Showing posts with label Surgery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Surgery. Show all posts

Thursday, August 29, 2019

In a first, three surgeries conducted using robots and 5G


BEIJING — Robots guided by doctors in a remote location through 5G wireless technology successfully completed major portions of three simultaneous orthopedic surgeries on Tuesday.

The whole process, monitored by specialists at a hospital in Beijing, was the first time three remote procedures were conducted at the same time.


The surgeries took place in Zhangjiakou, Hebei province; Karamay, the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region; and Tianjin. Live images were transmitted to a team at Beijing Jishuitan Hospital as the robots executed their preset programming commands.

At 9:30 am, Tian Wei, head of the hospital in Beijing and team leader, issued the command for the surgical robots to begin their work.

The robots have been designed to carry out many of the tasks, but others must still be done by humans, such as implanting devices within bones.

The operations on Tuesday were all completed at around 1 pm.


“The combination of 5G technology with surgical robots is a huge technological advance that will help us share our skills with more patients in distant regions,” Tian said. “People across society can now have access to top medical resources. In the future, using robots and 5G will be common. The medical community will be smarter.”

Jiang Wenxue, head of orthopedics at Tianjin First Central Hospital, where one of the surgeries took place, said 5G technology provided clarity and continuity of images-videos and still photos-as well as stability, reliability and safety, which helped the doctors in Beijing monitor progress and communicate with their counterparts in remote operating rooms.

“With the network, we can perform surgery regardless of the distance,” Jiang said.

The Tianjin subsidiary of the State Grid Group has been promoting the integration of the electrical grid and 5G technology and has developed plans to ensure that power is not interrupted during surgeries.

Xiang Huangmei, vice-president of China Telecom’s Beijing branch, said the bandwidth of 5G is 10 times greater than 4G, which provides tremendous speed advantages.


“The high speed of 5G has resolved the time-lag problem and brought about dramatic progress in remote surgeries,” she said.

In June, Jishuitan Hospital performed 5G-assisted remote robotic surgery on a patient in Yantai, Shandong province, monitored by doctors in Beijing. China Telecom provided network support.

Luo Jun, secretary-general of the International Health Industry Forum, a Beijing-based think tank, said the use of advanced technologies such as 5G, 3D printing and artificial intelligence is an unstoppable trend in China’s medical sector.

“The risks of surgery are highly controllable, and the medical teams always have emergency plans for power or network failures,” he said.

source: technology.inquirer.net

Thursday, February 7, 2019

12-year-old boy operated on after inserting 39 beads into penis


A 12-year-old boy from China who inserted beads into his penis had to undergo surgery after his kidneys stopped producing urine. 

The boy from Wuhan in central China first displayed symptoms of anuria, or the absence of urine. His family, concerned about his health, rushed him to the hospital last Jan. 13, as per a report by Kankan News via The Daily Mirror on Feb. 1

At the Wuhan Children’s Hospital, he complained of stomach pain and told doctors that he had swallowed magnetic beads.

However, a urologist found 39 magnetic beads, known as buckyballs, in his urinary tract. An x-ray showed that these formed a U shape along his urethra.


As to how they got there, the boy told the doctor he put them inside his penis because he was “curious.”

Doctors managed to remove the balls through surgery. He has since been able to urinate again and has been discharged.

Doctors at the hospital said such cases previously occurred, especially among children who are 11 or 12 years old and are just hitting puberty.   Niña V. Guno /ra

source: lifestyle.inquirer.net

Friday, December 1, 2017

Cavs’ Shumpert to have arthroscopic surgery on left knee


CLEVELAND — Cleveland Cavaliers guard Iman Shumpert was set to have arthroscopic surgery on his left knee Friday morning.

The Cavaliers said Thursday that Shumpert was reevaluated by team physicians Dr. Richard Parker and Dr. James Rosneck after the Cavaliers’ home victory over Miami on Tuesday night. Shumpert was scheduled to have surgery at Cleveland Clinic Sports Health.

