A gift of life and love: Thunder Bay artist with lupus prepares for transplant of partner's kidney
After a year on dialysis, Anishinaabe artist Lucille Atlookan is receiving a unique gift from her partner: a kidney. As the Thunder Bay, Ont., couple prepares for transplant surgery in Toronto, we take a deeper look at the challenges faced by people with chronic conditions who travel long distances for treatment. (Source: CBC | Health)
Source: CBC | Health - January 8, 2024 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: News/Canada/Thunder Bay Source Type: news

Kidney transplant and heart patients have slots cancelled amid junior doctors' strike - with some forced to wait 15 MONTHS before they are seen for life-changing treatment
Angela Waters-Kite, from Hull, revealed that her appointment for Monday has been cancelled, which would have revealed whether she could donate a kidney to her husband. (Source: the Mail online | Health)
Source: the Mail online | Health - January 3, 2024 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Mayo Clinic Q and A: Myths about minority organ donation
DEAR MAYO CLINIC: A co-worker was diagnosed with kidney disease last year. He is now on dialysis three times a week as he waits for a kidney transplant. He shared his hope to get a living donor, explaining that he will have a longer wait since there are not as many diverse people signed up as organ donors. Can you explain why this is and what can I do to help? ANSWER: More than 103,000… (Source: News from Mayo Clinic)
Source: News from Mayo Clinic - December 29, 2023 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: news

The Most Exciting New Advancements in Managing and Treating Lupus
The case study involved just one patient: a 20-year-old woman with severe systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). But the study’s results were so dramatic that they appeared in 2021 in the New England Journal of Medicine.  The woman received a type of cell therapy called CAR-T, which in the past has been used primarily to treat cancer. CAR-T cell therapy involves altering a patient’s immune cells so that they identify and attack problems or pathogens. In people with cancer, that attack is aimed at the diseased cells. But in the NEJM case study, the therapy was directed at the woman’s own B cells,...
Source: TIME: Health - December 27, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Markham Heid Tags: Uncategorized healthscienceclimate Source Type: news

13 Ways the World Got Better in 2023
As in most years, much of the media focus in 2023 was on the myriad crises people all over the world faced, from horrific wars in Eastern Europe and the Middle East to devastating natural disasters (many climate-change-related) in Turkey, Southeast Africa, Hawaii, Canada, and more. At the end of this long year, though, it’s worth taking a step back and considering some of the ways things improved. Here are some examples, gathered together by TIME’s climate and health journalists: [time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”] COVID-19 death numbers plummeted… Since the pandemic began, COVID-19 has b...
Source: TIME: Health - December 26, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: TIME Staff Tags: Uncategorized climate change Climate Is Everything feature healthscienceclimate Source Type: news

No Improvement Noted in Black-White Kidney Transplant Rate Ratios
THURSDAY, Dec. 21, 2023 -- For patients with kidney failure, there appears to be no substantial improvement over time in the observed or adjusted Black-White mean living donor kidney transplant (LDKT) rate ratios (RRs), according to a study... (Source: Drugs.com - Pharma News)
Source: Drugs.com - Pharma News - December 21, 2023 Category: Pharmaceuticals Source Type: news

Science ’s 2023 Breakthrough of the Year: Weight loss drugs with a real shot at fighting obesity
Show / hide sections navigation 2023 Breakthrough of the Year Runners-up Breakdowns Video Obesity plays out as a private struggle and a public health crisis. In the United States, about 70% of adults are affected by excess weight, and in Europe that number is more than half. The stigma against fat can be crushing; its risks, life-threatening. Defined as a body mass index of at least 30, obesity is thought to power type 2 diabetes, heart disease, arthritis, fatty liver disease, and certain cancers. Yet drug treatments...
Source: ScienceNOW - December 14, 2023 Category: Science Source Type: news

