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New cases in Pous 2064, HIV = 175, AIDS = 26, Death = 2. HIV rate is very high in Housewives than sex workers in Nepal ! ! ! HIV status in Nepal till 2005: Total Adult=70000, Adult Prevalence (15-49)=0.55%, Number of Women (15-49) LWHA=15,310 (22%), HIV Prevalence rate in IDUs=32.7%, HIV prevalence rate in sex worker=3.8%, HIV prevalence rate in client of SW=2.1%. The latest U.N. report shows that 65 million people have been infected with HIV since it was first identified 25 years ago. Twenty five million people have died of AIDS.

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medically induced coma - 11-01-2006, 11:16 AM

roght now prime minister of israel areal sharon is in medically induced coma after his 3rd head surgery. what is medically induced coma? what r its indications?
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11-01-2006, 05:48 PM

I have found something:

Doctors induce comas to fight brain disorders

By Michael E. Hochman, Globe Correspondent | May 24, 2005
For years, medical researchers have been looking for ways to induce coma in patients with brain disorders in the hopes of stopping the clock and giving the body time to recover. The goal is to create a temporary state of metabolic shutdown, much like what occurs during hibernation.
This approach has been considered for patients with a wide variety of conditions, such as strokes, seizures, and head trauma, but success has been limited.
Last fall, in a case that drew national attention, doctors in Wisconsin induced a seven-day coma in a 15-year-old girl with rabies, a virus that mercilessly assaults the brain and is almost invariably fatal. The patient, Jeanna Giese, survived and she has been recovering remarkably over the past several months. The case has raised hopes that inducing coma may have important applications for neurological diseases after all.
At a theoretical level, the idea of inducing coma to treat certain neurological diseases makes perfect sense. For many of the diseases, tissue damage occurs over a short and defined period of time. If it were somehow possible to put the brain to sleep during that critical time period, it would make sense that doctors could limit the damage.
Dr. David Warner, a neuroanesthesiologist at Duke University, has been studying the use of induced coma to treat strokes in lab animals. During a stroke, blood flow is cut off, depriving brain tissue of nutrients, such as glucose and oxygen.
''[A stroke] reduces the gas supply to the brain," Warner said. ''Like a car, if the brain is using its energy supplies more slowly, the fuel will last longer."
According to Warner, however, induced coma seems to be beneficial in only a few selected clinical situations (mostly trauma patients), and even then the benefits are marginal. But, he said, there is promise for the future.
The case in Wisconsin highlights some new potential uses for this technique.
Dr. Rodney Willoughby, an infectious disease specialist at the Children's Hospital of Wisconsin and the lead doctor in the Wisconsin case, explained that rabies is a perfect disease to treat with induced coma.
The rabies virus, which is usually transmitted from animals such as dogs or bats -- as was the case with Giese -- causes little direct damage to the brain. Rather, it induces abnormal brain activity, which leads to usually lethal complications.
Not only should blocking this abnormal brain activity minimize the complications, but at the same time it should provide the immune system with time to rid the body of the virus, Willoughby said.
French researchers actually tried to treat rabies with ''artificial hibernation" decades ago, but the idea was not successful at the time for unclear reasons. The idea was largely forgotten until Willoughby and his team used it last fall.
''[What] her physicians were trying to do, in casual parlance, was to give the brain a break," said Dr. Charles Rupprecht, a rabies expert from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention who was involved in the Wisconsin case.
While more work will be needed to show that the case was not simply a fluke, the tremendous success of the Wisconsin doctors had has garnered the attention of experts in the field.
Willoughby, who has taken an interest in new applications for induced anesthesia, speculated that ''this approach might apply to diseases in which there is not a lot of direct damage to brain cells." In particular, he said he believes it might have unrecognized uses in patients with congenital metabolic diseases, drug and alcohol intoxication, other infectious and immunologic disorders of the brain, and asphyxia (inadequate oxygen intake), in which damage results not so much from the actual disease itself but rather from the body's response to the disease. Inducing coma might slow down that response.
Warner agreed that the Wisconsin case has suggested some interesting new applications for induced coma in the treatment of disease, though he believes Giese, who recently returned to school part time, ''may have been just one very lucky individual."

http://www.boston.com/news/globe/hea...orders?mode=PF


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12-01-2006, 10:59 AM

thnx for making me clear
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To stabilize ICP, - 12-01-2006, 10:09 PM

Great MH,
that is excellent information.
Thanx for that.

There was one case in TUTH of 8 year old boy who had fall then sustained head injury.
He had bleeding from ears and noses.
There was clinical conclusion of fracture of Base of skull but Pictures failed to convince. However, consultant could not rule out the possibility. So the boy was sedated for a weeklong so that his Intracranial Pressure (ICP) would not rise.

That has fantastic result.

The boy who landed up in coma and rsuscitated there . Then sedated for a week is going school nowdays.

If not sedated, he might have some focal and other residual effects.

anyway,
researches seem going on the possibilities,
best wishes,
mati
from:AMDA Hospital, Damak, Jhapa
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