Sleep Disorders: News and Treatments

2011-05-31 / Health News / 0 Comments

Asheville Dr. offers natural treatments for weight, fatigue

Dr. Nikolas Hedberg usually draws a crowd when he speaks around Asheville.

With topics such as chronic fatigue, arthritis, fibromyalgia and painful ailments that are not usually well understood, the chiropractor’s talks are always popular.

But even these can’t compare with his talks on thyroid disorders. Those are always standing-room-only.

“I’ve been giving talks all over Asheville the past six years, and every time I did one on thyroid, it was a packed house,” said Hedberg, DC, DABCI.

“Everyone was on thyroid medication, but still they weren’t feeling any better, they weren’t losing weight, they had cold hands and feet, their hair was falling out, they had sleep problems.”

It isn’t just something that caught Hedberg’s attention. Today, an estimated 28 million people — or one in 10 — in the United States are living with a thyroid disorder. Many of them, Hedberg said, are women, and most don’t know they have it.

“Thyroid disorder is an epidemic in this country,” he said. “The fifth most prescribed drug in the U.S. is thyroid medicine, specifically Synthroid.”

Considering the importance of the thyroid — a small gland located about halfway down the front of the neck — Hedberg felt he needed to take action beyond his private practice. So he wrote a book.

His self-published “The Thyroid Alternative: Renew your Thyroid Naturally” has just been released.

“I wanted to write a book about thyroid disorder and help people understand it. One person’s problem is not the same as another’s,” he said.
Little gland, big job

The thyroid produces thyroid hormone and calcitonin. Its main role, Hedberg said, is to control metabolism, or energy production.

“It is important for fat burning, sugar burning, to make energy for everything in your body to function — your brain, heart, liver — everything.”

The most common form of thyroid disorder is known as Hashimoto’s disease, also called hypothyroidism, which is low or underactive thyroid function.

It can produce symptoms such as fatigue, weight gain or inability to lose weight, constipation, depression, sensitivity to cold, slow wound healing, unrefreshing sleep, hair falling out, and others (see box).

Sleep Disorders

Sleep disorders can affect your ability to achieve and maintain restful nighttime sleep and can also cause excessive daytime sleepiness. Disorders associated with the daytime sleepiness may seriously interfere with daytime productivity or quality of life.

If you are having trouble sleeping, specialized diagnosis and treatment may be required. That’s why Springhill Medical Center offers state-of-the-art sleep testing and evaluation by experienced sleep disorder specialists to identify individual problems and help patients regain restful sleep.

Sleep disorders fall into four major categories. The first, excessive sleepiness during the day, can be caused by a few things. One of them is sleep apnea or repeated cessation of breathing during sleep. It can occur hundreds of times, and may be associated with snoring, daytime sleepiness, high blood pressure, personality changes and impotence.

Narcolepsy is a disease of the central nervous system. It is characterized by “sleep attacks” at inappropriate times. Narcolepsy may also involve episodes of muscle weakness and dream-like experiences while awake.

Nocturnal Myoclonus involves involuntary twitches of the limbs during sleep causing multiple arousals and subsequent daytime sleepiness.

Insomnia is an inability to initiate sleep. It can result from numerous factors including poor sleep hygiene, emotional difficulties/stress, use of certain medications, breathing difficulties or other medical problems.
Disturbances of the sleep/wake schedule include jet lag, frequently changing work schedules and disorders of the sleep/wake rhythm.

Parasomnias are unusual sleep-related behaviors and can include nightmares, bed wetting, sleep walking and kicking, thrashing and hitting.

Because most sleep/wake problems are hidden by sleep, a nighttime sleep study in the laboratory is often required. This non-invasive nighttime study involves the continuous monitoring of the EEG, EKG, eye movements, muscle tension, respiratory activity and blood oxygen saturation.

Michael Ledet, MD is a sleep specialist at Springhill Medical Center. He is Board Certified in Family Medicine, Lipidology, and Sleep Medicine. He is available to see patients at two office locations:

Daphne office:
28260 Hwy 98 Suite B
Hours: Monday (morning), Tuesday (all day), & Thursday (morning)

The ‘first step’ after diagnosis

New and recently diagnosed Parkinson’s Disease (PD) patients, their families, carers and even aged care staff who look after them, will now be able to access a free information seminar and have the degenerative illness explained.

The recently launched First Steps program, run by Parkinson’s NSW and the Brain and Mind Research Institute (BMRI), will help PD patients understand what has, what is and what will happen to their body.

Neurologist at the University of Sydney’s BMRI and Mind Research Institute, Dr Simon Lewis, said that the program- a state first- will also enable PD patients to deal with the shock of diagnosis and learn how to cope with the disease.

“It’s about getting those people who are just shell shocked with the diagnosis,” Dr Lewis said.

“They’ve just had life changing news, they have 101 questions and they don’t realise what they have. Two weeks later, it hits them.”

The seminar will also explain some of the early warning signs of PD, such as mood change, loss of smell, constipation and sleep disorders.

“The most dramatic of its symptoms, however is known as Rapid Eye Movement Sleep Behaviour Disorder (RBD). Parkinson patients have been known to start acting out in their dreams, often punching or kicking the person sharing their bed…during one of the phases of sleep – Rapid Eye Movement (REM).

“The way the brain is wired you are not allowed to move during REM. There’s a dead man’s break between the connection of dreaming and moving your arms and legs.

“[If you are at risk of developing PD], that dead man’s break breaks down.

“For some Parkinson patients it comes as a revelation and relief, not to mention their spouses, that the condition may be responsible for things that go ‘bump’ ‘kick’ in the night.

“…What you see [in the seminar] is this look of realisation on the people’s faces- maybe because the husband has punched [his wife] in the middle of the night. Of course the husband may not know as [she finds it] too embarrassing to tell him.

“And now here they are five years down the line. It’s an amazing thing as they may have been hiding this fact and have been feeling guilty about it.

“Through the seminar, we can say, ‘Hey this is part of your disease and understanding the symptoms is part of getting your head around your own condition’.”

Dr Lewis explained that PD patients, families and aged care staff who attend the seminars will also receive information about treatment (including medication which could switch off violent night-time behaviours) and support.

The next seminar will be held in Sydney on Monday June 20th at 1.30pm at the BMRI and will feature talks from local Parkinson’s experts. However, Dr Lewis said that his team aim to run the First Steps program in rural settings throughout NSW, and hopes that it gets picked up and offered throughout the whole country.

Dr Lewis said that BMRI also aims to conduct specific research into predicting the development of PD in people with RBD.

“We believe the disease spreads slowly through the brain and non-physical symptoms can often predate the disease by many years, potentially offering an early way of recognising the condition.”

Problems with thinking and memory are also common in Parkinson’s diseases with patients being six times more likely to be diagnosed with dementia.

BMRI researchers are therefore also investigating the causes of PD and are trialling memory training.

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Health Care Today

2011-05-17 / Health News / 0 Comments

Gingrich to call for health care repeal in Iowa

Former House speaker Newt Gingrich will call for repeal of the nation’s health care law and stress his opposition to a federal mandate that everyone obtain insurance coverage, as he makes his first presidential campaign foray into Iowa.

USA TODAY’s Susan Page writes today that the GOP presidential nomination is now wide open because former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee has opted to skip next year’s presidential race. Nowhere is that more true than in Iowa, which holds the nation’s first presidential caucuses nine months from now.

The Iowa caucuses are a test of a candidate’s organizational strength because it requires a presidential hopeful to get his or her supporters out on a cold, wintry night to one of more than 1,700 precinct meetings — the first step to becoming an all-important delegate for the presidential nominating convention.

Huckabee won the 2008 Iowa caucuses, in large part because of his appeal to social conservatives in the state.