Shumpert was not available Tuesday night after playing seven minutes Monday night in a victory at Philadelphia. He’s averaging 4.8 points and 3.1 rebounds in 13 games this season.

The Cavaliers were in Atlanta on Thursday night.

source: sports.inquirer.net

Saturday, June 14, 2014

Canadian sues hospital for shortening penis in botched surgery


OTTAWA–A Canadian man is suing a Montreal area hospital over a botched surgery that left his penis one inch shorter, claiming it ruined his sex life and his marriage, media said Friday.

The man, whose identity was withheld by Sun Media, told the newspaper chain he had been rushed to hospital in 2011 with a fractured appendage. The injury was sustained while having sex with his wife.

Surgery to correct the injury reportedly left a “permanent scar” on his penis and reduced its length by “about an inch” (2.5 centimeters). 


The man claims he was unable to have sex for two years and his wife eventually walked out on him.

He is seeking Can$155,000 ($142,680) in damages for negligence and “indescribable anguish,” according to a statement of claim cited by Sun Media.

The allegations have not been proven in court.

source: lifestyle.inquirer.net

Monday, December 30, 2013

MMA star Silva undergoes surgery to repair broken leg


Anderson Silva underwent surgery to repair a broken left leg, a gruesome injury he suffered in his loss to Chris Weidman on Saturday night (Sunday Manila time), the Ultimate Fighting Championship said.

In a statement posted on its website, the UFC said that an “intramedullary rod” was inserted into Anderson’s left tibia (shinbone) in an operation performed at a local Las Vegas hospital.

Silva’s broken fibula (calf bone) has also been stabilized and does not require additional surgery.

In the their UFC 168 title bout, the 38-year-old Mixed Martial Arts star from Brazil dropped to the canvas, writhed in pain, as his lower-leg snapped upon absorbing the impact of Weidman’s check of the kick.

The referee halted the fight a minute and 16 seconds into the second round, and Weidman retained the UFC Middleweight title.

The injury and the loss cast doubts on whether Silva, one of the celebrated MMA fighters of all time, could still return to the ring.

Silva, in a Twitter post, thanked his fans and friends for the support and said that he “will be better soon.”

“I now I need to be with my family to recovering better,” he also said.

source: sports.inquirer.net

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Doctor finds patients comforted by prayer before surgery


Dallas — At 83, Carl Smith found himself facing quadruple-bypass surgery and the real possibility that he might not survive.

Within hours on this spring morning, Dr. Mark Pool would temporarily bring Smith’s heart to a stop in an attempt to circumvent its blocked passages.

And to help his patient confront the uncertainty, Pool did something unusual in his profession: He prayed with him.

The power of healing: Medicine and religion have both had their day, and they haven’t always been able to coexist. But as today’s medical treatment becomes more holistic, doctors are increasingly taking spirituality into account.

Studies show a majority of patients want their spirituality recognized, and most med schools now have classes related to the topic. In general, the new thinking asks doctors to note their patients’ spiritual leanings and open doors to expression, especially when life is at risk.

Pool, a highly regarded heart and lung surgeon at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas, is fervent about his Baptist faith. For about a year, he’s routinely asked patients if they’d like him to pray with them pre-surgery — a gesture he says is always appreciated but one that exceeds advocates’ suggested bounds.

“A physician should be open to a patient’s spirituality but shouldn’t push religion on patients,” says Nathan Carlin, assistant professor at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. “That’s confusing personal and professional roles.”

An inherent power differential divides doctors and patients, says Christina Puchalski, director of George Washington University’s Institute for Spirituality and Health and co-editor of the recently published Oxford Textbook of Spirituality in Healthcare.

“They’re coming to us for something other than prayer,” Puchalski says. “If I, as a patient, perceive (a surgeon) as having my life in his hands, and he asks me to pray and I say no, he may not treat me well. And that’s putting undue pressure on the patient.”

