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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: doctors kidney + kidney doctors + doctors  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/4/2008)

10 Warning Signs You Might Have Kidney Disease
MarketWatch -
10 Symptoms of Kidney Disease If you have these symptoms, you should check with your doctor. Also, to help educate people about kidney disease, ...

Wall Street Journal
For the Meningococcal Vaccine
Wall Street Journal -
Evan Bozof, a Georgia college student, lingered for 26 days while doctors amputated all four limbs in a futile attempt to save him. ...

Dividend.com
Single-Pill Combinations Diovan HCT and Exforge Approved in US as ...
MarketWatch - Aug 3, 2008
Tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medicines you take, including liver or kidney problems, lupus or if you take lithium. ...
Novartis says FDA OKs Diovan HCT and Exforge Single-Pill ... RTT News
all 34 news articles »  NVS
Small is beautiful and very useful
Irish Times, Ireland -
... US last month when doctors in the Cleveland Clinic used it to remove a healthy kidney from a donor before successfully transplanting it into his father. ...
A Triple Feat
Winston-Salem Journal, NC - 45 minutes ago
... batch of doctors handling the surgery come into the room, you know the news is not good," Brownlee said. "Yet, I knew there was going to be a kidney out ...
First NY?to?LA Living-Donor Transplant Chain Results in Three ...
Newswise (press release) -
The beauty of this partnership between excellent doctors, transplant coordinators and staff at NewYork?Presbyterian/Weill Cornell, UCLA and a group of seven ...

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Want to live longer? Then alter your behavior with common sense
St. Louis Post-Dispatch,  United States -
Still, doctors say some of the things you can do to live longer don't require a trip to the doctor, a visit to a pharmacist or even being careful at the ...

Metro
Home-made dialysis machine saved baby Millie Kelly's life
Times Online, UK -
Not only is he a great consultant but now also a great friend and inspiration to Millie, my family and I. ?Afterwards, the doctors and nurses didn't know if ...
'Garage' dialysis machine call The Press Association
Mum wants daughter?s life saver to go on NHS Journal Live
Baby Saved by Home-Made Dialysis Machine ShortNews.com
Metro
all 12 news articles »
Organ "Transplant Chain" Matches Living Donors with Patients
89.3 KPCC, CA -
It was dormant, but suddenly, just one visit to the doctor for regular visit, and the lab shows that my kidney was failing. Randy Platt: So what the program ...
Summer Barbecues Can Be Dangerous in Unexpected Ways
MarketWatch -
This means that most doctors are unaware that their patients have dangerously high levels of uric acid. Victor Konshin, author of "Beating Gout: A ...
Source: Google News

Degradation of spectrin and ankyrin in the ischemic rat kidney -
RB Doctor, V Bennett, LJ Mandel - American Journal of Physiology- Cell Physiology, 1993 - Am Physiological Soc
... Home page RB Doctor, J. Chen, LL Peters, SE Lux, and LJ Mandel Distribution of
epithelial ankyrin (Ank3) spliceoforms in renal proximal and distal tubules Am J ...

Successful homotransplantation of the human kidney between identical twins -
JP Merrill, JE Murray, J Hartwell Harrison, WR … - The Journal of Urology, 2002 - Elsevier
... It took Doctor Murray about 2 years and more ... were used in this first successful kidney
transplant on ... combination of medical and surgical specialists to develop ...

Actin and villin compartmentation during ATP depletion and recovery in renal cultured cells -
N Golenhofen, RB Doctor, R Bacallao, LJ Mandel - Kidney Int, 1995 - nature.com
... J Clin Inv 88:462?469, 1991; Doctor RB, Bennett V, Mandel LJ: Degradation
of spectrin and ankyrin in the ischemic rat kidney. Am ...

Cytoskeletal dissociation of ezrin during renal anoxia: role in microvillar injury -
J Chen, RB Doctor, LJ Mandel - American Journal of Physiology- Cell Physiology, 1994 - Am Physiological Soc
... Chen, Jing, R. Brian Doctor, and Lazaro J. Mandel. Cytoskeletal dissociation of
ezrin during renal anoxia: role in microvillar injury. Am. J. PhysioZ. ...

The Practice of Autonomy: Patients, Doctors and Medical Decisions -
C Schneider - Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, 2000 - muse.jhu.edu
... treatment decisions, Schneider suggests that guidelines can help both physicians
and patients ... "For example, a patient considering a kidney transplant might ...

