viernes, 9 de marzo de 2012

Books Update


Books Update

On the Cover of Sunday's Book Review

'Gods Without Men'

By HARI KUNZRU
Reviewed by DOUGLAS COUPLAND
In Hari Kunzru's fourth novel, an autistic boy disappears in the California desert and many lives intersect around a rock formation called the Pinnacles.

Also in the Book Review

King Kalakaua, circa 1882.

'Lost Kingdom: Hawaii's Last Queen, the Sugar Kings, and America's First Imperial Adventure'

By JULIA FLYNN SILER
Reviewed by MALIA BOYD
Julia Flynn Siler traces Hawaii's fraught history, from Captain Cook to American annexation.

'Enchantments'

By KATHRYN HARRISON
Reviewed by SUSANN COKAL
In Kathryn Harrison's novel of late imperial Russia, Rasputin's sway doesn't end with his death.

'No Cheating, No Dying'

By ELIZABETH WEIL
Reviewed by MAGGIE SCARF
A writer embarks on a project of marital enhancement.
Anthony Shadid reporting via satellite modem on a rooftop in Najaf, Iraq, in 2003.

'House of Stone'

By ANTHONY SHADID
Reviewed by PATRICK COCKBURN
Anthony Shadid rebuilt his ancestors' house in Lebanon.
The apprentice: Senator Barack Obama advised by Paul Volcker, former Fed chairman, to the left of Obama in the photo, and Robert Rubin, former Treasury secretary, to the right, in September 2008.

'The Escape Artists: How Obama's Team Fumbled the Recovery'

By NOAM SCHEIBER
Reviewed by PAUL M. BARRETT
Noam Scheiber takes us behind the scenes with President Obama's economic team.
Wallis Simpson

'That Woman: The Life of Wallis Simpson, Duchess of Windsor'

By ANNE SEBBA
Reviewed by LIESL SCHILLINGER
This new book looks at the life of Wallis Simpson, for whom Edward VIII abdicated.

'The Power of Habit'

By CHARLES DUHIGG
Reviewed by TIMOTHY D. WILSON
A look at the science of how we form habits and how we can break them.
Paul Grüninger was jailed for helping Jewish refugees enter Switzerland.

'Beautiful Souls'

By EYAL PRESS
Reviewed by LOUISA THOMAS
Eyal Press looks at ordinary people who resisted the status quo to follow their own convictions.
CRIME

Strangers Abroad

By MARILYN STASIO
In Chris Pavone's "The Expats," a burned-out C.I.A. operative moves to Luxembourg and begins investigating her husband's activities there.
Tomas Transtromer
ON POETRY

Versions

By DAVID ORR
The English versions of the Nobel Prize winner Tomas Transtromer's poems raise issues that go to the heart of the translator's function.
FRANK READE: Adventures in the Age of InventionBy Paul Guinan and Anina Bennett. 175 pp. Abrams Image. $24.95.The Reades were a family of inventors who once starred in a popular series of dime novels (a cover, above) with an air of Jules Verne. Here, they are treated as historical figures in a playful mock documentary.

Fiction Chronicle

By JOHN WILLIAMS
New fiction by Richard Mason, Anna Funder, Alex George, Helen Simpson and Jonathan Odell.

Children's Books

From

Honest, Fair, Courageous and Strong

By CANDACE FLEMING
It's Women's History Month, and four picture books introduce children to some real-life heroines.

The Finer Points of the Game

By MATT de la PEÑA
Basketball, in these two novels, is a path to success and a means of escape.

Bookshelf: Poetry

By PAMELA PAUL
Five new picture books introduce children to the art of poetry.

'After the Snow'

By S. D. CROCKETT
Reviewed by JULIANNA BAGGOTT
In S. D. Crockett's dystopian novel, a teenager navigates frozen terrain in search of his family.

'The Glass Collector'

By ANNA PERERA
Reviewed by JOSHUA HAMMER
This novel's hero belongs to a group of trash scavengers who prowl Cairo's filthy streets.

sesión del CMO 7/III/2012


Transmisión enviada en vivo y ahora compartida, los por menores de sesión, nuestro principal problerma la velocidad de la conexión a internet.



El ABC de los tumores oseos

Romeo Tecualt CURSO DE TUMORES OSEOS "EL ABC DE LOS TUMORES DEL 
Programa

SISTEMA MUSCULOESQUELETICO.
OAXACA, OAX. 01 Y 02 DE NOV. DEL 2012. HOTEL MISION DE LOS ANGELES.