As the saying goes, there are no atheists in foxholes: The idea that your fate is out of your hands offers fertile ground for re-examination.

“The moment somebody tells you that you have cancer,” says Methodist Dallas Medical Center’s Rohan Jeyarajah, a gastrointestinal surgeon who prays with patients, “you’re going to believe in something.”

But the situation, he says, requires caution: “We have to be careful about being in a position of perceived authority and not overstepping that bound. This is like a teacher-student relationship. There’s a chance you could be inappropriate.”

Pool pushes forward, eager to share the belief that drives him without making people feel awkward or flouting that power imbalance.

“I don’t want to exploit their situation,” he says. “At the same time, I want to give them the opportunity to explore the faith that I know.”

•••

Pool comes from a religious background. His father, his grandfather, his father-in-law, his brother-in-law: all ministers. Family members joke was that he started going to church nine months before he was born.

By age 6, he was well versed in Bible basics, but then something odd happened. One day at a prayer meeting, Pool says, he was touched by — well, not quite a vision, but an awareness.

“I had already understood that Jesus came to save the world,” he says. “That was nice. But then I understood: Jesus came to save me. And that changed everything.”

He’s pursued a path of faith ever since. Medicine seemed like a good way to help people. Even so, as a med student, Pool pondered ditching the whole thing to go to seminary instead.

As a member of First Baptist Dallas, he and wife Jessica lead relationship classes on Sundays for dozens of young married couples.

And as a cardiothoracic surgeon, another realization has set in: “I have a ministry. I don’t need to be standing in a pulpit. I have found a ministry I did not expect. I am able to minister to people in times of need.”

Since Texas Health is a faith-based hospital system, he felt at ease taking that step.

“The vast majority of people believe in God,” he says, “and yet when people come to the hospital, that’s completely ignored by doctors. If anything, they call the chaplain. It’s unfortunate that more doctors don’t try to engage that part of a patient’s life.”

That’s starting to change. Two decades ago, barely a few med schools offered classes on spirituality. Now, three-fourths of them do.

“Medicine has figured out that we ignore the more human sides of health care at our own peril,” says Craig Borchardt, interim chairman of humanities and medicine at Texas A&M University.

Studies show 60 to 80 percent of patients want their beliefs noted, he says — not as affirmation but as a sign that the doctor actually cares. But fewer than 20 percent of doctors bring it up.

The push has met with some backlash — from busy doctors reluctant to take time away from other concerns or others who don’t like talking about it.

“Some staff are more comfortable with it than others,” says Mark Grace, vice president of mission and ministry for Baylor Health Care System.

He doesn’t reject the idea of doctors offering to pray, but “if you don’t listen to the answer, that’s where you get into problems. ... The doctor needs to be prepared if the patient says no.”

George Washington University’s Puchalski says the bottom line is doing what’s best for the patient.

“Physicians are generally not trained to lead prayer,” she says.

•••

It’s 6 a.m., and Pool, shiny black boots poking from beneath blue scrubs, briefs Smith on his surgery. At 83, Smith is fit, mowing the yard occasionally, an active driver.

But coronary artery disease caught up with the retired Farmers Branch pharmacist, slowing his blood flow and causing chest pain. Over time, it could lead to a heart attack.

Madge Smith, his wife of 63 years, and Leah Wilson, his youngest daughter, are near. Scott Smith, his son, would join later.

Pool explains his plan: He’ll make an incision down Smith’s breastbone, then take arteries from his left and right side, and a vein from his leg, to form new channels for blood to flow through his heart.

“So,” he tells Smith, “you told me you’re a Sunday school leader. ... Would you mind if I said a prayer for you?”

Smith is touched. Pool places his hand on Smith’s shoulder and begins:

“God, thank you for Mr. Smith. We ask that you would guard his life, keep him safe and bring him through this operation. Replace any anxiety that he may have. Give him a great assurance of your love and your power.

