POPULARITY
Overview of ischaemic heart disease (IHD) in women and reasons for under-recognition and under-treatment Traditional risk factors (eg. diabetes, hypertension, smoking) and sex-specific risk factors (eg. PCOS, premature menopause, breast cancer treatment) Non-traditional risk factors such as autoimmune diseases, depression, and psychosocial stress Approaches to reduce cardiovascular risk and effectively assess and manage it in women Host: Dr Rebecca Overton | Total Time: 29 mins Expert: Dr Fiona Foo, Clinical & Interventional Cardiologist Register for our fortnightly FREE WEBCASTSEvery second Tuesday | 7:00pm-9:00pm AEST Click here to register for the next oneSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In today's VETgirl online veterinary continuing education podcast, Dr. Holly Brown, ACVP discusses the importance of performing in-house diagnostics (IHD) - commonly known as point-of-care (POC) diagnostics - as part of routine patient care and patient differential diagnosis. In-house diagnostics include urinalysis, CBC, serum chemistries, parasitology and cytology evaluations...all key diagnostics that can be performed at the clinic with the resources you have! Tune in to learn more about the advancements and benefits of performing in-house diagnostics.Sponsored By: Antech, MARS
Many people are considering plant-based diets for health, environmental, or ethical purposes. So this week I brought my friend Dr. Matthew Nagra to the show to discuss plant-based diets. Dr. Nagra is a long-time Vegan and also a Naturopathic Doctor who is very well versed in the science of this topic and does a great job of presenting the research about plant-based diets accurately. On this episode we discuss: Main reasons why one would consider adopting a plant-based dietPros and cons of adopting a plant-based dietNutrients of concern when going plant-based How to ensure you're meeting your nutrient needs on a plant-based diet Other considerations when going plant-based and more. Tune in to the episode to learn more. You can follow Dr. Nagra here: Follow on Instagram Here is the complement multivitamin that Dr. Nagra mentioned on the show.Complement Multivitamin Sources Discussed in the PodcsatAdventists Health Studies (large vegan population with lots of follow-up data) https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23836264/https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4073139/Diet and Heart Disease (Med. diet shows similar benefits to vegan) Vegan diets and IHD: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36030329/ Mediterranean diet and IHD: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00394-017-1582-0Want to support the podcast, you can do so here.
Welcome back to the Waking Up With Jess Podcast! I am so excited to have Werner Pitzal on the podcast today! Some of the topics we cover are: How he first got into the original Human Design System Seeing the Human Design System as a map of your filters of consciousness Consciousness vs. Awareness vs. Awakeness How INTEGRALHUMANDESIGN (IHD) differs from traditional Human Design The importance of not over-identifying with any system or label You can purchase an IHD Evaluation here. A bit more about Werner: “Since 1998, I have been fortunate to train under esteemed HDS figures like Ra Uru Hu, Jürgen Saupe and Martin Grassinger. I even embraced the role of a HDS teacher for a while.My initial attraction to HDS was quite unconventional. I envisioned it as a tool to enhance my efficiency as a psychotherapist. I hoped that HDS would illuminate certain immutable aspects in my clients, thereby saving them time and money by sparing them unnecessary struggles against unchangeable traits. Yet, to my surprise, I discovered that individuals could indeed evolve in areas where HDS had deemed them 'fixed' and 'defined'.Together with my wife Laura, we started to view HDS within a greater context which we came to call INTEGRALHUMANDESIGN (IHD). The purpose of IHD was the inclusion and transcendence of the HDS by seeing its proper place within the much larger frame of our comprehensive design as human beings.The frame of reference continually expanded, as it was necessary to be able to make sense of the findings from my hands-on practical experience. Initially, we expanded it to include the GeneKeys perspective, by loading specific Gene Keys language for Centers, Channels and Streams into the Bodygraph, and juxtaposing the Bodygraph with the GoldenPath journey. Later, we included the dimensions of the Integral Approach. We also enriched our understanding by delving into the neuroscience that makes up our design as humans, and by gaining direct insights into our mind's workings through meditation.” How to connect with Werner: Website: https://www.integralhumandesign.net IHD Resources: https://genekeys.com/integral-human-design About Jess: You can connect with me on Instagram @jessbubbico or through my website www.jessbubbico.com. Join the conversation on Substack! My children's book "Jessi Lou & The Magic Of You" is now available on Amazon! Head over to www.jessiloubooks.com to learn more about the book or follow the book journey on Instagram @jessiloubooks.
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? :Réception de l'Antiquité et histoire de la philologie classique : AnabasesIntervenants :Clément Bur (Univ. Toulouse II – Jean-Jaurès)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? :Humanités numériques et philologie récente et contemporaineIntervenants :Matthieu Cassin (CNRS, IRHTirht)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : ConclusionsIntervenants :Dario Mantovani, Professeur du Collège de FranceA. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? :Réception de l'Antiquité et histoire de la philologie classique : AnabasesIntervenants :Clément Bur (Univ. Toulouse II – Jean-Jaurès)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? :Humanités numériques et philologie récente et contemporaineIntervenants :Matthieu Cassin (CNRS, IRHTirht)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : ConclusionsIntervenants :Dario Mantovani, Professeur du Collège de FranceA. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Un projet récent de revue et ses perspectives : History of Classical ScholarshipIntervenants :Lorenzo Calvelli (Univ. Ca' Foscari, Venise)Federico Santangelo (Newcastle University)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? :Histoire et philologie : des Quaderni di storia à Philologie et libertéIntervenants :Luciano Canfora (Univ. de Bari)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Un projet récent de revue et ses perspectives : History of Classical ScholarshipIntervenants :Lorenzo Calvelli (Univ. Ca' Foscari, Venise)Federico Santangelo (Newcastle University)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? :La tradition française dans la Revue de philologieIntervenants :Philippe Moreau (Univ. Paris Est – Créteil)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? :Histoire et philologie : des Quaderni di storia à Philologie et libertéIntervenants :Luciano Canfora (Univ. de Bari)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? :La tradition française dans la Revue de philologieIntervenants :Philippe Moreau (Univ. Paris Est – Créteil)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
The questions answered in this podcast are listed below.They were compiled by GPs and health professionals around Australia. How to administer GLP1Ras? Dosing and titration? What are the differences with the current weekly GLP1RAS? How should the injections be stored? When to start? Who would benefit the most? Who should it NOT be used in? How do you manage the GI side effects? Duration of treatment? Are there any drug interactions? Choice of therapy after metformin Under PBS what other OHA can they be used with? Can they be used for people with T2DM with an HbA1c
