Showing posts with label People. Show all posts
Showing posts with label People. Show all posts

88-year-old George H.W. Bush: "Maybe they’ll come out with a new drug that makes memory come roaring back"

The former president George H.W. Bush wrote a poem for his grandkids:

"So I can add to the report on getting older. 
Who knows, maybe they’ll come out with a new drug that makes legs bend easier,
Joints hurt less, drives go further, memory come roaring back,
And all fears about falling off fishing rocks go away. 
Remember the old song: I’ll be there ready when you are.
Well I’ll be there ready when you are
There’s so much excitement ahead, so many grandkids to watch grow.
If you need me I’m here."

By the way, the 88-year-old former president said he was not done skydiving. His goal: to jump again when he is 90.



References:

'If you need me I'll be there': George HW Bush moved to tears during interview with granddaughter Jenna about his family and growing old | Daily Mail Online http://goo.gl/noCt0

George Michael, still breathless after pneumonia and tracheotomy, plans a show for his doctors (video)



Video: George Michael: This has been the worst month of my life. ShowBiz411.

A thin and visibly weak George Michael (48) told reporters outside his home in London that he wasn't supposed to speak for very long and was still recovering from a tracheotomy: "I got streptococca-something... It's a form of pneumonia and they spent three weeks keeping me alive basically," Michael said of the doctors in the Austrian hospital where the singer has been receiving treatment since he fell ill in November.

He added that he also wanted to hold a special show for the Austrian doctors who treated him. "I've spent the last 10 days since I woke up literally thanking people for saving my life."

References:

Gaunt George Michael says "fortunate to be here". Reuters, 2011.

Exercise pioneer Jack LaLanne died at 96 and was doing great until the very end (video)

Prticipation in sport is associated with a with a 20—40% reduction in all-cause mortality compared with non-participation. Exercise might also be considered as a fifth vital sign, according to the Lancet: http://goo.gl/gyxYf



Jack LaLanne, the fitness pioneer who inspired TV viewers to trim down, eat well and pump iron for decades (34 years), died at 96 of respiratory failure due to pneumonia at his home in California.

He ate healthy and exercised every day of his life up until the end. Just before he had heart valve surgery in 2009 at age 95, Jack Lalanne told his family that dying would wreck his image.

"The only way you can hurt the body is not use it," LaLanne said. "Inactivity is the killer and, remember, it's never too late."

His workout show was a television staple from the 1950s to the '70s. LaLanne and his dog Happy encouraged kids to wake their mothers and drag them in front of the television set. He developed exercises that used no special equipment, just a chair and a towel.

He said his own daily routine usually consisted of two hours of weightlifting and an hour in the swimming pool.

When he turned 43 in 1957, he performed more than 1,000 push-ups in 23 minutes on a TV show. At 60 he swam from Alcatraz Island to Fisherman’s Wharf handcuffed, shackled and towing a 1,000-pound boat. At 70, handcuffed and shackled again, he towed 70 boats, carrying a total of 70 people, a mile and a half through Long Beach Harbor.

He had a blog too: http://www.jacklalanne.com/blog



Jack LaLanne at Age 95 (CBS). He had just published his 11th book at the time.

Twitter comments:

@TracylynnHolt (Tracyfogelstrom-Holt) But lived an awesome LIFE...:):)

@DrVes: Sure. He was great. I wish everybody could make it to 96 in reasonable health... :)

@Thinkbirth (Carolyn Hastie): I love the videos, thanks for sharing "Jumping Jack" :-) so good to see that.

References:

Exercise pioneer Jack LaLanne dies at 96 at California home; inspired generations to get fit. Chicago Tribune.
Jack LaLanne, Fitness Guru, Dies at 96. TIME.
Jack LaLanne, Founder of Modern Fitness Movement, Dies at 96. NYTimes.


Related reading:

Minimum amount of physical activity for reduced mortality and extended life expectancy: 15 min a day or 90 min a week. Lancet, 2011.

Steve Jobs on medical leave - transplantation specialist discusses two likely clinical scenarios

From the WSJ:

William Chapman, transplantation chief at Washington University in St. Louis, hasn't examined Mr. Jobs personally, but said there are two likely scenarios in the CEO's case.

The first is that there was a transplant-related problem, though it would be unusual for that to happen a year and a half after the transplant.

A more likely possibility would be that the neuroendocrine tumor metastasized again. "It's really difficult to cure the disease with a liver transplant," said Mr. Chapman, adding that it's common to have some degree of recurrence. "Most people hope they reset the clock, gained some time and gained a quality of life even if you don't cure the disease."


Steve Jobs' speech at the 2005 Stanford graduation ceremony: “This is the closest I’ve ever gotten to a college graduation.”

