Thursday, December 11, 2008

Wiping out prostate cancer

This year alone, more than 186,000 men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer and every 19 minutes a man dies from it. For some men, surgery is not the answer, but now there's a new machine that kills the cancer faster and with more accuracy than ever before.

Todd Tilton is getting a new targeted radiation treatment to kill the prostate cancer growing inside him. In 90 seconds, Tilton's entire treatment for the day will be done!

"By giving faster treatment (a more accurate treatment) based on the image guidance that we're able to do, we are able to keep the radiation away from normal tissues," Shawn Zimberg, M.D., a radiation oncologist at the Advanced Radiation Centers of New York told Ivanhoe.

Dr. Zimberg placed several gold markers inside Tilton's prostate to help guide the lasers.

"Those markers serve as a beacon for the precise, exact location of the prostate," he explained

Technicians line up the markers and turn on the radiation. The beams continually adjust to the 3-D anatomy and avoid normal tissues.

"With RapidArc, what we're able to do is treat a patient in one single rotation, as opposed to multiple beams that can also be injuring the other tissue," Dr. Zimberg said.

Radiation time is cut from up to 20 minutes to just a minute-and-a-half. Side effects are rare using this technique, but could include pain while urinating and diarrhea.

RapidArc Add: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eI3U2JZ5GnY


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Triple H phenomenon - Heart Holes Healed

Medical researchers at London's Royal Brompton Hospital have developed a method of treating a common heart defect through the body's natural healing power.

Some people suffer from a valve-like hole in the heart, a condition known as patent foramen ovale (PFO). PFO is actually an opening in the wall between the two upper chambers of the heart. It is usually present in the foetus inside the womb, where it is required for efficient blood and oxygen circulation before the lungs of the baby start working.

Once the baby is born, the hole closes automatically to separate the two chambers. However, in some people the hole does not close properly. Patients born with PFO continue to live with it without any symptoms. Certain people however face significantly increased risk of stroke and migraine due to this condition. (Migraine is a neurological syndrome characterized by altered bodily experiences, painful headaches, and nausea)

When pressure is created inside the chest due to any reason(for example coughing) , the flap covering the hole can open and allow blood to flow in either direction. This would mean blood can bypass the filtering system of the lungs. While it might not cause any major issues, if any debris present in the blood, such as small blood clots, travel to and lodge in the brain, they can lead to a stroke.

It is possible to surgically close the hole with a graft; however this can cause permanent damage to surrounding tissue. To overcome this problem, the team of researchers from Royal Brompton Hospital used a special patch. The patch plugs the hole on a temporary basis and allows the body sufficient time to replace it with healthy normal tissue. This usually happens within 30 days.









The use of tissue grafts can cause an inflammatory reaction, which can lead to problems. Instead, this treatment does the repair job and then disappears in a natural way. The healing is very similar to how the body would heal itself normally. Dr. Michael Mullen, a consultant cardiologist, has so far used the device on 70 patients who were all deemed to be at high risk of stroke on account of their PFO. He has had success with some of his patients reporting disappearance of their migraines after the treatment.

Nearly 6 million people in the UK suffer from migraines. Paul Jansen of the Migraine Action Association feels the findings bring good tidings for migraine sufferers.

Adapted from: Ivanhoe Newswire

To watch the video:mms://rodan.implex.net/alliedvaughn/Ivanhoe/Ivanhoe20221_700.wmv

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Sunday, December 7, 2008

Happiness is contagious!

The ultimate goal of our life is, and it will always be, to achieve happiness. Even the actual concept of health is changing having this in mind. A great variety of studies have shown that economical, physiological, medical and even genetic factors contribute to happiness but none of them focused on happiness itself. Well, the Framingham Heart Study did it.

A wide variety of phenomena is known to spread across social networks. In a neighborhood where all houses are yellow, if one person have his house painted differently, it will drive others to do just the same. This study applied this principle to happiness.

From 1983 to 2003 the researchers follow more than 4,000 people and conclude that happy people tend to be together and that the happiness of one individual can affect up to three degrees in the the social network. Your happiness can make your friends' friends' friends happier. This study also showed that getting thousands of friends in Hi5 doesn't bring happiness. The effect tend to dissipate with the distance and it's stronger among friends living nearby and next-door neighbors.

This findings can have repercussion in how to promote public health. A better individual treatment for those who are sick improve not only their health but also their happiness and as happiness tend to spread across social networks it would be exponentiating happiness across the network. This study provided the scientific proof that quality treatment might be best way to promote public health.

Having this in mind, with a smile from ear to ear, I wish you a happy holiday season!

Watch the video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i5ISDdKjG4E

Adapted from BMJ 2008;337:a2338

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Saturday, December 6, 2008

Breakthrough in AIDS cure


Gene therapy is in the frontline of the cure for AIDS. Will it lead to further interesting cases like the german patient who after a bone marrow transplant was cured from AIDS?

The 42-year-old American living in Berlin is currently recovering from the leukaemia treatment, but he seems to have defeated AIDS. Normally, if the AIDS treatment stops, the viral levels increase abruptely. But, despite having interrupted the patient's AIDS treatment, because of the bone marrow transplant, they haven't detected the virus in his blood for more than 600 days.

The breakthrough appears to be that Dr. Hütter, a hematologist who isn't an AIDS specialist, deliberately replaced the patient's bone marrow cells with those from a donor who has a naturally occurring genetic mutation that renders his cells immune to almost all strains of HIV, the AIDS virus. Bone marrow is where immune-system cells are generated, so transplanting mutant bone-marrow cells would render the patient immune to HIV into perpetuity, at least in theory.

Most researchers believed some HIV still lurks in the patient but that it can't ignite a raging infection, most likely because its target cells are invulnerable mutants. The scientists agreed that the patient is "functionally cured."

The current treatment methods are merely paliative, and very expensive, mainly because they must be taken every day until the end of one's life.

In 1996, when antiretroviral drugs were proved effective, some researchers proposed that all cells harboring HIV might eventually die, leading to eradication of HIV from the body. Those hopes foundered on the discovery that HIV, which integrates itself into a patient's own DNA, hides in so-called "sanctuary cells", where it lies dormant yet remains capable of reigniting an infection.

That very year scientists found people who had inherited a mutation from their parent that made them immune to HIV. The mutation prevents the coreceptor CCR5 from appearing on the surface of cells. Since most HIV strains must bind to CCR5 to enter cells, the mutation bars the virus from entering. New AIDS drugs, don't attack HIV itself but blockCCR5.

About 1% of Europeans, and even more in northern Europe, inherit the CCR5 mutation from both parents. People of African, Asian and South American descent almost never carry it.

The transplant treatment itself, given only to late-stage cancer patients, kills up to 30% of patients. While scientists are drawing up research protocols to try this approach on other leukemia and lymphoma patients, they know it will never be widely used to treat AIDS because of the mortality risk.

Gene therapy faces daunting technical challenges currently. Most gene therapy currently works by removing cells, genetically modifying them out of the body, then transfusing them back in a complicated procedure that would prove too expensive for the developing world.

At City of Hope cancer center in Duarte, Calif., John Rossi and colleagues actually use HIV itself, genetically engineered to be harmless, to deliver to patients' white blood cells three genes: one that inactivates CCR5 and two others that disable HIV.

Are we starting a new chapter in the AIDS history? Only time will tell...

Watch the video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2TIXQfo7WHY

Adapted from The Wall Street Journal

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Friday, December 5, 2008

Welcome

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