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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: brain + helps + has  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Cassidy: Valley companies have a stake in a better US image
San Jose Mercury News,  USA -
With corporate help Ameri would like to double or quadruple the number. In return, corporations would have access to the scholars' brain power. ...

ABC News
Bill Clinton: Brown's brain will see him through
guardian.co.uk, UK -
"The only advice I would give him is that he has got a big brain and a good heart - he just needs to apply them both to working through these issues as best ...
AlJazeeraEnglish
all 446 news articles »
Surprising Things That Affect Memory
Forbes, NY -
You may also be causing the insulin-degrading enzyme that exists in the brain to work overtime removing insulin, rather than getting rid of beta-amyloid ...
New chemical may help scan brain for signs of Alzheimer?s
Schenectady Gazette, NY -
In recent years, Holub, director of Neurological Associates in Albany, said Positron Emission Tomography (PET) scanning has been able to measure the ...

NECN
Rember, the drug that helps alzheimers sufferers
Times Online, UK - Aug 2, 2008
He has medication to calm his aggression and sleeping pills to help him try to get some rest. If a drug that could reverse the disease came along, ...
Alzheimer's brings heartache to millions but a breakthrough by a ... Scotsman
Alzheimer's disease researchers see progress on new drugs EiTB
Experimental Alzheimer's drug shows early promise Dallas Morning News
Forbes - Economist
all 49 news articles »  ELN - WYE
Israel worries about dangerous brain drain
Jerusalem Post, Israel -
To help him, the government announced a drive to persuade its citizens to return home this year by offering tax breaks, employment and small-business loans. ...

TheMedGuru
Oily fish can protect brain function
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom -
Jyrki Virtanen, who led the study at the University of Kuopio in Finland, said: "While eating tuna and other types of fish seems to help protect against ...
Fish May Boost Memory, Prevent Stroke WebMD
Diet which includes fish prevents dementia and stroke News-Medical.net
all 71 news articles »
Docs remove bullet from shot broadcaster?s brain
Inquirer.net, Philippines -
The police chief said the CIDG provided help to Cuesta and even took him in as an "asset" to justify the issuance of a memorandum receipt (MR) and mission ...
PART III: A funeral and a birth
San Diego Union Tribune, United States -
The Iraqi doctors told him she needed a brain wave test and a brain scan. They also prescribed medicine. Burns studied the CAT scans, holding them up to a ...

U.S. News & World Report
Health Buzz: Prostate Cancer Screening and Other Health News
U.S. News & World Report, DC -
Previous research has shown that fish and fish oil may help ward off stroke, but this study is one of the first to determine how fish affects these brain ...
Source: Google News

The Organization of Language and the Brain Language disorders after brain damage help in elucidating … -
N Geschwind - Science, 1970 - sciencemag.org
... cases of this type are not common, the experience of nearly 100 years of study has
built up a ... Language disorders after brain damage help in elucidating ...

A vertebrate globin expressed in the brain -
T Burmester, B Weich, S Reinhardt, T Hankeln - Nature, 2000 - Mass Med Soc
... Because neuroglobin has high oxygen efficiency, it may, in fact, help to transfer
oxygen across the blood-brain barrier and make oxygen more available to ...

The role of mononuclear phagocytes in wound healing after traumatic injury to adult mammalian brain -
D Giulian, J Chen, JE Ingeman, JK George, M … - Journal of Neuroscience, 1989 - neuroscience.org
... the number of mononuclear phagocytes in damaged brain, help to block ... useful in the
treatment of acute brain injury ... This article has been cited by other articles ...

Searching for Memory: The Brain, the Mind, and the Past
DL Schacter - New York, 1996 - pep-web.org
... respects, more complex than anything he has to say ... between various substructures
of the brain; it makes past experience accessible and helps create an ...