He tells 3 stories from his life:

- Connecting the dots
- Love and loss
- About death

Mr. Jobs was diagnosed in 2004 with a rare type of pancreatic cancer called islet cell neuroendocrine tumor, which could be cured if surgery removed it promptly. He reportedly had surgery by the end of 2004 but began exhibiting weight loss in 2008. This type of cancer often metastasizes in another organ, usually the liver, during a patient's lifetime. A Tennessee hospital disclosed that Mr. Jobs had received a liver transplant there in 2009.

"Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose," Mr. Jobs said in the commence speech in June 2005, almost a year after he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.

I join everybody around the world in wishing Mr. Jobs a speedy recovery.

References:

Brain freeze, senior moment or just exhaustion - CNN video



From CBS News:

A 2006 study questioned the acceptability of minor episodic memory loss in older adults as normal. Episodic memory loss includes things such as forgetting the name of a new acquaintance, a recent conversation, or an upcoming appointment.

People commonly undergo an age-related slowing of the ability to retrieve information. They might forget where they put their keys, but they usually remember eventually. But when Alzheimer's is involved, new information is never properly stored, meaning the affected person never learned it well enough to be able to retrieve it.

Related reading:

Senior Moments: Signs Of Alzheimer's? CBS News.
Memory problems not a normal sign of aging: study http://goo.gl/xb9M
FDA Approves "Alzheimer's CT scan" by Eli Lilly - radioactive agent florbetapir tags clumps of sticky amyloid in brain. WSJ, 2012.

Michael Douglas on Having Throat Cancer - Late Show with David Letterman (video)



Oropharyngeal cancer is increasing at a "dramatic" rate, particularly in the male population http://goo.gl/JAko

Related:
Michael Douglas Has Stage IV Throat Cancer; Experts Weigh In. WebMD.
Catherine Zeta-Jones's fury at the doctors who missed her husband Michael Douglas's throat cancer. Daily Mail.

Update 01/11/2011:
Michael Douglas says his throat cancer tumor is in complete remission ("gone") after 7 weeks of radiation/chemotherapy, but salivary glands not working http://goo.gl/zfR9Z

Peace and Love



Ringo Starr's Peace and Love Birthday Wish 2010: Ringo Starr asks everyone to join him in a Peace & Love moment on his birthday July 7 2010 at noon where ever you are. "Perhaps one day everyone will have a moment of Peace & Love all over the world".

Barbara Walters, US TV Anchor, to Undergo Heart Surgery to Replace a "Faulty Valve" - Sounds Like Aortic Stenosis



Walters announced that she will undergo surgery to replace a "faulty" heart valve later this week.

"You know how I always say to you how healthy I am. ... I've never missed a day's work," she began. "Later this week, I'm going to have surgery to replace one faulty heart valve."

From her description, the valve defect sounds like aortic stenosis. For a variety of reasons, mitral stenosis is a less likely possibility in the differential diagnosis.

Best wishes for successful surgery and speedy recovery!

References:
Barbara Walters to Undergo Heart Surgery. ABC.

Rock legend Ronnie James Dio is fighting stomach cancer

On 25 November 2009, Dio's wife and manager announced that he was diagnosed with stomach cancer:

"Ronnie has been diagnosed with the early stages of stomach cancer. We are starting treatment immediately at the Mayo Clinic. After he kills this dragon, Ronnie will be back on stage, where he belongs, doing what he loves best, performing for his fans. Long live rock and roll, long live Ronnie James Dio. Thanks to all the friends and fans from all over the world that have sent well wishes. This has really helped to keep his spirit up." -- "He has had a few hiccups between Christmas and New Year's," she said in a statement to fans. "He has had a blood clot, a trip to the emergency room, and a three-day stay at the hospital."

ArtisanNewsService — April 13, 2010 — "One of heavy metal's premiere vocalists Ronnie James Dio shares his thoughts on his battle with stomach cancer at the Revolver Golden Gods awards." On 14 March 2010, Dio's wife and manager Wendy posted an online update on his condition: "It has been Ronnie's 7th chemo, another cat scan and another endoscopy, and the results are good - the main tumour has shrunk considerably, and our visits to Houston (MD Anderson Cancer Center in Texas) are now every three weeks instead of every two weeks."
Ronnie James Dio passed away on May 16, 2010 at age 67. The music lives on: http://www.ronniejamesdio.com
Dio, another day. Nigel Britto, TOI Crest, May 22, 2010. Dio monument in Bulgaria - source one, two, three (in Bulgarian), 10/2010. Cortland native Ronnie James Dio will be honored Thursday with the SAMMYs Lifetime Achievement Award, 2014 http://buff.ly/1lHk3j5
Updated: 10/24/2010

Rock star Ozzy Osbourne to CNN: "Between drugs and STDs, I'm lucky to be alive today"

