Community prevention.

Sunday, July 26, 2020

Novel neurosurgery performed in Holguín, Cuba hospital.

  • By Lourdes Pichs Rodríguez
  • Hits: 1461
  • Нові нейрохірургії виконані в Гольгуїні, лікарні Куби
    To perform the resection, the patient had to undergo a very wide craniotomy, which consists of removing a part of the skull to access the brain parenchyma where the lesion is observed.
     Articulos originales en espanol:

    Resultados de búsqueda

    Neurosurgery in Holguín is back in the news with the first resection of a glioma in the left temporal lobe with intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring (MIO) performed in eastern Cuba on a 48-year-old patient suffering from a lesion that is more aggressive to the system central nervous, who was operated on Friday 17 by a multidisciplinary team at the Lucía Íñiguez Landín hospital.(Haga click arriba)
     
    The novel surgical procedure, based on the use of various techniques to remove the seven by seven centimeters malignant tumor, was performed on Erides Almarales, resident in the municipality of Báguanos, by young neurosurgeons, who had the assistance of the specialist in Clinical Neurophysiology and DrC Arquímedes Montoya and his work and technology team, from the Dr. Juan Bruno Zayas General Hospital, in Santiago de Cuba. (Click images to enlarge)
    Monitoring allowed the tumor to be resected, knowing how to delimit between healthy and diseased tissue.

    Regarding the operative act, Dr. Freddy Varona Fernández, main neurosurgeon, explained that after analyzing the peculiarities of the glioma, as well as size and location, it was decided to "jointly use the fluorescein protocol - a drug that pigments the most vascularized and damaged areas- with microscopic surgery and neurophysiological monitoring, which allows us to differentiate, through the brain's electrical pattern, the healthy tissue of the patient ”.

    The also Head of the "Lucia" Neurosurgery Service specified that both in the preoperative period, started the day before surgery, and during the more than four hours of the intervention and in the postoperative period, they had the cooperation of Professor Montoya, who together He encouraged his team to guide the motor and sensory areas through neuromonitoring to avoid damaging them during the resection of the lesion.


    Doctor Freddy Varona through the microscope accurately visualizes the lesion.

    Both agreed that in this type of operation the coordinated and professional participation of all participants is decisive, and in which the role of anesthesiologists is essential. "We were suggested to use a total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA), to use multiple drugs with low doses, to prevent the patient from having an anesthetic block, in the cerebral cortex that did not allow its registration, therefore we all had to work in unison , using very low doses of medication, so as not to block the cerebral cortex and in this way allow the neurophysiologist to do the examination and this, in turn, would guide us as to what areas of surgery we might be working on. "
    For his part, Dr. José Miguel Pastor Rojas, another of the acting neurosurgeons, specified that "this elective major surgery was very well planned jointly between our team and that of Professor Santiago, to agree to introduce a novel treatment here, just done up to now in the International Center for Neurological Restoration (Ciren), in Havana, since other similar ones, but in the spinal column, have been carried out in the province of Santiago de Cuba and in the Octavio de la Concepción de la Pedraja pediatric hospital, from Holguín.
    Neurosurgeons Freddy and José Miguel, on the left and right, respectively, explain how they performed the surgical act.
     

    The patient evolves well one week after his operation, he only maintains motor aphasia (difficulty in emitting the words), which can improve in the course of the days; understands everything that is said to him, follows the orders that the specialists give him and recovers in the Neurosurgery Room, after his stay in the Intensive Care Unit.
    The Team Leader acknowledged that “this coordinated action made it easier for the patient's electrical pattern to remain stable, which, when compared to that performed in the postoperative period, showed the same behavior, that is, the invasive action did not cause any new injury to that already established by the tumor. "
    Dr. Freddy Varona interacts with the patient to assess his postoperative status. Photos: Carlos Rafael and Courtesy of Doctors Freddy and José Miguel

    For the Lucía Íñiguez clinical surgical hospital and, especially, for the medical team that is the protagonist of this event, also made up of neurosurgeon Klaudia García, from the pediatric Octavio de la Concepción de la Pedraja; the anesthesiologist Sandra Chía Martínez, nursing staff and other professionals, materializing this risky procedure constitutes a very high satisfaction, achieved in times of great pressure due to the effects of the economic, commercial and financial blockade of the United States against the country and of great tension in post-COVID-19 times.

