Molecular imaging detects signs of Alzheimer's in healthy patients

Public release date: 11-Jun-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Susan Martonik smartonik@snm.org 703-652-6773 Society of Nuclear Medicine

Miami Beach, Fla. (June 11, 2012)An arsenal of Alzheimer's research revealed at the Society of Nuclear Medicine's 59th Annual Meeting indicates that beta-amyloid plaque in the brain not only is involved in the pathology of Alzheimer's disease but may also precede even mild cognitive decline. These and other studies advance molecular imaging for the early detection of beta-amyloid, for which one product is now approved in the United States , as a major push forward in the race for better treatments.

"Diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease can now be made when the patient first presents symptoms and still has largely preserved mental function," says Christopher Rowe, M.D., a lead investigator for the Australian Imaging, Biomarkers and Lifestyle study of aging (AIBL) and professor of nuclear medicine at Austin Hospital in Melbourne, Australia. "Previously there was an average delay of three years between consulting a doctor over memory concerns and the diagnosis of Alzheimer's, as the diagnosis required the presence of dementia. When used as an adjunct to other diagnostic measures, molecular imaging can help lead to earlier diagnosis. This may give the patient several years to prepare for dementia while they still have control over their destiny."

According to the World Health Organization, Alzheimer's disease affects an estimated 18 million people worldwide, and incidence of the disease is expected to double by the year 2025 to 34 million. The National Institute on Aging estimates that as many as 50 percent of Americans aged 85 or older are affected.

Alzheimer's disease is a chronic and currently incurable neurodegenerative disease. Beta-amyloid burden can begin to build in the brain several years, if not more than a decade, before an individual shows any sign of dementia. Those who go on to develop Alzheimer's disease not only lose their ability to remember their loved ones but also have difficulty with essential bodily functions such as breathing and swallowing in the late stages of disease.

In one study, researchers used a molecular imaging technique called positron emission tomography (PET), which images physiological patterns in the body. PET was combined with an imaging agent called F-18 florbetaben, which binds to amyloid in the brain. This and other PET agents are drawn to targets in the body and emit a positron signal that is picked up by a scanner. Here molecular imaging was performed in conjunction with clinical and neuropsychological testing in order to better understand the long-term effects of beta amyloid plaques in the brains of older individuals with mild cognitive impairment. Those of the 45 subjects in the study who showed high levels of imaging agent binding during imaging and atrophy of the hippocampus, the memory center, had an 80 percent chance of developing Alzheimer's disease within two years, researchers said.

"Molecular imaging is proving to be an essential part of Alzheimer's disease detection," says Rowe. "This and other amyloid imaging techniques will have an increasing role in the earlier and more accurate diagnosis of neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimer's disease due to their ability to measure the actual underlying disease process."

Another AIBL study included 194 healthy participants, 92 people with mild cognitive impairment and 70 subjects with Alzheimer's disease, and used another imaging agent called C-11 PiB (Pittsburgh compound B) with PET to gauge amyloid burden in the brain. Researchers showed that, in this study group, widespread amyloid plaque build-up preceded cognitive impairment, and those with extensive amyloid burden were at higher risk of cognitive decline.

This and another study mark two of the first studies of their kind focusing on beta amyloid in healthy subjects. In the other study, 137 adults with normal cognitive function aged 30 to 89 years were imaged using PET with F-18 florbetapir, now FDA-approved for the detection of beta amyloid plaques, as well as functional magnetic resonance imaging in order to explore how amyloid build-up affects connections in specific areas of the brain involved in cognition, namely the default mode and salience networks, which are responsible for different states of wakeful rest and alertness. Those with increased amyloid burden in these neural networks were prone to impaired cognitive performance.

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Molecular imaging detects signs of Alzheimer's in healthy patients

Molecular imaging 'sees' inside coronary arteries to measure disease

Public release date: 11-Jun-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Susan Martonik smartonik@snm.org 703-652-6773 Society of Nuclear Medicine

Miami Beach, Fla. (June 11, 2012)Patients with cardiovascular disease will now benefit from a powerful new molecular imaging tool to detect disease in the main arteries supplying oxygen to the heart, say researchers presenting studies at the Society of Nuclear Medicine's 2012 Annual Meeting.

When an active heart needs more oxygen, blood vessels have a natural ability to open more so that greater amounts of blood can flow. The maximum dilation possible is the coronary flow reserve or CFR. This is an important reference, because it is one of the earliest signs of coronary artery disease, which is caused by atherosclerosis, a narrowing or hardening of these arteries due to a build-up of cholesterol and scar tissue. Diseased coronary arteries are unable to dilate as fully as healthy blood vessels, potentially limiting oxygen supply to the heart muscle.