"Ozzy Osbourne, the former front man of rock group Black Sabbath, says that after decades of living a life of drugs and sex, he's lucky to be alive today. Osbourne described how he often played a dangerous game when it came to using drugs and having promiscuous sex. "With the drugs, it nearly killed me on a daily basis -- I did a lot of heavy drug taking for a long time and I survived it by the grace of God. Answering a viewer's question on whether he realized his power to change people's lives, Osbourne replied with shock. "When you're on the inside looking, you don't see it that way," Osbourne said. "But I suppose you're right. I do -- I do have the power to change people's lives." Why aging rock stars still tour: "Once the lights go down and the crowds roar, something magical happens. All your aches and pains go" http://buff.ly/1hfxi3x References: Ozzy Osbourne: I'm living on borrowed time. CNN.
"Researchers studying Ozzy Osbourne's DNA found that the singer is descendant of Neanderthals" http://goo.gl/7Fa8 Related:

Atul Gawande: "Doctors are human. We miss stuff" - Checklists can help



Atul Gawande on NPR:

Doctors are human, and that their profession is like any other.

"We miss stuff. We are inconsistent and unreliable because of the complexity of care," Gawande says. "I got a chance to visit Boeing and see how they make things work, and over and over again they fall back on checklists. The pilot's checklist is a crucial component, not just for how you handle takeoff and landing in normal circumstances, but even how you handle a crisis emergency when you only have a couple of minutes to make a critical decision."

References:
Atul Gawande's 'Checklist' For Surgery Success. NPR.

Related:

Metallica drummer struggles with tinnitus: "Once your hearing is gone, it's gone"

From CNN: "I've been playing loud rock music for the better part of 35 years," said Ulrich, 46, drummer for the heavy metal band Metallica. "I never used to play with any kind of protection." Early in his career, without protection for his ears, the loud noise began to follow Ulrich off-stage. "It's this constant ringing in the ears," Ulrich said. "It never sort of goes away. It never just stops." It is a condition called tinnitus, a perception of sound where there is none. "I try to point out to younger kids ... once your hearing is gone, it's gone, and there's no real remedy." The military is generating a tremendous number of tinnitus patients." References: Metallica drummer struggles with ringing in ears. CNN.
Tinnitus relief: Suggestions for patients. CCJM, 2011. Noise Chart as It Relates to Hearing Damage and Hearing Loss http://goo.gl/tjZh1
Tinnitus - 2014 Clinical Practice Guideline http://buff.ly/1s5RdN5
Tinnitus - a real problem for many hard rock/heavy metal fands http://bit.ly/17JiQ6N

The President Got His H1N1 Flu Shot and the Photo Proof is on Flickr



A White House nurse prepares to administer the H1N1 vaccine to President Barack Obama at the White House on Sunday, Dec. 20, 2009. (Official White House photo by Pete Souza) (public domain).

The photo is from the official White House Flickr channel which provides an unprecedented access to photos of the President and his staff - all of them free for use and in the public domain.

Check some of the comments under the photo:

"OK you are going to feel a little pinch

This is the best-dressed nurse I've ever seen.

This is a Wonderful Capture and hopefully it will prod everyone in getting a H1N1 vaccine shot!

From the thumbnail I thought it was Obama getting a tattoo

The President has not been lifting weights. His arms are almost as bad as mine.

Baraccination"

References:

The White House's photostream
The Presidents Club | Photos: Oval Office Secrets from Truman to Obama | TIME, 2012.

John F. Kennedy had the most complex medical history of any U.S. president, likely had polyendocrine syndrome type II

From the Annals of Internal Medicine:

In an Era of Less Media Scrutiny, John F. Kennedy Hid Serious Health Problems from the Public.

At the age of 43, he was the youngest man ever elected president. During his campaign and presidency, the media portrayed him as the epitome of youth and vigor. However, a recent review of his medical records reveals that Kennedy had the most complex medical history of any U.S. president.

Unbeknownst public, Kennedy was diagnosed with Addison's disease, a rare endocrine disorder in which the adrenal glands do not produce enough of the hormone cortisol.

Later, when Kennedy was a senator, he was found to have hypothyroidism. During the 1960 campaign for the presidency, Kennedy's physician denied the Addison's diagnosis.

Today, with newly available evidence, researchers can plausibly conclude that Kennedy had a rare unifying endocrine disorder called autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type II, or APS II, which is characterized by the coexistence of hypothyroidism and Addison's disease.