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : L'édition et l'histoire de la philologie des textes chrétiensIntervenants :Stéphane Gioanni (Univ. Lumière – Lyon 2, HISOMA)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Le public des traductions : stratégies de la Pléiade et de folio GallimardIntervenants :Philippe Heuzé (Univ. Sorbonne Nouvelle – Paris III)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Éditer, commenter et traduire : la CUF et l'éclairage de l'histoire de la philologie- Pour la série latineIntervenants :John Scheid, Professeur du Collège de FranceA. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Éditer, commenter et traduire : la CUF et l'éclairage de l'histoire de la philologie - Pour la série grecqueIntervenants :Jacques Jouanna (Membre de l'Institut)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Évolution et convergences des méthodes philologiques : la Revue d'histoire des textesIntervenants :Jérémy Delmulle (CNRS, IRHT)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Le rôle de la BnF et des bibliothèques : accès, utilisation, évolution du public spécialisé et de la conservationIntervenants :Christian Förstel (BnF – Département des manuscrits)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Parcours de la recherche au prisme de l'Année philologiqueIntervenants :Charles Guérin (Sorbonne Université)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Les histoires de la philologie classiqueIntervenants :Stefania Montecalvo (Univ. de Foggia)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Une nouvelle encyclopédie en ligne sur la philologie grecque et latine ancienneIntervenants :Franco Montanari (Univ. Gênes)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : OuvertureIntervenants :Thomas Römer, Professeur et administrateur du Collège de FranceDario Mantovani, Professeur du Collège de FranceFrançois Bougard (CNRS, Directeur IRHT)Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Le public des traductions : stratégies de la Pléiade et de folio GallimardIntervenants :Philippe Heuzé (Univ. Sorbonne Nouvelle – Paris III)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Éditer, commenter et traduire : la CUF et l'éclairage de l'histoire de la philologie- Pour la série latineIntervenants :John Scheid, Professeur du Collège de FranceA. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : OuvertureIntervenants :Thomas Römer, Professeur et administrateur du Collège de FranceDario Mantovani, Professeur du Collège de FranceFrançois Bougard (CNRS, Directeur IRHT)Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Les histoires de la philologie classiqueIntervenants :Stefania Montecalvo (Univ. de Foggia)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Parcours de la recherche au prisme de l'Année philologiqueIntervenants :Charles Guérin (Sorbonne Université)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Le rôle de la BnF et des bibliothèques : accès, utilisation, évolution du public spécialisé et de la conservationIntervenants :Christian Förstel (BnF – Département des manuscrits)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Une nouvelle encyclopédie en ligne sur la philologie grecque et latine ancienneIntervenants :Franco Montanari (Univ. Gênes)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : L'édition et l'histoire de la philologie des textes chrétiensIntervenants :Stéphane Gioanni (Univ. Lumière – Lyon 2, HISOMA)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Évolution et convergences des méthodes philologiques : la Revue d'histoire des textesIntervenants :Jérémy Delmulle (CNRS, IRHT)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
Dario MantovaniDroit, culture et société de la Rome antiqueCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - Voies et voix de la philologie classique. Éditer les textes anciens : comment et pour quel public ? : Éditer, commenter et traduire : la CUF et l'éclairage de l'histoire de la philologie - Pour la série grecqueIntervenants :Jacques Jouanna (Membre de l'Institut)A. Voies de la philologie classiqueCe premier volet entend analyser succinctement les manières de narrer la longue histoire de la transmission des textes antiques et d'évoquer ses figures marquantes, mais aussi ses périodisations, ses concepts, ses modèles.B. Voix de la philologie classiqueCe second volet donnera la parole à plusieurs représentants de l'édition des œuvres classiques et des études d'histoire de la philologie classique ; aux uns, il sera demandé de se pencher sur les tendances actuelles de l'art d'éditer, traduire et commenter les textes anciens ; aux autres, de retracer le parcours de plusieurs revues éclairant l'histoire de ce domaine scientifique.Organisateurs : Dario Mantovani (Collège de France), Luigi-Alberto Sanchi (CNRS, IHD) et François Bougard (CNRS, IRHT).
H&P Disability Direct - Live Answers on the Road to VA Compensation
In this post, we will focus on VA service-connected compensation ratings for heart disease in general. You need to know what VA needs to have in order to assign the proper disability rating for your disease, so you can obtain VA disability compensation. If you are a Vietnam Veteran seeking information on ischemic heart disease, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs has allowed presumptive service connected compensation to Vietnam veterans for IHD (ischemic heart disease). Check out this post on Ischemic Heart Disease from Agent Orange.
In dieser Folge des WoodCAST spreche ich mit Prof. Steffen Tobisch, Leiter des Institut für Holztechnologie Dresden (IHD), über die Geschichte des Institutes und wie sich die Themenstellungen der Holzwerksotffindustrie über die letzten Jahre und Jahrzehnte verändert haben. Es gibt einen Einblick in aktuelle Themen rund um Altholzverwendung, Rezyklierbarkeit sowie bio-basierte Bindemittel. Wir philospieren außerdem über künstliche Intelligenz und den aktuellen Fachkräftemangel. Hier gehts zu den aktuellen Veranstaltungen des IHD:https://www.ihd-dresden.de/de/veranstaltungen/Support the showWer den woodCAST unterstützen möchte
Coronary heart disease caused by narrowing and blockage of the heart arteries causes angina, heart attacks and heart failure. It remains one of the commonest causes of mortality in the UK and globally. Public health interventions and improvements in treatment have steadily reduced deaths from coronary heart disease.This lecture will discuss the causes of coronary heart disease and advances in reducing its effects.A lecture by Sir Chris WhittyThe transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the Gresham College website: https://www.gresham.ac.uk/whats-on/coronary-heartGresham College has offered free public lectures for over 400 years, thanks to the generosity of our supporters. There are currently over 2,500 lectures free to access. We believe that everyone should have the opportunity to learn from some of the greatest minds. To support Gresham's mission, please consider making a donation: https://gresham.ac.uk/support/Website: https://gresham.ac.ukTwitter: https://twitter.com/greshamcollegeFacebook: https://facebook.com/greshamcollegeInstagram: https://instagram.com/greshamcollegeSupport the show
The Junior Prospects Hockey League (JPHL) is a new borderless league where players are allowed to sign with any team . The league will feature three age divisions: U14, U15 & U18. There are 10 hubs and the Lloydminster Athletics will be one. Kyle Tapp head instructor of IHD & Tyrel Spitzer a Vice President under Silent Ice Sports & Entertainment hop on to discuss some of the ideas that surround this new league. Let me know what you think Text me 587-217-8500 Support here: https://www.patreon.com/ShaunNewmanPodcast
Coronary revascularization; the bread and butter of modern cardiology practice and it got new guidelines! Jointly issued by the American Heart Association, American College of cardiology and the sky, and also reviewed by American Association for Thoracic Surgery, the guideline document was published simultaneously in JACC and in circulation less than a month ago. Noteworthy that these are first guidelines on the topic in 10 years. Several practice-changing trials were published in the same period. This long-waited document comes to replace or retire five guidelines partially or totally, not only 2011 PCI and CABG guidelines, but also will replace sections in STEMI guidelines, ACS guidelines and stable IHD guidelines. So this is a document not to miss!
Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) affects nearly 40% of intensive care unit (ICU) patients and carries significant morbidity and mortality. Once AKI is established, renal replacement therapy (RRT) is the mainstay of supportive care. The best time to initiate RRT is still unclear. Although several studies have evaluated early vs. late RRT in AKI, there is no clear consensus on how “early” or “late” should be defined. Existing evidence does not support the initiation of RRT based on any particular stage of AKI. Risk-benefit of RRT along with the host's ability to tolerate homeostatic derangements should be taken into account prior to initiating RRT. Continuous RRT (CRRT) has not been shown to be superior to intermittent hemodialysis (IHD). A CRRT dose of at least 20ml/kg/hour or an IHD dose of Kt/V 1.2 thrice a week seems to be adequate for patients with AKI in the ICU. Improvement of urine output and trend in azotemia can serve as a guide in weaning and termination of RRT. Diuretics have not been shown to decrease the need or frequency of RRT.
Continuing our month-long season to celebrate the English PEN centenary, World Book Club talks to multi-award-winning Turkish-Kurdish writer and activist Burhan Sönmez about his unforgettable novel Istanbul, Istanbul. At once powerfully political and intensely personal, Istanbul, Istanbul is the story of four prisoners kept in underground cells beneath the city, who tell one another stories about their city to pass the time. There are two Istanbuls, one below ground and one above, yet in reality both are one and the same. Sonmez worked as a lawyer in Istanbul and was a member of IHD, the Human Rights Society, and a founder of BirGün, a daily opposition newspaper. He was seriously injured following an assault by police in 1996 in Turkey and received treatment in Britain afterwards. Here he discusses his novel, censorship and the tense political situation in Turkey, and the invaluable impact of English PEN and other such pressure groups with presenter Ritula Shah and readers from around the globe. Istanbul, Istanbul was translated by Ümit Hussein. (Picture: Burhan Sönmez. Photo credit: Roberto Gandola.)
The NHS enters the winter phase surrounded by the "perfect storm" with an unprecedented backlog of cases, the threats from Flu and RSV which may act synergistically with Covid 19 infection and cause infections of greater severity, an expected increase in wintertime hospitalisations from non-communicable diseases (eg Asthma, COPD, IHD), staff and equipment shortages and what is an already overburdened service seeing an unexpectedly high demand on its resources. The fact that > 75% of our population is double vaccinated is indeed a feat of science. Vaccine confidence nationally seems to be high. The risk however is "Vaccine Over-confidence", where all other preventative measures such as social distancing, wearing masks, well-ventilated workspaces, meeting people outdoor wherever possible is put aside for the sense of security that being vaccinated brings. Indeed there is data from Israel that antibody levels wean after 6 months or so. This may increase susceptibility to infection but the vaccines still continue to provide protection from developing a serious infection. There is also data that records a three-fold reduction in transmission in those vaccinated. 99.5% of the mortality in the last 6 months occurred in those who weren't double vaccinated at the time of infection. There is the risk of a "triple lethal combination" of Flu, RSV and Covid 19 working together to overwhelm an already outstretched health service. The Covid 19 causing virus may also experience a natural "selection pressure" when it will need to compete with the other winter prevalent respiratory viruses and this may also force a new mutation. What could the general public do to minimise their risks? The unidimensional approach of either focusing on any one intervention such as testing, lockdowns or mass vaccinations are bound to fail and a multidimensional approach will need to be adapted to keep ourselves safe and to safeguard the NHS. This means utilising any and all of the above options should they be deemed necessary along with basic pillars of managing respiratory infections such as face masks, social distancing, hand hygiene, good ventilation etc. This will safeguard us from both Covid 19 and Flu/ RSV infections common in the winter season. Additionally, it is important for those who are vulnerable to self assess their risk and exercise greater caution. By exercising the above precautions the population could safeguard themselves and others dear to them. It is a fallacy to assume that the governments would need to walk a tight rope between securing the economy vs managing the covid pandemic as the data from other countries already shows that for the economies to be truly secured, the covid 19 threat needs to be managed first and foremost. The Government was given guidance around managing Covid 19 in Mid July with respect to the planning for the 2nd Winter with Covid-19. We start the winter with a higher number of cases as compared to the same time last year. We hope that this guidance is heeded this time around and a more proactive approach is adopted by the policymakers. Our personal freedoms are important but when they interfere with the safety of others then it becomes a separate matter altogether and leadership needs to step in. Getting this timing right for such a government intervention will always be a difficult act to pull off for anyone in power. References 1. https://blogs.bmj.com/bmj/2021/09/09/john-middleton-is-the-nhs-prepared-for-the-coming-winter/ 2. https://www.bmj.com/content/374/bmj.n2270 3. https://acmedsci.ac.uk/file-download/4747802
In this episode we cover the obvious, and subtleties around Valproic Acid toxicities. We talk everything from cerebral edema, giving that L-Carnitine and when to spin that IHD machine.