The World Health Organization considers cardiovascular disease the number one cause of death and disability across the globe. Coronary artery disease is just one of a range of these diseases that can cause serious problems, including heart attack, if left untreated.

In two studies presented at the meeting, investigators examined quantitative imaging data to determine the true extent of coronary artery disease. In one study, researchers tested a molecular imaging method called myocardial perfusion imaging, also known as a stress test, conducted with positron emission tomography (PET). They then measured the CFR and calculated the precise dilation of blood vessels at rest and under stress. The objective of the study was to compare this technique's ability to predict arterial disease to a more conventional imaging method called angiography. In the other study, researchers used a PET stress test and measured CFR to determine whether age is always a risk factor for arterial disease.

"The quantification of CFR with molecular imaging provides a substantial advantage for unmasking coronary artery disease, even in patients who would otherwise be considered healthy with normal myocardial perfusion imaging," says Michael Fiechter, M.D., lead investigator of one study in cardiac imaging at the department of radiology for University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.

Measuring CFR goes beyond traditional myocardial perfusion imaging, which is based on visual interpretation of the differences between blood flow at rest and under stress, and instead actually quantifies coronary artery disease using imaging data acquired during scanning. The molecular imaging technique is made possible with PET, which uses injected imaging probes that emit signals picked up by a specialized scanner. Coronary artery disease is often evaluated using angiography, an X-ray procedure that involves catheterization and the injection of a dye into the coronary arteries in order to image blood flow and structure of the vessels, and echocardiography, which uses sound waves to image the heart.

"Although different studies revealed a prognostic value of CFR, this study is the first that systematically assessed the diagnostic value of CFR against invasive coronary angiography as a standard of reference for detection of coronary artery disease," says Philipp Kaufmann, M.D., a lead author of one of the studies in the department of radiology and cardiac imaging at University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.

In the two presented studies, a total of 777 elderly participants underwent myocardial perfusion imaging with PET and either Rb-82 or N-13-ammonia as an imaging biomarker to evaluate quantitative CFR as an indicator for coronary artery disease. One study of 73 participants concluded significant improvements across five different reference points including sensitivity, positive predictive value, and accuracy of myocardial perfusion imaging compared to imaging studies without CFR measurements.

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Molecular imaging 'sees' inside coronary arteries to measure disease

Hypnosis – Suggestibility Tests : #1 Magnetic and Stuck Hands ( Re-Upload ) – Video

11-06-2012 03:19 This is a re upload of the same video And this will not work for all of you i want you to comment and tell me if it works or not or suggestions of my next videos tags (ignore) "Hypnosis (Literature Subject)" "Hand (Art Subject)" Control Mind "Art (Type Of Museum)" Your Youtube Brain Hands Mp4 Keep Body Put Hold Player Out Remote Upload Won Holding Power Media Reason Mpeg Sequence Avi H264 "Get Smart (TV Program)" Improved Sharing Audio Clap "Your Hands" Streaming "Put Your" Format Down Mpeg2 Dvd Export Converter Ntsc Public magnet funny webcam lol good music mp3 mpeg avi re upload amazing modder 360 xbox mw2 games mod Hack Combat Hacks Arms "Combat Arms" Bug Mods Induction Rapid Instant Arm Drop 8 word

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Hypnosis – Suggestibility Tests : #2 Thumbs Stuck Together ( Re-Upload ) – Video

11-06-2012 03:34 This is my second video of Suggestibility tests This one is called thumbs stuck together This will not work for all of you But comment and tell me the result and new suggestions for my further videos Tags ( Ignore ) "Hypnosis (Literature Subject)" Control Mind Youtube "Literature (Literary School Or Movement)" Brain Mp4 Body Player Upload Out Remote Power Media Mpeg Reason Sequence Avi H264 Improved Sharing Pinky Audio Human Streaming Format Tricks Mpeg2 "Out Control" Jedi Dvd Export Lose Master Parts "Remote Control" Thoughts Converter Experiment Ntsc Ultra Share Widescreen Copy Alex Using Mpeg4 Lan Rapid Instant Induction Universal Memory "New Improved" Record 800kbps 640x480 Quicktime Default

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Facebook Rolls Out New Photo Layouts

Facebook is the worlds largest photo-sharing site, and its not even close. Every single day, users upload 250 million photos. Seriously, pause and think about that number for bit. Now imagine how many photos are uploaded in a weeka montha year? It is estimated that Facebook actually houses somewhere around 4% of all photos ever taken in the history of the world.