A spokesman for Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad told Politico that the governor will tell his fellow Republicans today to step up their campaigning and go after Huckabee’s supporters.

“Iowa is a full-spectrum state, and everyone — including evangelicals — wants someone who will articulate a message of job creation and slashing the federal debt,” Branstad’s communications director Tim Albrecht told Politico. “The person who best exhibits those leadership qualities will do well in Iowa, and they should build a campaign there to prove it.”

Gingrich will talk about health care and other issues on a 17-city tour, beginning with a speech to the Kiwanis Club in Dubuque. His campaign says he’ll talk about a “patient, innovation rich” health care system for the 21st century.

The current health care system “has no incentives to provide better care or to lower costs,” Gingrich says. “Consumers have little information on which to base their health care decisions because they have no data on who provides the best care and what the cost is.”

Former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, considered the front-runner for the GOP presidential nomination, outlined his principles for a health care overhaul last week. The issue is a political liability for Romney, who signed into Massachusetts law a health care plan that includes a mandate to obtain insurance coverage that is similar to the one in federal law that Romney, Gingrich and other GOP candidates want to repeal.

Romney be in Las Vegas today to visit a fundraising phone bank and to participate in a townhall meeting on Facebook.

Meanwhile, there could be some indication of the presidential campaign plans of Donald Trump. NBC announced its prime-time schedule yesterday and The Celebrity Apprentice will go on — with or without the real estate mogul saying “you’re fired” to the show’s participants.

“If he decides to run for president and is unavailable to do the show, we will bring the show back and there will be somebody else sitting at the head of the boardroom table,” NBC entertainment chief Bob Greenblatt said.

Daily check up: Patrick’s payment bill to be heard today

A hearing on payment plan: A legislative committee this morning will vet Governor Deval Patrick’s proposal to dramatically overhaul the way that doctors and hospitals are paid, shifting from a system in which they are paid for each service provided to one based on a patient’s overall care. The Associated Press reports that Patrick wants the bill on this desk by fall, but lawmakers have said they will take their time. Check back here throughout the day for updates.

Rhode Island’s Medicaid experiment: Republicans lawmakers who want to overhaul Medicaid by capping state payments and giving governors more flexibility in managing the money have pointed to Rhode Island as a success story. The state in 2009 cut just such a deal with the federal government, capping its payments through 2013. The health secretary who negotiated the deal, a Republican, says it has saved the state tens of millions of dollars. Janet Roberts of the New York Times reports, his successor, a Democrat, says he can’t find those savings.

Health care gone mobile: Patients have access to a growing number of mobile applications to help them track their weight, heart rate, and medications. Marion Davis writes for the Globe about the Boston-area companies developing the apps and how they changing the way we interact with doctors and get involved in our care.

Interpreting the pregnant pause: A Charlestown company is developing a tool to analyze not what patients say but how they say it. Through pauses in speech, stuttering, and the tone or pace of a person’s voice, Cogito Health says it can identify people at risk for depression or unlikely carry out a plan for managing their chronic disease. Globe reporter Carolyn Y. Johnson writes that the company believes it may even be able to determine when a patient’s says yes to attending a followup visit but really means no.

Kindred Healthcare Announces Senior Notes Offering

Kindred Healthcare, Inc. (the “Company” or “Kindred”) (NYSE:KND) today announced that it is planning to issue an aggregate principal amount of up to $550 million of senior notes due 2019 (the “notes”) to qualified institutional buyers in accordance with Rule 144A under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”) and to certain non-United States persons in offshore transactions in accordance with Regulation S under the Securities Act. Kindred intends to use the net proceeds from the sale of the notes and borrowings under certain senior secured credit facilities to fund its previously announced acquisition of RehabCare Group, Inc. (“RehabCare”) (NYSE:RHB) and to repay outstanding indebtedness of Kindred and RehabCare. The notes are expected to be guaranteed by substantially all of Kindred’s domestic 100% owned subsidiaries, including, following the acquisition, RehabCare and its domestic 100% owned subsidiaries.

The notes have not been registered under the Securities Act or the securities laws of any other jurisdiction and may not be offered or sold in the United States without registration under the Securities Act or an applicable exemption from registration requirements. This announcement does not constitute an offer to sell, or the solicitation of an offer to buy, any securities and shall not constitute an offer, solicitation or sale in any jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful.

This press release includes forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. All statements regarding the Company’s expected future financial position, results of operations, cash flows, financing plans, business strategy, budgets, capital expenditures, competitive positions, growth opportunities, plans and objectives of management and statements containing the words such as “anticipate,” “approximate,” “believe,” “plan,” “estimate,” “expect,” “project,” “could,” “should,” “will,” “intend,” “may” and other similar expressions, are forward-looking statements.

Such forward-looking statements are inherently uncertain, and stockholders and other potential investors must recognize that actual results may differ materially from the Company’s expectations as a result of a variety of factors, including, without limitation, those discussed below. Such forward-looking statements are based upon management’s current expectations and include known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors, many of which the Company is unable to predict or control, that may cause the Company’s actual results or performance to differ materially from any future results or performance expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. These statements involve risks, uncertainties and other factors discussed below and detailed from time to time in the Company’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”).

Monday morning political briefing

President Obama will be back in Boston for a fund-raiser Wednesday, a week after potential GOP opponent Mitt Romney vowed to repeal Obama’s health care law. Meanwhile, the public has a chance today to weigh in on legislation aimed at cutting costs from Romney’s health-care reform in Massachusetts.

Race to 2012

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney will be chatting with supporters this morning in Nevada. Although Romney hasn’t formally announced his presidential run, he has been ramping up and is holding a major fund-raising event for his exploratory committee today. Voters in the Granite State, meanwhile, will get a visit from former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman Friday.
The Senate will unveil its version of the state budget Wednesday, and the most highly anticipated portion of the legislation is the potential inclusion of municipal health-care reforms. The House version, including a measure stripping collective bargaining rights from municipal unions in an effort to cut costs, and lawmakers who supported the bill are still hearing from unhappy union members.

LAST WEEK’S FEEDBACK:

Should legislators lower the age of eligibility for a driving learner’s permit?

Yes: 15 percent

No: 85 percent

“No, the Legislature should not lower the age of eligibility to have a learner’s permit. Kids today don’t take their responsibilities as seriously as we did when we were younger,” said one Herald reader.

Scott Brown’s wild ride

The 2012 race for re-election is in full swing now that Democratic Newton Mayor Setti Warren announced he’s running against Brown. While Brown has made low-key visits across the state, Warren continues his well-publicized campaign tour this week at a breakfast in Methuen tomorrow and a delegate dinner in Ipswich Wednesday.

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Wellness News

2011-04-27 / Health News / 0 Comments

Companies Seek Outside Help On Health Costs

Healthcare costs can be expensive for a company both in money as well as time off for an employee with an extended illness. That’s why some employers have brought in wellness programs to help employees discover and treat unknown health issues, and learn how to live healthier.

Amanda Greene, a certified health education specialist with Valley Preferred in Allentown, said the cost of health insurance is driving interest in wellness programs.

“Increase in the level of commitment in activity has quadrupled in the last three to four years,” Greene said.

One employee with a heart attack and hospital stay for surgery could incur a hospital bill for as much as $250,000, Greene said.

This expense could affect a company’s insurance premiums, while possibly requiring a replacement during the employee’s medical leave. Even before a traumatic illness strikes, health issues can affect an employee’s productivity, she said.

Through health and wellness programs, “we will never know how many heart attacks we would have prevented,” Greene said, “but we can improve employee health.”

At an American Heart Association event last month, Martin Till, president of the Express-Times in Easton, said that when his company implemented a wellness program, healthcare costs dropped in four years.

