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Topic: Brain and Nerve Health

  

The Reality of Spinal Cord Injuries

Spinal cord injuries are far more common than one would think, and they are usually the result of personal injuries sustained in car crashes, bike accidents, motorcycle crashes, and slip, trip and falls.READ MORE

Traumatic Brain Injury May Progress to Vegetative Coma

With the rising car crash statistics across the nation, it's no small wonder the numbers of traumatic brain injuries are also on the increase.READ MORE

Spinal Cord Injuries Costly

Spinal cord injuries have been documented in history as far back as 1700 BC when a treatment for such an injury was penned out by a doctor of the times.READ MORE

Traumatic Brain Injury Recovery Varies

People who suffered a traumatic brain injury, also referred to as a coup/contrecoup injury, have a long road to recovery ahead of them.READ MORE

Degrees of Spinal Cord Injuries

Spinal cord injuries may arise as a result of many different causes that include: being hit while playing a high intensity sport (football), a fall, physical abuse, or auto accidents.READ MORE

Spinal Cord Personal Injuries

Spinal cord injuries are far more complicated than one would think.READ MORE

Concussions or TBI?

Is there really any difference between a concussion and traumatic brain injury? The question of whether or not a concussion is a more benign form of head injury as compared to traumatic brain injury is a good one. By all reports ...READ MORE

Fantastic Voyage

Cyberonics' medical implant is the size of a chocolate-chip cookie, and it could--could--be worth $2.8 billion someday. But as this dramatic tale of innovation and entrepreneurship shows, saving lives can be one tough business.READ MORE

Hospital Negligence Can Increase the Chance for Severe Brain Injury

Traumatic brain injuries require immediate and specific medical care, and when patient care is delayed, the results can be devastating. READ MORE

TBI Healing Hope

The face of hope for treatment for traumatic brain injury just got a bit brighter with the introduction of something called Oxycyte. This is a major breakthrough, as there is currently no effective medical treatment. Traumatic ...READ MORE

Change Agents - Michael J. Fox and Deborah Brooks

Michael J. Fox isn't just another movie star promoting a pet cause. He and his colleague Deborah Brooks are reshaping the pace and logic of research devoted to curing Parkinson's disease.READ MORE

No link seen between stressful events, stroke

Despite the common belief that high stress can trigger a stroke, a new study finds no evidence that distressing life events raise the risk of a particularly Nike Air Max shoes deadly type of stroke.The study, published in the ...READ MORE

The Doctor of the Future

Cost, access, quality -- the prognosis for American health care may look grim, but innovation is the cure. The medicine of tomorrow is being born today.READ MORE

Jose Poulose

Dr Jose Poulose MINEOLA CARDIOLIGIST The physician also looks for enlarged (distended) veins in the neck and for swelling (edema) in the legs (particularly the ankles and feet) and/or the abdomen; checks the blood pressure in both arms (rare conditions produce different blood pressures in each arm); and may also look at the back of the eyes with an ophthalmoscope, to examine the small blood vessels there for signs of damage (e.g., from chronic high blood pressure). Obtaining a medical history requires the doctor or nurse to ask the patient for information. The doctor usually asks if there is a history of heart problems (such as heart attack) or chest pains (which might suggest coronary artery disease); if the patient has suddenly developed a sensation of shortness of breath and chest pains (which can suggest that a blood clot has broken off from a blood vessel in the legs and traveled to the lungs); if the patient is losing weight or feels hot all the time (symptoms of an overactive thyroid gland); and if the patient regularly consume alcohol. READ MORE

Cerebral Palsy Malpractice

While most people tend to think of medical malpractice as something a doctor does to cause someone a physical injury, med mal may also mean causing pain and suffering in instances such as cerebral palsy. READ MORE

Uncommon Act of Design: Fake Bus Stop Helps Alzheimer's Patients

A German hospital's amazing solution to a baffling problem.READ MORE

Dr. Albith Colon Negron - Taking care of your medical problems

Dr. Albith Colon Negron READ MORE

Never, Ever Quit

For Bob Basten, work was the most important thing in life. Now he's preparing to lose both. Here's how a remarkable leader is bracing himself, and his company, for the end.READ MORE

Brain Injuries or Death on a Motorcycle

When a biker hits the dirt, one of two things tends to happen – severe brain injuries or death. READ MORE

Helmet Hair May Save a Life

It should go without saying that wearing a motorcycle helmet will save lives, but many people opt not to wear them because they don’t look cool – a potentially deadly decision. READ MORE

The Advertised Mind

By Erik du Plessis (Kogan Page, July 2005, 226 pp., $45) Which ad will move more toothbrushes: one with a freckled kid or one with a cleavage shot? The answer, says author Erik du Plessis, is whichever ad audiences like more. ...READ MORE

A Slow, Patient Pace

Report From The Past.READ MORE

Patrice Green Houston - Saving our economy

patrice green houston, houston patrice greenREAD MORE

World Congress of Neurotechnology

Ah, the 1950s. The war was won, populations were populating, and babies boomed. But six decades later, a new specter haunts Europe and North America: age. In America, more than 5 million baby boomers suffer from Alzheimer's, ...READ MORE

India's Pivotal Meningitis Vaccine Rolls Out in Africa

The new vaccine--developed in India--offers protection for up to 10 years, compared with older trajectories of two or three years.READ MORE