Participants also will have a chance to observe as
the team sees patients, presents complex cases and dispels some of the many myths around the disease and its treatment.
Not exact matches
The US - based medical
team of researchers wanted to
see if the long - running program, now in its fourteenth season, was realistic in showing what happens to
patients when they are rushed to hospital after experiencing a major injury.
But let's consider two major positives: First, with both
patients and stakeholders investing in our healthcare system, we're all on the same
team: We all want to
see more positive outcomes for our loved ones and improvements in the health of our nation, both literally and financially.
Dr. J contacted the HHI
team in Katy and arranged for the
patient to be
seen today.
The
team saw 58
patients, administered 27 flu and 26 tetanus vaccines, and gave out 65 hygiene kits.
Patillas Town Transit Center: The HHI
team, working in conjunction with the Puerto Rico State Guard (PRSG),
saw 35
patients on 11/16 at the Patillas Town Transit Center.
That was one of the big reasons for our way day woes against the big Premier League
teams last season but we have been
seeing a much more
patient and disciplined Arsenal this season, some of the time at least.
I believe you can't get a feel for the league until about 9 - 10 games in, so we must be
patient and allow the
team to gel then we will
see where we are at..
every
team that comes to emirates knows they have a chance of scoring given our defense... so sit back
see if yoy can absorb and stay
patient....
Ia
Patient man and in no way a spoiled brat, I'm an intelligent adult who cant
see the logic if making Asenal a successful competitive
team is the agenda, I can thouh if is running a business that's profitable to the board and shareholders
Selling players isn't going to solve our problems & what's surprising,
seeing the same players doing better in other
teams, get to understand what these players want, they are mature, love them, be
patient with them, & make them better they will respect you if you respect them.
To study the pathogenesis of HIV - induced PNS disease, Jamie Dorsey, Research Technologist, and the research
team led by Dr. Mankowski developed a simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)- infected macaque model that closely reflects key peripheral nervous system (PNS) alterations
seen in HIV
patients with peripheral neuropathy.
Brunner says that about half of the mutations his
team has identified have previously been
seen in other
patients with similar forms of intellectual disability, offering enough assurance to make a diagnosis.
Ten of the
patients, both children and adults,
saw their visual field expand, and six experienced improved visual acuity, according to the
team's study, published in The Lancet.
James Lupski, a medical geneticist at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas, says that when his
team identifies a potentially disease - causing mutation in a
patient genome, he e-mails other scientists to
see whether they have found similar mutations.
«I was very excited to
see this proof of concept in
patients, and in
patients» own homes or rehabilitation centres,» says Steven Laureys of the University of Liège in Belgium, and clinical coordinator of the
team.
Now Swedo and her
team saw the picture clearly: Ordinary strep infection could cause neuropsychiatric symptoms in a far broader, more under - the - radar group of
patients.
In their study, Fiona Havers, MD, MHS, and a
team from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and several other institutions analyzed data for approximately 6,800
patients with acute respiratory illness who were
seen at five outpatient care centers in Washington state, Wisconsin, Texas, Michigan, and Pennsylvania.
Gentzsch noted potential reasons to explain why
patients in the clinical trial
saw benefit from the two drugs even though her
team's lab experiments produced evidence to the contrary.
George Daley of Harvard Medical School said on December 1 that he and his
team have
seen multiple
patients affected by NEMO deficiency syndrome, a disorder where an inherited faulty gene results in a weak immune system and leaves
patients prone to serious infections.
To care for such
patients, his
team has
seen families that try to have a second child — sometimes nicknamed a «savior sibling» — in the hopes that the second child's bone marrow can be employed to help the older sibling.
The research
team then reached out to other collaborators to
see if any of their
patients also had the FBXL4 mutation.
To
see whether Lin28 might be a factor in Wilms tumor development, Daley and an international
team of collaborators measured the gene's expression in tumor samples from 105 Wilms
patients.
But to truly test whether their prototype device could help essential tremor
patients overcome their condition's effects, the Lift Labs
team turned to Chou, who with his colleagues
sees hundreds of essential tremor
patients a year.
Bargar and his
team will monitor their first 10
patients to
see if the technique produces hip joints that are more long - lasting and comfortable for the
patient.
The research
team are now waiting for more mature data from the study to
see whether crizotinib also improves overall survival in this
patient group.
The trial is ongoing, and Gelfand says his
team will evaluate these
patients at a longer follow up to
see if the effects are sustainable and if
patients continue to improve.