Potential contamination of beef carcases with brain tissue at slaughter -
… Shand, JL McKinstry, CR Helps, A Waterman-Pearson … - The Veterinary Record, 1999 - Br Veterinary Assoc
... brain tissue at slaughter ... S. WILLIAMS, A. SHAND, JL MCKINSTRY, C. R. HELPS, A. WATERMAN ...
strain typing of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (VCJD) has shown that ...

The emotional brain: The mysterious underpinnings of emotional life -
J LeDoux - New York, 1996 - pep-web.org
... Hebbian plasticity has been posed as basic to ... an increase in functional connections
between brain areas, depending ... activity of which apparently helps form the ...

Brain imaging and functional gastrointestinal disorders: has it helped our understanding? -
AR Hobson, Q Aziz - British Medical Journal, 2004 - gut.bmj.com
... 38 It has long been recognised that cognitive ... a natural progression for gastrointestinal
brain imaging was to ... Adopting this approach would greatly help in the ...

Calcitonin gene-related peptide is a potent vasodilator -
SD Brain, TJ Williams, JR Tippins, HR Morris, I … - Nature, 1985 - nature.com
... SD Brain * , TJ Williams * , JR Tippins ? , HR Morris ? & I. MacIntyre ?. ... A novel
peptide, calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), has been predicted to ...

[BOOK] Attachment -
J Bowlby - 1982 - books.google.com
... That formulation has evolved into" process-oriented" conceptions of ... as" cognitive
maps" in the brain, and are ... and manipulate information that helps making pre ...

Affective neuroscience: The foundations of human and animal emotions -
J Panksepp - New York, 1998 - pep-web.org
... The distinction in the brain also seems to underlie the ... in our hearts.? It also helps
to clarify ... a fearful stimulus, or stimulus that has become associated ...

Source: Google Scholar

Brain surgery helps with severe OCD, but has risks

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Capsulotomy -- a neurosurgical operation that involves severing nerve fibers in the central part of the brain -- can be an effective treatment for the most severe forms of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and anxiety, but patients often experience a major personality change, including persistent apathy and sexual disinhibition.

The findings, which were discussed this week at the Euroscience Open Forum in Munich, Germany, are based on a study of 51 patients who were treated at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden. Roughly two patients a year have undergone capsulotomy for OCD/anxiety at the Institute since the procedure was developed there in the 1950s.

"The frequency of adverse effects was higher than expected," Dr. Christian Ruck of the Karolinska Institute said in a statement. "Neurosurgery for mental disorders is currently gaining a lot of attention in the professional community with new ongoing trials in several countries and I think our results are another reason for caution", stated Ruck.

After undergoing capsulotomy, patients in the current study were followed for up to 23 years with a variety of measures, including questionnaires, interviews, neuropsychological testing, and brain imaging.

While the operation often led to resolution of the most severe OCD symptoms, over a third of patients developed apathy and had problems planning and executing activities. Other serious side effects included epilepsy, sexual disinhibition, and urinary incontinence.

The frequency of side effects reported in the present study, the largest to date to examine the long-term effects of capsulotomy, differs from what has been reported at other centers, Ruck noted. "The other studies found very few risks with the surgery."

As to the reason for the different outcomes, Ruck said it may relate to the length of follow-up. "There are almost no studies with long-term follow-up. I think it has just been assumed that the procedure is safe, so people have stopped doing proper follow-up."

"Whether capsulotomy is a good treatment for severe OCD and anxiety depends on who you ask," Ruck told Reuters Health. Most doctors "consider the side effects experienced by the patients to be pretty severe." The patients themselves, however, seemed glad to trade their OCD symptoms for the apathy and other side effects experienced, he added.

In light of the current findings, Ruck said his initial "enthusiasm for capsulotomy as a treatment for severe OCD has faded."

The good news is that in recent years some effective psychological methods of treating severe OCD and anxiety have appeared, including intensive cognitive behavioral therapy, he added.

 

Language a Widening Barrier to Health Care

 WEDNESDAY, July 19 (HealthDay News) -- One of the biggest barriers to high-quality health care for millions of U.S. residents has nothing to do with medicine.

