2013年9月27日星期五

Understanding asthma


Asthma is characterized by airflow obstruction caused by alterations in the caliber of airways which gave rise to wheezing, coughing and tightness in the chest or simply shortage of breath. Increased prevalence and severity of asthma is directly related to inflammation of the lungs.



This inflammatory disease was observed to occur when there is chronic exposure to dust mites, allergens or other chemicals, strong odor, tobacco smoke and fumes. It normally occurs when there is stress, experiencing cold air or hyperventilation, there is change in weather upper respiratory tract viral infections and too much laughter or crying. Asthma usually occurs early morning or at night time. So you will see that the patient may be a little bit normal at daytime but increases coughing and wheezing at nightfall.



Narrowing of the airways is usually reversible but in some cases there may be an element of irreversible airflow obstruction. The lining of the airways becomes tighten and swollen while the muscles surrounding the airways tighten during an attack. This results to the inside of the airways becoming narrower which may also be blocked with mucus. This way air is no longer free to move in and out of the lungs because the sticky liquid plugs up the airways which seem to slow or stop the flow of air making breathing difficult.



Asthma attack may last for several hours to days ranging from slight breathlessness to not being able to breathe at all. Asthma may be chronic for some people where the illness may last for a long time or even a lifetime. Most people with asthma have airways that are very sensitive to things that do not bother other people. Asthma triggers vary from person to person. Oftentimes asthma and allergens go together but a person may have allergies without suffering from asthma. Likewise a person may have asthma but without allergies.












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When The Ants Go Marching: Easy Tips For Keeping An Ant Problem Under Control

Right at this moment somewhere in the United States, ants are marching from a homeowner’s backyard to the front door, looking for a hospitable place to live. When food and water are of limited supply or when the weather gets rough, ants will come looking for new places to call home. So, how do you keep them out?


Ants are social creatures that live together in communities known as colonies. You’ll often find them gathered near the foundation of a home, under concrete slabs or in other protected areas. The only way to really eliminate the problem is to kill the entire colony. Below are some additional tips from Combat®.


Keeping the Ants Out


– Many ants enter the home via tiny gaps between the wall and utility lines, around windows, and other little holes and cracks around the home. A little caulk around these areas will make a big difference.


– Keep vegetation about one foot away from the home, and avoid placing mulch close to the structure. Ants climb bushes and trees and will make their way from the outside into your home. Mulch is an attractive nesting spot for ants.


– Fix water leaks, and insulate cold pipes and appliances on which condensation develops. The most important thing in an ant’s life is water and they will readily enter your home to get it.


– Don’t over water houseplants. If the tray at the bottom of the plant fills up, empty it out.


– Leave pet food out only at feeding time, and store the food in airtight containers.


Prevention steps are often very effective, but in the event that ants are still entering the home, there are steps that can be taken to eliminate the problem. Sprays are temporarily effective, but getting to the root of the problem requires a long-term solution.


For best results, place Combat® baits or gels in areas where you see or have seen ants. The ants will take the bait and carry it back to the colony and pass it on to other ants, thereby killing the brood, the queen, and the entire colony. There will be noticeably fewer ants in days. All Combat products are guaranteed to work or your money back.


Cool Facts
• Without a queen ant, the colony cannot survive.
• The queen orders directives by emitting odors that tell the ants what to do.
• Ants rely on scent for almost all of their communications.
• An ant can lift 20 times its own body weight, and ants work in teams to lift heavy items.
• The average life expectancy of an ant is 45-60 days; however, a queen will live for several years.
• An ant has two stomachs—one for itself and one to store food to take back to the colony
• There are more than 12,000 species of ants.
• An ant colony contains only female ants.
• The males die shortly after reproduction.
• During the winter, ants can slow their metabolism to survive without eating for months.
• Keep children and pets away from fire ant nests. Fire ants are aggressive can cause serious injury.
• Carpenter ant colonies usually have multiple nests. The main nest is usually located outdoors, even though they’re known for burrowing in structures. They don’t feed on wood, but excavate it to make a nesting site.
• Carpenter ants are nocturnal; they only feed at night.


Bronchial Thermoplasty: New Surgery To Treat Asthma


A new procedure called bronchial thermoplasty permanently opens constricted airways by reducing the smooth muscle lining and can provide relief for chronic, acute asthmatics. About 22 million Americans suffer from asthma, an inflammation of the airways in the lungs that causes coughing, wheezing and shortness of breath. It can range in severity from an occasional annoyance to a chronic, life-threatening condition; exercise, allergies and airborne dust or other irritants can set off attacks.


People with chronic asthma often develop a thickening of the smooth muscle lining the airways. Not only do you have too much muscle, it’s too twitchy. If you have irritants in the airways, they can close down almost to the size of a pinhole. Most asthma medications work by reducing that “twitchiness. Bronchial thermoplasty uses radiofrequency waves to shrink the smooth muscle itself, a new approach to treating asthma symptoms.
This is the first non-drug treatment for asthma, and it’s a very promising technology for patients who have been taking all the medications and whose symptoms are still not completely controlled.