With billions upon billions of photos, its no surprise that Facebook is focusing on that aspect of its users experience. It has been argued that the photo-sharing sphere is the ultimate future of the social network, and growth and user engagement is directly tied to maintaing dominance as the worlds premier place to look at pictures. A recent billion dollar acquisition should tell you that.

With all of that in mind, Facebook is beginning to upgrade the desktop News Feed to make photo-browsing more interesting. Last week, we told you that Facebook was starting to roll out new photo layouts to its users. The new layouts mimicked the ones that users have seen on Facebooks iOS and Android apps bigger photos and more photos displayed in posts.

For instance, heres the large photo flanked by three smaller photo look that has appeared on mobile for a few weeks as it currently appears on the web version:

And thats not the only one. Some users have begun to see a bunch of new layouts including a four-panel one and a nine-panel one.

Heres what the four-panel layout looks like:

And heres the nine-panel layout:

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Facebook Rolls Out New Photo Layouts

Penn Medicine Cardiologist Chairs National Report on Optimal Use of Vascular Laboratory Tests for Patients with Known …

PHILADELPHIA A new report issued today by the American College of Cardiology (ACC) and developed in collaboration with 10 other leading professional societies provides detailed criteria to help clinicians maximize the appropriate use of certain noninvasive vascular tests when caring for patients with suspected or known non-coronary arterial disorders. Emile R. Mohler, MD, professor of Medicine and director of Vascular Medicine at Penn Medicine, chaired the national committee producing the criteria.

"This is the first systematic and comprehensive evaluation looking at appropriate indications for vascular testing, such as ultrasound or functional testing," said Dr. Mohler, who is also a member of the Penn Medicine Cardiovascular Institute. "We hope this document will help clinicians determine whether or not and when to refer individual patients for testing."

Ultrasound and other noninvasive laboratory tests can be essential tools to help clinicians evaluate vascular blockages and disease, for example, in the arteries of the neck, kidneys, abdomen, and lower extremities, as well as the aorta itself. Such testing also plays a central role in surveillance of the vascular system in some patients to help inform treatment decisions and prevent serious problems, and is part of follow-up after peripheral vascular procedures, such as arterial bypass, surgical removal of plaque (endarterectomy), or stenting. Still, guidance about when and how to best use this technology in practice is largely missing, according to experts.

Such decisions affect a growing number of patients as the population ages. Dr. Mohler estimates more than 20 million adults in the U.S. have some form of vascular disease, and would likely be a candidate for these types of tests.

The panel identified common clinical scenarios when noninvasive vascular testing might be considered in patients with suspected or known non-coronary arterial disorders (e.g., narrowing or blockages in the arteries of the neck, kidneys, abdomen or legs, abdominal aortic aneurysms, arterial dissection). Applying a rigorous rating scale, the 19-member panel then assessed the appropriateness of each indication and often at different time intervals (3-5, 6-8 and 9-12 months).

In addition to looking at the reasons for ordering these tests, the work group also sought to determine how frequently repeat testing is needed in clinical practice in light of the need for ongoing surveillance in some patients.

The appropriate use criteria were developed in collaboration with the ACC, American College of Radiology, American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine, American Society of Echocardiography, American Society of Nephrology, Intersocietal Commission for the Accreditation of Vascular Laboratories, Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions, Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography, Society of Interventional Radiology, Society for Vascular Medicine and Society for Vascular Surgery. The document is further endorsed by the American Academy of Neurology, American Podiatric Medical Association, Society for Clinical Vascular Surgery, Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, and Society for Vascular Ultrasound.

For more information on the new guidelines, please see the ACC press release.

The Perelman School of Medicine is currently ranked #2 in U.S. News & World Report's survey of research-oriented medical schools. The School is consistently among the nation's top recipients of funding from the National Institutes of Health, with $479.3 million awarded in the 2011 fiscal year.

The University of Pennsylvania Health System's patient care facilities include: The Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania -- recognized as one of the nation's top 10 hospitals by U.S. News & World Report; Penn Presbyterian Medical Center; and Pennsylvania Hospital the nation's first hospital, founded in 1751. Penn Medicine also includes additional patient care facilities and services throughout the Philadelphia region.