KDIGO Supports HCV+ Kidneys Going To HCV – Recipients KDIGO Supports HCV+ Kidneys Going To HCV – Recipients
" This update is intended to assist clinicians in the care of patients with HCV infection and CKD, including patients receiving dialysis (CKD G5D) and patients with a kidney transplant (CKD G1T-G5T). "MDedge News (Source: Medscape Medical News Headlines)
Source: Medscape Medical News Headlines - December 13, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: Nephrology Source Type: news

Thousands of kidney disease patients set to benefit from £1-a-dose diabetes drug which can reduce the need for dialysis and a transplant
Kidney disease is usually triggered by the damage caused by another illness, such as type 1 and type 2 diabetes or high blood pressure. (Source: the Mail online | Health)
Source: the Mail online | Health - December 9, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

New Delhi Investigating Alleged Illegal Kidney Transplants New Delhi Investigating Alleged Illegal Kidney Transplants
The New Delhi city government is investigating an Apollo hospital after a media report linked it to the illegal sale by Myanmar nationals of their kidneys for organ transplants.Reuters Health Information (Source: Medscape Transplantation Headlines)
Source: Medscape Transplantation Headlines - December 7, 2023 Category: Transplant Surgery Tags: Nephrology News Source Type: news

3D printing method using ultrasound shows success
Researchers are highlighting their approach to 3D printing, which uses ultrasound waves to create objects from sonically cured inks. Their results were published December 7 in Science. A team led by Xiao Kuang, PhD, from Harvard Medical School found that its ultrasonic 3D printing method -- deep-penetrating acoustic volumetric printing --successfully created anatomical structures such as the liver, kidney, and vessel networks. “The deep penetration of focused ultrasound waves allows the volumetric fabrication of opaque [nano]composites and printing through centimeter-thick tissues that are not attainable through state-...
Source: AuntMinnie.com Headlines - December 7, 2023 Category: Radiology Authors: Amerigo Allegretto Tags: Ultrasound 3D Printing Source Type: news

Kidney transplant: Three-year-old is smallest patient
Olly Cartmill was 13kg when he had the life-saving operation, getting a kidney from his grandmother. (Source: BBC News | Health | UK Edition)
Source: BBC News | Health | UK Edition - December 7, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

William P. Murphy Jr., Innovator of Life-Saving Medical Tools, Dies at 100
Dr. Murphy ’s safe, reliable blood bag replaced breakable glass bottles used in transfusions in the Korean War. He also helped improve pacemakers and artificial kidneys. (Source: NYT Health)
Source: NYT Health - December 6, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Robert D. McFadden Tags: Deaths (Obituaries) Medicine and Health Blood Inventions and Patents Blood bag Medical Devices Korean War Murphy, William P Jr (1923-2023) Cordis Corp Source Type: news

William P. Murphy Jr., an Inventor of the Modern Blood Bag, Dies at 100
Dr. Murphy ’s safe, reliable container replaced breakable glass bottles used in transfusions in the Korean War. He also helped improve pacemakers and artificial kidneys. (Source: NYT Health)
Source: NYT Health - December 5, 2023 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Robert D. McFadden Tags: Deaths (Obituaries) Medicine and Health Blood Inventions and Patents Blood bag Medical Devices Korean War Murphy, William P Jr (1923-2023) Cordis Corp Source Type: news

Where are our nation ’s donors?
All-Party Parliamentary Group for Ethnicity Transplantation and Transfusion - The report says that the UK ’s mixed heritage and ethnic minority population face a double whammy of inequity as they are more likely to need donors due to conditions which disproportionately affect them, such as sickle cell and kidney disease, but less likely to find well-matched donors on the blood, stem cell and organ don or registers. This is particularly true for patients in need of stem cell transplants for the treatment of blood cancer, where matched tissue type (most often found in donors from a similar ethnic background) is criti...
Source: The Kings Fund - Health Management Specialist Collection - December 5, 2023 Category: Health Management Authors: The King ' s Fund Library Tags: Equality and diversity Public health and health inequalities Source Type: news