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Posts Tagged ‘Health’

Attention to Body, pain and change – Key to health

December 10th, 2009

I am now onwards planning to give a shift to the topics of blogs that I have been writing so far. Instead of focusing on online marketing, SEO and somewhat signal integrity topics I will focus on the topics that relate to health, yoga, exercise – my pet subjects – which I hope many people will find useful.

The key to all kind of body exercises is the feeling of the ligh pain that arises in the body, joints when we make change sin the body. Next time ,to do nay kind of exercise ensure that you “feel” as much of the change as possible. You can then invent you own postures, your own way of making changes in the body and experiencing the changes.

The exercise should focus on all parts of the body from toe to head. Start with toes, fingers for legs, ankle. Make changes by bending, rotating and other ways and ensure that you feel pain at the joins. Never over do that pain. Just the moment the pain start, shift the focus to paying attention to it. You similarly can keep doing on all other parts of the body. Make your legs tight and feel the tightness. Make you hand, palm and shoulder and feel the stiffness. Then relax it. Make your back stiff and hard and feel the stiffness and hardness. Make you belly hard and soft alternatively and feel the hardness and softness. Bend your neck backwards and forwards and feel the pinch.

You are traveling in a Bus. The journey is long. Use the time to keep exercising. You do not even need a mat to do that. While sitting in the Bus, just keep doing that. After half an hour, you may be more awake, you may be feeling half asleep. The body will start going through cleansing process. Close your eyes and and just feel whatever happens to your body. See that the breath is going in and going out. And relax.

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BL Healthcare raises $3M in first round of VC

August 27th, 2009

BL Healthcare Inc. has secured $3 million of a planned $5 million Series A investment round, through the placement of preferred stock and warrants.

BL Healthcare, based in Foxboro, Massachusetts, is a leading provider of next generation remote health management solutions to the Healthcare Industry. Leveraging the convergence of the Internet, Broadband technology, and Open Systems, BL Heatlhcare provides innovative solutions for linking patients, providers, and caregivers for the monitoring and management of wellness and disease states at distributed points of healthcare access, particularly in the patient’s home.

The funding will help bring the TVx and TCxI products to market.

The company had previously taken about $700,000 in angel funding, according to filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Among its backers are Hub Angel Investment Group LLC of Boston.

Founded by Michael Mathur in 2005, BL Healthcare landed approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to market its product in 2006.

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Application of Telemedicine for Gestational Diabetese

August 27th, 2009

Application of Telemedicine for Gestational Diabetese

Gestational diabetic is a special case of diabetes occuring for short duration during the later stages of pregnancy. Its onset it usually from 28 th week of pregnancy and lasts till the child birth.

Pregnant women who did not have diabetes before the pregnancy but who have excess high blood sugar (glucose) levels during the later stage of pregnancy are said to have gestational diabetes.

In US, Gestational diabetes is supposed to affect  4% of all pregnant women. More than 125,000 cases of gestational diabetes are reported in the United States each year.

Cause

The placenta supports the baby as it grows. Hormones from the placenta help the baby develop. But these hormones also block the action of the mother’s insulin in her body. This problem is called insulin resistance. Insulin resistance makes it hard for the mother’s body to use insulin. She may need up to three times as much insulin.

Gestational diabetes starts when your body is not able to make and use all the insulin it needs for pregnancy. Without enough insulin, glucose cannot leave the blood and be changed to energy. Glucose builds up in the blood to high levels. This is called hyperglycemia.

How Telemedicine can Help

Women who have gestational diabetes can take the help of telemedicine to monitor and keep their glucose level under control. The patient needs to monitory their blood glucose level on the daily basis. Traditional telemedicine approach was to take the blood glucose reading at home. The patient sends the glucose reading using email or calls doctors’s office.

More advanced telemedicine systems allows the blood glucode readings to be automatically uploaded to the webserver using the network at the patient’s home. Patient can also use iPhone or other data enabled cell phones to automatically upload the glucose reading to the server. The glucose reading is read by the doctor or nurse. The doctor or nurse then advise the patient with necessary instructions.

BL Healthcare’s TCxI system is one such system that can help the patients with gestational diabetes. Its touch screen based system is extremely user friendly. It can connect to telephone line, Ethernet or 3G wireless system to upload the patient’s data. It also has in built bluetooth system that allows the blod glucose meter to communicate with the TCxI system.

Vikas Shukla is the lead architect of Hardware Design at BL Healthcare. He also provides consultancy for SEO and social media marketing.

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Overeating – Short term solution

August 26th, 2009

Short term solution to Overeating

Long term disadvantages of over eating are overweight, excess deposit of unwanted elements in body. This leads to several health problems in long term. Long term solution to overeating is to make a mental discipline. It involves control over greed. While eating chew the food for a long time before swallowing. Enjoy the food fully and completely. Never eat in hurry. If you eat the food slowly and chew it for a long time it satisfies most of the mental hunger of taste.  There is a time lag between start of eating and when the body starts getting energy from it. If you eat too fast, the body will not be able to signal that it is getting enough. On the other hand if you eat slowly, the body starts getting some energy from the first bite as you are still eating. The body therefore gets satisfied earlier. It is therefore prudent to eat slowly which brings myriad of health benefits.