National Jewish and New York’s Beth Israel Medical Center are two of about 30 medical centers in the U.S. currently offering bronchial thermoplasty, which was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in April. It was developed by Asthmatix Inc. The company was acquired by Boston Scientific Corp. in September and expects more hospitals to offer the procedure in the future.


Since bronchial thermoplasty is so new, few insurers cover it yet. The total cost to patients can range from $ 12,000 to $ 18,000. But some people with severe asthma pay that much per year for medications, doctor visits and hospital expenses.


This is an invasive procedure. It has some risks associated with it, mainly lung collapse, bleeding and additional breathing problems, mostly related to the bronchoscope. Patients also must be at least 18 years old to have the procedure. Since there are no nerves inside the airways, bronchial thermoplasty isn’t painful. But patients generally do feel worse for a day or two following the treatments—one reason the procedure is divided into three separate treatments. There’s a lot of mucous to cough up, and your throat is a little sore from putting the tube down in it.


Afterward, however, their symptoms improve—sometimes dramatically. In a randomized, double-blind controlled study of 297 patients at 30 sites, those treated with the Alair device had a 32% reduction in asthma attacks, an 84% reduction in emergency-room visits and a 66% reduction in school or work days lost due to asthma. Those results continued when the patients were evaluated again two years after the treatment, according to data presented this week at the annual CHEST conference of the American College of Chest Physicians meeting in Vancouver, Canada.


Bronchial thermoplasty is done in three separate treatments, each focusing on different sections of the lungs. With the patient under light sedation, the interventional pulmonologist guides a standard bronchoscope, a long, flexible tube, through the patient’s mouth or nose as far as possible down each airway. An attached camera and light allow the physician to view the airway on a video screen. The thermoplasty device, called the Alair System, travels inside the bronchoscope and has an array of electrodes on its tip that extends and expands to contact the airway walls. The electrodes are then heated with radiofrequency energy, shrinking the muscle and creating a larger opening.


Each activation of the device treats less than an inch of airway. The pulmonologist moves the device and activates it again and again along the dozens of bronchial branches. Some patients have been followed for more than four years now and the smooth muscle in the airways does not become thickened again. The muscle is just gone. It does not grow back.


Patients may still need to use their asthma-maintenance medications after the procedure, although many use their rescue inhalers less often and are able to engage in far more strenuous physical activity than before.
Experts do caution that bronchial thermoplasty isn’t for patients with mild, occasional asthma—only those who are taking all possible medications and still having symptoms. As of now, the company estimates that about 10% of asthma sufferers are potential candidates. Some asthma sufferers may be too sick to for bronchial thermoplasty. Those with an FEV1 (for Forced Expiratory Volume, a measure of air exhaled per second) of less than 50% of normal aren’t considered good candidates. (WSJ, 11/1/2010)


"Loch Nash Monster" sighting in Easthampton is the talk of the town






Published: Monday, January 31, 2011, 7:15 PM
Updated: Tuesday, February 01, 2011, 7:59 AM
Patrick Johnson, The Republican By Patrick Johnson, The Republican


EASTHAMPTON – Scotland is famous for its mythical Loch Ness Monster; Easthampton has the “Loch Nash Monster,” and it’s no myth.


Since Sunday, Nashawannuck Pond in the center of Easthampton has been graced by a multi-stage snowbeast in the shape of a sea serpent.


Dubbed the “Loch Nash Monster,” the creature immediately attracted the attention of hundreds of passersby, and the local media.


WWLP did a piece on it Sunday night that Yahoo news linked to. abc40 sent a crew out on Monday afternoon.


Easthampton resident Patrick Brough said the snow sculpture is the product of a spontaneous display of community pride.


Brough, who maintains the Easthampton Good News page on Facebook posted on a whim Saturday afternoon that he was looking for volunteers to help build a snowman on the frozen pond.


By Sunday, Brough said his plan for a traditional snowman evolved into the multi-sectioned sea monster, while the call to to action took hold among people in town, he said.


“We had 10-20 people helping out,” Brough said.


“We must have had six families, there was me and my two kids, John Atwater and his kids, Tom Connor and his kids,” he said. “There were four or five people that I never even met.”


One woman came out of the blue to deliver cups of hot chocolate, he said.


It took about 3 1/2 hours, from 11 a.m. until about 2:30 p.m., he said. The finishing touch was to apply green food coloring to give it a monster-like hue.


As they were building it and it began to take shape, passing cars on Cottage Street started honking their horns in support, he said.


Brough said when he dropped his kids off and grabbed his camera to go back for some pictures, he found word of the monster was already spreading.


“When I go back, there were probably 20 people on Williston and Cottage streets with cameras taking pictures,”


The interest in the Loch Nash Monster, both before and after the build, is a reminder of the community pride in Easthampton, he said.


