Sunday, February 7, 2010

Q&A on Porphyria

What is VARIEGATE PORPHYRIA?
Is a metabolic disorder. It causes overproduction of substances known as porphyrins.

Variegate Porphyria = acute porphyria

· Genetic disorder
· Affects nervous system and skin
· Body produces too much of the chemical porphyrin
· Porphyrin is used to make Heme
· Heme is the part of blood that carries oxygen
· Heme also gives blood its color
· Any circulating porphyrin the body doesn’t use is excreted in urine and stool
· In porphyria the body produces and excretes too much porphyrin and not enough Heme remains to keep a person healthy


How does having porphyria effect someones lifestyle/life?

The sun is a killer!! Modern medicine, BARBITURATES, SULPHONAMIDES especially and PENTOTHAL are to be absolutely AVOIDED at all costs!!!

In general, patients with porphyria have only two major symptoms: the acute attack and skin photosensitivity. It is important to realise that not every porphyria is associated with both problems, and you should be sure in your own mind of which type of porphyria you have and what its possible effects are.

The acute attack is a serious condition which arises during a time of particularly active porphyrin overproduction, and may follow exposure to a wide range of drugs and medications which stimulate the production of porphyrins. It is felt by the patient as an attack of severe abdominal pain, possibly with nausea, vomiting, constipation and pain in the limbs and back. It may potentially deteriorate into a state of paralysis, and is therefore dangerous. Fortunately however, there is very effective treatment available which will prevent this provided the attack is recognised and treated early.

The skin disease takes the form of easy blistering and development of sores, scabs and scars in sun-exposed areas, particularly the backs of the hands and face.

How was it discovered?

In 1939 two medical students at the University of Cape Town; Lennox Eales (Prof Eales) and Jack Chait published the first description on Porphyria in the l’nyanga journal.

The link with this founder family was identified first by Geoffrey Dean, a British physician who settled in South Africa in 1947.

Is it easily curable?

NO!
In most cases the defect is genetic, and a mutation carried within a family results in a faulty enzyme which cannot handle the normal metabolism of porphyrins, with a consequent overproduction. One form of porphyria (porphyria cutanea tarda), is however usually not genetic, but is acquired or "picked up" as a result of certain forms of liver dysfunction. In this case, the defect is found only in the patient and not in his or her family.

Do you know someone who has porphyria? If so, is there anything different about them? (emotionally)

I have Variegate Porphyria (South African Porphyria) - It’s been in our family for generations (van Niekerks). My grandmother died at the age of 26 – giving birth to her fourth child. She died of kidney failure, due to medication complications…

My DNA test confirmed a positive South African R59W gene mutation – the common defect responsible for Variegate porphyria in South Africa.
That means PORPHYRIC DRUG PRECAUTIONS need to be exercised.

It was done in the PORPHYRIA LABORATORY MRC/UCT LIVER RESEARCH CENTRE (University of Cape Town) by Prof Peter Meissner and Prof Richard Hift.
Prof Richard Hift is now the HOD of the School of Clinical Medicine at UKZN Medical School. They are doing brilliant work in this respect!

And NO there is nothing different from us, except that we get very sick when in an attack! And suffers from sun-exposed areas on our skin, but otherwise we are normal :)


What are the different types of porphyria?

Acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) and ALA dehydratase deficiency (Doss) porphyria are associated with acute attacks only, but no skin disease.
Porphyria cutanea tarda (PCT) , erythropoietic protoporphyria (EPP) and congenital erythropoietic porphyria (CEP) are associated only with skin disease, but not with acute attacks.
Variegate porphyria (VP) and hereditary coproporphyria (HCP) are associated with both.

Variegate porphyria is common in South Africa, The other forms of porphyria are also encountered in South Africa, but less frequently.

How do people treat you?

With care :) History has shown us that when we judge in ignorance we can make terrible mistakes.
The testing of porphyria is very problematic and can cause a lot of pain and hurt (emotionally). In South Africa where Variegate Porphyria is suppose to be common, it is still ignored or unknown or unheard off by certain Drs, however I think it is worse in America according to their porphyria blogs... We have great Professors at UCT in Cape Town.

What triggers the acute attack?
PENTOTHAL, BARBITURATES AND SULPHONAMIDES and should be avoided at all costs
· Other drugs, tranquilizers, birth control and sedatives
· Chemicals and exposure to the sun
· Certain foods like dried fruits containing Sulphur dioxide used as preservative and alcohol, wine containing Sulphites – Sulphur dioxide used in bleaching and as a fumigant

If in an attack the following procedure is followed:

Severe acute attacks
The patient usually experiences the following.

Severe abdominal pain - which may also be felt as a dragging discomfort in the lower back, loins and legs - nausea; vomiting is not invariable - mildly elevated blood pressure and pulse rate -
passage of dark urine and, perhaps, paralysis.

Mild acute attacks are signified by the following - abdominal pain as above, lasting continuously for several days, continuous throughout most of the day and night, accompanied by loss of appetite and possibly nausea.

The only reliable confirmation of porphyria as the cause of the pain, is the demonstration of elevated aminolaevulinic acid (ALA) & porphobilinogen (PBG) and porphyrins in the urine. People experiencing abdominal pain on the basis of their porphyria will have a very active porphyria metabolically. One usually finds high levels of porphyrins in their urine and the precursors— ALA and PBG— will be raised. This is strong evidence for an incipient acute attack.

Such an attack can prove fatal if left untreated.

The cardinal feature is that these are attacks - We are, and look, ill.

If it is symptoms of a more severe attack, and vomiting or fails to improve promptly
Patients should be instructed to:

Cease their medication and Consult their doctors without delay.
You'll be admitted and treated for an acute attack.

Never forget that the abdominal pain of porphyria is not associated with peritonism.
The absence of abdominal tenderness, guarding, rigidity or rebound tenderness is typical of acute porphyria, and does not imply that the patient is simulating illness.

They usually need powerful analgesics such as Pethidine (Demerol) for control of the pain of the acute attack. Other medication may be necessary to control nausea and vomiting.

In approximately half the acute attacks encountered in patients with variegate porphyria, the attack begins to settle spontaneously within the first 24 hours. If so, then no further treatment is necessary.

In the remaining patients (and in most patients with acute intermittent porphyria), patients require treatment with haem arginate (Normosang™, Orphan Europe). This is a compound of haem and the amino acid arginine and is given intravenously by infusion. It is highly effective in aborting the acute attack. Patients usually feel greatly improved within two days of beginning haem arginate, and a well enough for discharge in approximately four days.

Haem arginate is available in South Africa, but will in most instances have to be specially ordered from the distributors. If you or a family member are developing an attack, you should advise your doctor and pharmacist to make early arrangements for the delivery of haem arginate, as it may prove impossible after hours or over weekends. I have never used it - it is very expensive and by the time they order it from Johannesburg and it arrives on the South Coast I am nearly over the attack.
And you never know when you are going to have another attack, it just happens... Only afterwards you'll discover the reason(s) behind the attack, your diet, medication, alcohol or the sun... I have to be very careful with what I eat due to all kinds of chemicals and preservatives in and on food...