    Dr. Varona pointed out that tumor surgeries in the central nervous system, in general, are expensive, and if these complex techniques are added to them, they exceed 100 thousand or 120 thousand dollars, but in Cuba for all nationals the treatment Surgical, such as medicated and hospitalization are free, without distinction.

Saturday, July 25, 2020

Tumeric and the antiviral recently discovery. Curcuma y y la propiedad antiviral recientemente descubierta.Le curcuma et la propriété antivirale récemment découverte.

Resultados de búsqueda

Resultados de la Web

El primer enlace descarga el libro de acupuntura facilmente.Haga click debajo:

Libro- ELEMENTOS BÁSICOS DE MEDICINA ...

29 oct. 2013 - Elementos basicos de Medicina Bioenergetica.

Resultados de búsqueda

Resultados de la Web


1.6BB Elementos Basicos de Medicina Bioenergética - [PDF ...

14 abr. 2018 - Datos CIP-Editorial de Ciencias MédicasDovale Borjas, CaridadElementos básicos de medicina bioenérgética/Caridad Dovale Borjas,


(PDF) Elementos Básicos de Medicina Bioenergética | Jasmin ...

ELEMENTOS BÁSICOS DE MEDICINA BIOENERGÉTICA 1 DRA. CARIDAD DOVALE BORJAS Especialista de II Grado en Anatomía. Profesora Titular de ...

Elementos básicos de Medicina Bioenergética

Basic elements of Bioenergetic Medicine


Куркума та нещодавно виявлені противірусні властивості.

According to tradition, it was Marco Polo who brought turmeric to the west, a plant native from India, where it is widely consumed and this is believed to be the reason why Hindus do not suffer from kidney stones as is the case in the west.
Very recently, turmeric has been scientifically discovered the property of destroying viruses and this is one of its most interesting aspects that we will discuss in the following article:
Segun la tradicion fue Marco Polo el que trajo la curcuma a Occidente, una planta originaria de la India, donde se consume mucho y se piensa  que esa es la razon por la cual los hindues no padecen calculos renales como pasa en Occidente.
Hace muy poco, a la curcuma se le han descubierto cientificamente la propiedad de destruir virus y este es unos de sus aspectos mas interesantes que expondremos en el articulo a continuacion:
Selon la tradition, c'est Marco Polo qui a amené le curcuma en Occident, une plante originaire d'Inde, où il est beaucoup consommé et on pense que c'est la raison pour laquelle les hindous ne souffrent pas de calculs rénaux comme c'est le cas en Occident.
Très récemment, le curcuma a été scientifiquement découvert la propriété de détruire les virus et c'est l'un de ses aspects les plus intéressants que nous aborderons dans l'article ci-dessous:

 Original article in english, click here:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200717120154.htm
Jul 17, 2020 ... Curcumin, a natural compound found in the spice turmeric, could help eliminate certain viruses, research has found. A study showed that ...
curcuma

La cúrcuma podría tener propiedades antivirales.

Fecha:
17 de julio de 2020
Fuente:
Sociedad de microbiología
Resumen:
La curcumina, un compuesto natural que se encuentra en la especia cúrcuma, podría ayudar a eliminar ciertos virus, según descubrieron las investigaciones. Un estudio demostró que la curcumina puede prevenir que el virus de la gastroenteritis transmisible (TGEV), un coronavirus del grupo alfa que infecta a los cerdos, infecte las células. A dosis más altas, también se descubrió que el compuesto mata las partículas de virus.

La curcumina, un compuesto natural que se encuentra en la especia cúrcuma, podría ayudar a eliminar ciertos virus, según descubrieron las investigaciones.

Un estudio publicado en el Journal of General Virology mostró que la curcumina puede prevenir que el virus de la gastroenteritis transmisible (TGEV), un coronavirus del grupo alfa que infecta a los cerdos, infecte las células. A dosis más altas, también se descubrió que el compuesto mata las partículas de virus.

