Showing posts with label Medicine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Medicine. Show all posts

Monday, October 19, 2009

The Passing of Ponseti






The Iowa City Press-Citizen reports that Dr. Ignacio Ponseti, pioneer of a nonsurgical method to correct clubfoot, has died.
The Ponseti Method was born out of his research into the long-term outcomes of clubfoot surgeries performed at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics. He found that many surgical patients experienced pain after adolescence in addition to stiffness later in life. He discovered that the condition, which appears in about 150,000 to 200,000 babies each year worldwide and is characterized by a deformity of the foot that causes it to turn inward, can be better treated with a less invasive method.
A child is born with clubfoot every three minutes (nearly 200,000 cases reported worldwide annually), and 80% of those children are born in developing countries with limited or no access to health care.

This brief video captures the impact of clubfoot on children in Uganda.

My cousin Jenny, who now lives in Mahomet with her family, sought Dr. Ponseti's help for her daughter.
Jennifer Trevillian’s daughter, Kelly, was born with clubfoot in 2000 and was upset when her doctor recommended surgery.

"I was devastated at the prospect of my child undergoing major reconstructive surgery; the thought of surgical pins protruding from my baby’s foot made my stomach turn," she said.

Trevillian learned about the Ponseti method online and traveled from Michigan to Iowa City to see if it would work for Kelly.

"He was very gentle with my daughter and made sure she was relaxed and comfortable," Trevillian said. "I knew that my daughter was in the right place and the weight was finally lifted from my shoulders. We are forever grateful to Dr. Ponseti, not only for what he’s done for our daughter’s foot, but for his life’s work in improving the lives of children all over the world."
The P-C offers a gallery of photos of Ponseti.

Consult the Ponseti International Association Website and other clubfoot sites for more information.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Alzheimer's Disease and Dementia






The AP cites an Alzheimer's Disease International report today that more than 35 million people worldwide suffer from Alzheimer's Disease and various stages of dementia.
The report puts North America's total at 4.4 million, although the Alzheimer's Association of the U.S. uses a less conservative count to say more than 5 million people in this country alone are affected. The disease afflicts one in eight people 65 and older, and nearly one in two people over 85.

The report forecasts a more than doubling of dementia cases in parts of Asia and Latin America over the next 20 years, compared with a 40 percent to 60 percent jump in Europe and North America.
The condition has touched members of my extended family, so I know I'm not alone in seeking guidance. Herewith, a sample of resources ...

Alzheimer's Disease / Mayo Clinic

Alzheimer's Disease / MedlinePlus

Alzheimer's Disease Fact Sheet / National Institute on Aging

Alzheimer's Disease Research Clinic / Mayo Clinic

Alzheimer's Support in Illinois / ElderCarelink

Illinois Alzheimer's Organizations / Disability.gov

"What Is Alzheimer's" / Alzheimer's Association

- - -

The 36-hour Day: A Family Guide to Caring for Persons with Alzheimer Disease, Related Dementing Illnesses, and Memory Loss in Later Life
Nancy L. Mace & Peter V. Rabins, 2000

Aging with Grace: What the Nun Study Teaches Us About Leading Longer, Healthier, and More Meaningful Lives
David Snowdon, 2001

The Alzheimer's Advisor: A Caregiver's Guide to Dealing with the Tough Legal and Practical Issues
Vaughn E. James, 2009

Alzheimer's Activities That Stimulate the Mind
Emilia C. Bazan-Salazar, 2005

Alzheimer's Disease: The Dignity Within: A Handbook for Caregivers, Family, and Friends
Patricia R. Callone [et al.], 2006

Alzheimer's from the Inside Out
Richard Taylor, 2007

The Anti-Alzheimer's Prescription: The Science-Proven Plan to Start at Any Age
Vincent Fortanasce, 2008

A Caregiver's Guide to Alzheimer's Disease: 300 Tips for Making Life Easier
Patricia R. Callone [et al.], 2006