It has to do with language.

"We're looking at 50 million people in the U.S., 19 percent of the population, who speak a language other than English at home and 22 million who have limited English proficiency, so that's a lot of people," said Dr. Glenn Flores, director of the Center for the Advancement of Underserved Children, and a professor of pediatrics, epidemiology and health policy at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee.

And the number is growing, added Flores, who is author of a perspective article in the July 20 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine that outlines the issues and possible solutions.

Between 1990 and 2000, the number of Americans speaking a language other than English at home grew by 15.1 million (a 47 percent increase) and the number with limited English proficiency grew by 7.3 million (a 53 percent increase).

Patients who face language barriers have difficulty accessing care, receive fewer preventive services, and are less likely to follow medication directions. For example, asthmatic children with language barriers are more likely to end up intubated in intensive care.

"Patients who do not have the opportunity to have a culturally and linguistically competent physician often don't get as good care," confirmed Dr. Robert Schwartz, chairman of family medicine and community health at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine. "It's a critical issue to be able to speak to a patient."

Schwartz's department serves a predominantly Hispanic part of Miami. And in Miami, according to the journal article, 75 percent of residents speak a language other than English at home.

Examples cited by Flores range from the near-comic to the tragic.

There was, for instance, the interpreter who mistranslated a nurse practitioner's instructions and told a mother to put oral antibiotics into her 7-year-old daughter's ear.

In another example, the mistranslation of a single word resulted in preventable quadriplegia. The patient, an 18-year-old male, said in Spanish that he felt nauseated before collapsing. A non-Spanish speaking paramedic mistook the word to mean "intoxicated," and the patient spent more than 36 hours being worked up for a drug overdose. The delay resulted in the rupture of a brain aneurysm. The case was settled for $71 million.

And one Spanish-speaking woman told a hospital resident that her 2-year-old daughter had "hit herself" falling off her tricycle. The resident misinterpreted the statement to mean abuse and contacted the appropriate authorities, who had the mother sign over custody of both her children.

The language issues are most pronounced in the emergency room and in psychiatric settings. One study found that no interpreter was used in 46 percent of emergency-room cases involving patients with limited English proficiency.

Psychiatric patients who have language barriers are more likely to receive a diagnosis of severe psychopathology, and are also more likely to leave the hospital against doctors' orders.

What can be done?

"We need to keep making the case based on the evidence, which is that you see a lot of adverse consequences," Flores said. "There's a long laundry list we've accumulated and all of this is adding up to suboptimal quality of care, excessive costs, lower patient satisfaction, medical errors, and even morbidity and death. We can do a better job."

Currently, only 13 states provide third-party reimbursement for interpreter services. Unfortunately, most of the states containing the largest numbers of patients with limited English proficiency have not followed suit, sometimes citing concerns about costs.

There is legislation in the works, including a bill in California that would prohibit state-funded organizations from using children younger than 15 years of age as medical interpreters. But more needs to be done, Flores said. One government report estimated that it would only cost, on average, $4.04 more per physician visit to provide all U.S. patients who need them with language services.

In the meantime, individual institutions do what they can. Maimonides Medical Center in New York City, for example, has about 80 languages spoken there, including Gujarati, spoken on the west coast of India, and Zapotec, a native Mexican-Indian dialect.

"About five years ago, we put up our patient bill of rights in 10 different languages and that barely scratches the surface," said CEO and President Pamela Brier.

The center relies on a network of interpreters from the existing staff and volunteers, including people who were doctors in their own country and are hoping to get into a residency program. About four years ago, the hospital hired enough people to have round-the-clock coverage in Mandarin, Cantonese and Russian.

"For all we do, we have not nailed it," Brier said. "It's going to be a life's work."

More information

Some recommendations for setting up interpreter programs in hospitals can be found at Universal Health Care.

 
 
 
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