Pethidine addiction is almost unheard of among our porphyrics.

Characteristic behaviour among many patients is to demand pethidine repeatedly during their admission, often with sudden improvement immediately thereafter, only to cry for pethidine again within a short time.
Yet, as soon as the acute attack settles, all demands for pethidine cease and the patients are discharged. This is totally incompatible with any definition of opiate dependence, and proves that the opiate requirement is genuinely in response to pain. Unfortunately many doctors and nurses with no experience of porphyria fail to realise this, and resort too easily to labels such as "pethidine dependence".

Friday, February 5, 2010

Wear Red Day

Wear Red Day

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Sunday, January 24, 2010

Larry Platt

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Sunday, January 17, 2010

Joan Abbott

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Thursday, November 19, 2009

PACE

Medtronic-Sponsored Study Indicates Bi-Ventricular Pacing Superior to Right Ventricular Pacing in Avoiding Cardiac Enlargement
Published Sunday, November 15, 2009, 21:01 (Your-Story.org)

Early Results Show Preserved Heart Size in Pacemaker Patients with Normal Left Ventricles

MINNEAPOLIS & ORLANDO, Fla.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Pacing the two lower chambers of the heart, or bi-ventricular pacing, prevented cardiac enlargement as compared to only pacing the right ventricle in pacemaker patients with normal pumping hearts, according to results presented today from the Pacing to Avoid Cardiac Enlargement (PACE) trial, a clinical study supported by Medtronic, Inc. (NYSE: MDT). Bi-ventricular pacing is proven to reduce symptoms, extend survival and reduce heart size in symptomatic heart failure patients; however, it is not currently approved for use with pacemaker patients with normal pumping hearts. PACE data were presented today as a late-breaking clinical science session at the Scientific Sessions 2009, the annual congress of the American Heart Association in Orlando, Fla. and published online in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Meeting its primary objective, PACE results showed that after one year of pacing, patients with pacing in both right and left ventricles (bi-ventricular) had no significant changes in left ventricle size while patients paced only in the right ventricle developed enlarged left ventricles. Adverse changes in patients paced only in the right ventricle included:

“These early results show bi-ventricular pacing may be superior to pacing only in the right ventricle to preserve the heart’s normal left ventricle size and pumping ability for these pacemaker patients,” said Cheuk-Man Yu, M.D. professor of medicine at Prince of Wales Hospital, The Chinese University of Hong Kong in China and PACE lead investigator. “As the first randomized study with this patient population, these initial results suggested that ensuring synchrony of the ventricles can help maintain patient health.”

“Clinical evidence shows delivering pacing only when and where patients need it is important to improving the care of pacemaker patients,” said Marshall Stanton, M.D., vice president of clinical research for the Cardiac Rhythm Disease Management business at Medtronic. “With the Medtronic-exclusive pacing mode MVP®, Managed Ventricular Pacing, which is the only technology available that reduces unnecessary right ventricular pacing by 99 percent, and the ongoing BLOCK-HF bi-ventricular pacing study, Medtronic is dedicated to offering physicians the latest tools and clinical evidence to help physicians deliver appropriate care to their pacemaker patients.”

About PACEThe PACE study is a prospective, randomized, double-blind, parallel study enrolling 177 patients at four hospitals in Asia. Patients had a Medtronic Insync® III cardiac resynchronization therapy-pacemaker (CRT-P), or bi-ventricular pacemaker without defibrillation, and had no prior history of heart failure with normal left ventricle function and ejection fraction greater than or equal to 45 percent. Patients were evaluated at one, three, six, nine and 12 months.

About Cardiac Resynchronization TherapyCardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT), also known as bi-ventricular pacing, is a treatment for heart failure that uses an implantable device to improve the pumping efficiency of the heart. A cardiac resynchronization therapy-pacemaker (CRT-P), is a stopwatch-sized device implanted in the upper chest to resynchronize (without defibrillation) the contractions of the ventricles by sending tiny electrical pacing impulses to the heart muscle to help the heart pump blood throughout the body more efficiently and reduce symptoms. Cardiac resynchronization therapy is intended to complement standard drug treatment, and dietary and lifestyle modifications.

About MedtronicMedtronic, Inc. (www.medtronic.com), headquartered in Minneapolis, is the global leader in medical technology – alleviating pain, restoring health and extending life for millions of people around the world.

Caution: The CRT-P devices used in the PACE trial are investigational for the patient population studied; their use is limited by federal (or United States) law to investigational use for this indication.

Any forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties such as those described in Medtronic’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended April 24, 2009. Actual results may differ materially from anticipated results.

Press Release Contact Details:

Medtronic, Inc. Public Relations: Catherine Peloquin, 763-526-2494 or Investor Relations: Jeff Warren, 763-505-2696

Monday, November 16, 2009

Butchering South African Anthem...

The reggae singer the Springboks accused of butchering the anthem before the 20-13 Test match defeat to France said that he thought he had "sung beautifully".

Ras Dumisani, sporting dreadlocks tucked into a huge red, green and white Rastafarian cap, was adamant that his performance - which made large parts of the Toulouse crowd burst into laughter - had been a good one.

"No one told me they were upset with the singing," the Durban native said. "In fact, someone just came up to me and told me how beautifully I had sung."

The South African anthem was sung before France's stirring "Marseillaise" and the singer, backed by two drummers of his Afrikhaya Band, made a mess of the four-language homage to the Rainbow Nation.

At the anthem's conclusion, large parts of the crowd were left openly laughing and several Bok players looked over angrily as the singer made his muted departure from the field.

"I must convey that we are annoyed by the fact that the French disrespected our anthem," blasted South Africa coach Peter de Villiers.

"They didn't get someone who really knows the thing and show any respect for it. We expect people to show respect to the anthem of any other country."

But Dumisani was aghast that de Villiers and other Bok players were unhappy with his rendition.

"Everyone at the stadium told me I sang well, even after the match. The Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika has been my tune since a baby," he said. "How can I not know the words?

"There are four languages: Zulu, Sesontho, Afrikaans, English. It's just four bars, always saying the same thing," said Dumisani, now based in Paris where he currently records is music and from where he is about to embark on a tour.

"I am the biggest reggae man in South Africa and the Springboks are my team. "Everyone has their own tastes and you can't always account for that but most people find my music so beautiful."

Speaking after the match on Friday, Bok vice-captain Victor Matfield said Dumisani's rendition of the anthem had taken some of the wind out of the Springbok sails just moments before a kick-off.

"It's almost like receiving a jersey - every week's a special moment," Matfield said of lining up to sing the anthem.

"Every time you go out on the field and sing the national anthem, it's very important for us and that's something that fires you up because it really fires you up because you know you're playing for your country.

"It was a joke out there. The guys couldn't sing along to it and

even the crowd were starting to laugh. It was very disappointing." (source UK Telegraph)

SO HERE IS MY NATIONAL ANTHEM AGAIN ESPECIALLY FOR RAS DUMISANI...