“I ask you to watch over our team, that you give us all clarity of thought, that you guide my hands as they move. We pray these things in Christ’s name. Amen.”

“Amen,” Smith says.

Later, as Smith’s family awaits the outcome, his wife says: “I have never had a doctor do that. It just meant so much to us. We just thought it was sent from God.”

Pool initially wondered if his praying might give patients pause, whether they’d worry he wasn’t confident enough in his own skills to get through the surgery.

“It’s been the opposite,” he says. “They value the humility.”

Not long ago, Pool contacted a local evangelistic organization. “So I could up my game,” he says. He wants to learn how to share his faith without being a “turn or burn” proselytizer.

“I wouldn’t want for somebody to make a decision in a moment of crisis that they wouldn’t make otherwise,” he says. “I don’t want to say, ‘It’s your last chance: Smarten up or else.’

“It doesn’t mean I can’t share my faith just because it might upset somebody in the world. This nation was founded on Christian ideals.”

Pool pauses when asked if he’d pray with followers of Islam, a faith he considers antagonistic and unforgiving.

“I don’t think they would get the same meaning” from it, he says. “Not that they would feel offended, but ... not comforted.”

He tries to avoid a holier-than-thou air and doesn’t claim only certain believers get into heaven.

“It’s not my job to get somebody to make certain decisions,” Pool says. “All I can do is live a life that makes it appealing to somebody and then share it with them. If I share and they say, ‘I’m not interested,’ I say no problem and move on. But seeds can be sown that you never see the fruit of.”

•••

Smith’s operation was a success. Six weeks later, Pool meets with him one last time.

“You’re doing extremely well,” Pool says. “I’m going to fade away now. You don’t have to come back and see me.”

“I’d be six feet under if it wasn’t for you,” Smith says.

Pool dismisses the thought. “I’d like to say a prayer with you,” he says.

Smith bows his head and closes his eyes.

“Lord,” Pool begins, “thank you for getting Mr. Smith out of the hospital and getting him home. We ask that you continue that process of healing and give him a spring in his step once again. In Jesus’ name we pray.”

Smith is upbeat. He believes the gesture will help him get better. And in the end, that might be the most important thing of all.

source: lasvegassun.com

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Bee Gees star Robin Gibb in a coma as his family keeps bedside vigil


(CNN) -- Bee Gees star Robin Gibb is in a coma and has pneumonia, the latest turn in health issues that include a recent battle with colon and liver cancer, according to a message Saturday on his website.

Doctors believe that Gibb, 62, has a secondary tumor, his representative Doug Wright said, confirming a news account in The Sun in the United Kingdom. Gibb had emergency surgery in 2010 for a blocked bowel and then had more surgery for a twisted bowel, Wright confirmed.

"We are all hoping and praying that he will pull through," said the message on Gibb's website, which noted that reports "are true" about Gibb being in a coma and having contracted pneumonia.

News of Gibb's condition elicited a flood of support on social network sites and in the music community.

Peter Frampton, who like the Bee Gees rose to fame in the 1970s, wrote on Twitter, "My positive thoughts go out to Robin Gibb and all of the Gibb family. I am wishing you the best and hope for a quick recovery. Much love 2 U."

Others offering their thoughts and prayers online included Julian Lennon, the son of John Lennon, and former Jackson 5 member Jackie Jackson.

Diane Warren -- who herself has written and produced dozens of popular songs for a wide range of performers, including Aretha Franklin and Justin Bieber -- described Gibb as "one of the best songwriters of all time."

Robin Gibb's twin brother, Maurice, died in 2003 of a twisted bowel.

Brother Andy died at age 30 from a heart infection.

The Brothers Gibb -- calling themselves the Bee Gees -- soared to renown as one of the most successful British groups after the 1977 film "Saturday Night Fever" starring John Travolta was built around the group's disco songs.

Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997, the Bee Gees have sold more than 200 million albums, and their soundtrack album to "Saturday Night Fever" was the top-selling album until Michael Jackson's "Thriller" claimed that distinction in the 1980s.

While often in the background as brother Barry sang lead vocals, Robin Gibb stepped forward on several top tunes, including "I Started a Joke" and "I've Gotta Get a Message to You." He also recorded several solo albums during his career.

source: http://edition.cnn.com/2012/04/14/showbiz/robin-gibb-coma/index.html?hpt=hp_t3

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Bee Gees founding member Robin Gibb has surgery, cancels commitments

LONDON—Singer Robin Gibb, who spoke last month of making a "spectacular" recovery from cancer, has had further surgery, according to a statement released to the British media on Wednesday.

The 62-year-old, a founding member of the disco-era hit machine the Bee Gees, has been forced to cancel several commitments due to the operation.

"On Sunday 25 March, Robin Gibb underwent further intestinal surgery," the statement read.

"He is currently recovering in hospital and therefore, for the time-being, all existing commitments prior to the Titanic Requiem concert, have had to be cancelled."

His spokesman was not immediately available for comment.

"The Titanic Requiem" is Gibb's first classical work written with his son Robin-John, and is being released to mark the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the luxury liner on April 15, 1912.

The world premiere of the work is due to take place at Central Hall, Westminster in London on April 10.

Media speculation about Gibb's health was sparked in recent months by his gaunt and frail appearance, but the singer said in February that a growth in his colon had "almost gone" and he was feeling "fantastic." —Reuters

article source: gmanetwork.com

Sunday, March 11, 2012

St. Luke's conducts revolutionary TAVI heart treatment

MANILA, Philippines - Patients affected with severely blocked aortic valves of the heart or severe aortic stenosis may now consider a new treatment option in the Philippines — the Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI). It was introduced first in the country by the leading heart specialists of St. Luke’s Medical Center-Global City just last month.

TAVI is a minimally invasive procedure which does not involve the use of a heart lung machine nor large chest incisions.

It is ideal for the elderly, those who are at high risk of death or complications following open surgical valve replacement, or those who are not candidates for open surgery due to multiple medical problems.

TAVI is considered a revolutionary and transformational procedure by the international medical community.

The first and only TAVI procedure in the country was led by Dr. Fabio Enrique Posas, a highly experienced interventional cardiologist, with Dr. Estanislaode Castro, a leading cardiothoracic surgeon, and proctored by TAVI specialist Dr. Eberhard Grube of Stanford University School of Medicine and Medizinische Klinik.

The successful operation was performed by the cardiology and surgical team of St. Luke’s which included Drs. Ofelia Najos Valencia, a cardio imaging expert and the team’s cardiac imaging head; Dahlia Estrera, cardiovascular anesthesiologist; Ferdinand Alzate, interventional cardiologist; and Donald Cristobal, cardiac imaging.

The patient, an 87-year-old female, underwent the successful one and a half-hour procedure. She was discharged on a significantly improved condition barely a week after receiving the valve implant.

Unlike traditional open heart surgery, TAVI uses a small incision at the groin and can be done while the heart is pumping.

More recently, the procedure has been done without surgical cuts or fully percutaneously and under sedation. The tissue valve or bioprosthetic is positioned and deployed using a catheter inserted through the groin arteries and positioned at the aortic valve area under x-ray guidance.

This allows the patients to experience less physical stress or trauma and less pain. It also minimizes risk of infection and enables faster ambulation and recovery.

“With this technology, you can treat very sick patients in a less invasive way,” said Dr. Eberhard Grube. “I think it’s wonderful that the Philippines is now open to field this procedure. Given the high profile and high quality of work demonstrated by the medical team, the hospital facilities and its personnel, we are now ready to extend this technology to local patients who require it,” he said.

TAVI was only previously offered by leading institutions in the United States, Europe and highly selected centers in the Asia-Pacific region. St. Luke’s landmark TAVI procedure proves that advanced and high-quality medical care is right at every Filipino’s doorstep.