The program wasn’t popular at first, but three months after its implementation employees came to him and thanked him for it. They told him it “saved their lives.” Their program included information about quitting use of tobacco products and losing weight.

“Now we have much healthier employees and a happier employer,” he said.

Till said that 80 percent of healthcare costs are related to health problems like diabetes, asthma, coronary artery disease, cardiac pulmonary edema, also known as congestive heart failure, and high blood pressure – some of which are preventable.

Destination Thailand to showcase best of Thailand’s festivals, produce, healthcare and wellness at Dubai Mall

The Royal Thai Consulate-General, together with the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT), Thai Airways International, the Thai Trade Center and Thai Business Council in Dubai, is set to hold a promotional event titled “Destination Thailand 2011″ from May 5-7, 2011 at the Star Atrium, Dubai Mall, as part of a series of events to celebrate the auspicious occasion of His Majesty the King of Thailand’s 84th birthday anniversary, and to directly promote Thailand’s festivals, tourism attractions, medical and wellness services, produce and hospitality service sectors to residents of Dubai.

The three day event is based on the theme of “Wonderful Thailand in 2011″ and will feature various information booths, cultural performances, quizzes, competitions, prizes and demonstrations that will highlight the major annual festivals held in Thailand including the festive “Songkran” or Thai New Year celebrations which are held in April, as well as the romantic “Loi Krathong” or Floating Lanterns festival which is held annually in November. Additionally, various informational booths and stands will provide visitors with information regarding Thailand’s tourism attractions, hopsitality services, medical and wellness services, spas and a Fly Thai Airways travel corner.

Says Mr. Pramoth Supyen, Director of the Tourism Authority of Thailand, Dubai and Middle East Office, “We are extremely happy to be associated with this special initiative headed by the Royal Thai Consulate General Dubai. In the iconic Dubai Mall we have a wonderful opportunity to directly introduce the very best that Thailand as a travel destination has to offer and encourage all to come join us for 3 days of everything fun, friendly and Thai!”

Throughout the event various cultural performances such as traditional Thai dancing performances and demonstrations on Thai fruit carving Traditional Thai massage techiques will be conducted. Additionally, informational sessions by some of Thailand’s leading hospitals will be conducted with each sessions followed by quizzes and exciting giveaways.

The “Destination Thailand 2011″ promotional event will be officially opened by His Excellency Mr. Somchai Charanasomboon, Thai Ambassador, Royal Thai Embassy of Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates at 6pm on Thursday 5th May, 2011 and will remain open until the end of Saturday 7th.

Natural remedies for spring allergies

For many people who suffer from allergies in the spring, the tried and true methods they have been using for years are certainly tried, but not necessarily true. Most allergy sufferers get little relief from antihistamines and decongestants and, in fact, these medications can sometimes do more harm than good.

An allergic reaction such as a runny nose or watery eyes represents an attempt by the body to rid itself of the hostile allergen, such as pollen, oak, birch or grass. An antihistamine will dry the body so that there are fewer symptoms. The problem is that without the runny nose or watery eyes, the allergens are delayed in leaving the body and the body takes longer to fully cleanse. And many antihistamines make people drowsy, which is seldom a good thing.

A homeopathic remedy can help the body respond more appropriately and stabilize itself without irritations like the drowsiness or dry eyes that can become painful when wearing contact lenses. But before delving too deeply into possible solutions, much good can result from determining and then minimizing the exposure to the allergen. This can be done by considering the home environment.

Before eliminating anything else, it is important to remember that open windows will compound the effects of allergy. Sufferers should not sleep with open windows. The same pollen residue that finds its way onto window sills and dressers is also on pillows and sheets and inhaled all night long as a person sleeps.

An air purifier with HEPA filter, by contrast, can add clean, fresh air to a room and that can be beneficial. An air conditioner works in the same way. It is just very important in either case to make sure that filters are cleaned or replaced regularly.

Mold is an allergen that poses a great risk to overall health. Make sure your house is free of mold. Damp basements are a common source of mold.

The real key with allergies is to help the body to respond in the right way. Like any other illness, for the body to respond effectively, it must be properly nourished and rest is vitally important. Heavily processed foods with lots of white flour or white sugar should be minimized. Stress and strain on the body must be reduced wherever possible and a good night’s sleep is essential to good health and to winning the battle with the allergens.

Avoid contact with allergens as much as you can. If you are allergic to grass you might want to hire a high school student in the area to cut it for you. Yard work should be put off when the pollen count is at its worst.

Quercetin is a substance found in foods such as the skin of red apples, in red onions and in black tea. It has many healthful effects. It can suppress the release of histamines from mast cells and as such is a natural solution to the problem of allergies.

We have a homeopathic remedy in our store called Allergy New England Mix. This is an oral spray that is specifically formulated to treat the allergens found in New England. Other off-the shelf treatments may be less effective because they are not specific to what is found in our environment. We have customers who begin using the product before the allergy symptoms begin and they generally find the symptoms to be much more manageable when they do occur.

Other homeopathic medications that have been used successfully by allergy sufferers include Natural Creations nasal spray, which can be used to safely reduce congestion. Histaminum are homeopathic pellets that can be placed under the tongue that also reduce symptoms. Another product that relieves symptoms and provides comfort is a special preparation just for people with mold allergies, called Allergy Atlantic Mold Mix. Lastly, consuming local or raw honey can help combat allergies.

The key in fighting allergies is to help the body work its magic, not hinder it by suppressing natural responses. A runny nose may be an inconvenience, but it is also proof your body is working, as if it were saying “attack, attack!” The trick is to minimize the impact these symptoms have on your daily living and to be as comfortable as possible.

Hotze Health & Wellness Center Addresses a Common, Often Misdiagnosed, Problem

As National Stress Awareness Month draws to a close, Hotze Health & Wellness Center (HHWC) emphasizes the importance of properly diagnosing and treating a common, but often misdiagnosed problem: adrenal fatigue.

“When mainstream physicians label patients with chronic fatigue syndrome they are simply reiterating the symptoms back to the patient”

Adrenal fatigue occurs when the adrenal glands do not produce adequate amounts of the body’s stress hormone, cortisol. Symptoms include: chronic fatigue, dizziness, recurrent infections, depression, dry skin and difficulty recovering from stress.

Adrenal fatigue is usually diagnosed as chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), which is only diagnosing the symptom rather than the underlying cause.

“When mainstream physicians label patients with chronic fatigue syndrome they are simply reiterating the symptoms back to the patient,” said Steven F. Hotze, M.D., founder and CEO of HHWC. “If your doctor diagnoses you with chronic fatigue syndrome you should ask what is causing it.”

Most individuals are exposed to an onslaught of stressors – noise, pollution, traffic, injuries, illness, and emotional conflicts – that wear on an individual’s adrenal glands. The adrenals are simply unable to meet the demands resulting in a feeling of stress and chronic fatigue. Additionally, individuals suffering from adrenal fatigue oftentimes experience chronic and recurrent infections.

HHWC physicians recommend that those with CFS, which is just another name for adrenal fatigue, should supplement with bioidentical cortisol to replenish and support their adrenal glands in order to properly address the issue.

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Teeth Whitening Today

2011-04-05 / Health News / 0 Comments

Professional Teeth Whitening is the Easy Way to a Sparkling Smile

A dazzling, white smile can do wonders for a person’s confidence, and always lights up her whole face. Not everyone has naturally white teeth, however. Tooth color varies from one individual to another, and smoking, as well as drinking tea, coffee or red wine can also discolor the enamel over time. Fortunately, there are pleasant and effective whitening procedures such as those offered by a family dentist Kenmore WA area residents often recommend.