APROVECHEMOS LAS FECHAS PARA PARTICIPAR DE ESTA CIUDAD LLENA DE FOLKLOR Y ATRACTIVOS. 





jueves, 8 de marzo de 2012

Mujer...

No hay mujer más inteligente, que la que sabe darse a respetar.
No hay mujer más bella, que la que tiene un gran corazon .
No hay mujer más fuerte, que la que cree en si misma.
No hay mujer más admirable, que la que tiene dignidad.
No hay mujer más elegante, que la que es una dama.
No hay mujer más sana, que la que realmente se conoce.
No hay mujer más feliz, que la que sabe valorar. 

FELIZ DÍA INTERNACIONAL DE LA MUJER


FELIZ DÍA INTERNACIONAL DE LA MUJER 
Es el deseo de un amigo
 
con una pequeña muestra de las pinturas de Leonid Afremov
 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

programas de control malaria en la región Amazónica


Buen articulo sobre la valoración de los programas de control malaria en la región Amazónica, Incluye al Perú.
usa indicadores muy interesantes.


http://www.malariajournal.com/content/pdf/1475-2875-10-379.pdf

Estatinas y succinilcolina


Consecuencias de la administración de succinilcolina a pacientes usando estatinas
Consequences of succinylcholine administration to patients using statins.
Turan A, Mendoza ML, Gupta S, You J, Gottlieb A, Chu W, Saager L, Sessler DI.
Department of Outcomes Research, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, USA.alparslanturan@yahoo.com
Anesthesiology. 2011 Jul;115(1):28-35.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Statins cause structural changes in myocytes and provoke myotoxicity, myopathy, and myalgias. Thus, patients taking statins may be especially susceptible to succinylcholine-induced muscle injury. The authors tested the hypothesis that succinylcholine increases plasma concentrations of myoglobin, potassium, and creatine kinase more in patients who take statins than in those who do not and that succinylcholine-induced postoperative muscle pain is aggravated in statin users. METHODS: Patients who took statins for at least 3 months and those who had never used statins were enrolled. General anesthesia was induced and included 1.5 mg/kg succinylcholine for intubation. The incidence and degree of fasciculation after succinylcholine administration were recorded. Blood samples were obtained before induction and 5 and 20 min and 24 h after succinylcholine administration. Patients were interviewed 2 and 24 h after surgery to determine the degree of myalgia. RESULTS: The authors enrolled 38 patients who used statins and 32 who did not. At 20 min, myoglobin was higher in statin users versus nonusers (ratio of medians 1.34 [95% CI: 1.1, 1.7], P = 0.018). Fasciculations in statin users were more intense than in nonusers (P = 0.047). However, plasma potassium and creatine kinase concentrations were similar in statin users and nonusers, as was muscle pain. CONCLUSIONS: The plasma myoglobin concentration at 20 min was significantly greater in statin users than nonusers, although the difference seems unlikely to be clinically important. The study results suggest that the effect of succinylcholine given to patients taking statins is likely to be small and probably of limited clinical consequence
http://journals.lww.com/anesthesiology/pages/articleviewer.aspx?year=2011&issue=07000&article=00013&type=abstract
 
La succinilcolina debe de evitarse en pacientes con terapia con estatinas
Succinylcholine should be avoided in patients on statin therapy.
Lee C.
Anesthesiology. 2011 Jul;115(1):6-7.
http://journals.lww.com/anesthesiology/Citation/2011/07000/Succinylcholine_Should_Be
_Avoided_in_Patients_on.8.aspx  
Miopatías inducidas por estatinas
Statin-induced myopathies.
Tomaszewski M, Stępień KM, Tomaszewska J, Czuczwar SJ.
Department of Cardiology, Medical University of Lublin, Jaczewskiego 8, PL 20-954 Lublin, Poland. mdtomaszewski@yahoo.com
Pharmacol Rep. 2011;63(4):859-66.
Abstract
Statinsare considered to be safe, well tolerated and the most efficient drugs for the treatment of hypercholesterolemia, one of the main risk factor for atherosclerosis, and therefore they are frequently prescribed medications. The most severe adverse effect of statins is myotoxicity, in the form of myopathy, myalgia, myositis or rhabdomyolysis. Clinical trials commonly define statin toxicity as myalgia or muscle weakness with creatine kinase (CK) levels greater than 10 times the normal upper limit. Rhabdomyolysis is the most severe adverse effect of statins, which may result in acute renal failure, disseminated intravascular coagulation and death. The exact pathophysiology of statin-induced myopathyis not fully known. Multiple pathophysiological mechanisms may contribute to statin myotoxicity. This review focuses on a number of them. The prevention of statin-related myopathy involves using the lowest statin dose required to achieve therapeutic goals and avoiding polytherapy with drugs known to increase systemic exposure and myopathy risk. Currently, the only effective treatment of statin-induced myopathy is the discontinuation of statin use in patients affected by muscle aches, pains and elevated CK levels.
http://www.if-pan.krakow.pl/pjp/pdf/2011/4_859.pdf 
Atentamente
Anestesiología y Medicina del Dolor

