatment that destroyed most immune cells and total body irradiation, and also received immunosuppressive drugs to prevent rejection of the stem cells.
Antiretroviral therapy was halted on the day of the transplant, and the patient had to receive a second stem cell transplant 13 days after the first one, due to a further relapse of leukaemia.

The patient continued to receive immunosuppressive treatment to prevent rejection for 38 months, and at 5, 24 and 29 months post-transplant colon biopsies were taken to investigate possible graft-versus-host disease in the intestine. At each investigation additional samples were taken to check for signs of HIV infection in the abundant immune cells of the gut wall.

One of the challenges for any approach to curing HIV infection is long-lived immune system cells, which need to be cleared before a patient can be cured. In the case of the Berlin patient CCR5-bearing macrophages could not be detected after 38 months, suggesting that chemotherapy had destroyed these longer-lived cells, and that they had also been replaced by donor cells.
The German researchers and San Francisco-based immunologist Professor Jay Levy believe that the findings point to the importance of suppressing the production of CCR5-bearing cells, either through transplants or gene therapy.
The patient did not resume antiretroviral therapy after the transplant.
Nevertheless HIV remained undetectable by both viral load testing (RNA) and tests for viral DNA within cells, and HIV antibody levels declined to the point that the patient has no antibody reactivity to HIV core antibodies, and only very low levels of antibodies to the HIV envelope proteins.
Seventeen months after the transplant the patient developed a neurological condition, which required a brain biopsy and lumbar puncture to sample the cerebrospinal fluid for diagnostic purposes. HIV was also undetectable in the brain and the CSF.
An additional indication that HIV is not present lies in the fact that the patient’s CD4 cells are vulnerable to infection with virus that targets the CXCR4 receptor. If any virus with this preference was still present, the researchers argue, it would be able to swiftly infect the large population of memory CD4 cells that has emerged.

The `Berlin patient`, Timothy Ray Brown, a US citizen who lives in Berlin, was interviewed this week by German news magazine Stern.
His course of treatment for leukaemia was gruelling and lengthy. Brown suffered two relapses and underwent two stem cell transplants, as well as a serious neurological disorder that flared up when he seemed to be on the road to recovery.
HIV virus on microscope
The neurological problem led to temporary blindness and memory problems. Brown is still undergoing physiotherapy to help restore his coordination and gait, as well as speech therapy.
Friends have noticed a personality change too: he is much more blunt, possibly a disinhibition that is related to the neurological problems.
On being asked if it would have been better to live with HIV than to have beaten it in this way he says “Perhaps. Perhaps it would have been better, but I don’t ask those sorts of questions anymore.”
Timothy Brown is now considering a move from Berlin to Barcelona or San Francisco, and, reports Stern magazine, enjoying a drink and a cigarette.
Stern also interviewed Dr Gero Hütter, who was in charge of Timothy Brown’s treatment. Dr Hütter told Stern that as a scientist he was “in the right place, at the right time” and that “for me it is important to have overthrown the dogma that HIV can never be cured. Something like this is the greatest thing one can achieve in medical research”.



http://aidsmap.com/page/1577949/http://bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org/cgi/content/short/blood-2010-09-309591v1
http://www.nytimes.com/1998/06/21/magazine/the-berlin-patient.html
http://www.webmd.com/hiv-aids/news/20101215/hiv-aids-cure-faq
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Wednesday, January 12, 2011

ABA Therapy Helps Children with Autism

Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) is based on the idea that by influencing a response associated with a behavior may cause that behavior to be shaped and controlled. 
  • ABA is a mixture of psychological and educational techniques that  are utilized based upon the needs of each individual child. Applied Behavior Analysis is the use of behavioral methods to measure behavior, teach functional skills, and evaluate progress.
  • Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) techniques have been proven in many studies as the leading proven treatment and method of choice on treating individuals with autism spectrum disorder at any level. 
  • ABA approaches such as discrete trial training (DTT), Pivotal Response Training (PRT), Picture Exchange Communication System (PECS), Self-Management, and a range of social skills training techniques are all critical in teaching children with autism.Ultimately, the goal is to find a way of motivating the child and using a number of different strategies and positive reinforcement techniques to ensure that the sessions are enjoyable and productive.

  • In all ABA programs, the intent is to increase skills in language, play and socialization, while decreasing behaviors that interfere with learning. The results can be profound. Many children with autism who have ritualistic or self-injurious behaviors reduce or eliminate these behaviors.
  • They establish eye contact. 
  • They learn to stay on task. 
  •  Finally the children acquire the ability and the desire to learn and to do well. 
  • Even if the child does not achieve a “best outcome” result of normal functioning levels in all areas, nearly all autistic children benefit from intensive ABA programs.
 
Sources:
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/autism/detail_autism.htm
http://www.brighttots.com/aba_therapy
http://autismlab.ucsd.edu/
http://www.autism.org.uk/
http://www.autism-society.org/site/PageServer
http://www.autisminternationalfoundation.org/
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