近日,牛津大学等研究人员发表在BMC Medicine上一项研究首次发现:未经加工的红肉和加工肉摄入总量较多会与25种疾病(癌症除外)的高风险相关,比如缺血性心脏病(IHD)、肺炎、憩室疾病、结肠息肉、糖尿病、出血性卒中。
近日,牛津大学等研究人员发表在BMC Medicine上一项研究首次发现:未经加工的红肉和加工肉摄入总量较多会与25种疾病(癌症除外)的高风险相关,比如缺血性心脏病(IHD)、肺炎、憩室疾病、结肠息肉、糖尿病、出血性卒中。
近日,牛津大学等研究人员发表在BMC Medicine上一项研究首次发现:未经加工的红肉和加工肉摄入总量较多会与25种疾病(癌症除外)的高风险相关,比如缺血性心脏病(IHD)、肺炎、憩室疾病、结肠息肉、糖尿病、出血性卒中。
近日,牛津大学等研究人员发表在BMC Medicine上一项研究首次发现:未经加工的红肉和加工肉摄入总量较多会与25种疾病(癌症除外)的高风险相关,比如缺血性心脏病(IHD)、肺炎、憩室疾病、结肠息肉、糖尿病、出血性卒中。
In this podcast, I interview Dave Lockridge, the founder of ACE Overcomers a Center for Resiliency and Trauma-Informed Training. Dave shares a about The ACE Study, the largest study of its kind with more than 17,000 participants. The purpose of the study was to see how stressful and traumatic childhood experiences influence later physical and emotional health. The study observed 10 types of adverse childhood experiences: emotional, physical, and sexual abuse, emotional neglect, physical neglect, domestic violence against the mother, mental illness of a family member, substance abuse in the home, parental separation or divorce, imprisonment of a household member. As your ACE score increases, the risk for the following health problems increases in a strong and graded fashion: alcoholism and alcohol abuse, COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease), depression, ischemic heart disease (IHD), liver disease, fetal death, illicit drug use, smoking, attempted suicide, unintended pregnancy, sexually transmitted diseases, partner violence, obesity. Dave specializes in teaching survivors of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) how to understand trauma, so they can better care for themselves while overcoming the effects of ACEs. He also trains businesses about trauma, so they can better care for those who are still suffering from adverse childhood experiences. You can contact Dave at dave@aceovercomers.org and visit the website at www.aceovercomers.org 1:00 - What's your Origin Story 2:00 Pastors Marry people and they bury people 3:20 What is an ACE? 5:30 Prevention vs remediation 6:30 How God Called Dave 7:30 The ACE Overcomers Curriculum 10:00 Mini ACE Survey 14:00 What does a person's ACE Score mean? 15:45 Toxic Stress - How Stress Affects the Body 18:00 Where's the hope in having a high ACE score? 19:00 Congress Woman Shot and she was able to retrain her brain 21:00 Stigmas associated went mental conditions 22:00 Diagnosis and Trauma 24:00 Medications and Regulation 29:00 Can someone who struggles with trauma help others with trauma? 33:00 Self Talk and Stinkin' Thinkin' 35:00 Stress and Cognitive Functioning -------- This is Hope is a podcast that discovers hope through stories of struggle and transformation // The podcast interviews social entrepreneurs and people who are actively engaged in transforming their communities to better understand the process of hope and social transformation. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thisishope/message
Türkiye’de son yıllarda muhaliflere yönelik sivil kaçırmalar, tehditler, ajanlaştırma faaliyetlerinde giderek artıyor. İHD’nin hazırladığı rapora göre, yılın 10 ayında 160 kişi ajanlaştırma dayatmasına maruz kaldı ve kaçırıldı.İHD Eş Genel Başkanı Öztürk Türkdoğan, Türkdoğan, “Bu konuda özel rapor hazırlama ihtiyacı son üç yıldır kendini gösterdi. 15 Temmuz darbe girişiminden sonra yaşananların benzerini yeniden yaşamaya başladık. İnsanlar son üç yıldır işkenceye uğruyor, kaçırılıyor” dedi.Yankılar’ın konuğu olan Türkdoğan, Türkiye’de her alanda hak ihlallerinin arttığına dikkat çekti.
The Aussie share market is eyeing a lift of 0.4% at the open. All eyes will be on the cyclical sectors tied to economic growth like Energy and Financials which are up the most this week.Aussie shares are on pace for the best week since April 10 thanks to budget stimulus. U.S. equities are having a good week too on the back of a potential $1,200 payment to individuals.What to watch:The oil price rose 3% to US$41.29, its highest level in almost 5 weeks.Gold rose 0.3% after U.S. President Trump said he would not do the second presidential debate next week unless it's face to face, despite Trump being diagnosed with COVID-19 about a week ago.The RBA Financial Stability review will be released today at 11:30am. Companies going ex-dividend today: Harvey Norman (ASX:HVN), while ETFs going ex-div include IAF, IOF, IGB, and IHD.Local trading ideas:BINGO (ASX:BIN) was reiterated as a UBS buy, with the international bank increasing BIN's target price of $3.00.UBS maintained Ramsay Health Care (ASX:RHC) as a hold with a $71.20 target.Pinnacle Investment Management (ASX:PNI), ReadyTech (ASX:RDY) and FINEOS (ASX:FCL) are all showing bullish charting signals according to Trading Central.
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.07.21.213397v1?rss=1 Authors: Park, J. E., Guo, X., Liou, K. C. K., Lynn, S. E., Ng, S. S., Meng, W., Lim, S. C., Leow, M. K.-S., Richards, A. M., Pennington, D. J., McCarthy, N. E., de Kleijn, D. P. V., Sorokin, V., Ho, H. H., Sze, S. K. Abstract: Abnormal matrix deposition on vessels and recruitment of inflammatory cells into the arterial wall are critical events in atherosclerotic plaque formation. Fibronectin protein is a key matrix component that exhibits high levels of deamidation in atherosclerotic plaques and blood plasma, but it is unclear how this structural change impacts on endothelial function or modifies interactions with recruited leukocytes. This study aimed to determine how deamidation-induced isoDGR motifs in fibronectin influence extracellular matrix accumulation on endothelial cells, and to investigate possible effects on integrin outside-in signalling in matrix-bound monocytes which are key mediators of human atherosclerosis. Blood plasma fibrinogen and fibronectin displayed marked accumulation of isoDGR motifs in ischemic heart disease (IHD) as determined by ELISA analysis of patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting compared with age-matched healthy controls. Biochemical and functional assays confirmed that isoDGR-containing fibronectin promoted activation of integrin {beta}1 in monocytes and facilitated protein deposition and fibrillogenesis on endothelial cell layers. In addition, isoDGR interactions with integrins on the monocyte cell surface triggered an ERK:AP-1 signalling cascade that induced potent secretion of chemotactic mediators (including CCL2, CCL4, IL-8, and TNF), that promoted further leukocyte recruitment to the assembling plaque. Fibronectin deamidation forms isoDGR motifs that increase binding to {beta}1 integrins on the surface of endothelial cells and monocytes. Subsequent activation of integrin outside-in signalling pathways elicits a range of potent cytokines and chemokines that drive additional leukocyte recruitment to the developing atherosclerotic matrix and likely constitutes a key early event in progression to IHD. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info
İHD: Demirtaş derhal tahliye edilmeli. İHD cezaevi komisyonu avukatı Zeynep Ceren Boztoprak İHD’nin Demirtaş raporunu Zübeyde Sarı'nın sunduğu Mercek programında değerlendirdi: İHD’nin verilerine göre göre 2019 yılı itibari ile cezaevlerinde 457’si ağır, 1334 hasta mahpus var. Cezaevi koşulları sağlıklı insanları hasta eder durumda. #Demirtaş’ın yemek borusunda iltihap tespit edilmiş. Hekim spazmın bu iltihap nedeniyle olabileceğini bildirmiş. #Demirtaş’ın hastalığının nedeni cezaevi koşulları. “#Demirtaş’ın derhal tahliye edilmesi gerekir. Şuanda riskli durumu. Dr #Demirtaş’a ‘cezaevi koşullarında hastalığının tedavisi çok zor’ demiş, ancak bunu raporuna yansıtmamış. Hastanenin derhal #Demirtaş’a cezaevinde kalamaz raporu vermesi lazım. Hapishanelerde hasta olduktan sonra tedavin yapılmıyor, hastane sevkine aylar sonra götürülüyor “Bir çok mahpus kelepçeli muayene olmak istemediği için tedavi olmuyor
(音質良くなくてすみません)イベント後の居酒屋トークです。IHDは来年からイベント主催したいメンバー募集しています!