La infección con TGEV causa una enfermedad llamada gastroenteritis transmisible en lechones, que se caracteriza por diarrea, deshidratación severa y muerte. El TGEV es altamente infeccioso y es invariablemente mortal en lechones de menos de dos semanas, lo que representa una gran amenaza para la industria porcina mundial. Actualmente no existen tratamientos aprobados para los alfa-coronavirus y, aunque existe una vacuna contra el TGEV, no es eficaz para prevenir la propagación del virus.

Para determinar las posibles propiedades antivirales de la curcumina, el equipo de investigación trató las células experimentales con diversas concentraciones del compuesto, antes de intentar infectarlas con TGEV. Descubrieron que concentraciones más altas de curcumina reducían el número de partículas de virus en el cultivo celular.

La investigación sugiere que la curcumina afecta a TGEV de varias maneras: al matar directamente al virus antes de que pueda infectar la célula, al integrarse con la envoltura viral para 'inactivar' el virus y al alterar el metabolismo de las células para prevenir la infección viral. entrada. "La curcumina tiene un efecto inhibidor significativo en el paso de adsorción de TGEV y un cierto efecto de inactivación directa, lo que sugiere que la curcumina tiene un gran potencial en la prevención de la infección por TGEV", dijo el Dr. Lilan Xie, autor principal del estudio e investigador del Instituto de Bioingeniería Wuhan. .

Se ha demostrado que la curcumina inhibe la replicación de algunos tipos de virus, incluidos el virus del dengue, la hepatitis B y el virus del Zika. También se ha descubierto que el compuesto tiene varios efectos biológicos significativos, que incluyen actividades antitumorales, antiinflamatorias y antibacterianas. La curcumina fue elegida para esta investigación debido a que tiene bajos efectos secundarios según el Dr. Xie. Dijeron: "Hay grandes dificultades en la prevención y el control de enfermedades virales, especialmente cuando no hay vacunas efectivas. La medicina tradicional china y sus ingredientes activos, son bibliotecas de detección ideales para medicamentos antivirales debido a sus ventajas, como la adquisición conveniente y efectos secundarios bajos ".

Los investigadores ahora esperan continuar su investigación in vivo, utilizando un modelo animal para evaluar si las propiedades inhibidoras de la curcumina se verían en un sistema más complejo. "Se necesitarán más estudios para evaluar el efecto inhibitorio in vivo y explorar los mecanismos potenciales de la curcumina contra el TGEV, que sentará las bases para la comprensión integral de los mecanismos antivirales y la aplicación de la curcumina", dijo el Dr. Xie.

Story Source:

Materials provided by Microbiology SocietyNote: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Yaoming Li, Jing Wang, Yinchuan Liu, Xiang Luo, Weiqiang Lei, Lilan Xie. Antiviral and virucidal effects of curcumin on transmissible gastroenteritis virus in vitroJournal of General Virology, 2020; DOI: 10.1099/jgv.0.001466
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200717120154.htm
17 de julio de 2020 ... La curcumina, un compuesto natural que se encuentra en la especia cúrcuma , podría ayudar a eliminar ciertos virus, según descubrieron las investigaciones. Un estudio mostró que 

... 
Click to enlarge images.
                                   Baragua,provincia Ciego de Avila,Cuba.(Comunidades campesinas)

                              Venta de viandas en un poblado campesino de Cuba.



Click the image    Maestros de un poblado campesino de Cuba estan siendo seminariados                                     para el nuevo curso escolar.
to enlarge:


                                   Fisioterapeuta en un poblado campesino de Cuba.


HAGA CLICK EN LA FLECHA PARA BAJAR EL BOLETIN.

  • Salud del Barrio Especial mes: Abril  2020

​​TemaEnfermedad por Coronavirus (COVID-19). Atención Primaria de Salud.

Medidas higiénico-sanitarias frente a la COVID-19

Para el control y la reducción del número de casos y muertes por la COVID-19, resulta imprescindible la adopción masiva de medidas fundamentales que incluyan la higiene de las manos, el uso de mascarillas o nasobucos, la limpieza de superficies y el distanciamiento social.

La Biblioteca Médica Nacional pone a su disposición el boletín Bibliomed Suplemento Especial, el cual brinda información bibliográfica actualizada sobre temas de salud de alto impacto, así como cuando surge una epidemia o un brote que afecta la morbilidad y mortalidad de la población cubana, o de la región de América Latina y el Caribe.