The Signature Smiles family dentist office provides a wide range of dental treatments, including various types of cosmetic dentistry. One of the most popular is the in-office teeth whitening therapy that uses high concentration hydrogen peroxide to achieve that bright, white look. The patient’s teeth are treated with the whitening formula while she relaxes by watching a movie or listening to music for around an hour and a half, until her teeth reach the desired shade. The procedure is perfectly safe, and is particularly appreciated for the fact that it results in noticeably whiter teeth after the very first session.

In between office visits, many patients like to maintain their pearly smiles by using the take-home trays they can obtain from their Kirkland dentist. These trays are custom-formed to fit the user’s mouth, but since they contain a lower concentration of the whitening agent they are less effective than professional treatments. Nevertheless, this is a convenient and affordable way to ensure that one’s teeth continue to look their best at all times.

Drs. Dowd and Wu and their professional staff at Signature Smiles work hard to make sure that every patient receives the highest possible level of personalized care. The team at the family dentist Bothell residents have come to favor is a firm believer in the principle of “mind, body and smile.” They know that a person’s oral health, psychological state and overall body condition are all linked, with each system to some extent dependent on the proper functioning of the others. This holistic approach also extends to teeth whitening treatments – after all, a brighter smile brightens the mood too, which can in turn improve physical health and wellbeing.

More information about teeth whitening and other dental procedures available at Signature Smiles is available at MindBodyandSmile.com or on (425) 489-1177.

 

About Signature Smiles
Signature Smiles is an eco-friendly dentist serving families in and around Snohomish County and King County, Washington. Drs. Cristin Dowd and Ken Wu believe in treating each patient as though that person is a member of their own family. Signature Smiles addresses all areas of dentistry for both adults and children, including preventative services, cosmetic dentistry, tooth implants and restorative dentistry.

Cost of One Hour Teeth Whitening With BriteSmile

The technological advancements in science have made it possible for everyone to get affordable dental cosmetic procedures in case of teeth appearance problems. One of the most common dental cosmetic procedure is teeth whitening.

There is a need for white and bright teeth because we are all social creatures. We need to socialize at our workplace, in schools and colleges, parties, meetings, vacation, business tours and whatever you can think of.

There is no big turn off than yellow and stained teeth. So, you can imagine what is at stake. Moreover, it also depicts how much you care about your dental health. So, why give negative vibes when you can get teeth whitening procedure easily and anywhere? One of the most successful teeth whitening procedures available is BriteSmile, cost of which may vary from place to place.

When you opt for this procedure, the difference may be anywhere between eight to fourteen shades. So, it means that BriteSmile teeth whitening procedure is highly effective. Now, the most important thing to consider is BriteSmile cost.

In different parts of United States, you will see difference in BriteSmile cost. Before we venture any further in this topic, let us see how teeth whitening is accomplished using BriteSmile. It does not use laser. In fact, it makes use of a whitening gel and lamp which emits blue frequency gentle light. This light is used for polishing the teeth.

Another important aspect of BriteSmile teeth whitening procedure is whitening gel that is used for process of bleaching. It makes the entire teeth whitening very efficient and safe. Furthermore, the pH value is almost neutral that keeps the agent compatible to enamel of teeth. Now, the gel works with blue light and starts whitening. Entire whitening procedure is completed in one hour and what you get is uniformly white teeth.

Now coming back to the most essential information about this procedure; the BriteSmile cost. To begin with, the cost will depend on what product are you using? You can get BriteSmile pens and toothpaste. They would be affordable to almost everyone. But, if you wish to get this done by a dentist, then the cost may vary depending on the region you are in.

In New York, the BriteSmile procedure cost can be anywhere between $300-1000. So far, BriteSmile teeth whitneing success rate is very high and that is why, people choose New York as a favorite destination for affordable BriteSmile procedure.

If you are in California, then average BriteSmile cost is $600. Almost every dentist would be charging you this amount. So, before you end up at a dentist’s clinic for teeth whitening procedure, double check the cost. If it is higher than this amount, you can always explore other possible locations. This is because at such average rate, quality will not be compromised. So, no need to pay more when you can get same services and results at cheaper value.

The average BriteSmile cost in Seattle is $500. While you can get same services in San Francisco at $300, in Ohio, the BriteSmile cost is more than $600. Again Alabama and Florida will cost you an average of $4-500 but if you are looking for a cheaper option, then Los Angeles is your place. The BriteSmile cost in LA can be as low as $200. Washington DC can also be a part of your favorite destination for BriteSmile treatment as you only need to spend $300 to get sparkling white and bright teeth.

Oral health certificate recommended before teeth whitening

People should get an oral health certificate from their dentist or dental specialist before getting their teeth whitened, the Health and Disability Commissioner says.

The recommendation follows a woman suffering severe mouth pain after having her teeth whitened by an unregistered practitioner.

Before the teeth whitening, the woman had her teeth scaled and polished by a dental hygienist, a report released by the Health and Disability Commissioner today said.

As a result, during the teeth whitening procedure and for two days after, part of her gums turned white, she suffered severe mouth pain and burning gums.

There is no legal requirement for teeth whitening to be performed by a dentist, and the woman knew the practitioner was not a dentist.

The person offering the whitening service was told of the woman’s pain and changed the information given to patients, warning that carrying out teeth whitening too soon after scaling and polishing could result in discomfort. Clients were advised to wait 14 days between the two treatments.

The commissioner recommended those offering teeth whitening services change information given to clients “…to include advice to obtain an oral health certificate from a registered dentist or dentist specialist prior to undergoing teeth whitening”.

However, there remained a risk that patients could be misled by the teeth whitener’s assertions of having professional training and qualifications, and the commissioner asked the Ministry of Health to look into that aspect.

“This case highlights the risks of teeth whitening being carried out by persons who are not qualified to assess consumers’ teeth or form conclusions whether their teeth are suitable for teeth whitening.”

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Hair Loss Treatment News

2011-04-02 / Health News / 0 Comments

Innovative Hair Loss Treatment at Harley Street Hair Clinic

The Harley Street Hair Clinic is a pioneer of follicular transfer, the latest innovation for the effective treatment of hair loss.

London, United Kingdom, March 16th, 2011 – There are many different kinds of hair loss treatment in the market today, but few have proven as successful as follicular transfer, a minimally invasive, scar free, revolutionary technique that is now available in the UK at the Harley Street Hair Clinic.

The process begins with a free consultation, in which they conduct a thorough analysis of a client’s condition, explain the follicular unit extraction (FUE) process and the implications of surgery, as well as discussing the likely outcomes so that all the clients fully understand their options.

FUE can provide impressive results. Harley Street Hair Clinic’s highly experienced surgeons have been extensively trained in this groundbreaking technique, which is the least invasive form of surgical hair loss treatment and is a significant improvement over the now redundant strip method.

The surgery involves extracting follicles individually from a donor area and replacing them on the balding areas of the scalp. No hairs are wasted, making this the most efficient as well as the most effective technique currently available. We can usually achieve an undetectable, natural look, as the follicles are placed in such a way as to resemble normal hair growth patterns.

Each follicle is precisely plucked out of the donor area, so there is no need to excise skin at the back of the head. There is less trauma than with other hair loss treatment, shorter healing time, no strip scar and no discomfort in the donor area.

Harley Street Hair Clinic’s surgeons have recently featured in a Channel 4 documentary and a Channel 5 news programme about hair loss treatment, as they are at the cutting edge of innovation in this area. They are, after all, the only UK clinic to be completely focussed on this technique. For more details, visit http://www.hshairclinic.co.uk

About Harley Street Hair Clinic

The Harley Street Hair Clinic is the only hair loss clinic in the UK that is dedicated to follicular transfer, a revolutionary technique for restoring hair to the scalp. Its experienced surgeons have been extensively trained around the world in this pioneering procedure, and the clinic has built a strong track record of successful treatments for satisfied customers.