“It’s just such a feel-good thing,” he said.


http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/2011/01/loch_nash_monster_sighting_is.html


COPD - Gaining A Better Picture Of Lung Disease

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), a respiratory disease commonly known as chronic bronchitis or emphysema, is the fourth leading cause of death worldwide. 600 million people live with COPD and while researchers have yet to find any real treatment or cure, Grace Parraga of Robarts Research Institute at The University of Western Ontario in London, Canada, is using various imaging techniques to gain new insight into the disease.


Parraga is a scientist in the Imaging Research Laboratories at Robarts and recently recruited to the Departments of Medical Biophysics, Graduate Program in Biomedical Engineering, Medical Imaging and Oncology at the Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry. Currently, Parraga and her collaborators at Western including Drs. David McCormack, Rob McFadden, Roya Etemad-Rezai and Giles Santyr hold two large grants valued at $ 2.5 million from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) in collaboration with the world-renowned Vancouver James Hogg Centre at St. Paul’s Hospital to characterize COPD using Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and to compare three different types of lung imaging in COPD patients over time.


“The idea is that if we can understand the structural and functional imaging changes that happen over time, we can start to understand the patients in a different way, with the potential to change the way they are treated,” says Parraga.


Parraga and her collaborators believe that two major COPD groups exist: those with dysfunctional airways, and those with lung tissue damage. She says current methods of evaluating COPD don’t consider the differences imaging methods can detect and therefore these often are not predictive of how patients feel and how their disease progresses. The London-Vancouver collaboration directly addresses this shortcoming to lead the way in helping to categorize COPD patients using computed tomography (CT), MRI, and optical coherence tomography, to help improve patient treatment.


Parraga’s research uses a nation-wide interdisciplinary collaboration, a unique lung imaging core facility and a unique capability to image lungs to make an impact on the millions suffering from the disease. Their collaborative work was also recently recognized by the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) that awarded one her graduate students in Medical Biophysics (Hassaan Ahmed) the prestigious RSNA Trainee Prize.



Swine Flu + Asthma = 1 very sick little boy!!!

My 9 year old Huey came down with a low grade fever and a cough last Saturday. I wondered if it was the swine flu but then it was so mild I was not worried and thought it might just be a little cold or other virus. We just kept the fever down and he was fine. We know several people that have had it and they all had varied reactions and intensity to their flu. My little Dewey and I have asthma so I have been quite concerned each time I hear that someone has died from H1N1 because of other underlying conditions they had when they got the flu. Each time they have said what that condition was it was ASTHMA!!! One of the first people that died was near my age and had asthma and had just recently had a baby. Well, that describes me and has worried me. I do not want to leave Brian with 4 kids to raise alone and I’m certain he doesn’t want me to! I have been especially worried about my little Dewey! When I heard the other day that the reason people with asthma have been dieing is because they contract VIRAL pneumonia I became quite concerned! Well, I don’t like the idea of the vaccine because I feel it was too rushed and they don’t know long term effects of it and stuff but I decided it was important for me and Dewey to be immunized since we have asthma. We went down there Monday and got our shots. Tuesday night he started having a low grade fever and coughing. Wednesday his fever was 102.3 and his cough was worse. During the night I was alternating Tylenol and Ibuprofen every 3 hours and it still wasn’t controlling the fever. He was really wheezing and his breathing sounded terrible! I kept giving him puffs of my inhaler since we are out of medicine for his nebulizer and he didn’t really have asthma problems much in the last 2 1/2 years. Well, I took him to the very weird but super nice and very concerned dr. in our new town. She gave him a breathing treatment with no improvement so she prescribed pulmicort, liquid albuterol, prednazone, and Tamaflu. Apparently they have found that if people with H1N1 start using Tamaflu in the first 48 hours of symptoms their reactions aren’t nearly as bad as if they don’t use it. He has been doing so much better! He isn’t pale as a ghost! He stayed in bed yesterday and barely ate anything but today he has been up and playing, eating, fighting with his brothers and just doing really well. He obviously isn’t 100 % and has a ways to go before he is over it completely but he is breathing and that is a VERY, VERY, GOOD THING!!! We are so grateful for the prayers of our family! We hope he continues to deal well with it! I just thought I would share so that if any of you or your children have asthma you know to seek help immediately if you think you might have the flu! It takes 4 weeks for the immunization to take effect so even if you have had the shot or mist you still aren’t completely out of the woods for 4 weeks! She said that she thinks that the fact that he had the shot on Monday will help him not have as severe a reaction as if he didn’t have it. Also, the main reason people die is they wait too long to seek treatment! We found out that 8 of the kids from Huey’s class were also home sick on Monday. And the teacher was absent, not sure if he’s sick or what. Anyway, I hope none of you or your children get it but if you do please be careful!!!


2013年9月26日星期四

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