“Through this successful TAVI procedure, we have shown that this technology can be safely performed in the Philippines, by Filipino physicians — people don’t have to fly out of the country in order to access these technologies for their health care,” said Posas, the lead interventional cardiologist during the operation.

He acknowledged the value of new treatments to high-risk patients like the elderly and those unable to endure open heart surgery. He emphasized that TAVI can prolong and enhance patients’ lives and he hopes that more physicians who care for such patients will recognize TAVI as a life-saving procedure which minimizes patient discomfort and which can be performed rapidly and efficiently.

Dr. Nick Cruz, director of St. Luke’s Medical Center-Global City’s Heart Institute, said breakthrough procedures like TAVI is advantageous to all Filipinos and that this kind of medical innovation benefits not only the hospital but the country as well.

For more information on the Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI), contact the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory at St. Luke’s Medical Center-Global City at 789-7700 ext. 3025.

source: philstar.com

Friday, March 9, 2012

John Mayer Cancels Tour After Throat Condition Returns


John Mayer has been forced to take an indefinite break from live performance after learning that a granuloma on his vocal cords has grown back after doctors believed it had healed. The singer went to the doctor after noticing that something about his voice wasn't quite right in rehearsal on Tuesday. "This is bad news," Mayer wrote on his Tumblr this morning. "Though there will be a day when all of this will be behind me, it will sideline me for a longer period of time than I care to have you count down."

The singer says that his new album Born and Raised, which had been delayed by his throat ailment, will be released on May 22nd as scheduled, and in the meantime he will begin work on writing new songs. "I feel really vibrant as a writer at the moment and there’s no reason not to begin the next album project in the time I would have been touring," says Mayer. "Somewhere in all of this is another surgery and a very long chemically-imposed period of silence, so I hope you’ll understand that I have to really pick that date carefully.

"I’m pretty emotionally burnt out at the moment, but please know how hard I tried to resolve this and how disappointed I am that I can’t perform this record yet," Mayer added.

article source: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/john-mayer-cancels-tour-after-throat-condition-returns-20120309

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Ramona Bautista, suspect in Ramgen slay, now on Interpol Wanted List

One of the suspects in the Ramgen Revilla slay, the late actor's sister Ramona Bautista, is now on the International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol) Wanted List.

Bautista, 23, is one of the suspects in the killing of teen actor Ramgen Revilla, son of former Senator Ramon Revilla Sr.

Another Revilla sibling, RJ Bautista, has since been arrested by the Parañaque Police and pleaded not guilty to the charges, along with other suspects Ryan Pastera, Glaiza Visda and Norwin Dela Cruz.

Pastera, Visda and Dela Cruz were supposedly hired by the Bautista siblings to execute the plan to kill Ramgen inside their Parañaque home on Oct. 28, 2011.

The killers also shot Janelle Manahan, Ramgen’s girl friend, in the face. Manahan survived the shooting and underwent reconstructive surgery.

source: http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/249894/news/nation/ramona-bautista-suspect-in-ramgen-slay-now-on-interpol-wanted-list

Monday, February 13, 2012

Adele wins 4 early Grammys; Foo Fighters five

LOS ANGELES - British soul singer Adele won four early Grammys on Sunday, including song of the year for her smash hit "Rolling in the Deep," in a show that began on a somber note with a prayer for late pop superstar Whitney Houston.

Adele, whose album "21" was among the smash hits of 2011, took the stage and thanked her doctors, who performed surgery on her throat last year. "Seeing as it's a vocal performance I need to thank my doctors, I suppose, who brought my voice back," she said.

Aside from surgery, the British singer has enjoyed a stellar year. Her sophomore album "21" has sold more than 6.3 million copies in the U.S. and broken many sales records, including spending 19 weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard album chart.