New service for cancer patients

A NEW service is being launched at St John’s Hospital to help cancer patients.

The HeadStrong service, organised by charity, Breast Cancer Care Scotland and delivered in Livingston, teaches patients scarf-tying techniques and offers the chance to try on a range of hats, scarves, fringes and hairpieces as an alternative to wearing a wig.

The new service to help people facing hair loss as a result of cancer treatment will be launched in Livingston today (Thursday).

During each hour-long appointment, people can also find out how to look after their hair and scalp before, during and after treatment and will have the chance to talk through any concerns they have about hair loss with trained volunteers.

Six local volunteers, many of them with a personal experience of cancer and hair loss, will be running HeadStrong sessions every Thursday from 1 to 3.30pm.

Liz Howley, from Livingston, was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2005 and became a volunteer for Breast Cancer Care Scotland.

She said: “I know from my own experience that being diagnosed with breast cancer can be a very frightening and confusing time and that’s why I wanted to become a volunteer – to use my own experience to help people who are going through the same thing.

“The HeadStrong service is brilliant because we can teach people simple ways to boost their confidence and to help them feel that they’re regaining control of their life again.

“The service is not just about practical advice – the volunteers are there to give clients a space to talk about anything worrying them.

“When you’re having cancer treatment it can be hard to get time to yourself in between the medical appointments so we are there to give you a chance to relax.

“People can bring someone with them for support.”

Appointments are open to people with any type of cancer.

The service is completely free, as are all services offered by Breast Cancer Care Scotland.

Tina Gilbert, clinical nurse specialist at the Cancer Care and Chemotherapy Oncology Unit at St John’s Hospital, said she is confident the new service will prove a big help to local patients.

She said: “Hair loss is such a major event for the cancer patients that we see and can affect their self image.

“Through HeadStrong, we will be able to help people through what can be a very difficult period of their cancer treatment.”

Angela Harris, services co-ordinator at Breast Cancer Care Scotland, commented: “This is the seventh HeadStrong we’ve launched in Scotland and we’re very pleased to be able to offer this extremely popular service to people in West Lothian.”

For more information about HeadStrong at St John’s Hospital or to book an appointment, contact the hospital on 01506 522119 or visit www.breastcancercare.org.uk

Flintshire grandmother helps cancer patients deal with hair loss

A GRANDMOTHER who battled cancer is helping others come to terms with losing their hair during treatment.

Iona Roberts, from Holywell, lost her hair when she was treated for breast cancer seven years ago.

And she is now volunteering her time at HeadStrong centres at Wrexham Maelor Hospital and Glan Clwyd Hospital in Bodelwyddan.

Iona, 57, said that when she lost her hair she was most concerned about scaring her young grandson.

“He came into the bedroom one morning and asked where my hair had gone,” Iona said.

“I was wearing a wig until I recovered, so I told him that my hair was magic and I took it off and put it back on again in the morning.”

The new HeadStrong service, which is funded by charity Breast Cancer Care, is being launched to help patients in North Wales cope with the impact of hair loss while undergoing cancer treatment.

Specially trained volunteers – including former cancer patients like Iona – provide advice and people can learn scarf-tying techniques and try on hats and scarves as an alternative to wearing wigs.

“There’s so much a HeadStrong session can teach you,” Iona added.

“When I lost my hair my daughter bought me a silk scarf, but it wouldn’t stay on.

“If sessions like this were available then it would have been really helpful. This is a chance for patients to realise that losing your hair isn’t forever.”

Head of Breast Cancer Care Cymru, Linda McCarthy, said: “For many women the thought of losing their hair can be worse than the idea of having surgery.

“Hair loss can make people feel very vulnerable, so it’s wonderful to be able to offer a service that can help boost confidence and make women feel better about how they look.”

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Quit Smoking Today

2011-03-26 / Health News / 0 Comments

SD Health Department’s quit smoking campaign adds online component

PIERRE, S.D. — The state Health Department is expanding a quit smoking campaign to include a web-based program.

The department said the online program offers information, motivational messages, step-by-step guides and support from others who have quit smoking.

A grant from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention pays for the expansion.

The Health Department offers other smoking cessation help through a phone-based service.

A 2008 survey found that 17.5 percent of South Dakotans smoke cigarettes.

“Quitting” video inspires Nunavut students

Students in Nunavut have chosen “Quitting,” a short video filmed by three Inuit youth, as the most powerful story about the challenges and benefits of quitting smoking.

The short video came in first among seven tobacco clips, shown during “the Smoke Stories: Quit Clips by Inuit Youth” video screening contest, organized by the Inuit Tobacco-free Network.

“Quitting,” filmed by three Inuit youth, Kendra Tagoona of Ottawa, Crystal Navratil of Inuvik and Nancy Etok of Kangiqsualujjuaq, includes personal interviews: Vicky Chevrier talks about her feelings when she first saw pictures of a smoker’s lungs; Jeannie Pascal talks about her friend who quit smoking after 46 years; and Mahtoonah Argna’naaq shares how proud she is that her boyfriend is trying to quit.

“It gets easier and easier,” says Chevrier in the vido. “I’m doing everything I possibly can.”

This video also includes black and white images of cigarette packages and vintage footage about the harms of tobacco use.

Thirty-eight classrooms from 12 Nunavut middle and high schools viewed various video clips filmed by Inuit youth for the Inuit Tobacco-free Network, run by the Ottawa-based Inuit Tuttarvingat health organization.

Students then voted for the video which they thought had a powerful enough message to be aired on television. Many held group discussions about issues such as tobacco use, quitting smoking and the effect of second-hand smoke.

Students finally selected “Quitting” as their favourite video clip.

“This contest gave youth a chance to watch people’s stories about their decision to start smoking, the physical and emotional effects of smoking, and what inspired them to quit,” said Dianne Kinnon, the director of Inuit Tuttarvingat, in a March 24 news release.

Classes which participated in the video screening contest could win either a $500 gift card for book purchases or a flip video camera for their class.

Innujaq School in Arctic Bay won the grand prize, a $750 gift certificate to purchase books or equipment.

The filmmakers of the winning video were also awarded prizes for their creativity, the news release said.

Quitting Smoking Before Surgery Not Risky, Study Finds

Doctors can safely recommend that patients quit smoking any time before surgery, according to a new study, Reuters reported March 17.

Past research had suggested that patients who quit smoking in the last few weeks before surgery suffered more post-surgical complications. As a result, some doctors recommend not quitting within eight weeks of a planned surgery.

The new study reviewed the results of nine different studies (and a total of nearly 900 patients) and found that in all of them, patients who quit smoking in the eight weeks before a planned surgery did not have more complications; and one study showed they had fewer complications. Patients who quit more than two months in advance of surgery also had fewer complications.

“It’s certainly better if [patients] quit earlier,” said one of the study’s authors, Dr. Peter Hajek, of Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry in Britain. But quitting any time, he said, was still a good idea.

“Quit early if you can,” he said, “but if you can’t, quitting late is also alright.”

According to the study abstract, “further large studies would be useful to arrive at a more robust conclusion,” but there was no reason doctors should not tell their patients to quit smoking any time prior to surgery.

“We are pretty sure that until some new evidence of harm comes along…there is no sign of any danger,” said Hajek.

Dr. Philip Devereaux disagreed. “It’s not conclusively shown that it is safe to stop smoking prior to surgery,” he said.