NKOSI SIKELEL'I FOR AFRICANS/AFRIKANERS AND ENGLISH SPEAKERS

Thu 12 Nov 2009, 02:55 (2) 37 Comment(s) 41082033



Monday, November 9, 2009

Angiogram at Umhlanga Hospital


I was admitted at 9 (last Monday )



In the ward they immediately did an ECG ; Blood glucose, High Blood Pressure and completed the pages and pages of personal health questions…

When it comes to my Porphyria, it always causes a stir, because belief it or not it is not as common as I thought.
My cardiologist got sick and his excellent partner took over. My baby sister who has been the private PA of a well-known Oncologist in Durban for nearly 25 years put in a good word with the kind and professional cardiologist.

My baby sister and I could have been twins, so close is the resemblance; and he jokingly remarked on the fact. He was great and did a complete check-up. The ECG did show a TL wave V1 and V3 irregularity and therefore the angiogram. I have been cancelling my appointments with the Cardiologist for the last 4 months; I just didn’t have the courage to go…

It was a very long morning and I only went into the Cath Lab at 15:45

I have been through some big operations before but this one really scared me…

It is very intimidating in the Catheterization Laboratory with all the big computers, scanners and radiation equipment/shields all over and around the special examination table. The cardiologist and sisters wore full protective clothing and worked behind a protective shield/screen during the full procedure. I had to be injected with a hydrocortisone due to my sensitivity to Iodine, etc (porphyria and allergic reaction to the x-ray dye); which regulates carbohydrate metabolism and maintains my blood pressure. After local anesthesia was given, a catheter was inserted into a main blood vessel in my groin by means of a needle-stick. The catheter was advanced through the blood vessel to my heart. It hurt in the beginning and caused a sort of ‘hot flush’ up in my head and down to my toes, a very weird and odd sensation.

By injecting the dye through the catheter a series of rapid x-ray images were recorded, some kind of x-ray movie was made of the blood flowing through the cardiac chambers; and/or through the blood vessels surrounding my heart – this is what is known as angiography/angiogram/arteriography.

The procedure took about 30 minutes. The catheter was removed and bleeding was controlled by placing pressure (a 2kg sandbag) on the catheterization site for 6 hours +. I was restricted from bending/moving my leg or getting up …

Cardiac catheterization and angiography are relatively safe, but because they are invasive procedures involving the heart, several complications are possible…

I had minor bleeding at the site of the catheter insertion and temporary heart rhythm disturbances caused by the catheter irritating my heart muscle as well as temporary changes in my blood pressure. I was put on blood thinners to keep a blood clot forming (just a precautionary measure; thrombosis etc.) . I battled with a terrible migraine, nausea and my eyes were sore, and my vision was blurring for more than an hour after the procedure. I will not mention the more significant complications, because they are life threatening…

They then moved me directly into ICU 1 for the night. I shared the ward with three triple bypass patients (males) as well as one serious case, a man who had a ‘5 bypass – a quintuplet?’
Yes, ladies in ICU; I shared the room with males. Very uncomfortable!
I had an Indian male at my feet (no pun intended); who was better off than the rest of the patients in ICU. We could 'face' each others every move; not the ideal position when I was restricted to my bed and had to make use of a bedpan and he a bottle... (He could move into a sitting position the next day and was having meals after his triple bypass. I couldn't believe my eyes when he opened a packet of Simba chips...)

That same evening at 20h00, we had a code blue; which caused some serious activity happening in the ward! He didn’t make it and it was very upsetting, because although they closed the curtains, the sounds caused some vivid images… It happened during visiting hours and the visitors had to leave in a hurry. The family was so upset and the removal of the body was so ‘everyday’; when the staff arrived with the trolley to remove him to the morgue; the guy asked loudly for everyone to hear where the body is?? They enclosed ‘him’ in the body bag and I still cannot get the awful zipping of the bag out of my head as well as the sound of the trolley wheels as they moved out of ICU. With the sound disappearing in the passage, another precious life has departed from this sad world!

The next morning the Indian man with ‘quintuplet’ bypass had a code blue as well, and they nearly lost him… They did revive him, but his whole life was by then controlled by machines…

I take my hat off to the staff in ICU1; they do brilliant work! I don't know how they cope with the 'stress factor' however... Or is it just a normal everyday at work for them? Do they get immune to these situations?

What cheered me up was a surprise visit by Anil… It wasn’t visiting hours; so don’t ask me how she got into ICU! I don’t care, I was so thankful for her visit; it made my day!

I was so relieved when I was eventually discharged just before 14h00 …


I am still suffering from alexithymia …

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Irene van Wyk killed...


Irene Van Wyk killed in crash ...

Irene van Wyk, one of South Africa’s most popular gospel singers, died yesterday afternoon as the result of a head-on collision with a truck near Bronkhorstspruit.
Her body was identified by her ex-husband and (ex) -manager, Louis van Wyk.

This is so sad! In those early days she and Louis stayed in Shelly Beach and she was very popular with the locals.

She is known as the Cyclone of South African music, because she sings up a storm!
I had the good fortune to meet her personally and to hear her sing; her voice could match Tina Turner at any given time! Irene has done some solo albums in her career and started off with singers like Steve Hofmeyr and the infamous 80s band, Chess. Her latest projects include duets from some of our favourite artists. She was back on top again with her albums Lyne van jou lyf, In U spore, and Vrou.

Since Irene recorded her debut album in 1986, she has made great strides in the South African music industry. She released many successful albums, performed on stage and appeared on the covers of several magazines.

She received a Vonk award for the best gospel album of the year in 2008.

She was also one of the scandalmongers of the TV series Glitterati.

Rest in Peace beautiful Irene.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

PORFIRIE IN SUID AFRIKA

DEFINISIE VAN PORFIRIE

Die Porfirieë kan gedefinieer word as ‘n groep van (meestal oorgeërfde) siektes, wat gekenmerk word deur ‘n ophoping in die liggaam van porfirien-voorlopers en/of porfirienes.

Variegate Porfirie (VP) is al geslagte lank in ons familie en het begin by die Van Niekerks. My Ouma Elsie Maria Swanepoel (van Niekerk) is op die ouderdom van 26jaar oorlede (1936) met die geboorte van haar vierde kind weens nierstuipe. Daai jare was sulfas ‘antibiotika’ en ‘pentothal’ vir narkose gebruik en vir porfirie-lyers is/was dit dodelik.
Ek dra ‘n Medic-Alert armband en Sulfas, Pentothal en Barbiturate as verbode middels.

Ons het DNA bevestiging verkry d.w.s. is ‘Positief getoets vir die Suid Afrikaanse R59W geen mutasie’ van die Universiteit van Kaapstad (Prof Peter Meissner en Prof Richard Hift ) en hoef nie weer getoets te word nie; tensy ons ‘n akute aanval kry en dit nodig is om die vereiste laboratoriumtoetse uit te voer om ‘n akute fase te bevestig. Prof R J Hift MB ChB MMed (Med) PhD FCP(SA) is nou betrokke by die UKZN.