Now he and his
team are putting cells from human brain tumors into the organoids, which have reached the level of development and complexity of a 20 - week - old human fetus's, to
see whether they reprise what happens in
patients.
After being treated by health care
teams at National Jewish Health, children who underwent in -
patient therapy
saw an average reduction in symptoms of 71 percent, they maintained healthy skin a month after returning home, and, perhaps most important, did so without relying solely on medications typically prescribed to these
patients.
As follow up, Bedrosian and her
team hope to mine the randomized controlled trial findings from the 1980s, matching those cohorts to current NCDB
patients to
see if a similar survival benefit could be observed.
A
team led by Øystein Fluge and Olav Mella at the Haukeland University Hospital in Bergen, Norway, discovered by chance that rituximab might help people with CFS after
seeing symptoms ease in a
patient who had both lymphoma and CFS (PLoS One, DOI: 10.1371 / journal.pone.0026358).
«The next step will be to track a few
patients over the course of their treatment, taking several blood draws to
see if the data captured by the microfluidic device correlates with the data their medical
team is collecting through other methods,» says Liu.
«We
saw that this procedure is really invasive and can take 10 to 15 hours to complete,» said Shruthi Rajan, a
team member from Charlotte, N.C. «It's also very expensive, and not all
patients qualify for the surgery.
The hypersensitivity
seen in
patients with some anxiety disorders could arise from a faulty ability to distinguish between true signals of danger and similar but less vital stimuli, the Northwestern
team speculates, adding that its research could help develop new therapies.
«The SAFE - T program is a total
team effort with a high level of collaboration between Temple nurses and physicians, and it's inspiring to
see the impact that this program is having on the well - being of our
patients and their families,» says Jennifer Rodriguez, BSN, RN, Director of Nursing Services at TUH.
For pancreatic cancer, the
team saw signs of pancreatic cell death in the blood of about half of 42
patients; the group even distinguished cancer from pancreatitis — which also raised cell - free DNA levels in seven of 10
patients — by incorporating a test for a cancer mutation.
In liver cancer
patients, for example, the
team saw a rise in DNA traceable to dying liver cells.
Fugger hopes that his
team's study will also help to dispel the notion that genome - wide association studies will never offer much that can be used in
patient care (
see «Human genetics: Hit or miss»).
Based on the study findings, Weisfeldt and his
team, including lead author John Hopkins medical student Ross Pollack, would like to
see greater distribution of AEDs, including equipping police with defibrillators, especially in regions where it takes emergency responders long to get to the
patient.
The Chinese
team has now applied this approach to understanding the spread of disease and demonstrated that there are four main outcomes one might
see with a pandemic in today's world all affected by the government response to the outbreak, the provision of healthcare, the isolation of
patients and availability of treatments of the given disease.
Their
team discovered by accident that rituximab might work against CFS after
seeing symptoms ease in a
patient who had both lymphoma and CFS.
«Our
team is studying high - risk
patient populations to
see how often and how early we can identify a sleep disorder,» says lead author Renée Shellhaas, M.D., M.S., a pediatric neurologist at Mott.
Hirsch, Morello and
team compared 99 DIMM clinic
patients to 56 type 2 diabetes
patients who
saw their primary care providers an average of two times over six months.
The research
team is now conducting a three year study in community pharmacies across the country to
see if engaging
patients with this information and then offering them a web - based e-health program will help them adopt healthier lifestyles, including healthier diets and regular physical activity.
Four months after receiving the treatment, the
patients have not developed any tumors or abnormal growths that have sometimes been
seen in animals receiving hESC - derived cells, the
team reports online today in The Lancet.
In their search for novel, tumor - specific therapies that could target multiple brain metastases without damaging adjacent tissues, the research
team first developed a mouse model that more closely mimics what is
seen in
patients.
For the purpose of this study, a
team of geologists from the Nanjing University, China, and the University of Illinois studied the echoes generated by seismic waves produced during earthquakes to scan below the surface of Earth, much like an ultrasound is used to
see inside
patients.
A
team of researchers from Stellenbosch University in South Africa report that persistent immune activation may contribute to the increased risk of CVD
seen in
patients with HIV.
Our multidisciplinary
team of physicians and staff
sees patients for initial treatment and ongoing care.
An international research
team, led by University College London's Professor Jonathan Ledermann, carried out a trial to
see whether olaparib could have a role to play in preventing ovarian cancer from coming back in this group of
patients.