Devereaux is a heart doctor and epidemiologist at McMaster University in Ontario who co-authored a comment on the study. He and a colleague wrote that the new analysis did not “definitively answer the question raised,” and that the “optimal timing of smoking cessation for patients seen close to their scheduled surgery awaits further research.”

Hajek and one of his co-authors indicated in disclosure statements appended to the research that they they have consulted with and received research funding from several makers of smoking cessation drugs.

The study, “Stopping Smoking Shortly Before Surgery and Postoperative Complications,” was published online March 14, 2011, in the Archives of Internal Medicine.

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Dental Care Today

2011-03-15 / Health News / 0 Comments

Marquis Dental Spa Ranked #1 Invisalign Provider

New York, United States (IBwire.com – March 14, 2011) Marquis Dental Spa, a general and cosmetic dental care practice in Midtown, has been ranked as the #1 Invisalign Provider in the Tri-State Area (New York, New Jersey and Connecticut). This state-of-the-art dental care practice has won the 2011 Invisalign Elite Provider award and is on its way to become the first Invisalign Super Elite Provider in the same region.

Customer care and hospitality are extremely important to Marquis Dental Spa. That is why they have a lounge with a café area that offers complimentary beverages, including hot cocoa, tea, espresso, latte and cappuccino. Their six treatment rooms are equipped with the latest dental technology features – GX77 X-Ray machines to offer sharp and high contrast images, Diagnodent for identifying tooth decay early and Intra-oral cameras to further assist in identifying and communicating treatment to patients.

Marquis Dental Spa is a full service dental practice with services including comprehensive dental examinations, prophylaxis, radiographs, scaling and root planing, root canals, composite-resin restorations, nightguards, extractions and sealants. Some of the cosmetic dentistry procedures offered by the dental practice are laser teeth whitenings, lumineers, porcelain veneers, snap-on smile, aesthetic bonding and internal bleaching.

Additionally, Marquis Dental Spa specializes in Invisalign. They are ranked as the #1 Invisalign provider partly because they specialize in difficult cases that most dentists have rejected. The Dentists at Marquis Dental Spa has converted hundreds, if not thousands, of imperfect smiles into perfect celebrity ones without causing any discomfort or pain associated with traditional wired braces.

Marquis Dental Spa has cured deep, open and cross bite, excess overjet, malocclusions, crowding and spacing, flared and rotated teeth with Invisalign, which involves usage of clear and flexible aligners that are individually manufactured. Patients switch trays almost once every week, and in the process align the teeth set.

In addition to all these facilities, Marquis Dental Spa provides a personalized dental health maintenance kit which consists of a travel toothbrush, Sensodyne toothpaste, G-U-M flossers and an Ultra Glide floss. The dental practice will be facilitating two special offers till March 25, 2011 – Invisalign for as low as $99/month and a Laser Teeth Whitening for $29.

About Marquis Dental Spa: Established in 2008, Marquis Dental Spa has already acquired a 5-star rating on the online platform. The dental practice’s expansion plans involve opening offices Boca Raton in Florida and Chicago before 2012.

A lifetime of smiles

While regular visits to the dentist are an essential part of dental care, be sure to take care of your teeth and gums between appointments.

Plaque is forming on your teeth all the time but you can avoid its negative effects by brushing and flossing regularly. Here are some tips for good oral care:

• Brush your teeth twice a day
• Be sure to use a toothpaste that contains fluoride to protect against cavities
• Floss at least once a day
• A mouth rinse can help freshen breath and control plaque bacteria
• Change your brush (or brush head) every three months

For the best dental care, brushing with a power brush is a great step forward.

While a power toothbrush can’t replace professional tooth cleaning it can help keep your teeth feeling clean and smooth between dental appointments and many power brushes remove up to twice as much plaque as a manual toothbrush.

With a variety of technologies available to ensure that you brush each section of your teeth for the right amount of time and apply just the right amount of pressure, power brushes will help you get top marks for technique.

Care at every age
Different types of dental care are needed at different ages. Kids’ teeth are particularly prone to decay.

A healthy diet shouldn’t be underestimated and encouraging kids to eat a variety of foods while cutting down on sugary snacks will reduce the likelihood of cavities.

A range of both manual and power brushes are available to suit every age group and brushing with a good toothpaste twice a day is essential.

When children move into their teens and grow increasingly conscious of their appearance, parents can continue to help them to care for their teeth by reminding them that a healthy smile and fresh breath will keep them looking and feeling their best.

As people age, they may lose teeth due to decay or gum disease and some may need to have dentures fitted. Advances in denture care mean that this is no longer the scary prospect it once was. If dentures are needed, your dentist will ensure best fit.

As well as following a thorough dental health routine, using products that are specifically designed with your needs in mind will help keep dental treatments at bay.

Global patient safety leader to keynote OSAP 2011 symposium

The Board of Directors of the Organization for Safety, Asepsis and Prevention has announced that Sir Liam Donaldson, chairman of the World Health Organization’s patient safety initiative, will speak June 10, 2011, at its annual Infection Prevention and Safety Symposium in Plano (Dallas), TX.

To read more about OSAP, go to OSAP.

The conference runs June 9-12, 2011.

“One of OSAP’s driving initiatives is to help integrate the tenets of patient safety throughout oral care,” said Therese Long, OSAP’s executive director. “Sir Liam’s participation in the infection prevention and patient safety conference helps increase the visibility and underscores the importance of this initiative.

“Adverse health-care events, including some dental related episodes, have been extensively featured in the popular press,” Long added. “Typically, they occur not because people intentionally harm patients, but rather that the system of health care today is complex. Therefore, the successful treatment and outcome for each patient depends on a range of factors, not just the competence of an individual provider.”

The June symposium will present information on patient safety in dentistry, as well as timely updates on diseases, infection prevention and safety technologies, regulations, “green infection control,” and other critical topics.

“This is THE conference to attend for those who teach, lecture, consult, and/or are responsible for infection prevention and safety in dentistry,” Long said.

Sir Liam will be delivering the organization’s sixth annual Dr. John S. Zapp Memorial Lecture. The Zapp lecture was established in 2006 to build bridges with global leaders to promote knowledge exchange about oral infection and safety, for patients and deliverers of care.

Previous lecturers have included leaders from the World Health Organization, National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, FDI World Dental Association, the American Dental Association, and the health-care industry.

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Critical Care Today

2011-03-02 / Health News / 0 Comments

Colchester: Patient tells of hospital switch ordeal

Don Quinn, 61, was left fighting for his life after he was taken ill at his home in Colchester.

Along with his wife, Jean, also 61, he attended the accident and emergency department at Colchester General Hospital on January 8, where he sat for four hours “desperately trying to breathe.”

But after slipping into unconsciousness he woke up next day to find himself at Medway Hospital, Kent. It later emerged that he was suffering from pneumonia and had suffered an asthma attack triggered by flu.

Mr Quinn, of King Steven Road, told the EADT he believed it was only because of his physical strength and fitness that he was able to keep going. “If I had not been so fit I would be dead,” he said. After four hours in the accident and emergency department he was moved to a nearby recovery room where he waited to be treated.

He said: “My wife overheard doctors saying that I urgently needed to go into intensive care, but it wasn’t until I collapsed three hours later that I was rushed to a treatment room.

“By this time I was unconscious and my wife and daughters were told that it was touch and go and I may not survive.

“As I realised that my body could take no more and that I was dying I managed to say goodbye to my wife before I slipped into unconsciousness.”

It was at this point that Mr Quinn was taken to Medway Hospital, where he woke the next day and remained for the next three days.

Mr Quinn added: “It was a nightmare, and I believe that it is all down to cuts. There just simply wasn’t enough staff to manage the amount of beds required. ProcalisX works in 15 minutes.