She has thrilled fans singing about personal heartbreak in a raw, soulful manner in singles including "Rolling in the Deep," "Someone Like You," which earned her a second Grammy for best solo pop performance, and "Set Fire to the Rain."

Adele also sang for the first time in front of a public audience since her operation, belting out a rendition of "Rolling In the Deep." She earned a standing ovation and basked in the limelight.

Rockers Foo Fighters were the other big winners early in the show, picking up five Grammys in rock music categories, including best rock performance for their hit "Walk."

"This is a great honor because this record was a special record for our band. Rather than go to the best studio ... we made this one in my garage with some microphones and a tape machine," said frontman Dave Grohl. "It shows that the human element of making music is what's most important."

But as jubilant as the audiences was for Adele and as much as Foo Fighters rocked the house, the Grammys audience was equally serious about the death of Houston on Saturday in a Beverly Hills hotel room.

Host LL Cool J took the stage and offered a prayer for Houston, her fans and her family. "Although she is gone too soon, we remain truly blessed by her musical spirit," he said.

Organizers played a video of Houston performing her hit "I Will Always Love You" from a previous Grammy show. Later, actress and singer Jennifer Hudson, who won an Oscar for her role in movie musical "Dreamgirls," is expected to perform the same song in a tribute to the singer.

Many winners

Grammy organizers give out awards in more than 75 categories and many early winners mentioned Houston. Singer Melanie Fiona, who won with Cee Lo Green for traditional R&B performance for "Fool For You," said she was inspired by Houston.

"Whitney Houston, I would not be standing up here if not for you," Fiona said. Backstage, she told reporters her mother had rocked her in the cradle to Houston's songs when she was a baby.

Major winners included Jay-Z and Kanye West for best rap performance with their song, "Otis" from the album "Watch the Throne," but they failed to show up to claim their prize. Chris Brown won the Grammy for best R&B album "F.A.M.E.," and Lady Antebellum took home best country album with "Own the Night."

Rousing performances came from Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, Chris Brown, Coldplay and Rihanna, Jason Aldean and Kelly Clarkson, and Alicia Keys and Bonnie Raitt sang a duet of "A Sunday Kind of Love" from Etta James, who also died in 2012.

Country singer Taylor Swift picked up two awards for her song "Mean," about people she felt had wronged her, and DJ Skrillex won two Grammys for best dance recording and top dance/electronica album with "Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites."

Rapper Kanye West earned seven nominations, but was shut out of the top categories, paving the way for Adele to be the night's big winner - or surprise loser if she fails to overcome competition. Along with his rap performance trophy, West won a second award for best rap album with "My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy."

Still to come were top awards including best album where Adele's "21" faces rockers Foo Fighters and their hit "Wasting Light," Lady Gaga with "Born This Way," Bruno Mars and his "Doo-Wops & Hooligans," and pop star Rihanna with "Loud."

Adele also figures prominently among nominees for record of the year where "Rolling in the Deep" squares off against rockers Bon Iver and "Holocene," Bruno Mars for "Grenade," Mumford & Sons with "The Cave," and Katy Perry for "Firework."

One poignant moment came early in the day when Mitch and Janis Winehouse, parents of late singer Amy Winehouse who died of excessive drinking in 2011, accepted the award for best pop duo or group performance - Amy and Tony Bennett - "Body and Soul."

"Long live Whitney Houston. Long live Amy Winehouse and long live Etta James," referring to the "At Last" singer who died earlier this year. "There's a beautiful girl band up there." — Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

Monday, January 16, 2012

Beyond cosmetic treatments or plastic surgery, a healing of the soul


Arianne Vasquez, medical director of Aesthetic Science Clinic, walks her talk. Before she underwent breast augmentation, she meditated, cleansed her chakras or energy centers, and performed inner dancing, the use of movement to release blocked energies and to harness inner power.

During post-surgery, there was the initial discomfort of having foreign bodies in the chest. Her anxiety was heightened with thoughts about surgical complications. Thus, two of her reiki healer-friends healed her through long distance. She then felt a deep sense of calm and returned to work in five days.