Sesión del colegio mexicano de ortopedia del 7 de marzo del 2012

Transmisión enviada en vivo y ahora compartida, los por menores de sesión, nuestro principal problerma la velocidad de la conexión a internet.



8 de Marzo , día internacional de la mujer

Dra Mariana Meléndez Gámez
Hoy celebró una GRAN responsabilidad, la de ser mujer, porque de "sexo débil" no tenemos nada, tampoco somos frágiles y mucho menos somos menos capaces; y aunque aún tenemos que enfrentarnos a acosos, discriminación, humillaciones, burlas, y hasta violencia física, seguimos de pie, que placer es ser mujer!!! Un abrazo a todas las mujeres!! y un abrazo mas fuerte a todos los hombres que respetan, aman y valoran a las mujeres 



miércoles, 7 de marzo de 2012

When is a Doubled Semitendinosus Tendon Autograft after ACL Reconstruction "Normal"?


When is a Doubled Semitendinosus Tendon Autograft after ACL Reconstruction "Normal"?

Biomechanical and histological evaluation of the doubled semitendinosus tendon autograft after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction in sheep

Kondo E, Yasuda K, Katsura T, Hayashi R, Kotani Y, & Tohyama H. The American Journal of Sports Medicine 2012. 40(2):315-324.

Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction often involves the use of a graft to help restore the knee to a point of normalcy.  However, the graft may not actually be “normal” either mechanically or histologically.  Animal reconstruction models allow us to closely evaluate the reconstructed graft but few have investigated the semitendinosus graft.  The purpose of this study was to evaluate the biomechanical and histological properties of semitendinosus ACL autografts in a sheep model.  The surgically reconstructed semitendinosus ACL autograft of 36 sheep were used for biomechanical (i.e., translation, tensile strength; 20 sheep) and histological (looking for cell structure and fiber alignment; 16 sheep) evaluation in comparison to contralateral control ACLs.  Five sheep were biomechanically evaluated at each of the 4 time points, 0, 12, 24, and 52 weeks post-surgery.  For histological evaluation, 3 sheep were evaluated at 4 time points: 0, 2, 24, and 52 weeks post-surgery, and 2 were evaluated at 6 and 12 weeks post-surgery.  Anterior-posterior translation was significantly greater in the ACL reconstruction knee than the contralateral control knees at all time points (0, 12, 24, & 52 weeks post-surgery), and translation was significantly less at 52 weeks than at 12 weeks post-surgery.  All ACL autografts failed tensile strength tests with 3 out of 5 being midsubstance tears at 12 weeks, and all 5 samples at 24 as well as 52 weeks post-surgery being midsubstance tears.  Maximum load at failure was significantly greater at 52 weeks than 12 weeks post-surgical.  In contrast, the contralateral control ACLs failed by avulsing from the bone. Histological observation was near normal by 24 weeks with abnormalities at earlier time points (0 and 12 weeks post-surgery); including the presence of necrotic (dead) tissue at 12 weeks.  Cell density was significantly lower at 2 weeks than all other time points.

Clinically, it appears that up to 1-year post-injury the semitendinosus autograft may not fully reach “normal” ACL biomechanical properties, despite histological similarities around this time point.  The authors note that these findings are similar to other autografts (e.g., bone-patellar tendon-bone).  Abnormalities that exist up to 1 year post-surgery have major implications regarding rehabilitation and return-to-play expectations.  There may be activity modifications or changes in rehabilitation programs that are necessary to promote the long-term health of the knee.  Based on the data, the authors suggest that vigorous activity should be limited in earlier periods when the graft is necrotized and weakened.  Even later in the process, the autografts are failing with midsubstance tears indicating that they are not as strong as the contralateral ACL.  As clinicians, we may need to think about acting more conservatively.  Research has demonstrated within humans (Beynnon et al. 2005) that there are biochemical abnormalities in the knee still present at 1-year post ACL reconstruction regardless of ACL rehabilitation program (conservative versus accelerated programs).  Within our current treatment approaches, it appears that the surgery (or the injury) itself may immediately alter the biomechanics and biochemistry of the knee and it is unclear when the graft returns to normal (if it ever does).  So the question remains, does the knee ever fully return to “normal” or do we need to establish a newly accepted “normal?”  Also, thinking long-term knee health, do we think it is healthy to return someone to activity with abnormalities or are we are returning athletes to activity prematurely after ACL reconstruction?