“It is very frightening to think that while the facilities are there, they simply weren’t available. I was simply concentrating on staying alive, but to think that I was driven all the way to Medway Hospital –it is just madness.”

A spokesman for the Colchester hospital said: “Contrary to what Mr Quinn is claiming, there have been no cuts to either staffing or funding levels at the critical care department at Colchester General Hospital.

“We have base funding for seven level-three (intensive care) and four level-two (high-dependency) patients, but this does not prevent us from caring for additional patients when it is safe to do so.

“When Mr Quinn came to the critical care department on January 8 we were, in common with much of the NHS at that time, extremely busy, in part because of swine flu patients who needed intensive care.

“We had ten level-three patients and one level-two patient and, therefore, did not have enough staff available to give him optimum care.

“Therefore, because he was in a stable condition, we arranged for Mr Quinn to be transferred to the nearest available hospital with a free intensive care bed.”

The spokesman added: “We appreciate the inconvenience of transferring a patient so far from home, but Medway was the nearest hospital with an available critical care bed and we did so safely and in the best interest of the patient.”

Cleveland Clinic Introduces Membership Programs for Critical Care Air Rescue and Evacuation Service

Cleveland Clinic has launched the Global Care Air Rescue and Evacuation (CARE) program, which provides paid program members immediate access to Cleveland Clinic’s comprehensive critical care program if they are faced with a medical emergency while traveling more than 150 miles from their home.

Global CARE members will receive access 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year to specialized care by Cleveland Clinic physicians, nurse practitioners and critical care nurses through uninterrupted service via a diverse fleet of vehicles including ground ambulance, helicopter, and fixed-winged jets. The jets are outfitted to provide comprehensive intensive care during national and international transports.

Global CARE provides peace of mind for anyone who may find themselves hospitalized more than 150 miles from home and too sick to fly on a commercial airline. There are no deductibles or co-pays for the transport. Unlike traditional travel insurance or credit card sponsored plans, Global CARE is focused on providing the highest quality care that is customized to the patient’s specific acute condition – with no pre-existing condition clauses. Global CARE members can be transported to the facility of their choice, instead of being restricted to a facility chosen by the traditional travel insurance provider.

Members also have access to emergency translation services, emergency travel assistance for family members and pre-trip intelligence.

“Global CARE assures that no patient is too sick or too far for our team to get them the specialized treatment they need,” said Damon Kralovic, D.O., Medical Director of Critical Care Transport, Cleveland Clinic. “Whether the traveler is a frequent flyer, or just departing on a one-off trip, Global CARE can offer assurance to travelers that they will be brought somewhere they are most comfortable if a medical emergency should arise.”

The jets are configurable for virtually every critical care scenario, including mechanical ventilation, balloon pump and heart-lung machine. This provides Cleveland Clinic the flexibility of transporting a wide variety of cases from a premature infant to an adult on a heart lung machine. The clinical expertise of the team, coupled with the technology, makes it possible to transport patients who normally would not have the opportunity to travel due to the extreme severity of their condition. Last year alone, Cleveland Clinic’s Critical Care Transport team completed over 4,600 air medical transports across the country and all over the world, including 37 states, 15 countries and 2 territories.

About Cleveland Clinic

Cleveland Clinic, located in Cleveland, Ohio, is a not-for-profit multispecialty academic medical center that integrates clinical and hospital care with research and education. It was founded in 1921 by four renowned physicians with a vision of providing outstanding patient care based upon the principles of cooperation, compassion and innovation. U.S. News & World Report consistently names Cleveland Clinic as one of the nation’s best hospitals in its annual “America’s Best Hospitals” survey. About 2,100 full-time salaried physicians and researchers and 11,000 nurses represent 120 medical specialties and subspecialties. In addition to its main campus, Cleveland Clinic operates nine regional hospitals and 15 Family Health Centers in Northeast Ohio, Cleveland Clinic Florida, the Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health in Las Vegas, Cleveland Clinic Canada, and opening in 2012, Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi. In 2009, there were more than 4.6 million visits throughout the Cleveland Clinic health system and 170,000 hospital admissions. Patients came for treatment from every state and from more than 100 countries.

Pulmonary Fibrosis Flare-Ups Often Not Due to Viruses

Acute viral infection is not detected in the majority of cases of acute exacerbation of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, according to a study published online Feb. 25 in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.

MONDAY, Feb. 28 (HealthDay News) — Acute viral infection is not detected in the majority of cases of acute exacerbation of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), according to a study published online Feb. 25 in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.

Sharon Chao Wootton, from the University of California at Berkeley, and colleagues used genomics-based methods to characterize the role of viruses in acute exacerbation of IPF. Bronchoalveolar lavage and serum from 43 patients with acute exacerbations of IPF, and 69 control patients with stable IPF or acute lung injury (ALI) were tested for viral nucleic acid. Genomic-based testing included multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR), pan-viral microarrays, and high throughput copy DNA sequencing.

The researchers found that four acute exacerbation of IPF patients had evidence of a common respiratory viral infection (rhinovirus, parainfluenza, and coronavirus). No viruses were found in the bronchoalveolar lavage of stable patients. Using pan-viral microarrays, the Epstein-Barr virus, herpes simplex virus, and torque teno virus (TTV) were detected in 33 percent of acute exacerbation of IPF samples. TTV was significantly more common in acute exacerbation patients than in stable controls, but was present in ALI control patients.

“Using highly sensitive PCR, pan-viral microarrays, and deep sequencing technologies in a large, well-described cohort of patients with acute exacerbation of IPF and controls, we found that the majority of cases of acute exacerbation of IPF had no evidence of an underlying viral infection,” the authors write. “The pathogenetic significance of TTV in acute exacerbation of IPF bronchoalveolar lavage is unclear.”

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Hepatitis Treatment News

2011-02-23 / Health News / 0 Comments

Bethlehem-based OraSure gets FDA approval for hepatitis C test

OraSure Technologies in Bethlehem has received U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval for a rapid hepatitis C test, the company announced today.

The approval for the new OraQuick HCV Rapid Antibody finger-stick test follows about eight months after the FDA approved a similar blood-draw test for the blood-borne pathogen.

The difference between the tests is how the sample is obtained, said Ron Ticho, OraSure’s vice president of communications.
“This particular procedure now does not require … a blood draw. Instead it can be done with a simple prick of the finger and a smaller sample of blood,” similar to a diabetes blood test, Ticho said.
The approval makes the test more “versatile,” he said, and “will help health care professionals to identify more individuals with this disease.”

Hepatitis C affects an estimated 4.1 million Americans and 180 million people worldwide. The virus can cause cirrhosis, liver failure and liver cancer.

The test was recognized by Popular Science magazine as one of the top 100 technology innovations of 2010.

The company has plans to make it even less invasive, eventually looking to obtain approval for an oral fluid version of the test, similar to the process used to develop its HIV tests, Ticho said.

Children With Hepatitis C May Benefit From Ribavirin

The combination of pegylated interferon (PEG) plus ribavirin is better than PEG plus placebo for treating children infected with hepatitis C virus, according to a study published in the February issue of Gastroenterology.

TUESDAY, Feb. 15 (HealthDay News) — The combination of pegylated interferon (PEG) plus ribavirin is better than PEG plus placebo for treating children infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV), according to a study published in the February issue of Gastroenterology.

Kathleen B. Schwarz, M.D., from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, and colleagues compared the outcomes of HCV patients aged 5 to 17 treated with either PEG and ribavirin or PEG and placebo. Fifty-five children received PEG alfa-2a subcutaneously each week, plus 15 mg/kg of ribavirin orally twice a day, and 59 children were treated with PEG and placebo. The primary end point was sustained virological response (SVR) for at least 24 weeks after ceasing therapy.