Hanim Tosun feels at home at the Istanbul office of the Human Rights Association, also known as the IHD, its acronym in Turkish. It was here that she and a group of Kurdish women launched the first Saturday Mothers vigil 24 years ago.The Saturday Mothers is one of the longest-running peaceful protest movements in the world. On Saturdays since 1995, the women would gather in Istanbul's Galatasaray Square, a popular pedestrian shopping area, to demand the whereabouts of their sons, fathers and husbands who disappeared after Turkey's 1980 military coup. Their protest was inspired in part by the Argentine women in white who demanded to know the fates of loved ones who disappeared during their country's dictatorship.Today, Turkey's Saturday Mothers continue to meet in Istanbul — at the IHD office. And while many of the founding protesters are growing frail, their daughters are taking the reins. Some men have joined the movement, as well.Hanim Tosun's husband, Fehmi Tosun, was among hundreds of Kurds who disappeared in the '80s and '90s, when Turkey's conflict with its minority Kurdish population was at its height. Anyone who sympathized with Kurdish separatists could be targeted. Related: Biden said ISIS is ‘going to come here.' Is he right?In the wake of another war Turkey is now waging against the Kurdish region of Syria, many Kurds fear that more of their loved ones will be kidnapped by militias and authoritarian regimes.US troops are crossing into Iraq as part of a broader withdrawal from Syria ordered by President Donald Trump, a decision that allowed Turkey to launch an offensive against the Syrian Democratic Forces, which for years was a US ally battling ISIS. (SDF is a leftist Syrian Kurdish militia considered terrorists by Turkey.)Turkey agreed to pause its offensive for five days under a deal with Washington. The truce expires late on Tuesday, just after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is set to discuss next steps in the region at a meeting in Russia with President Vladimir Putin.‘They're going to catch me. They're going to kill me.'The last time Hanim Tosun saw Fehmi Tosun was October 1995. She was upstairs in their Istanbul apartment when the yelling started. It was around 7 p.m., and a group of men were taking him away.“He was shouting a lot. He tried not to get in the [men's] car, but they forced him to get in the car ... they were dragging him in. While I was trying to go downstairs, I yelled, ‘Get that car's license plate,'” she said. Her daughter, Jiyan Tosun, who was 9 years old at the time, heard her father scream. “[He shouted,] ‘They're going to catch me. They're going to kill me,'” Jiyan Tosun said. “I ran downstairs. My brother ran up to the car, but my father told him to let go because they might do the same to him.”Related: Does the chaos in Syria help ISIS?They never heard from Fehmi Tosun again.“We didn't understand that it was undercover policemen at first.”Hanim Tosun, Saturday Mothers“We didn't understand that it was undercover policemen at first,” who took her husband away, Hanim Tosun said.Fehmi Tosun is among at least 1,300 Kurds who have disappeared in Turkey's conflict with its minority Kurdish population since 1935, according to Maside Ocak, a researcher with Turkey's Human Rights Association. Only 200 bodies of Kurds who've been killed have been identified, she said.Her own brother, Hasan Ocak, is among the dead — his body was identified by a Turkish soldier — while a local journalist found bones from two teenage Kurdish boys in a cave in 2016.At 53, Hanim Tosun is one of the youngest of the Saturday Mothers. Many of them are in their 80s and 90s now, and some have died without getting answers. The Turkish government banned them from meeting for 10 years, from 1999 to 2009.Related: Syrian civilians plea for 'no-fly' zoneIn recent years, Turkey has been cracking down on dissent by women. In March, police tear-gassed and stopped the International Women's Day protest in Istanbul after 17 years of allowing it.Successive Turkish governments have targeted and harassed the Saturday Mothers. But the current government, led by the AK Party, generally left them alone.Until August 2018. On the 700th vigil, police swooped in with tear gas. They arrested dozens of protesters, including one of the pioneering Saturday Mothers, 83-year-old Emine Ocak, who is Maside Ocak's mother. An image of Emine Ocak in 1997 alongside a photo of her last year being detained by police went viral on Turkish social media. Video of Turkey: Clashes erupt as Saturday Mothers protest for missing Since then, the government has banned the Saturday Mothers from gathering at Galatasaray.“The world heard about our struggle from Galatasaray. We want to return there. It's like a sacred ground, for us.”Hanim Tosun, Saturday Mothers“The world heard about our struggle from Galatasaray. We want to return there. It's like a sacred ground, for us,” Hanim Tosun said.Turkish officials say they blocked the vigils because the Kurdish militia group, the PKK, was using them as propaganda on social media. The Saturday Mothers say they have no connection to the PKK.Amnesty International is advocating for the government to allow the group back to the square.“It's a place of historic importance. It's a place of peaceful protest, not just for the Saturday Mothers actually, but sit-ins [and] small-scale protests over the years have taken place there,” said Milena Buyum, a campaigner for Amnesty. “Now, it's encircled by iron barriers, and there's a permanent police presence there discouraging and stopping anybody else. And this is a really big problem. The public space is being banned for people.”Keeping the protest aliveFor now, the Saturday Mothers have moved their sit-in to the human rights office.Jiyan Tosun is 34 now, and when her mom can't make it to the Saturday sit-in, she often steps in. She's studying to become a lawyer, she said, because she wants to fight in court, as well as the street.