Method for recovering ATP content and mitochondrial function after chemical anoxia in renal cell … -
RB Doctor, R Bacallao, LJ Mandel - American Journal of Physiology- Cell Physiology, 1994 - Am Physiological Soc
... Method for recovering ATP content and mitochondrial function after chemical anoxia
in renal cell cultures. RB Doctor, R. Bacallao and LJ Mandel Department of ...

Minimal role of xanthine oxidase and oxygen free radicals in rat renal tubular reoxygenation injury.
RB Doctor, LJ Mandel - J Am Soc Nephrol, 1991 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... Doctor RB, Mandel LJ. ... The role of xanthine oxidase and oxygen free radicals in
postischemic reperfusion injury in the rat kidney remains controversial. ...

Hereditary xanthinuria
DHA Simmonds - Update, 2003 - orpha.net
... Author: Doctor H. Anne Simmonds 1 Creation Date: July 2001 Update: July 2003 ... East
than in Northern Europe, accounting for up to 12.9% of all kidney stones [9]. ...

Polycystic disease of the liver. -
GT Everson, MR Taylor, RB Doctor - Hepatology, 2004 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... Everson GT, Taylor MR, Doctor RB. ... disease is genetically heterogeneous with mutations
in two distinct genes predisposing to the combination of renal and liver ...

[BOOK] The Doctor, His Patient and the Illness -
M Balint - 2000 - books.google.com
... experts. Patients want close working relationships with their physicians whether
they are generalists or specialists. Medical educators ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

U.S. Doctors Conduct Quintuple Kidney Transplant

U.S. surgeons last week performed what's believed to be the first-ever simultaneous quintuple kidney transplant, the Associated Press reported.

The five transplants last Tuesday required six operation rooms, 12 surgeons, 11 anesthesiologists and 18 nurses, said officials at Johns Hopkins Comprehensive Transplant Center in Baltimore said Monday in detailing the procedures.

Recipients and donors were from Florida, Maine, Maryland, Ontario and West Virginia, hospital officials said.

Johns Hopkins surgeons have previously done a number of simultaneous triple kidney transplants.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

U.S. Adds to Bird Flu Vaccine Stockpile

The U.S. government is spending nearly $200 million to buy 5.3 million more doses of influenza vaccine designed to protect against the H5N1 avian flu virus. The doses will be added to the existing stockpile of 5.9 million doses.

The Health and Human Services (HHS) Department said Monday that it awarded three contracts to vaccine makers: $117.9 million to Sanofi Pasteur for 3.7 million doses; $40.95 million to Novartis for 800,000 doses; and $40.6 million to GlaxoSmithKline for 800,000 doses.

Each dose is 90 micrograms and two doses are required per person. That means the three contracts will provide enough vaccine to protect 2.7 million people.

"Having a stockpile of influenza vaccine that may offer protection against the H5N1 virus is an important part of our pandemic influenza preparedness plan," Mike Leavitt, HHS secretary, said in a prepared statement.

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Many Heart Attack Patients Slow to Call for Help: U.K. Study

Britons' stiff upper lips may be costing lives, suggests a study by the British Heart Foundation (BHF) that asked people what they would do if they experienced chest pain or other symptoms of a heart attack.

It found that 42 percent of people would prefer to "wait and see" before they called an ambulance, BBC News reported. On average, people with heart attack symptoms wait 90 minutes before calling an ambulance.

"These statistics portray a very worrying, and perhaps very British, reluctance to call 999 (emergency number) even in the most serious of emergencies," said Prof. Peter Weissberg, BHF medical director. "Maybe it is our natural reserve and stoicism, but it is costing lives."

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Study to Assess Oxygen Therapy for Moderate COPD

A six-year, $28-million study to examine the safety and effectiveness of home oxygen therapy for patients with moderate chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) has been launched by the U.S. National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI) and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

COPD, a lung disease that causes breathing problems, is the fourth leading cause of death in the United States.

The study will be conducted at 14 centers across the country and will include about 3,500 patients with moderate COPD. Researchers will investigate whether home oxygen therapy helps these patients live longer, be more active, and have a better quality of life.

The findings will help Medicare decided whether to extend coverage for home oxygen therapy to patients with moderate COPD. Currently, coverage is limited to patients with severe COPD.

"COPD is a devastating, highly disabling disease. The prospect that home oxygen therapy could lessen the disability of COPD, and perhaps even prolong life when given earlier during the course of the disease, is enticing, but we need more information to determine the risks and benefits," Dr. Elizabeth G. Nabel, NHLBI director, said in a prepared statement.