Variegate Porfirie is oorerflik. VP is ook geidentifiseer in Nederland waar dit skaars is.

In 1939 het twee mediese student, Lennox Eales (Prof Eales) en Jack Chait die eerste beskrywing van porfirie in die Universiteit van Kaapstad se studente joernaal l’nyanga gepubliseer.

Dr Geoffrey Dean of liewer ‘Sir Geoffrey Dean’ het in die 1940s – 1950s uitgebreide genealogiese navorsing oor VP in die Oos-Kaap gedoen wat oor jare gestrek het. Hy het verskeie boeke geskryf o.a. ‘The Porphyrias’ a story of inheritance and environment’
Hy het tot die slotsom gekom dat feitlik alle VP lyers wat hy in Suid Afrika bestudeer het, herlei kan word na die stamboom van ‘n Hollandse egpaar wat in 1688 aan die Kaap getroud is.

Die VP geen PPOX mutasie R59W dateer terug na Gerrit Jansz van Deventer, gebore in Veldkamp, Nederland en sy vrou Ariaentje Jacobs, gebore in Rotterdam.
Gerrit Jansz (die seun van Jan) kom van Deventer, or liewer ‘n voorstad van Deventer, genoem Veldkamp.
Hy was een van die vryburgers wat in 1685 na die Kaap gekom het sonder ‘n vrou.

Ariaentje Jacobs (or Ariaantje Adriaansse or Ariaantje van den Berg) die spelling verskil in verskeie dokumentasie se vader is oorlede toe sy vyf jaar oud was en haar moeder toe Ariaentje agt jaar oud was. Sy was toe in die ‘Gereformeerde Burgersweeshuis’ in Rotterdam geplaas. Die minister Sewentien het toe agt van die weesmeisies na die Kaap gestuur om vrouens te word van die setlaars. (Ariaentje en haar half-suster Willemijntje was ingesluit in die groep)
Hul het met die skip ‘China’ vertrek en in 1688 voet aan wal gesit in die Kaap.

Vier van die weesmeisies is binne enkele maande getroud en hul name is in die ‘Kaapse Huweliks Register’ aangeteken. Ariaentje was een van hulle.

‘…Met die oog op huwelik aangesien die Kaap ‘n oorwig van mans was en die Vrijburgers vrouwens dringend nodig gehad het’

Ariaantje (die dogter van Jacob) is getroud met Gerrit Jansz van Deventer in 1688, en hul het agt kinders gehad, van wie vier die porfirie geen ge-erf het.
Hul het die porfirie geen ge-erf van Gerrit of van Ariaentje.

Een van hierdie agt kinders, ‘n dogter by die naam Jacomijntje was ook ‘n VP draer. Sy is in 1720 getroud met Cornelis van Rooyen en verskeie van hul kinders het ook VP gehad. As gevolg van die assosiasie van VP met hierdie van, is daardie tye na die siekte as ‘Van Rooyen se velsiekte’ verwys.

Gebaseer op die feit dat Hendrik, die seun van Willemijntje (die half-suster van Ariaentje) ook die porfirie mutasie ge-erf het, is toe aangeneem dat die draer wel Ariaentje was.


Vandag kom VP in talle families met baie verskillende vanne voor. Dit is ook lankal nie meer beperk to Afrikaner families nie, maar kom voor by baie Engelssprekendes en kleurlinge.


Die besonderhede van die ouers en grootouers van Gerrit Jansz is in die argiewe in Holland opgespoor en dit sou ook moontlik gewees het om Ariaentje se geskiedenis op te spoor in Rotterdam; as die weeshuis rekords nie verwoes was gedurende die bomaanvalle in Rotterdam in 1940 nie.

Dit blyk dus te wees dat die duisende wat porfirie ge-erf het in Suid Afrika almal lede is van een groot familie; met die Variegate Porfirie geen afkomstig van Holland. ‘n Klassieke geval van ‘n stigters effek.

Dr. Dean het daardie jare beraam dat VP ongeveer by drie uit elke duisend van die Afrikanerbevolking voorkom. Vandag word dit bereken dat daar ongeveer
30 000 VP lyers van alle bevolkingsgroepe in SA is. Die voorkoms van VP-lyers in SA is baie hoër as in enige ander land in die wêreld. Dit, en die feit dat VP eerste in SA ontdek en beskryf is, het gelei tot die assosiasie van VP met SA, naamlik die ‘Suid-Afrikaanse genetiese porfirie’.

Monday, October 12, 2009

PORPHYRIA IN SOUTH AFRICA

Por-phyr-i-a

Is a metabolic disorder. It causes overproduction of substances known as porphyrins.
In most cases the defect is genetic. The mutation carried within my family results in a faulty enzyme which cannot handle the normal metabolism of porphyrins, which results in overproduction. (large amounts of porphyrins in the blood and urine)

· Variegate Porphyria = acute porphyria
· Genetic disorder
· Affects nervous system and skin
· Body produces too much of the chemical porphyrin
· Porphyrin is used to make Heme
· Heme is the part of blood that carries oxygen
· Heme also gives blood its color
· Any circulating porphyrin the body doesn’t use is excreted in urine and stool
· In porphyria the body produces and excretes too much porphyrin and not enough Heme remains to keep a person healthy


PORPHYRIA ATTACK IS TRIGGERED BY:

· PENTOTHAL, BARBITURATES AND SULPHONAMIDES and should be avoided at all costs
· Other drugs, tranquilizers, birth control and sedatives
· Chemicals and exposure to the sun
· Certain foods like dried fruits containing Sulphur dioxide used as preservative and alcohol, wine containing Sulphites – Sulphur dioxide used in bleaching and as a fumigant

The name PORPHYRIA comes from the GREEK ‘porphuros’ meaning reddish-purple.

I have Variegate Porphyria (South African Porphyria) - It’s been in our family for generations (van Niekerks). My grandmother died at the age of 26 – giving birth to her fourth child. She died of kidney failure, due to medication complications…

My DNA test confirmed a positive South African R59W gene mutation – the common defect responsible for Variegate porphyria in South Africa.
That means PORPHYRIC DRUG PRECAUTIONS need to be exercised.

It was done in the PORPHYRIA LABORATORY MRC/UCT LIVER RESEARCH CENTRE (University of Cape Town) by Prof Peter Meissner and Prof Richard Hift.
Prof Richard Hift is now the HOD of the School of Clinical Medicine at UKZN Medical School. They are doing brilliant work in this respect!


A little bit of Historical background…

The South African mutation imported to the Cape in 1685/1688 from Holland and is now widespread in the South African population.

It is also identified in the Netherlands, where it is rare, and shown by haplotype analysis to be genetically related to the South African population. Also the mutation found on one allele of all four South African patients with compound heterozygous ("homozygous") VP.