“Until the disappeared are found and the perpetrators are tried, our demands will remain the same. This has been my mother's struggle since we were kids.”Jiyan Tosun, Saturday Mothers“Until the disappeared are found and the perpetrators are tried, our demands will remain the same," she said. "This has been my mother's struggle since we were kids. Every week, my mother was going to the demonstration on Saturday … If we didn't go with her, we were waiting in front of the TV, to see how much she would be beaten that week,” said Jiyan Tosun.At one Saturday protest earlier this year, Jiyan Tosun was stationed in front of the human rights office. About 150 people gathered for the vigil, carrying red carnations and photos. Nearby, about a dozen police officers in riot gear stood on alert.“I'm angry because the reason we're here is the government … They are just standing in front of us and actually preventing us from finding our relatives,” she said. Fariba Nawa/The World Credit: Saturday Mothers meets every Saturday to demand the whereabouts of their missing husbands, fathers and sons. But Hanim Tosun says she doesn't go as often as she used to.Related: For many US military vets, the offensive against the Kurds is personalShe said it's painful to keep retelling her husband's story. “When I was getting arrested, there was a lot of violence: kicking, slapping, tear gas, batons. But in jail, they didn't touch us. One time, they put us in solitary confinement,” said Hanim Tosun, who has been arrested numerous times over the years.And she doesn't like to discuss the details in front of her kids.“The hardest thing for me has been hiding the pain from my kids and enduring it in silence when I'm with them.”Hanim Tosun, Saturday Mothers“The hardest thing for me has been hiding the pain from my kids and enduring it in silence when I'm with them,” Hanim Tosun said.But she said that despite the pain, she will continue her activism. It's still important for the world to hear them, so more people don't disappear like her husband did.She and the Saturday Mothers have gotten recognition and support for their struggle. The Irish band U2 recognized Fehmi Tosun in their 1997 album, “Pop,” and the Tosun family met the band members after an Istanbul concert in 2010.“Our government doesn't hear our voice. Somewhere far away, they hear us," Hanim Tosun said. "Our struggle is not in vain. I'm happy to see that."Reuters contributed to this story.
Hanim Tosun feels at home at the Istanbul office of the Human Rights Association, also known as the IHD, its acronym in Turkish. It was here that she and a group of Kurdish women launched the first Saturday Mothers vigil 24 years ago.The Saturday Mothers is one of the longest-running peaceful protest movements in the world. On Saturdays since 1995, the women would gather in Istanbul's Galatasaray Square, a popular pedestrian shopping area, to demand the whereabouts of their sons, fathers and husbands who disappeared after Turkey's 1980 military coup. Their protest was inspired in part by the Argentine women in white who demanded to know the fates of loved ones who disappeared during their country's dictatorship.Today, Turkey's Saturday Mothers continue to meet in Istanbul — at the IHD office. And while many of the founding protesters are growing frail, their daughters are taking the reins. Some men have joined the movement, as well.Hanim Tosun’s husband, Fehmi Tosun, was among hundreds of Kurds who disappeared in the ’80s and ’90s, when Turkey’s conflict with its minority Kurdish population was at its height. Anyone who sympathized with Kurdish separatists could be targeted. Related: Biden said ISIS is ‘going to come here.’ Is he right?In the wake of another war Turkey is now waging against the Kurdish region of Syria, many Kurds fear that more of their loved ones will be kidnapped by militias and authoritarian regimes.US troops are crossing into Iraq as part of a broader withdrawal from Syria ordered by President Donald Trump, a decision that allowed Turkey to launch an offensive against the Syrian Democratic Forces, which for years was a US ally battling ISIS. (SDF is a leftist Syrian Kurdish militia considered terrorists by Turkey.)Turkey agreed to pause its offensive for five days under a deal with Washington. The truce expires late on Tuesday, just after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is set to discuss next steps in the region at a meeting in Russia with President Vladimir Putin.‘They’re going to catch me. They’re going to kill me.’The last time Hanim Tosun saw Fehmi Tosun was October 1995. She was upstairs in their Istanbul apartment when the yelling started. It was around 7 p.m., and a group of men were taking him away.“He was shouting a lot. He tried not to get in the [men’s] car, but they forced him to get in the car ... they were dragging him in. While I was trying to go downstairs, I yelled, ‘Get that car's license plate,’” she said. Her daughter, Jiyan Tosun, who was 9 years old at the time, heard her father scream. “[He shouted,] ‘They’re going to catch me. They’re going to kill me,’” Jiyan Tosun said. “I ran downstairs. My brother ran up to the car, but my father told him to let go because they might do the same to him.”Related: Does the chaos in Syria help ISIS?They never heard from Fehmi Tosun again.“We didn't understand that it was undercover policemen at first.”Hanim Tosun, Saturday Mothers“We didn't understand that it was undercover policemen at first,” who took her husband away, Hanim Tosun said.Fehmi Tosun is among at least 1,300 Kurds who have disappeared in Turkey’s conflict with its minority Kurdish population since 1935, according to Maside Ocak, a researcher with Turkey's Human Rights Association. Only 200 bodies of Kurds who've been killed have been identified, she said.Her own brother, Hasan Ocak, is among the dead — his body was identified by a Turkish soldier — while a local journalist found bones from two teenage Kurdish boys in a cave in 2016.At 53, Hanim Tosun is one of the youngest of the Saturday Mothers. Many of them are in their 80s and 90s now, and some have died without getting answers. The Turkish government banned them from meeting for 10 years, from 1999 to 2009.Related: Syrian civilians plea for 'no-fly' zoneIn recent years, Turkey has been cracking down on dissent by women. In March, police tear-gassed and stopped the International Women’s Day protest in Istanbul after 17 years of allowing it.Successive Turkish governments have targeted and harassed the Saturday Mothers. But the current government, led by the AK Party, generally left them alone.Until August 2018. On the 700th vigil, police swooped in with tear gas. They arrested dozens of protesters, including one of the pioneering Saturday Mothers, 83-year-old Emine Ocak, who is Maside Ocak’s mother. An image of Emine Ocak in 1997 alongside a photo of her last year being detained by police went viral on Turkish social media. Video of Turkey: Clashes erupt as Saturday Mothers protest for missing Since then, the government has banned the Saturday Mothers from gathering at Galatasaray.