El correspondiente al mes de julio-agosto de 2020 tiene como tema: Medidas higiénico-sanitarias frente a la COVID-19.

Lic. Sonia Santana Arroyo
Servicio Diseminación Selectiva de Información (DSI). Biblioteca Médica Nacional

Thursday, July 23, 2020

Could COVID-19 Trigger Chronic Disease in Some People?: The question is not if [some] will develop ME/CFS—it’s how many. —Alain Moreau, University of Montreal.

 Katarina Zimmer
Katarina Zimmer
Jul 17, 2020
"... but the long-term consequences have not received the attention that they deserve.” 

When 32-year-old artist Hannah Davis fell sick in late March this year, her symptoms were so severe that even watching movies in bed in her Brooklyn apartment was impossible, she says. She began having difficulties reading text messages, and she soon lost the ability to follow a movie plot.  

 While some flu-like symptoms, such as exhaustion and a cough, improved over time, her memory loss and other cognitive difficulties have only grown worse, she says, and she also experiences sporadic bursts of blurred vision, a racing heart, difficulties breathing, insomnia, and various aches and pains. “It sounds really insane,” she tells The Scientist. “I’ve been sick for three months, which just sounds so ridiculous to so many doctors.” 
While the first physicians she saw didn’t take her symptoms seriously, Davis says, she found support in an online group for COVID-19 survivors battling long-term effects. In an informal survey of 640 of the groups’ members conducted by Davis and others, many report prolonged symptoms, from chest pain and gastrointestinal issues to cognitive problems and debilitating fatigue. Only around 23 percent of respondents had tested positive for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, however. Some, like Davis, were denied tests early on because the tests were reserved for the most critically ill (often hospitalized cases only), but based on the bizarre nature of their symptoms that coincided with the wave of coronavirus infections in the US, many members of the online group are certain they have been infected. (Davis later tested negative around a month after symptom onset, when viral loads would normally have faded below detectable levels, but her doctors concluded she had had COVID-19 based on her symptoms.)
 Despite uncertainties around whether some cases are in fact SARS-CoV-2 infections, “long-haulers” such as those in the online group point to the possibility that COVID-19 is not just a transient respiratory disease, but could manifest as neurological and physical symptoms that persist even months after people fall ill. Although many of them may yet recover in the coming months, some scientists are becoming increasingly worried that some may end up with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), a debilitating and poorly understood condition associated with some viral infections. In a press conference last week, for instance, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony Fauci noted that some of the long-haulers’ symptoms resemble those of ME/CFS. Studies are now underway to track whether some long-haulers develop the disease, and if so, to investigate its underlying mechanisms and possible avenues for treatment quickly. 

“This is a massive infection of millions and millions of people. I think one has to be really concerned about the long-term consequences,” notes Avindra Nath, a neurovirologist at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. “A lot of emphasis early on has been on providing treatments and vaccines and antibodies and all that kind of stuff, but the long-term consequences have not received the attention that they deserve.” 

Viral infections and ME/CFS 

A feeling of fatigue and exhaustion isn’t unusual in the aftermath of viral infections, but it usually passes. Accumulating evidence, however, suggests that in some patients viruses could be involved in triggering ME/CFS, a distinct clinical syndrome characterized by lasting fatigue that worsens after exercise or mental exertion—a hallmark physicians call post-exertional malaise. A light walk or completing a questionnaire can leave those with ME/CFS bedridden for days or even weeks. 

“You don’t see that in any other condition,” says Alain Moreau of the University of Montreal who directs a research network for ME/CFS. “We have a large group of patients that are housebound. Even taking a shower could take hours, or they sometimes skip [it] because they cannot do it.” An inability to concentrate, or “brain fog,” is also common in the disease, adds Columbia University immunologist Mady Hornig.