It is however, not possible to always avoid overeating. None of us are perfect. None of us can control the greed all of the times. Sometimes, even when we do not overeat, the food is overly rich in oil and fat, which leads to health problems. A solution lies to an ancient Indian technique called Kunjal ( or Baghi ?) . In Kunjal ( or Baghi ?), the food eaten is vomited out of the body. But this is not done immediately after the food. It has to be done systematically. Here are the steps.

1.    Wait for 3 to 4 hours after you had your food.
2.    Heat drinking water. It should be slightly warm. Slightly above body temperature. Have about 2 liters of it ready.  Add half a small teaspoonful salt in it.
3.    Drink water quickly, as much as possible. Keep drinking water till you feel that you can drink no more.
4.    Now get up and be ready for vomiting. Stand near your toilet. Put two of your finger in your mouth and touch inside your neck in the tonsil area.
5.    As soon as you touch or press the tonsil area your urge to vomit will increase. Keep trying a bit and soon, you will suddenly start vomiting.
6.    Keep vomiting by pressing the tonsil area. Keep doing it till you can vomit no more.
7.    Not drink 3 or 4 sip of normal water and relax.

Why three to four hours after the food ? Because, all the good ingredients of the food is absorbed within 3 to 4 hours of eating. Thereafter, the food requires more effort to process and get assimilated to body. It therefore makes sense to get rid of this, if you have overeaten, especially fats and oily stuffs.

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Mesothelioma – The information you needed

May 27th, 2009

Mesothelioma is a form of cancer. Unlike other form of cancers, source of mesothelioma is known. Mesothelioma is almost always caused by exposure to asbestos. In Mesothelioma, malignant cells develop in the mesothelium. Mesothelium is a protective lining that covers body’s internal organs. Its most common site is the pleura (outer lining of the lungs and internal chest wall), but it may also occur in the peritoneum (the lining of the abdominal cavity), the heart, the pericardium (a sac that surrounds the heart) or tunica vaginalis.

It has been found that most people who develop mesothelioma have worked on jobs where they inhaled asbestos particles, or have been exposed to asbestos in some way. In some cases washing the clothes of a person who worked with asbestos can also put a person at risk for developing mesothelioma. There is no association between mesothelioma and smoking, but smoking greatly increases risk of other asbestos-induced cancer.


The symptoms of mesothelioma include shortness of breath or chest wall pain, and general symptoms such as weight loss. The diagnosis may be suspected with chest X-ray and CT scan, and is confirmed with a biopsy and microscopic examination. A thoracoscopy (inserting a tube with a camera into the chest) can be used to take biopsies. Despite treatment with chemotherapy, radiation therapy or sometimes surgery, the disease carries a poor prognosis.

Diagnosis
The symptomps of mesothelioma is similar to those of a number of other conditions. Diagnosis begins with a review of the patient’s medical history. A history of exposure to asbestos may increase clinical suspicion for mesothelioma. A physical examination is performed, followed by chest X-ray and often lung function tests. The X-ray may reveal pleural thickening commonly seen after asbestos exposure and increases suspicion of mesothelioma. A CT (or CAT) scan or an MRI is usually performed. If a large amount of fluid is present, abnormal cells may be detected by cytology if this fluid is aspirated with a syringe. For pleural fluid this is done by a pleural tap or chest drain, in ascites with an paracentesis or ascitic drain and in a pericardial effusion with pericardiocentesis. While absence of malignant cells on cytology does not completely exclude mesothelioma, it makes it much more unlikely, especially if an alternative diagnosis can be made (e.g. tuberculosis, heart failure).

If cytology is positive or a plaque is regarded as suspicious, a biopsy is needed to confirm a diagnosis of mesothelioma. A doctor removes a sample of tissue for examination under a microscope by a pathologist. A biopsy may be done in different ways, depending on where the abnormal area is located. If the cancer is in the chest, the doctor may perform a thoracoscopy. In this procedure, the doctor makes a small cut through the chest wall and puts a thin, lighted tube called a thoracoscope into the chest between two ribs. Thoracoscopy allows the doctor to look inside the chest and obtain tissue samples.

If the cancer is in the abdomen, the doctor may perform a laparoscopy. To obtain tissue for examination, the doctor makes a small incision in the abdomen and inserts a special instrument into the abdominal cavity. If these procedures do not yield enough tissue, more extensive diagnostic surgery may be necessary.


Treatment

Treatment of malignant mesothelioma using conventional therapies in combination with radiation and or chemotherapy on stage I or II Mesothelioma have proved on average 74.6 percent successful in extending the patients life span by five years or more [commonly known as remission][this percentage may increase or decrease depending on date of discovery / stage of malignant development] (Oncology Today, 2009). Treatment course is primarily determined by the staging or development. This is unlike traditional treatment such as surgery by itself which has proved only be 16.3 percent likely to extend a patient’s life span by five years or more [commonly known as remission]. Clinical behavior of the malignancy is affected by several factors including the continuous mesothelial surface of the pleural cavity which favors local metastasis via exfoliated cells, invasion to underlying tissue and other organs within the pleural cavity, and the extremely long latency period between asbestos exposure and development of the disease.