The South African variegate porphyria gene PPOX mutation R59W could be traced back to Gerrit Jansz (the son of Jan) van Deventer, born in Veldkamp in the Netherlands, and to his wife Ariaentje (daughter of Jacob) van Rotterdam (who was born in Rotterdam).
In the 17th century most people did not have surnames but were described as the son of, or the daughter of, the father’s first name.


Gerrit Jansz (the son of Jan) came from Deventer, or rather a suburb of Deventer called Veldkamp.
He was one of the free burghers and came to the Cape in 1685. He was given a grant of land in the Stellenbosch district but he did not have a wife. He must have come from a good family because his grandfather wrote a history of the Dutch-Spanish war.

Ariaentje Jacobs van Rotterdam, (or Ariaantje Adriaansse or Ariaantje van den Berg) father died when she was 5 months and her mother, when she was eight.
*The spelling of Ariaentje varies in different documents. She was admitted to the orphanage ‘Gereformeerd Burgersweeshuis’ in Rotterdam, in 1687.

The director minister Sewentien decided to send eight of his female orphans (including Ariaentje and her half-sister Willemijntje) to the Cape to become wives of the Dutch settlers. They were sent out on the ship China and arrived in the Cape in 1688.
Four of the female orphans were married within months of their arrival and their names are together in the Cape Marriage Register. One of the four was Ariaantje

Ariaantje (the daughter of Jacob) married Gerrit Jansz van Deventer in 1688, and they and had eight children, of whom four had porphyria. They must have inherited porphyria either from Gerrit or from Ariaantje. It is not known whether porphyria was brought to South Africa by Gerrit Jansz or his wife Ariaantje Jacobs.

Based on the fact that Hendrik, the son of Willemijntje, the halfsister of Ariaantje, also had the porphyria mutation - the carrier was assumed to be Ariaentje.


The details about the parents and grandparents of Gerrit Jansz have been found from the archives in Holland and it would have been possible to trace the ancestry of Ariaantje, from the orphanage in Rotterdam, if only the orphanage records wasn’t destroyed by fire during the bombing of Rotterdam in 1940.

A cluster of porphyria was also identified in a community southeast of Portland, Oregon (Robert Vlietinck, unpublished results). These people were descended from seven founders who all emigrated to the United States in the middle of the 19th century. They were endogamous to keep the farming land in the families. Their ancestry could be traced back to the province of North-Brabant, not far away from the village Veldkamp, where Gerrit Jansz van Deventer was born.


Porphyria Variegate is so ‘common’ in South Africa because one of the early settlers happened by chance to have brought the porphyric gene from Holland and descendants multiplied rapidly.

It appears that the thousands who have inherited porphyria variegate in South Africa are members of this one huge family.

Those who have inherited Variegate Porphyria seem to be more emotional than average and if it wasn’t for modern medicine, porphyria would have done little harm…

Modern medicine, BARBITURATES, SULPHONAMIDES especially and PENTOTHAL are to be absolutely AVOIDED at all costs!!!


In 1939 two medical students at the University of Cape Town; Lennox Eales (Prof Eales) and Jack Chait published the first description on Porphyria in the l’nyanga journal.

The link with this founder family was identified first by Geoffrey Dean, a British physician who settled in South Africa in 1947.

Friday, October 9, 2009

HEART AND STROKE FOUNDATION SA


The Heart and Stroke Foundation South Africa is eager to reach into your community.

A healthy kick-start!

National Nutrition week runs from 9th-13th October 2009 and overlaps with

Obesity Week which is from 12-18th October 2009.

The health status of young children is in question as researchers have found that 10% of South African kids under the age of 9 years are overweight, while 4% are obese. The concern with this is that, if untreated, it can lead to other lifestyle diseases later in life like diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol and cardiovascular disease. Furthermore, overweight or obese kids are often burdened with psycho-social difficulties including negative self esteem, poor social skills and discrimination. According to the World Health Organisation, 70% of overweight children become overweight adults and hence this warrants the need for intervention as early as possible!

Not only is overnutrition a matter of concern, but undernutrition is also a problem…Stunting and underweight due to malnutrition poses a threat to children’s health with South African statistics revealing that 1 in 5 children is stunted while almost 1 out of 10 is underweight. Added to this are major problems of vitamin and mineral deficiencies, with more than half of South African children under the age of 9 years being deficient in Vitamin A and more than 10% iron deficient. With these nutrition challenges on hand, it becomes incumbent for parents, caregivers, child minders as well as kids, to be educated about healthy eating practices.

This year, South Africa is celebrating National Nutrition Week from the 9th – 13th October.


The theme is ‘Healthy eating for children’ - highlighting 3 important key messages:


Enjoy a variety of foods
Drink lots of clean, safe water
Be active

Enjoy a variety of foods
Eating a variety of healthy foods as well as regular meals and snacks will help children attain optimal wellbeing. In addition to variety, all the food groups should be included daily – this ensuring a balanced intake of macro and micronutrients.


All foods fit into 5 types:
Starch
Vegetables and fruit
Dairy
Meat and meat alternatives like legumes, lentils, soya, chicken and fish
Fats and sugars (add these sparingly to the diet)


Kids spend most of their time in school and so they should be provided with a variety of healthy foods, be it in their lunch box or at the school tuck shop. Some good options include fruit, chopped vegetables with a low fat dip, yoghurt, popcorn, peanuts and dried fruit.


The Heart and Stroke Foundation South Africa (HSFSA) has a School Tuck Shop Programme designed to address the problem of unhealthy eating amongst school children. The main objective of the programme is to enable children to make healthier choices when faced with a range of options. To achieve this, we strive to encourage school tuck shops to serve more nutritious snacks and meals.


For more information about this programme, visit our website http://www.heartfoundation.co.za/ or email ayesha@heartfoundation.co.za


Drink lots of clean, safe water


Water, a natural calorie free beverage, is sadly often forgotten! Water is required for various functions in our body from preventing constipation, aiding in digestion of food, maintaining a healthy skin to keeping one well hydrated. Kids also need about 6-8 glasses of water per day. Ensure that the water is from a safe source (tap) - if not, the water can be boiled and cooled in a clean container or treated with bleach (add 1 teaspoon of bleach to 20 liters of water and allow to stand for 2 hours before drinking).

Tips for getting children to drink water:


Give them a bottle of cool clean, safe water to take to school every day
Serve a glass of water with each meal
Give children a glass of clean, safe water to drink when they brush their teeth in the morning and evening
Dilute fruit juice with some water
Make fruit ice in summer
For a refreshing drink, add a squeeze of lemon juice or slices of lemon to the water

Be active


Exercise plays a pivotal role in a child’s life, be it walking the dog, roller-skating, jogs on the beach, dance classes or playing outdoors with friends. The South African Youth Risk Behaviour Survey of 2002 found that 37.5% of our youth do not participate in physical activity and 25% watch television/are playing computer games for 3 hours or more per day. Limiting time spent on sedentary activities and encouraging more physical activity will definitely do wonders for your child’s well being - good heart health, a reduction in weight gain (if overweight), improved self esteem and better sleeping patterns are just some of the benefits that could be reaped. So get your child involved in activity for at least 60 minutes a day or 30 minutes twice a day. Allow them to choose activities they enjoy - this way, they are more likely to do it.