Autoimmune polyendocrine syndromes in Essentials of clinical immunology By Helen Chapel:



Autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type II (also known as Schmidt's syndrome) may include:

- Addison's disease
- Hypothyroidism
- Diabetes mellitus (type 1)
- Hypogonadism
- Vitiligo

Autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type I (also known as Whitaker syndrome) may include:

- Chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis (CMC)
- Hypoparathyroidism and parathyroid autoantibodies
- Addison’s disease and antibodies to steroidogenic enzymes
- Hypergonadotropic hypogonadism
- Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus
- Autoimmune thyroid diseases
- Lymphocytic hypophysitis or pituitary defects
- Pernicious anemia
- Chronic atrophic gastritis
- Malabsorption
- Chronic hepatitis
- Vitiligo

The 3 major components of polyglandular autoimmune syndrome, type I, are (1) chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis, (2) hypoparathyroidism, and (3) autoimmune adrenal insufficiency. The presence of all 3 components is not required to make a diagnosis; at least 2 components have to be present in an individual.

APS type III, although ill defined, is the co-occurrence of autoimmune thyroid disease with 2 other autoimmune disorders, including diabetes mellitus type 1, pernicious anemia, or a nonendocrine, organ-specific autoimmune disorder in the absence of Addison disease.

Comparison of different APS in Basic and clinical endocrinology By Francis Sorrel Greenspan, David G. Gardner:



References:

Endocrine and Autoimmune Aspects of the Health History of John F. Kennedy. Lee R. Mandel, MD, MPH. Ann Int Med. 1 September 2009 | Volume 151 Issue 5 | Pages 350-354.
Polyglandular Autoimmune Syndrome, Type I. eMedicine.
Polyglandular Autoimmune Syndrome, Type II. eMedicine.
Autoimmune Polyglandular Syndrome Type 1. C. Betterle, N. A. Greggio and M. Volpato. The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism Vol. 83, No. 4 1049-1055, 1998.
The Presidents Club | Photos: Oval Office Secrets from Truman to Obama | TIME, 2012.
Image source: John F. Kennedy, Wikipedia, public domain.

Video: "Ben Goldacre on MMR, autism and media mendacity"



From Wikipedia:

Ben Goldacre is a British medical doctor and journalist, and the author of the The Guardian newspaper's weekly Bad Science column.

Former President George H.W. Bush makes parachute jump on 85th birthday



Former President George H.W. Bush: "Just because you're old, that doesn't mean you can't do fun stuff. And you don't want to sit around drooling in the corner. Go out and get something doing."

Video: CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta takes you inside his operating room where he "moonlights" as a neurosurgeon



"I wasn’t sure what to expect as I waited outside the employee parking lot of Grady Memorial Hospital Monday morning. My assignment for the day? Produce a story on Dr. Sanjay Gupta’s life outside of CNN – his life as a trauma neurosurgeon.

He greeted our crew a little before 5 a.m. with a familiar smile and diet soda in hand. Wasting no time with chit-chat, he scurried into the hospital, quickly changed into scrubs, then was off to his “home away from home”, O.R. 14. He had three cases scheduled by the time we arrived – a brain surgery and two spinal fusions.

First up – clipping a ruptured brain aneurysm."

References:
Inside Dr. Gupta’s operating room. CNN.

Wayman Tisdale (1964-2009): a great athlete and musician



From Wikipedia:

"Wayman Lawrence Tisdale (June 9, 1964 – May 15, 2009) was an American professional basketball player in the National Basketball Association and a smooth jazz bass guitarist.

Tisdale called music his "first love". He was a self-taught musician; he never took any lessons, never knew what key any of the pieces he played is written in, or even the names of the notes.

In March 2007, Tisdale underwent treatment for cancer in his knee (osteosarcoma), which was discovered after he fell down a flight of stairs in his home on February 8, and broke his leg. In May, Tisdale announced on his website that he was recovering from a procedure to remove the cyst, and expected to recover 100%. However, the first round of chemotherapy was unsuccessful, leading to a second round. As Tisdale recalled later, "The doctor had never given anyone chemo that was my size. They just calculated how much chemo to give me and said, 'We hope it doesn't mess up your kidneys. If it does, sorry."

In August 2008, Tisdale had part of his right leg amputated because of the bone cancer. On his web site, Tisdale said removing a portion of the leg would be the best way to ensure that the cancer would not return.



Shortly after the operation, he was fitted for a prosthesis. Scott Sabolich, the clinical director, said that in his 21-year career, he had never created a prosthesis as large as the one he had to design for Tisdale. At the same time, Sabolich noted that it typically takes a new amputee from three to six months to acclimate to a prosthesis, while it took Tisdale a month.

In April 2009, Tisdale accepted an award from the Greenwood Cultural Center in Tulsa, and then set off on a 21-date national concert tour.

Tisdale died on the morning of May 15, 2009, at age 44, at St. John Medical Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He was admitted to the ER for breathing troubles, but it is unknown if his death was related to his battle with cancer."

References:
Wayman Tisdale, from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Wayman Tisdale, basketball star and musician, dies. CNN.