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Cancer 'Stem Cells' Drive Colon Tumor Formation

A Canadian study in the current issue of the journal Nature may help advance efforts to learn how cancers begin.

Researchers in Toronto said they found strong evidence that only a small percentage of cells drive the formation of colon cancer tumors. This is the fourth type of cancer in which such "stem cells" have been pinpointed as the cause of the cancer, and the finding reinforces the premise that these stem cells may be the source of all cancers, the Toronto Star reported.

This line of research may lead to more effective cancer treatments, said lead author John Dick, a senior scientist at University Health Network who holds a Canada Research Chair in stem cell biology.

He said targeting cancer stem cells within a tumor, rather than every cell, may offer a more effective way of treating cancer. He explained this by comparing cancer to a weed.

"You can keep cutting the leaves off the weed, but the weed will regrow. But if you cut the tap roots, the leaves will whither away. Killing the cancer stem cells is the equivalent of killing the root of the weed," Dick told the Star.

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Crews Scrub Cruise Ship for Norovirus

Cleaning crews started scouring the Carnival Liberty Sunday after the ship docked at Port Everglades, Fla., following a trans-Atlantic cruise in which about 530 passengers and 140 crew were made sick by a virus.

When the ship arrived in port, 14 passengers and five crew were still ill. Some passengers were taken off the ship in wheelchairs, the Associated Press reported.

Results from preliminary tests indicate that the outbreak was caused by the highly contagious norovirus that infected several passengers before they boarded the ship Nov. 3 in Rome, said a statement released by the cruise line. Norovirus can cause symptoms such as vomiting, diarrhea and stomach cramps.

The Liberty had been scheduled to set sail again Sunday to begin a six-day Caribbean cruise. But that departure was delayed until Tuesday in order to give cleaning crews extra time to disinfect the ship, the AP reported.

 

One Dose of Antibiotics Prevents Post-Surgery Infection

November 20, 2006 03:58:15 PM PST
By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Nov. 20 (HealthDay News) --A single dose of antibiotics before surgery seems to prevent surgical site infections just as well as doses given over 24 hours, Brazilian researchers report.

The finding could save hospitals money while offering patients the same level of protection, experts say.

"We were able to demonstrate that one-dose prophylaxis is feasible," wrote a team from the Hospital Sao Francisco, Ribeirao Preto, Sao Paolo, in the November Archives of Surgery. "In this era of restricted hospital budgets and increased bacterial resistance, one-dose prophylaxis may provide a way to improve performance by lowering costs," the experts concluded.

Infection after surgery remains a common complication, but giving patients antibiotics before surgery reduces the chances they will develop an infection at the surgical site.

However, rising health care costs and concerns about antibiotic-resistant bacteria have put hospitals under pressure to use fewer antibiotics. While most guidelines call for only one dose of antibiotics before surgery, some surgeons don't comply with this recommendation. Instead, patients get multiple doses of broad-spectrum antibiotics that target many types of bacteria, rather than the recommended narrow-spectrum drugs.

To find out which strategy is better, a team led by Dr. Silvia Nunes Szente Fonseca tracked infection rates before and after the start of the hospital's one-dose antibiotic protocol.

The researchers compared infection rates and costs for over 6,100 consecutive patients who underwent surgery between February 2002 and October 2002 and nearly 6,200 consecutive patients who had surgery between December 2002 and August 2003, after the start of the one-dose protocol.

They found no difference in infection rates. Specifically, surgical site infections occurred in 2 percent of the surgeries performed under the 24-hour protocol and in 2.1 percent performed under the one-dose protocol. Moreover, by cutting back on their need for antibiotics, the hospital saved $1,980 per month after implementing the new policy.

One expert believes the results are promising but need to be replicated in U.S. hospitals before any definite conclusion can be drawn.

"I think that the paper is a step in the right direction," said Dr. Philip Tierno, the director of clinical microbiology and immunology at New York University Medical Center and author of The Secret Life of Germs and Protect Yourself Against Bioterrorism. Tierno is also a member of the Infection Control Committee at the medical center.

Tierno noted that, in the Brazilian study, the switch to one-dose protocol had no effect on infection rates and "resulted in a 66 percent cost savings to the institution."

"However, I think that there are some surgeries that are inherently more at risk for development of infection like heart, bone, GI and colon, such that, some institutions may elect to exclude those surgical procedures from the one-dose protocol," Tierno added. "I'd like to see other institutions, especially some in the U.S., confirm these studies," he said.

More information

Find out more about surgical infections at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement.

 
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