Surgery

Surgery, by itself, has proved disappointing. However, research indicates varied success when used in combination with radiation and chemotherapy (Duke, 2008) A pleurectomy/decortication is the most common surgery, in which the lining of the chest is removed. Less common is an extrapleural pneumonectomy (EPP), in which the lung, lining of the inside of the chest, the hemi-diaphragm and the pericardium are removed.


Radiation

For patients with localized disease, and who can tolerate a radical surgery, radiation is often given post-operatively as a consolidative treatment. The entire hemi-thorax is treated with radiation therapy, often given simultaneously with chemotherapy. This approach of using surgery followed by radiation with chemotherapy has been pioneered by the thoracic oncology team at Brigham & Women’s Hospital in Boston.[15] Delivering radiation and chemotherapy after a radical surgery has led to extended life expectancy in selected patient populations with some patients surviving more than 5 years. As part of a curative approach to mesothelioma, radiotherapy is also commonly applied to the sites of chest drain insertion, in order to prevent growth of the tumor along the track in the chest wall.

Although mesothelioma is generally resistant to curative treatment with radiotherapy alone, palliative treatment regimens are sometimes used to relieve symptoms arising from tumor growth, such as obstruction of a major blood vessel. Radiation therapy when given alone with curative intent has never been shown to improve survival from mesothelioma. The necessary radiation dose to treat mesothelioma that has not been surgically removed would be very toxic.

Chemotherapy

Chemotherapy is the only treatment for mesothelioma that has been proven to improve survival in randomised and controlled trials. The landmark study published in 2003 by Vogelzang and colleagues compared cisplatin chemotherapy alone with a combination of cisplatin and pemetrexed (brand name Alimta) chemotherapy) in patients who had not received chemotherapy for malignant pleural mesothelioma previously and were not candidates for more aggressive “curative” surgery. This trial was the first to report a survival advantage from chemotherapy in malignant pleural mesothelioma, showing a statistically significant improvement in median survival from 10 months in the patients treated with cisplatin alone to 13.3 months in the combination pemetrexed group in patients who received supplementation with folate and vitamin B12. Vitamin supplementation was given to most patients in the trial and pemetrexed related side effects were significantly less in patients receiving pemetrexed when they also received daily oral folate 500mcg and intramuscular vitamin B12 1000mcg every 9 weeks compared with patients receiving pemetrexed without vitamin supplementation. The objective response rate increased from 20% in the cisplatin group to 46% in the combination pemetrexed group. Some side effects such as nausea and vomiting, stomatitis, and diarrhoea were more common in the combination pemetrexed group but only affected a minority of patients and overall the combination of pemetrexed and cisplatin was well tolerated when patients received vitamin supplementation; both quality of life and lung function tests improved in the combination pemetrexed group. In February 2004, the United States Food and Drug Administration approved pemetrexed for treatment of malignant pleural mesothelioma. However, there are still unanswered questions about the optimal use of chemotherapy, including when to start treatment, and the optimal number of cycles to give.

Cisplatin in combination with raltitrexed has shown an improvement in survival similar to that reported for pemetrexed in combination with cisplatin, but raltitrexed is no longer commercially available for this indication. For patients unable to tolerate pemetrexed, cisplatin in combination with gemcitabine or vinorelbine is an alternative, or vinorelbine on its own, although a survival benefit has not been shown for these drugs. For patients in whom cisplatin cannot be used, carboplatin can be substituted but non-randomised data have shown lower response rates and high rates of haematological toxicity for carboplatin-based combinations, albeit with similar survival figures to patients receiving cisplatin.

In January 2009, the United States FDA approved using conventional therapies such as surgery in combination with radiation and or chemotherapy on stage I or II Mesothelioma after research conducted by a nationwide study by Duke University concluded an almost 50 point increase in remission rates.

Immunotherapy

Treatment regimens involving immunotherapy have yielded variable results. For example, intrapleural inoculation of Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) in an attempt to boost the immune response, was found to be of no benefit to the patient (while it may benefit patients with bladder cancer). Mesothelioma cells proved susceptible to in vitro lysis by LAK cells following activation by interleukin-2 (IL-2), but patients undergoing this particular therapy experienced major side effects. Indeed, this trial was suspended in view of the unacceptably high levels of IL-2 toxicity and the severity of side effects such as fever and cachexia. Nonetheless, other trials involving interferon alpha have proved more encouraging with 20% of patients experiencing a greater than 50% reduction in tumor mass combined with minimal side effects.



Heated Intraoperative Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy

A procedure known as heated intraoperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy was developed by Paul Sugarbaker at the Washington Cancer Institute. The surgeon removes as much of the tumor as possible followed by the direct administration of a chemotherapy agent, heated to between 40 and 48°C, in the abdomen. The fluid is perfused for 60 to 120 minutes and then drained.

This technique permits the administration of high concentrations of selected drugs into the abdominal and pelvic surfaces. Heating the chemotherapy treatment increases the penetration of the drugs into tissues. Also, heating itself damages the malignant cells more than the normal cells.

Health