What does the HSFSA recommend?


Encourage healthy habits from a young age to prevent future heart-ache, but more importantly be a role model to your kids. They are more likely to engage in healthy behaviours if they see their parents doing so. Try not to always reward your child with food when he/she has done a favourable task. Parents mean well, but why not a soccer ball, a new swimming costume, new track pants or even a frisbee for a change. So the next time your child does well in school, completes his/her homework, does household chores etc don’t offer them dessert, cakes, chocolates or a trip to the nearest fat-laden fast food take-away. Go the extra mile and make it not only personal but also worthwhile for their health by rewarding them with something of significance. Written by Ayesha Seedat, Registered Dietitian, the Heart and Stroke Foundation South Africa

For more heart smart information, please contact the Heart Mark Diet Line on 0860 223 222, email heart@heartfoundation.co.za or visit our website http://www.heartfoundation.co.za/

POWER OF WORDS

The Real Meaning of Words....



























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Wednesday, September 30, 2009

NEW SOUTH AFRICA!

The latest crime statistics showed that about 50 people were murdered in South Africa a day, while business robberies increased by 41.5 percent and house robberies by 27.3 percent.




Please post your support and prayers for Kerryn Roodt


“Kerryn Roodt was robbed and shot while on a week’s holiday down at the coast,” writes her friend Mariette Van Antwerp on :


”Kerryn and her boyfriend came down to the South Coast for a week to have fun and enjoy a week’s holiday,” writes Mrs Van Antwerp, who is from Amanzimtoti, Kwa-Zulu. “They were busy packing when four young men aged between 14 to 17 years climbed over the wall and held them at gunpoint. “They robbed everything they had with them even took their shoes they had on. The attackers told Kerryn they are going to rape her and then “when they are finished with her they are going to rape her boyfriend as well”.


They told him not to look while they are busy raping her as they are going to shoot him if he did. They started licking and kissing her all over her body – but something alarmed them and they went outside as they walked out one said don't shoot, its going to make a noise. But two came back kissed her again and said : “Goodbye my beautiful young white baby” and shot her. They fired a shot at her boyfriend as well but they missed him.


Kerryn now is paralysed and needs all the prayer and support she can get… http://www.blogger.com/'http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=


Join Adriana Stuijt at Facebook – and stay informed!


Source: Censor Bugbear (Adriana Stuijt)



For more information visit http://www.dienuwesuidafrika.com

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Trailers | The Age of Stupid

Trailers | The Age of Stupid

Shared via AddThis

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Shape-HF™ Cardiopulmonary Testing System




Dean MacCarter, Ph.D. Addressed Differentiation of Responder vs Non-Responder CRT Status with Low Level Exercise at HFSA13th Annual Scientific Meeting


Speaking at the recent Heart Failure Society of America Scientific Meeting, Dr. MacCarter discussed how breathing efficiency measurements during low level exercise may offer a better discriminator for CRT responder and no-responsder outcomes. He also introduced a new objective method for optimizing CRT in heart failure patients using the FDA-approved Shape-HF™ Cardiopulmonary Testing System--the accuracy of which was validated in a recent Mayo Clinic study--to measure changes in patient breathing efficiency as cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) pacemaker settings are adjusted. In this way, physicians are able to assess the physiological effect of therapy in real time while the patient is exercising at a level consistent with normal daily activity.


Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN (PRWEB) September 17, 2009 -- Speaking at the recent Heart Failure Society of America 13th Annual Meeting, September 13 to 16, Dean MacCarter, Ph.D., Vice President Clinical Affairs for Shape Medical Systems, Inc., addressed how breathing efficiency measurements during low level exercise may offer a better discriminator for cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) responder and non-responder outcomes. He also introduced the audience to a new patented method for optimizing therapy in patients with implanted cardiac resynchronization pacemakers. This new method involves using the FDA-approved Shape-HF™ Cardiopulmonary Testing System (http://www.shapemedsystems.com/products.html)--the accuracy of which was validated in a recent Mayo Clinic study--to measure changes in patient breathing efficiency as CRT pacemaker settings are adjusted. In this way, physicians are able to assess the physiological effect of therapy in real time while the patient is exercising at a level consistent with normal daily activity.


CRT is used in severe cases of heart failure to restore synchrony between the heart chambers during the heartbeat. In patients with advanced heart failure the heart may not beat strongly or efficiently enough to supply adequate oxygen to peripheral tissues (such as active skeletal muscles), and poor blood flow to the lungs disrupts the process of exchanging needed oxygen for carbon dioxide, a waste product of normal metabolism. Combined, these effects lower the amount of oxygen in the blood, which decreases the patient's ability to exercise and causes inefficient, labored breathing."Shortness of breath on even mild exertion is a key symptom in heart failure," says Dr. MacCarter. "We know that a positive response to CRT improves breathing efficiency during exercise, so it makes sense that parameters that can measure patient breathing efficiency can be used to define patient response and determine the proper pacemaker settings for CRT."


The test involves measuring ventilation parameters while the patient exercises on a treadmill at a very low intensity of one mile per hour with the treadmill set at a minimal 1% to 2% grade. "This is a level of exercise that is consistent with normal daily activity in this patient population," notes MacCarter. As the patient exercises at a steady state heart rate, the physician adjusts therapy settings every two minutes, enough time for the adjustments to be reflected in breathing physiology. At the end of the test, during which four to five therapy settings are tested, the Shape-HF™ System uses a proprietary computer algorithm to rank the physiological response to exercise at each setting. The physician then reviews the results and chooses the therapy setting he or she believes is most appropriate for the patient.


"The CRT response rate in heart failure patients is about 70%. By using the Shape-HF™ System, physicians may be able to help the remaining 30%--the non-responders--feel better," says Clarence Johnson, President and COO of Shape Medical Systems. "Because patient breathing efficiency is so sensitive to changes in CRT delay settings, using gas exchange parameters to assess these changes provides a completely objective method for defining response to CRT."


The Shape-HF System is the only device that objectively measures CRT response in real time while the patient is exercising. The System is cost-effective, easy to use, and the test is easy on the patient. "CRT patients generally believe they should spend most of their time lying on the couch," said Dr. MacCarter. "Our objective is to get them off the couch, back on their feet and enjoying life again."


About the Heart Failure Society of America (http://www.hfsa.org/annual_meeting.asp)- The Heart Failure Society of America (HFSA) is a nonprofit educational organization, founded in 1994 as the first organized association of heart failure experts. Today HFSA has over 1,500 members and provides a forum for all those interested in heart function, heart failure research and patient care. The HFSA Annual Scientific Meeting is designed to highlight recent advances in the development of strategies to address the complex epidemiological, clinical and therapeutic issues of heart failure.