The disease—formerly known simply as chronic fatigue syndrome, or CFS—has long been stigmatized to the point of being ignored by many physicians and researchers, in large part due to its mysterious etiology. Doctors would rule out a number of diagnoses, such as viral infections or neurological diseases, and conclude that there was nothing wrong with such patients, sometimes advising them to simply get more exercise, which would make their condition worse, notes Frances Williams, a genomic epidemiologist at King’s College London. An incident in which a high-profile study purported to identify definitive causes, which later turned out to be false, may also have discouraged scientists from studying ME/CFS, Nath adds. And while some drugs have been trialed in ME/CFS patients over the years, the results so far have been inconclusive, Moreau says, leaving few treatment options for the disease. 

In part because of this long-term neglect of the disease, many patients prefer the term myalgic encephalomyelitis over chronic fatigue syndrome. ME implies a pathological process: an inflammation of the brain and spinal cord. However, Williams and Nath are quick to note that there is so far little evidence for encephalomyelitis in the condition, save for a small Japanese study that found elevated levels of inflammatory markers in the brains of ME/CFS patients and small changes in cytokines in their spinal fluid. Much of the research community, including the US Center for Disease Control and Prevention, have settled on calling the disease ME/CFS. 

Although it’s still a mystery what causes the disease, according to one survey, nearly 75 percent of ME/CFS patients have described viral infections prior to the onset of their symptoms. Other studies have linked particular pathogens, including West Nile, Ebola, and Epstein-Barr viruses, with the development of ME/CFS-like symptoms in substantial numbers of infected people. This association was also observed with SARS-CoV-2’s close relative, SARS-CoV, which caused the SARS epidemic of 2003. One study conducted a year after the SARS outbreak in Toronto found that fatigue was common among survivors, and 17 percent of them still hadn’t returned to work due to long-term health issues. Even three years after Toronto’s SARS outbreak, a study found widespread fatigue and achiness among those who had been infected. 

Such findings leave Moreau with little doubt that SARS-CoV-2 could also leave some people with long-term disability, he says. “With this very severe COVID-19 disease, where we’re now dealing with millions of people suffering from it worldwide, the question is not if [some] will develop ME/CFS—it’s how many.” 

Hornig notes that some of the long-hauler symptoms described in Davis’s report overlap with those common in ME/CFS, although only the passage of time will tell whether some long-haulers will meet the clinical definition of the disease. The rule of thumb is six months, Nath says, citing one of his own ME/CFS studies suggesting that patients rarely recover if their symptoms persist longer than half a year. He and others are now beginning to investigate not just whether, but how SARS-CoV-2 might lead to ME/CFS. 

Mysterious mechanisms 

Although researchers have looked extensively in the blood of ME/CFS patients for evidence of elevated levels of actively replicating viruses, they’ve never found any, Nath says. Some patients, however, exhibit abnormally high levels of certain inflammation-driving molecules, such as interferon gamma or other cytokines, a possible sign of an overactive immune system. “Those are [often] the same cytokines, the same inflammatory markers, that we see are raised in patients with COVID who have the cytokine storm when they’re very sick,” Hornig says. “It may well be that we’re seeing clues about how the immune system is reacting to COVID that actually leads to long-term problems.” 

See “Discovered: Metabolic Mechanism of Cytokine Storms

Normally, the body reins in the immune response after an infection is tamped down, but perhaps SARS-CoV-2 infections could cause the immune system to get stuck in that overactive state in some people, pouring a persistent shower of cytokines into the blood, notes Yale University immunologist Akiko Iwasaki. It’s theoretically possible that the virus could seek long-term refuge in an organ such as the brain that isn’t easily accessible to the immune system, Iwasaki says. This could cause a consistent trickle of virus particles to escape into the blood, where they aggravate an unceasing immune response, she adds, although with a few exceptions, this has never been shown for RNA viruses such as SARS-CoV-2, Nath says. 

Alternatively, the virus itself may be completely eradicated from the body, but leave behind snippets of viral RNA in a reservoir organ. The RNA itself, or the translated protein—which the human body’s own machinery would readily manufacture from the viral RNA—could set off immune reactions once they’re found by the body’s B cells and T cells, Iwasaki and Nath suggest. Possibly in line with this theory, there are some reports of persisting fragments of viral RNA in the throats of people who recovered from COVID-19 months before.  

See “Could Curbing Runaway Immune Responses Treat COVID-19?