Aesthetic Science clinic espouses a holistic approach to cosmetic enhancement as it offers life coaching and reiki healing. Although cosmetic dermatology and plastic surgery can beautify a person, it can’t take take away the bitterness or the harshness of the soul. Hence, the need for complementary treatments.

“Some clients want a change not just on the outside but also on the inside,” says Vasquez. The clinic offers life coaching to help them deal with deep-seated issues that brought them to the clinic in the first place.

Many patients, mostly women, want a boob job, a nose lift or eyebag removal because of low self-esteem born out relationship problems. However, they have unrealistic expectations about the surgical results.

“Surgery is not the cure-all. On the other hand, some patients talk about their problems while others remain silent.”

Stress

Vasquez added that undergoing major and minor surgery can still pose stress.

“Even if the patients come out beautiful or sexy, it will not ease their burden.”

Life coaching or counseling can help women realize that self-esteem is not based on looks alone but on their qualities.

For people with weight issues, doctors recommend diet and exercise before undergoing liposuction or non-invasive body contouring treatments for best results. Jason Peñaranda, the wellness doctor, specializes in detox and digestive cleansing.

JASON Peñaranda

“Some people have a hard time losing weight. The liver doesn’t function properly because of the fats in it,” says Vasquez. Some are advised to detox first, to cleanse the body off bad oils and residues from synthetic medicine.

With obese patients, life coaching can help identify emotional issues that spurred the weight problems.

“The approach is holistic because you’re not just working on the body but also the soul,” says Vasquez.

Peñaranda pointed out that after liposuction or completing their non-invasive body contouring treatments, patients come to him for diet and lifestyle change so that excess weight doesn’t creep back. While other doctors treat weight loss from a physiological viewpoint, he dwells more into attitude in order to affect transformation. Instead of making a restricted diet plan that tends to make patients feel miserable, he suggests adapting new habits and using food as medicine.

Peñaranda underscores the importance of keeping the digestive system in order so that nutrients could be easily assimilated.

Ancient art

Although most people visit the Aesthetic Science to improve their looks, some also come for reiki healing to boost their energy, both psychic and physical. Reiki is an ancient Japanese healing art wherein the healer goes through a meditative space to harness the Source and uses the palms to diagnose and balance the energies.

Vasquez also practices reiki healing with her crystals. Some of the cases range from severe allergies to victim complex. She meditates, puts the crystals on the patient’s energy centers and lays her hands. She stays longer in the weak areas to neutralize the imbalances. The healing takes place on the level of vibrations or frequencies.

Peñaranda explains that the healer is merely a channel of the cosmic energy.

HEALING with crystals

“Supposing your energy is off. It needs another energy to put restore it,” he says. He likens the patient-healer dynamic to the child and adult.

“If you’re sick, your energy is like the kid who bikes in an erratic direction. It needs the assistance of an adult to make the child bike straight. Reiki provides the conduit for correcting an aberrant frequency.”

Says Vasquez, “From my experience, reiki lowers the blood pressure, relieves stress and provides some mental clarity. For post surgery, it speeds up the recovery. We had a patient who had gastric pains. In the process, she started crying as emotional issues came out. It taught me a lesson that you have to address the whole being.”

Although there is still resistance to alternative modalities, Vasquez observes people are slowly opening up to this new alternative. “They say there’s an evolution or a shift consciousness as the Mayan calendar ends,” she says.

Aesthetic Science is at Jupiter Place Bldg., Jupiter St., Bel-Air, Makati, tel. 8993643 and 0908-9967376; and Kennedy Center Prime St.t, Madrigal Business Park, Ayala Alabang, tel. 8098021, 3833488, 0916-3412464.

source: http://lifestyle.inquirer.net/31387/beyond-cosmetic-treatments-or-plastic-surgery-a-healing-of-the-soul