About Shape Medical Systems, Inc (http://www.shapemedsystems.com/index.html). - Shape Medical Systems Inc. is a privately held, St. Paul, Minnesota-based medical device company whose core technology lies in the development and commercialization of products for assessing heart/lung interaction and ventilation in chronic heart failure and other cardiopulmonary disease. Shape's clear mission is to develop products that increase the quality of patients' lives by helping doctors quantify shortness of breath, assess patient functional capacity, optimize drug, device and rehabilitation therapy, and monitor patient progress. Shape Medical Systems was founded in 2004 and received FDA market clearance for the Shape-HF™ Cardiopulmonary Testing System in April 2009. The Shape-HF™ System, testing protocols and applications are protected by patent 7,225,022 and other U.S. and foreign patents issued and pending.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Stellenbosch scientists identifies the gene that causes inherited heart disease




(From left standing) Sr Althea Goosen (Stellenbosch University); Prof Olaf Pongs (University of Hamburg); Prof Paul Brink (Stellenbosch University); Dr Lou Hofmeyr (Stellenbosch University). (Front left sitting) Prof Eric Schulze-Bahr (University of Munster); Prof Valerie Corfield (Stellenbosch University).
After a scientific search of more than three decades, researchers in the Faculty of Health Sciences, Stellenbosch University - in collaboration with international partners - have pinpointed the rogue gene that causes the inherited heart disease, known as progressive familial heart block type I, in a group of South African families whose ancestors can all be traced to one immigrant who landed on these shores in 1696.


The disease was first described by Prof Andries Brink - a cardiac specialist and former dean of the Faculty - in 1977. In 1986, Brink's son, Prof Paul Brink, in collaboration with Prof Valerie Corfield - both of the Faculty of Health Sciences - embarked on the search for the genetic mutation that triggers the condition and causes a disruption of the electrical impulses that control heart contractions. They traced this to a small area on chromosome 19 which contained about 80 genes. This search recently came to an end when Brink and Corfield, in collaboration with scientists from Hamburg and Münster in Germany, managed to pinpoint the exact gene amongst this group.


The study, which represents years of research and at times involved teams of other scientists, clinicians, cardiac specialists and technologists of the Stellenbosch Faculty of Health Sciences, is due to be published in the September edition of the international Journal of Clinical Investigation. However, an online version of the article can be accessed ahead of print, on the Journal's website [http://www.jci.org/]


The study of progressive familial heartblock started at Stellenbosch University in the 1970's when Prof Andries Brink - then practicing as a cardiac specialist at the Tygerberg Hospital - treated a baby who was born with a very slow heart rate. The child's condition was so serious that she had to be fitted with an artificial cardiac pacemaker. She thus became the first baby in South Africa to be treated with a pacemaker. According to Prof Paul Brink, it was a big decision to make at the time because artificial pacemakers were at an early stage of development and they were almost the size of a brick. Today, the body of a pacemaker is less than four centimeters long, and it is implanted under the skin with electrodes regulating the beating of the heart.


While Brink was treating the baby, he became aware of another child who also needed a pacemaker. This child happened to be a close relative of the baby under his care. He then examined the mother and found evidence of a similar underlying disease - but not as advanced as that of the baby. This lead Brink to believe that he was dealing with a family problem and he called in the help of Dr Marie Torrington, an expert in the field of genealogical research, who soon traced the disease to other families - most of them living in the Eastern Cape. She found that the carrier of the defective gene came to South Africa from Madeira, Portugal in 1696. He married a woman of Dutch descent. Today, all South Africans affected by progressive familial heart block are descendants of this couple.


Roughly 50% of children born to an affected person will be carriers. Of these "about two thirds will need a pacemaker at one time or another," says Prof Valerie Corfield. "A very small percentage of them will show no evidence of the disease on an electrocardiogram, even though they carry the gene, while others will display an underlying electrical glitch."


According to Prof Paul Brink, progressive familial heart block is characterized by a slow heart rate which necessitates a pacemaker. "The disease can occur any time from birth until old age and in some cases it has been identified in utero. Today it can be managed with the timely implantation of a pacemaker, but before the advent of this device it often claimed the lives of patients affected by the condition."


He says the identification of the affected gene could not have taken place without the ongoing cooperation and interest of the families affected by the disease. At the same time, advances in molecular biology in the 1990's and the mapping of the human genome in particular, made it possible for himself and Corfield to use the information, gathered from large family studies, to pinpoint a particular place on one chromosome where the rogue gene was situated.


However, even with their access to the human genome, "it was like looking for a needle in a haystack. There were at least eighty genes in the area where we expected to find the rogue gene. Examining all of them was a costly and time-consuming process," says Corfield.
"It was during this search that Prof Olaf Pongs of a research team in Hamburg, Germany, contacted us serendipitously and told us that he was interested in a particular gene situated in our search area and that we should take a closer look at this gene. We thus teamed up with Pongs and another research team in Münster, Germany and through our joint efforts it was finally confirmed that the gene that interested Pongs, indeed showed a very small change that leads to the development of the disease. Through our research it soon became clear that the product of this gene was playing a role in the way heart cells handle sodium and potassium, which underlie the electrical signals of the heart."


The discovery of the rogue gene means that families in the affected population can now receive an accurate genetic diagnosis and learn at an early stage which members of a family is at risk of developing the disease - and should be followed up accordingly.


At the same time, it will give scientists and clinicians better insight and understanding of many conditions affecting the electrical system of the heart, such as non-genetic delays in the heart rate which is common in older people.


* Brink and Corfield are also involved in a wide range of studies of other genetic cardiac disorders, most of which also involve founder families of Afrikaner descent, i.e. a cardiac muscle disease known as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy that predisposes people – often young and seemingly healthy sportsmen and women - to sudden unexpected death, as well as a Long QT syndrome which causes dangerously irregular heart rhythms and another conduction disorder, known as progressive familial heart block, type II.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009





2009
Kearsney College – Botha’s Hill

14-15 August 2009

Upbeat 2009 is a smorgasbord of events offering something for all tastes and all ages - laid back Jazz on Friday evening, fun cabaret with a powerhouse of talent on Saturday evening, and in-between the riotously funny-man of South African humour Mike Naicker, talented youth performing in 'Refresh' and Kearsney's musical ‘Return To The Forbidden Planet’; the likes of which hasn't been seen outside the West End!
I can't wait to see 'GIRLS BEHAVING BADLY'Four gorgeous girls turn up the heat with a fast-paced look at all the naughty girls' in music - from Diana Ross to Britney, Amy & Madonna. It's cheeky, it's fun and with stylish choreography and stunning costumes.You're sure to get to your feet as they belt out hits from Bette Midler, Pussycat Dolls, Gwen Stefani, & Tina Turner and even include my type of oldies from Billie Holiday, Connie Francis & Nancy Sinatra. It is Supper-theatre-style format so you can bring your own hamper or purchase from the Festival Food Court...(Shelly McLean, Marion Loudon, Janna Ramos-Violante and Elizabeth Perkins)

Now in its sixth year, UPBEAT FESTIVAL 2009 explores new genres of the arts, to include rhythm & song, bands & jazz, theatre, comedy & choirs, dance & magic, extreme stunts, art, photography & design exhibitions, international award winning ads, handmade crafts, as well as food & wine tastings.