“The world heard about our struggle from Galatasaray. We want to return there. It’s like a sacred ground, for us.”Hanim Tosun, Saturday Mothers“The world heard about our struggle from Galatasaray. We want to return there. It’s like a sacred ground, for us,” Hanim Tosun said.Turkish officials say they blocked the vigils because the Kurdish militia group, the PKK, was using them as propaganda on social media. The Saturday Mothers say they have no connection to the PKK.Amnesty International is advocating for the government to allow the group back to the square.“It’s a place of historic importance. It’s a place of peaceful protest, not just for the Saturday Mothers actually, but sit-ins [and] small-scale protests over the years have taken place there,” said Milena Buyum, a campaigner for Amnesty. “Now, it’s encircled by iron barriers, and there’s a permanent police presence there discouraging and stopping anybody else. And this is a really big problem. The public space is being banned for people.”Keeping the protest aliveFor now, the Saturday Mothers have moved their sit-in to the human rights office.Jiyan Tosun is 34 now, and when her mom can’t make it to the Saturday sit-in, she often steps in. She’s studying to become a lawyer, she said, because she wants to fight in court, as well as the street.“Until the disappeared are found and the perpetrators are tried, our demands will remain the same. This has been my mother’s struggle since we were kids.”Jiyan Tosun, Saturday Mothers“Until the disappeared are found and the perpetrators are tried, our demands will remain the same," she said. "This has been my mother’s struggle since we were kids. Every week, my mother was going to the demonstration on Saturday … If we didn’t go with her, we were waiting in front of the TV, to see how much she would be beaten that week,” said Jiyan Tosun.At one Saturday protest earlier this year, Jiyan Tosun was stationed in front of the human rights office. About 150 people gathered for the vigil, carrying red carnations and photos. Nearby, about a dozen police officers in riot gear stood on alert.“I’m angry because the reason we’re here is the government … They are just standing in front of us and actually preventing us from finding our relatives,” she said. Fariba Nawa/The World Credit: Saturday Mothers meets every Saturday to demand the whereabouts of their missing husbands, fathers and sons. But Hanim Tosun says she doesn’t go as often as she used to.Related: For many US military vets, the offensive against the Kurds is personalShe said it’s painful to keep retelling her husband’s story. “When I was getting arrested, there was a lot of violence: kicking, slapping, tear gas, batons. But in jail, they didn’t touch us. One time, they put us in solitary confinement,” said Hanim Tosun, who has been arrested numerous times over the years.And she doesn’t like to discuss the details in front of her kids.“The hardest thing for me has been hiding the pain from my kids and enduring it in silence when I’m with them.”Hanim Tosun, Saturday Mothers“The hardest thing for me has been hiding the pain from my kids and enduring it in silence when I’m with them,” Hanim Tosun said.But she said that despite the pain, she will continue her activism. It’s still important for the world to hear them, so more people don’t disappear like her husband did.She and the Saturday Mothers have gotten recognition and support for their struggle. The Irish band U2 recognized Fehmi Tosun in their 1997 album, “Pop,” and the Tosun family met the band members after an Istanbul concert in 2010.“Our government doesn’t hear our voice. Somewhere far away, they hear us," Hanim Tosun said. "Our struggle is not in vain. I’m happy to see that."Reuters contributed to this story.
The Staying Young Show 2.0 - Entertaining | Educational | Health & Wellness
Meat eaters, pescatarians, vegetarians, and vegans—listen up! This is Judy Gaman and this is your Stay Young medical minute. A new study published in BMJ looked at correlations between diet and risk factors for stroke and ischemic heart disease, or IHD. They put participants into three different groups: meat eaters, pescatarians (the only meat they eat is fish), and vegetarians or vegans (plant-based diet). The researchers found that pescatarians had a 13% lower risk of developing IHD than meat eaters. Vegetarians had a 22% lower risk! Shocker, right? But here's where it gets interesting. Vegetarians had a 20% higher risk for stroke. In the past, studies have argued that stroke risks were lower in vegetarians, but they were only looking at death related strokes. So, which is the best diet? Maybe a little bit of everything in moderation. This Stay Young Medical Minute is brought to you by Executive Medicine of Texas, a leader in preventative and proactive medicine. Learn why patients from around the globe trust Executive Medicine of Texas to their health. Visit EMTexas.com that's EMTexas.com https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/326270.php Thank you for listening to the Staying Young Medical Minute! With all the mixed messages on health, you need information that you can use and that you can trust. Listen in as the experts discuss all topics health related. It's time to STAY YOUNG and stay healthy! Each week we tackle a topic and often with leading scientists, best-selling authors, and even your favorite celebrities! As a listener of our show, your input is important to us. Please take a moment to fill out this quick survey so we can serve you better - https://survey.libsyn.com/stayingyoung2 For more information on The Staying Young Show, please visit our website at www.StayYoungAmerica.com, and subscribe to the show in iTunes, Stitcher, or your favorite podcast app. You can also reach out to our host, Judy Gaman on www.judygaman.com for book purchasing, and speaking opportunities in your area!