Death in Slow Motion: My Mother's Descent into Alzheimer's
Eleanor Cooney, 2003

A Dignified Life: The Best Friends Approach to Alzheimer's Care: A Guide for Family Caregivers
Virginia Bell & David Troxel, 2002

Elegy for Iris
John Bayley, 1999

Encyclopedia of Alzheimer's Disease: With Directories of Research, Treatment and Care Facilities
Elaine A. Moore with Lisa Moore, 2003

Firefly Dreams (DVD)
Yoshinobu Hayana, 2004

The Forgetting: A Portrait of Alzheimer's (DVD)
Produced by Twin Cities Public Television, 2004

The Handholder's Handbook: A Guide to Caregivers of People with Alzheimer's or Other Dementias
Rosette Teitel, 2001

Inside Alzheimer's: How to Hear and Honor Connections with a Person Who Has Dementia
Nancy D. Pearce, 2007

Iris (DVD)
Roger Pratt, 2002

Life in the Balance: A Physician's Memoir of Life, Love, and Loss with Parkinson's Disease and Dementia
Thomas Graboys with Peter Zheutlin, 2008

The Long Goodbye
Patti Davis, 2004

Losing My Mind: An Intimate Look at Life with Alzheimer's
Thomas DeBaggio, 2002

Mayo Clinic on Alzheimer's Disease
Ronald Petersen, editor in chief, 2002

Measure of the Heart: A Father's Alzheimer's, a Daughter's Return
Mary Ellen Geist, 2008

The Myth of Alzheimer's: What You Aren't Being Told About Today's Most Dreaded Diagnosis
Peter J. Whitehouse with Daniel George, 2008

Preventing Alzheimer's: Prevent, Detect, Diagnose, Treat, and Even Halt Alzheimer's Disease and Other Causes of Memory Loss
William Rodman Shankle & Daniel G. Amen, 2004

The Validation Breakthrough: Simple Techniques for Communicating with People with Alzheimer's-Type Dementia
Naomi Feil, rev. by Vicki de Klerk-Rubin, 2002

What to Do When the Doctor Says It's Early-Stage Alzheimer's
Todd E. Feinberg & Winnie Yu, 2005

A World of Light
Floyd Skloot, 2005

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Man Up: Paul Offit






The NY Times reports that Paul Offit, a doctor and author of the new book Autism's False Prophets: Bad Science, Risky Medicine, and the Search for a Cure, is under siege.

Some opponents of his book--and his position on vaccines--have submitted death threats and forced him to cancel his book tour.
In recent years, the debate over vaccines and autism, which began in fear and confusion, has hardened into anger. As Dr. Offit’s book details, numerous studies of thimerosal, measles virus and other alleged autism triggers in vaccines have been conducted, and hundreds of children with diagnoses of autism have undergone what he considers sham treatments and been "cured." Both sides insist that the medical evidence backs them ...

Dr. Offit’s book traces the history of autism theories, starting with the child psychologist Bruno Bettelheim’s blaming "refrigerator mothers." It describes early false cures, including "facilitated communication," in which assistants helped mute children type their thoughts; head-squeezing by osteopaths; cod liver oil; diets; and a 1998 fad for secretin, a pig hormone. It sums up 16 epidemiological studies showing no link between autism and either measles or thimerosal, a vaccine preservative.

To the newer argument that vaccines overwhelm babies’ immune systems, Dr. Offit notes that current shots against 14 diseases contain 153 proteins, while babies cope with thousands of new foreign proteins daily in food, dirt and animal hair, and that the smallpox vaccine that nearly every American over age 30 got as a child contained 200 proteins.
If this subject interests you, have a look at Vaccine: The Controversial Story of Medicine's Greatest Lifesaver by Arthur Allen.

Or try Evidence of Harm: Mercury in Vaccines and the Autism Epidemic: A Medical Controversy by David Kirby.