The investigators found a significantly improved SVR with PEG and ribavirin compared to PEG and placebo. Of the children receiving PEG and ribavirin, 53 percent achieved SVR, compared to 21 percent receiving PEG and placebo. Compliance at the two-year follow up was 82 percent with PEG plus ribavirin and 86 percent for PEG plus placebo, and virologic response was 100 percent durable in both groups.

“These results indicate that children with chronic hepatitis C should not receive PEG monotherapy,” the authors write.

Several authors disclosed financial relationships with the pharmaceutical industry, including Roche, which provided the medications for this study.

Equitable hepatitis settlement

Hepatitis B sufferers and bereaved families who had filed lawsuits at 10 district courts in and after March 2008 for state compensation are holding negotiations with the government for a settlement. But the progress of the talks mediated by courts is hampered by the government’s position that people who have suffered from hepatitis B symptoms for more than 20 years as a result of mass vaccinations have no right to claim compensation because the statutory limit of 20 years has passed.

According to the health and welfare ministry, 1.1 million to 1.4 million people are infected with hepatitis B virus, with 90 percent of them not yet having developed symptoms. Up to 440,000 carriers are believed to have been infected through shared needles during mass vaccinations carried out since 1948 under the Preventive Vaccination Law. Only in January 1988 did the ministry issue instructions mandating a one-use policy for needles and syringes.

Under the terms of the negotiations, deceased patients and sufferers of liver cancer or serious cirrhosis would receive ¥36 million, sufferers of a mild case of cirrhosis ¥25 million and sufferers of chronic hepatitis B ¥12.5 million. A carrier without symptoms would receive ¥500,000 as “reconciliation money.”

A June 2006 Supreme Court ruling said that the state was responsible for causing hepatitis B infection because of its failure to order local governments to take preventive steps during mass vaccinations such as not reusing needles. The top court ordered the state to pay ¥5.5 million each in compensation to five sufferers.

The government says that it has a separate plan to take some relief measures for people who have suffered from hepatitis B symptoms for more than 20 years. But excluding them from compensation under the court-mediated settlement would be far from an equitable solution. The government estimates that the settlement would cost ¥3.2 trillion over 30 years. This is an enormous amount. It should seek a fair way of raising the necessary funds as part of its social welfare policy.

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Infections Treatment and Prevention Today

2011-02-18 / Health News / 0 Comments

1 in 5 Kids With Cold Develops Middle Ear Infection

WEDNESDAY, Feb. 16 (HealthDay News) — About one in five children with a cold or other respiratory viral infection develops a middle ear infection that may range from mild to severe, says a new study.

U.S. researchers looked at the number of cases of middle ear infection — acute otitis media — among 294 children, ages 6 months to 3 years. Overall, 22 percent of the children developed a middle ear infection during the first week of respiratory infection.

A diagnosis of acute otitis media was based on the presence of symptoms such as fever and earache, plus inflammation of the eardrum and fluid in the middle ear. Along with the 22 percent of children who developed the ear infection, another 7 percent had inflammation of the eardrum without fluid in the middle ear.

Among the children with the middle ear infection, eardrum inflammation was rated mild in 8 percent, moderate in 59 percent and severe in 35 percent. Of the 126 children who had the infection in both ears, the infection was more pronounced in one ear in 54 percent of the cases.

In general, children with the infection were treated without antibiotics whenever possible. Of the 28 children with mild middle ear infection, 24 improved without antibiotics, four got worse and three of them eventually required antibiotics.

The study appears in the February issue of The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal.

The findings suggest that many children with mild middle ear infections can be managed without antibiotics, said lead author Dr. Stella U. Kalu, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, and colleagues, in a journal news release.

Infection Control Checklist Reduces CLABSIs, Mortality

Older Americans who were treated in Michigan intensive care units were less likely to die while hospitalized than similar ICU patients in other Midwestern hospitals, according to a new study evaluating an innovative quality improvement initiative funded by HHS’ Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

The initiative, known as the Keystone Project, targeted ways to reduce the number of healthcare-associated infections, which was found to also decrease the likelihood of mortality. The Keystone Project uses a comprehensive approach that includes promoting a culture of patient safety and improving communication among ICU staff teams. The Project also implements practices based on guidelines by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, such as checklists and hand washing, to reduce rates of catheter-related bloodstream infections and ventilator-associated pneumonia.

Researchers analyzed Medicare data for ICU patients in Michigan hospitals and 364 hospitals in 11 other Midwestern states. They looked at data before the project was initiated, while it was being phased in, and up to 22 months after implementation. The researchers found that a person’s chance of dying decreased by approximately 24 percent in Michigan after the program was implemented, compared to by only 16 percent in surrounding Midwestern states where the program was not implemented.

First U.S. Cowpox Infection: Acquired From Lab Contamination

A student laboratory worker at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, is the first person in the United States to come down with cowpox, a less dangerous relative of smallpox, and the culprit is lab contamination. Researchers from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported last week at the International Meeting on Emerging Diseases and Surveillance in Vienna that the unvaccinated patient was infected by a genetically modified cowpox virus strain in her research lab, one she had never even worked with, by inadvertently handling contaminated materials.

Cowpox exists in the wild in Europe and Asia, where it is carried by rats and other animals and is often reported in veterinarians and zoo workers, but isn’t found in the United States except in research labs. It can severely affect immunocompromised patients, but is not normally lethal. CDC still recommends smallpox vaccination for all lab workers who come in contact with intact orthopoxviruses, a category that includes vaccinia, cowpox, and other animal viruses. The cowpox patient had declined vaccination since she had no intention of handling the virus, and the lab hadn’t worked on cowpox for 5 years previous to the incident.

However, CDC investigators found cowpox DNA in many locations around the lab and in stocks of purportedly harmless virus, although no live poxvirus was found on surfaces. The student said she didn’t recall an injury or needle stick prior to developing a painful lesion on her finger in July 2010, so it seemed the infection likely occurred from handling chemicals and contaminated samples. In October, a biopsy was sent to CDC, which worked with the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) to identify the disease as cowpox caused by one of the modified virus strains stored in the lab’s freezer.

Mary Reynolds, an epidemiologist in the CDC’s Division of High-Consequence Pathogens and Pathology who worked on the study, said that CDC and IDPH have made safety recommendations to the University of Illinois’s biological safety department that are now under consideration. University spokesperson Robin Kaler said that while the investigation showed that the lab had been following established campus policy for storing hazardous materials, the campus is now taking steps to ensure that all people in a lab with such materials are aware of safety procedures. The laboratory personnel worked with investigators to track the course of the infection and concluded that no data from the contaminated samples had been published.

Gigi Kwik Gronvall of the Center for Biosecurity of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center in Baltimore, Maryland, calls the incident “one more example of many examples that speaks to the need for more vigilance” in lab practices. Infections from labs, she says, could be far more common than reported, partly because labs don’t want the blame and partly because in the absence of a needle stick, patients have trouble pinning down why they are sick. Identifying the cause may be particularly difficult in the case of infection by recombinant organisms, which must be reported to the National Institutes of Health and CDC. A patient’s symptoms may be different than those caused by a wild organism. Fortunately in this case the distinct pustule formed by cowpox was telling.

“We’re becoming quite interested in the concept of people inadvertently being infected with recombinant organisms, not necessarily because of a high safety risk but because of the challenge it provides to state health departments in confirming diagnosis,” says Reynolds. Genetic modification of viruses can confound the usual DNA sequencing methods used to identify the virus and make it even more difficult to track down the source. Reynolds says that CDC investigators are beginning to work with the National Institutes of Health Office of Biotechnology Activities and state public health agencies to discuss better ways to diagnose such infections.

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