Expand your idea of ischemic heart disease to include non-obstructive patterns, which as our guest, Dr Noel Bairey Merz, a clinical investigative cardiologist whose multiple roles include Director of the Barbra Streisand Women’s Heart Center and the Preventive Cardiac Center at the Smidt Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, shares with us, is incredibly common, especially in women. Learn to recognize these women and treat according to guidelines, preventing unnecessary IHD mortality in our female (and some male) patients. We review a variety of non-obstructive pathologies and the best techniques to evaluate them. Full show notes available at http://thecurbsiders.com/podcast. Join our mailing list and receive a PDF copy of our show notes every Monday. Rate us on iTunes, recommend a guest or topic and give feedback at thecurbsiders@gmail.com. Credits Written and produced by: Shreya Trivedi MD, Molly Heublein MD Hosts: Paul Williams MD, FACP; Shreya Trivedi MD; Molly Heublein MD Edited by: Matthew Watto MD, FACP; Emi Okamoto MD Graphics by: Hannah Abrams Guest: Dr. C Noel Bairey Merz MD, FACC, FAHA Curbsiders' Schwag! We’ve got the perfect father’s day gift for every internal medicine nerd. The Curbsiders have opened our own online shop. Get your Curbsiders t-shirts, hoodies, stickers, and coffee mugs. Help support the show and gain instant bragging rights. Note: All purchases come with admitting privileges at Kashlak Memorial Hospital! Time Stamps 00:00 Intro, disclaimer and guest bio 04:36 Guest one-liner; Advice for success in research and clinical practice 07:07 A case of shortness of breath and chest tightness; Why the paradigm of obstructive coronary artery disease is flawed. 12:04 Why is there a sex difference in ischemic heart disease? 14:52 How to recognize ischemic heart disease in women; Are certain symptoms more likely in women; Categorizing angina 20:13 Who needs stress testing?; Screening for ischemic heart disease in women 24:52 How guidelines make good doctors great doctors 27:00 Diagnosis of NSTEMI in a woman without obstructive coronary disease 29:33 Medical therapy for non-obstructive ischemic heart disease 33:18 Additional testing: Cardiac MRI for myocarditis; perfusion reserve testing; CT coronary angiograms 35:48 How current non-invasive techniques fail to identify microvascular ischemic heart disease in women 39:10 Antianginal therapy 41:40 HFpEF in women 47:10 Weight loss for paroxysmal atrial fibrillation 48:45 New nomenclature for ischemic heart disease 50:18 Take home points 52:40 Outro
Dr Craig Bash is an Air Force Veteran. He has been doing Veteran's evaluations for well over 30 years. His specialty is Neuroradiology. Dr Bash's website is http://www.veteransmedadvisor.com. His knowledge of the VA claims process as it relates to an individuals disablity is top tier. Join us.
Jane and Dan spoke to Garth Birdsey, Senior clinician pharmacist at Barwon Health. We asked Garth about: Real world experience with DOACs in special patient groups Concerns about under-dosing patients with DOACs Optimal use of beta-blockers and why metoprolol 12.5 mg bd is often inappropriate in IHD
Intermittent hemodialysis (IHD) is an accepted method for acute kidney injury (AKI) in both human and veterinary medicine. It is often considered in patients with severe azotemia, hyperkalemia, fluid overload, or severe clinical signs. While it can be a life-saving therapy, most current publish information only evaluates the short-term outcome following IHD. In this veterinary podcast, VetGirl discusses common reasons to consider intermittent therapy, and also evaluates IHD's use on long-term outcomes based on underlying diseases.
Intermittent hemodialysis (IHD) is an accepted method for acute kidney injury (AKI) in both human and veterinary medicine. It is often considered in patients with severe azotemia, hyperkalemia, fluid overload, or severe clinical signs. While it can be a life-saving therapy, most current publish information only evaluates the short-term outcome following IHD. In this veterinary podcast, VetGirl discusses common reasons to consider intermittent therapy, and also evaluates IHD's use on long-term outcomes based on underlying diseases.
Michaela Cartner, an ED physician and intensivist, gives a down-to-earth fast paced low down on dialysis. She gave this lecture on the Registrar day at the Bedside Critical Care conference 2012 (#BCC3). The sound snippets are from "O Fortuna" which can be bought here
Background/Aims: Methods of intermittent hemodialysis (IHD) dose quantification in acute renal failure (ARF) are not well defined. This observational study was designed to evaluate the impact of disease activity on delivered single pool Kt/V-urea in ARF patients. Methods: 100 patients with severe ARF (acute intrinsic renal disease in 18 patients, nephrotoxic acute tubular necrosis in 38 patients, and septic ARF in 44 patients) were analyzed during four consecutive sessions of IHD, performed for 3.5-5 h every other day or daily. Target IHD dose was a single pool Kt/V-urea of 1.2 or more per dialysis session for all patients. Prescribed Kt/V-urea was calculated from desired dialyzer clearance (K), desired treatment time (t) and anthropometric estimates for urea distribution volume (V). The desired clearance (K) was estimated from prescribed blood flow rate and manufacturer's charts of in vivo data obtained in maintenance dialysis patients. Delivered single pool Kt/V-urea was calculated using the Daugirdas equation. Results: None of the patients had prescription failure of the target dose. The delivered IHD doses were substantially lower than the prescribed Kt/V values, particularly in ARF patients with sepsis/septic shock. Stratification according to disease severity revealed that all patients with isolated ARF, but none with 3 or more organ failures and none who needed vasopressive support received the target dose. Conclusion: Prescription of target IHD dose by single pool Kt/V-urea resulted in suboptimal dialysis dose delivery in critically ill patients. Numerous patient-related and treatment-immanent factors acting in concert reduced the delivered dose. Copyright (C) 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel.
Tierärztliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU - Teil 02/07
Restenosis constitutes a serious problem during therapeutical use of stents. It is a multifactorial event composed of inflammatory reactions, thrombus formation, proliferation of muscle cells, and the design of the stent. This study is due to test the influence of various antithrombogenic and/or antiproliferative stent coatings on in-stent restenosis by comparison. Methods: 10 mm InFlow Dynamics Flex-Stents were dip-coated aseptically. Polylactic acid (PLA) is used as a carrier as well as being a testgroup itself. Into this carrier, different pharmaceuticals were incorporated alone or in combination with each other up to 20 % of the PLA concentration. There is around 200 µg of coating material per stent. The groups and their numbers are: PLA (n = 10), IH: 2 % iloprost + 5 % PEG-hirudin (n =11), IHD: 2% iloprost + 5% PEG-hirudin + 5% dexamethasone acetate (n = 11), DD: 5% dexamethasone acetate + 15% dexamethasone (n = 12) and UNC: uncoated bare stents (n = 16) as control group. By random, the stents were implanted into both femoral arteries (one into each) of 30 German Landrace pigs. After four weeks, the animals were euthanised and the stented vessels were analysed at three different levels. The histomorphometrical assessment included the absolute neointimal area, the neointimal thickness, and the thickness of neointima at the struts. Histomorphologically, the mean injury score as well as the symmetry of stent distension were analysed. Results: The biggest trauma of vessel wall was found with the uncoated control stents. The PLA stents showed the most asymmetrical extension, as well as the biggest thickness at the struts and neointimal thickness, and neointimal area. There is no significant difference between the groups. None of the groups is outstanding regarding the reduction of restenosis. Only the uncoated stents are noteworthy having no higher rate of restenosis contrary to expectations. Conclusion: Neither dexamethasone, nor iloprost or hirudin alone or in combination were able to inhibit proliferation of smooth muscle cells. There were no differences regarding neointimal proliferation between the antithrombotics iloprost and hirudin, the antiproliferative substance dexamethasone or the carrier polylactic acid or their combinations.