Of added interest this year will be several exhibitions – mixed media art from the Highway community, photography, jewelery and contemporary objects d’art.

The FunZone has jumping castles, swings and a choochoo train for the littlies, to a climbing wall, 75m zip line, bungee trampoline and mechanical surfboard for bigger thrill-seekers. Between the shows there are various venues for relaxing, including the Coffee shop, food court and beer tent.

The Festival will also feature ‘Room 13’, an international initiative recently introduced to South Africa, in which learners are encouraged to explore their creativity, whilst learning business skills to assist in marketing their artworks.

Long term weather predicts clear skies and warm days so come and enjoy the day with us….

The full programme of events can be viewed on http://www.kearsney.com/
Bookings for the shows can be made either through Computicket
http://www.computicket.com/ / 083 915 8000 or
via the internet
http://www.computicket.com/web/festival/upbeat_festival_2009/1214395/
or Mrs Brigette Oakes in the music department (031 765 9659).

Subject to availability; tickets can be purchased on the day of the show from the campus Festival Box Office.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Pacemaker hangs from neck...

Just when I think I've seen and heard well almost everything...
Brajagopal Layek at home, holding the pacemaker.
Picture by Gour Sharma Barakar

An octogenarian in Burdwan wears his pacemaker next to his heart all right but not under his skin. He keeps the machine in a cloth bag that hangs from his neck, and wipes it clean once in a while.

The lean, bespectacled Brajagopal Layek was apparently so fed up with regular infections because of the instrument that he slit open his skin with a blade and prised it out. It’s been hanging over his chest for the past five months.

A pacemaker uses electrical impulses, delivered by electrodes in touch with cardiac muscles, to regulate the beating of the heart. The electrodes still travel from the pacemaker into Layek’s heart.

The 82-year-old resident of Barakar near Asansol said he was fine with this arrangement, but doctors were aghast.

The Asansol cardiologist whom Layek consulted said he was stunned by what he saw. “I’ve never seen anything like this in my 20 years as a doctor and took a snap of him on my phone. But what he has done is not acceptable,” said V.B. Gupta.

Cardiac surgeon Kunal Sarkar said Layek could contract an infection anytime. “He needs to change the pacemaker immediately and plant it properly far from the infectious area. It is his great luck that he has survived so long like this.”

Layek had spent Rs 1 lakh in 1995 to get the machine implanted at Christian Medical College, Vellore.

For the next 10 years, he was okay, but complications developed thereafter. “My pulse rate went down and I felt dizzy. Our family physician suspected that the battery life of the pacemaker had been exhausted and suggested I contact Vellore,” said Layek, a retired technician of the Damodar Valley Corporation.

Doctors at CMC replaced the old battery with a new one in May 2005.

The going was again fine for Layek, an amateur homoeopath, for the next one year. In November 2005, he visited Vellore for a routine check-up. In the summer of 2006, he developed rashes with itching and a burning sensation on the patch of skin under which the pacemaker had been implanted. “I used to scratch the rashes and the skin became rough above the pacemaker with a burning sensation,” he said.

Vellore doctors told him the machine might have got infected during the battery change. “They sterilised it and shifted it to my left chest. I returned and resumed normal life but only for two years,” Layek said. In October 2008, he again developed rashes, itching and a burning sensation.

“We became fed up with the repeated travelling to Vellore and decided to consult a cardiologist in nearby Asansol. The doctor suspected infection in the pacemaker and suggested an ointment,” said Layek’s elder son Ashish, 45.

But the problem persisted. The Asansol cardiologist then advised Layek to shift the pacemaker to his abdomen because the skin on the left chest was not accepting it. “We again contacted Vellore, which wrote to us to come for another operation. But my father refused to go,” said Ashish.

This February, Layek used a shaving blade he had sterilised to slice his chest and take out the pacemaker. He applied an antiseptic cream on the cut and put a plaster on it. The wound healed with time.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Stem Cells Used for 'Biological Pacemaker'


"Cell therapy could overcome those problems and provide a possible cure for conductive disease. Our goal is to create a biological pacemaker."

Stem cells from a type of human fat tissue may one day be able to reverse the electrical problems in the heart that pacemakers now correct, Japanese scientists report.

Researchers grew "beating" cells with properties similar to the heart's conductive tissue from stem cells taken from the brown fat tissue of mice. They then injected them into rodents with reduced heart rates caused by electrical signaling problems known as atrio-ventricular (AV) block.

After a week, the AV block was completely reversed or partially reversed in half of the test mice, according to the report scheduled to be presented Wednesday at the American Heart Association's Basic Cardiovascular Sciences Conference in Dallas. No change was observed in the control mice, they said.

The beating cells, which researchers colored green so they would be easy to see, were found to have attached near the section of the heart that manages its electrical conduction systems.
"Electronic pacemakers are often used as palliative therapy (helpful but not curative treatment) for people who have conduction problems with the electrical signals that govern the heart beat.

However, that therapy has several shortcomings, including possible malfunction and the need for repeated replacement of the device's power packs and electrodes," study lead author Dr. Toshinao Takahashi, a research fellow at Chiba University Graduate School of Medicine in Chiba, Japan, said in an American Heart Association news release.

"Cell therapy could overcome those problems and provide a possible cure for conductive disease. Our goal is to create a biological pacemaker."

Brown fat tissue is a source of mesenchymal stem cells, which previous studies have shown can develop into many different types of cells, such as bone, neuron, muscle, liver and fat cells. After isolating these cells in a laboratory, the Japanese team managed to grow groups of spontaneously beating cells. One tube-like group of cells resembled the heart's fine muscle fiber, while all contained two proteins, chemical markers and other similarities to the heart's own pacemaker-like cells.

"Our findings suggest that brown-fat-derived mesenchymal stem cells…may become a useful cell source for anti-arrhythmic therapy," Takahashi said. (Source: (HealthDay News)

Monday, July 6, 2009

Dolly the sheep...




















Today is the birthday of DOLLY the sheep; the first mammal successfully cloned from an adult cell in July, 1996, Edinburgh, Scotland.

Cells from the udder of a pregnant six year-old sheep were inserted into the uterus of another sheep to develop, and thus Dolly was born; her name was a sly nod to singer Dolly Parton.

However, Dolly the sheep, was given a lethal injection on February 14, 2003 at Scotland's Roslin Institute, after veterinarians discovered signs of progressive lung cancer.


Though she lived only about half the expected 10 to 12 year life span for a Finn Dorset sheep, scientists who conducted the postmortem found that other than her lung and arthritis ailments she appeared to be normal. The celebrity sheep was the mother of six lambs, which were brought into the world the old-fashioned way.

Dolly made headlines around the world and launched a public debate about the possibilities-and ethics-of cloning. Over the years, research groups around the world reported the cloning of mice, rats, cows, goats, rabbits, pigs, a horse, a mule and a dog.

What do you think about cloning?
Is it a yes or a no?