Written by: Nicole Cattano

Kondo E, Yasuda K, Katsura T, Hayashi R, Kotani Y, & Tohyama H (2012). Biomechanical and histological evaluations of the doubled semitendinosus tendon autograft after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction in sheep. The American Journal of Sports Medicine, 40 (2), 315-24 PMID: 22088579

A través de videojuego chileno gratuito niños y jóvenes aprenden sobre biología celular


A través de videojuego chileno gratuito niños y jóvenes aprenden sobre biología celular

ic-kokori
Kokori se llama este videojuego en 3D donde nano-robots combaten virus y bacterias en un viaje al centro de la biología celular humana. Proyecto financiado por CONICYT y desarrollado por la Universidad Santo Tomás conecta el mundo de las TICs con la comunidad educativa. En el desarrollo de la iniciativa, participaron docentes y biólogos, quienes adaptaron los contenidos del programa de enseñanza media, junto a un grupo de expertos en diseño de videojuegos, quienes dieron vida a esta lúdica herramienta educativa, financiada por el Programa TIC-EDU de CONICYT.
La directora de este proyecto, Virginia Garretón, es una gran fan de los videojuegos, a los cuales considera una fuente de entretención, aprendizaje y entrenamiento. “Impartiendo cursos de biología para educación media percibí que las herramientas para el desarrollo de esas clases están muy lejos del lenguaje más visual, interactivo y de colaboración virtual que caracteriza a los jóvenes de hoy. Así nació la idea hacer Kokori”, cuenta.
Kokori se divide en varias misiones cortas con diferentes niveles de complejidad en donde los jugadores deberán recorrer una célula usando diminutos “Nanobots”. Este personaje irá adquiriendo cualidades que le ayudarán a los jugadores a solucionar problemas que han puesto a dicha célula en peligro (ej: infección de un virus, mala nutrición, intoxicación, etc). Al cumplir con las etapas, además de entretenerse, se logrará el objetivo de que el jugador explore una célula, reconozca sus componentes y entienda diferentes procesos biológicos o funciones de sus estructuras.
Para el equipo de investigadores tan importante como los jugadores (alumnos), son los profesores, por lo que se está trabajando en el desarrollo de ejercicios que muestren de qué manera se puede insertar el videojuego al interior del aula. De éste modo, el docente accederá a una metodología de enseñanza en un lenguaje familiar a los jóvenes, favoreciendo la motivación y el trabajo en equipo de sus alumnos. Ya está disponible la guía 1 y además una versión “soft” que permite a los docentes navegar por el mundo celular sin la presión propia de un videojuego.
El videojuego ha sido descargado 8.703 veces por usuarios diferentes, a octubre de 2011 (12% docentes). Sin embargo, los desarrolladores del proyecto calculan que circulan muchas más copias, puesto que ellos mismos recomiendan distribuirlo por otros medios una vez que ya ha sido descargado.
“Kokori no solo está en inglés sino también en mapudungún, rapanui, inglés e italiano. Nuestra decisión de incluir los idiomas originarios mayoritarios del país es porque nuestro objetivo es llegar a todos los jóvenes del país y extender la idea de ofrecer a cada comunidad docente herramientas que los acerquen a su realidad y la de sus niños”, puntualiza Virginia Garretón
Premios
Kokori obtuvo el segundo lugar en la categoría de desarrollo de herramientas TIC del concurso Conectar-Igualdad del Mineduc de Argentina y por medio de la visibilidad que obtuvo Kokori por este premio, el ministerio Argentino incluirá Kokori en la oferta de herramientas a la que tienen acceso los 3 millones de computadores que se están distribuyendo en Argentina bajo su programa “un computador por niño”.
Además, Kokori será convertida en serie animada a transmitirse en 2012 con fondos del CNTV, gracias a un proyecto de la Prodcutora Cábala, basada en la idea original del proyecto.
Kokori
Kokori es una palabra rapa nui que significa “juego colectivo” y que da nombre al laboratorio desde donde se inician las misiones del videojuego, cuyos objetivos son combatir virus y bacterias, restablecer la energía de las células y reparar organelos.