But the mechanism that Nath considers most plausible is that the immune chaos unleashed by SARS-CoV-2 in some patients somehow triggers autoimmune reactions. On occasion, during the process of instructing T cells which proteins to attack, a macrophage presents one of the body’s own proteins to a T cell. Such rogue T cells are usually eliminated by the immune system, but with the body’s inflammatory signals going haywire during a viral infection, some might escape that culling process, Iwasaki says. A similar mechanism has been proposed for how viral infections could lead to the myelin-attacking autoimmune reactions observed in multiple sclerosis. Interestingly, Italian doctors recently observed autoimmune-like symptoms in severely affected COVID-19 patients that mimic a condition known as Guillain-Barré syndrome. Guillain-Barré has also been linked with infections of certain herpesviruses and Zika virus. 

There are other ways SARS-CoV-2 could lead to autoimmunity, Hornig notes. Once viral RNA or proteins slip inside immune cells—either through infection or other uptake mechanisms—they could disrupt mitochondrial function, altering the cells’ metabolism and function and making them more likely to trigger autoimmune reactions. Perhaps that could help explain why some researchers have found antibodies in ME/CFS patients against receptors of the autonomic nervous system, which controls functions such as blood pressure, heart rate, and breathing, she adds. 

It’s still not clear how immune overactivation could lead to some ME/CFS symptoms, however. It’s possible that chronic immune activation simply drains the body of energy, in a similar way as the growth of tumor cells causes fatigue in cancer patients, Nath suggests. Or maybe the process starts with viral infection in the brain, and that then disrupts the organ’s communication with the immune system, Nath says. “It’s possible that maybe there is some low-grade encephalitis, and [inflammation] in the brain, and that is somehow driving the abnormalities in the immune system and causing this fatigue-like syndrome,” he says. 

There could be other mechanisms at play that don’t necessarily involve autoimmunity, Moreau notes. In an effort to find a biomarker for ME/CFS to help improve clinicians’ diagnoses, he and his colleagues have found in yet-unpublished work that there are unique patterns of microRNA sequences detectable in patients’ blood compared to healthy controls, suggesting that the disease is associated with widespread changes in gene expression. Perhaps viral infections can trigger epigenetic changes in gene expression and downstream metabolic alterations which then cause ME/CFS symptoms, he suggests. 

Hornig says it’s important to keep an open mind to different mechanisms that may be taking place in long-hauler patients as researchers begin to study the phenomenon. 

Tracking long-haulers

If COVID-19 can lead to an autoimmune disease, that process should be evident in patients’ blood in the form of T cells or other immune machinery directed against human proteins, Iwasaki says. She and her colleagues have started collecting blood samples from hundreds of hospitalized patients who have tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 to track their disease and compare the immune profiles of those who recover swiftly with those who don’t. “That would be our first look at whether anything strange is going on,” she says. 

Williams and Hornig are both making use of apps they and others have developed to identify and track the progression of long-haulers. Williams’s app, which encourages people to log SARS-CoV-2 infections and submit regular reports on their symptoms, was released just before the March peak of infections in the UK and has been downloaded by 3 million people so far. Of them, around 3,000 are twins who are part of a long-term study of how genetic factors influence health, and have already provided blood as well as genetic samples before the pandemic. Williams and her colleagues will use the data to try to tease out genetic and immunological factors that help determine who suffers from long-term disease. “That’s going to be essential, I think, for working out what’s going on. Because once you find genetic abnormalities, then [skeptics who still dismiss ME/CFS as a psychiatric disease] will have to accept it,” she says. 

Nath and Moreau, who are both also launching long-term studies of COVID-19 patients’ recovery, see the pandemic as a golden opportunity to finally elucidate what causes ME/CFS, and to find treatment avenues quickly. This will not only benefit COVID-19 survivors, they say, but also the millions of other people worldwide who already have ME/CFS, and whose disease onset is so far in the past that it’s impossible to know what triggered it. 

“I think people—agencies, Congress, everybody—should be really focused” on the possibility that some COVID-19 patients will develop ME/CFS, Nath says. “They really need to appropriate resources to quickly get into this field, get lots of people interested in studying these patients, and try to get the bottom of it. . . . If you don’t do it, it’ll be a missed opportunity.” 

Source:

https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/could-covid-19-trigger-chronic-disease-in-some-people-67749