martes, 6 de marzo de 2012

Extubación y ventilación comprometidas


Extubación de pacientes con debilidad neuromuscular. Un manejo nuevo de manejo
Extubation of Patients With Neuromuscular Weakness A New Management Paradigm
John Robert Bach, MD, Miguel R. Gonçalves, PT, Irram Hamdani, MD and Joao Carlos Winck, MD, PhD
Chest 2010;137;1033-1039;
Abstract
Background: Successful extubation conventionally necessitates the passing of spontaneous breathing trials (SBTs) and ventilator weaning parameters. We report successful extubation of patients with neuromuscular disease (NMD) and weakness who could not pass them. Methods: NMD-specific extubation criteria and a new extubation protocol were developed. Data were collected on 157 consecutive "unweanable" patients, including 83 transferred from other hospitals who refused tracheostomies. They could not pass the SBTs before or after extubation. Once the pulse oxyhemoglobin saturation (SpO 2) was maintained at ≥ 95% in ambient air, patients were extubated to full noninvasive mechanical ventilation (NIV) support and aggressive mechanically assisted coughing (MAC). Rather than oxygen, NIV and MAC were used to maintain or return the SpO 2 to ≥ 95%. Extubation success was defined as not requiring reintubation during the hospitalization and was considered as a function of diagnosis, preintubation NIV experience, and vital capacity and assisted cough peak flows (CPF) at extubation. Results: Before hospitalization 96 (61%) patients had no experience with NIV, 41 (26%) used it < 24 h per day, and 20 (13%) were continuously NIV dependent. The first-attempt protocol extubation success rate was 95% (149 patients). All 98 extubation attempts on patients with assisted CPF ≥ 160 L/m were successful. The dependence on continuous NIV and the duration of dependence prior to intubation correlated with extubation success (P < .005). Six of eight patients who initially failed extubation succeeded on subsequent attempts, so only two with no measurable assisted CPF underwent tracheotomy. Conclusions: Continuous volume-cycled NIV via oral interfaces and masks and MAC with oximetry feedback in ambient air can permit safe extubation of unweanable patients with NMD.
http://chestjournal.chestpubs.org/content/137/5/1033.full.pdf+html  
Falla respiratoria hipoxémica severa: parte 2- estrategias no ventilatorias
Severe hypoxemic respiratory failure: part 2--nonventilatory strategies.
Raoof S, Goulet K, Esan A, Hess DR, Sessler CN.
Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, New York Methodist Hospital, 506 Sixth St, Brooklyn, NY 11215, USA. sur9016@nyp.org
Chest. 2010 Jun;137(6):1437-48.
Abstract
ARDS is characterized by hypoxemic respiratory failure, which can be refractory and life-threatening. Modifications to traditional mechanical ventilation and nontraditional modes of ventilation are discussed in Part 1 of this two-part series. In this second article, we examine nonventilatory strategies that can influence oxygenation, with particular emphasis on their role in rescue from severe hypoxemia. A literature search was conducted and a narrative review written to summarize the use of adjunctive, nonventilatory interventions intended to improve oxygenation in ARDS. Several adjunctive interventions have been demonstrated to rapidly ameliorate severe hypoxemia in many patients with severe ARDS and therefore may be suitable as rescue therapy for hypoxemia that is refractory to prior optimization of mechanical ventilation. These include neuromuscular blockade, inhaled vasoactive agents, prone positioning, and extracorporeal life support. Although these interventions have been linked to physiologic improvement, including relief from severe hypoxemia, and some are associated with outcome benefits, such as shorter duration of mechanical ventilation, demonstration of survival benefit has been rare in clinical trials. Furthermore, some of these nonventilatory interventions carry additional risks and/or high cost; thus, when used as rescue therapy for hypoxemia, it is important that they be demonstrated to yield clinically significant improvement in gas exchange, which should be periodically reassessed. Additionally, various management strategies can produce a more gradual improvement in oxygenation in ARDS, such as conservative fluid management, intravenous corticosteroids, and nutritional modification. Although improvement in oxygenation has been reported with such strategies, demonstration of additional beneficial outcomes, such as reduced duration of mechanical ventilation or ICU length of stay, or improved survival in randomized controlled trials, as well as consideration of potential adverse effects should guide decisions on their use. Various nonventilatory interventions can positively impact oxygenation as well as outcomes of ARDS. These interventions may be considered for use, particularly for cases of refractory severe hypoxemia, with proper appreciation of potential costs and adverse effects.
http://chestjournal.chestpubs.org/content/137/6/1437.full.pdf+html 
Atentamente
Anestesiología y Medicina del Dolor