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Penn Medicine Cardiologist Chairs National Report on Optimal Use of Vascular Laboratory Tests for Patients with Known ...

Geomagic Demonstrates How Medicine Meets 3D at OMTEC 2012 Event

MORRISVILLE, N.C.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Geomagic, a global company providing 3D technology solutions for digital reality, today announced it will showcase best practices and output from its customers digital orthopedic product workflows at this weeks OMTEC 2012 event in Chicago beginning Wednesday, June 13th. As orthopedic implant manufacturers work to apply the latest technologies to their patient-specific implant processes, Geomagics customers demonstrate the results that are made possible when medicine meets 3D capture, touch-enabled design, 3D inspection and digital manufacturing technology.

Speakers and exhibits at OMTEC 2012 will depict the use of Geomagics products in the latest materials for the ultimate in personalized fit, form and function. For example, Level 3 Inspections Bill Greene will outline the advantages of Computer Aided Inspection for orthopedic implants as a way to deliver better patient-specific forms, faster, with fewer iterations, less waste, and lower cost. Bill will be presenting at the conference on Thursday June 14, at 10 am CT.

Geomagic will be demonstrating its Freeform Modeling System for organic design and preparing files for manufacturing. Level 3 Inspection also will join Geomagic and demonstrate its scanning solution using Geomagic Qualify for inspection and analysis.

Advanced software is allowing us to solve clinical problems we couldnt even begin to touch before, and Geomagics solutions are at the heart of the innovation, said Barry Fell, president of Thermoplastic Products Corp. in Hummelstown PA, who designs and prototypes custom orthopedic implants.

By using Geomagics suite of 3D solutions, including Geomagic Studio to capture real world data, Freeform to develop designs, and Geomagic Qualify to inspect and check manufactured products, medical manufacturers are moving to successful mass custom manufacturing through 3D digital reality. Innovative orthopedic products created using Freeform, Geomagic Studio and Geomagic Qualify on display at OMTEC include:

Digital reality, like the digital economy, is a fact of life today, allowing art and science, and in this case medicine, to achieve breakthrough results that are not possible without our technology, said Ping Fu, CEO of Geomagic. A good example is the use of additive manufacturing in exciting new ways. What was previously utilitarian, and perhaps cast or vacuum formed with standard parts, now can be designed more elegantly, ergonomically and aesthetically and printed in new bio-compatible materials. Its a new era for the practitioners and patients in the orthopedic industry.

Geomagic is exhibiting in booths 831-833 at OMTEC, which takes place at the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center, 5555 North River Road in Chicago, on Wednesday June 13 from 9 am 6 pm CT, and Thursday June 14 from 9 am 12 noon CT.

About Geomagic

Geomagic (www.geomagic.com) is a global company dedicated to advancing and applying 3D technology for the benefit of humanity. Different from CAD, Geomagic offers specific products to create 3D content from imaging the real world and real people, verify dimensional quality by comparing a master design to as-built products, and simulate touch sensations in digital environments. Products include Geomagic Studio, Geomagic Qualify, Geomagic customers are the most innovative companies in industries ranging from aerospace, automotive, toys, moldmaking, medical device, surgical simulation, consumer products, arts, heritage, research and education. Some of the leading companies around the globe using Geomagic products include Ford, BMW, Boeing, Harley Davidson, Timberland, Fisher Price, Lego, Pratt & Whitney, NASA, Schneider Electronic, 3M, Danaher and Invisalign. Geomagic is based in Research Triangle Park, NC, USA, with an office in Boston and subsidiaries in Europe and Asia, and channel partners worldwide.

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Geomagic Demonstrates How Medicine Meets 3D at OMTEC 2012 Event

Medicine Dispensing Systems, a Subsidiary of Medbox, Inc., Emerges as a Leader in Arizona Medical Marijuana Clinic …

HOLLYWOOD, Calif., June 11, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Medicine Dispensing Systems, Inc., a subsidiary of Medbox, Inc., (MDBX) (www.medboxinc.com) has successfully completed and filed 110 applications for the granting of medical marijuana dispensing licenses for its consulting clients in the State of Arizona. The company completed the lengthy and complicated process on behalf of groups and individuals that are seeking to open dispensaries in Arizona's tightly regulated market.

Neither Medicine Dispensing Systems nor Medbox, Inc. own any marijuana dispensing clinics. The company acts as a consultant and helps guide those wishing to open a clinic through the complex issues that regulate the medical marijuana industry, and the steps that are necessary to operate in full compliance of each individual States regulations. The company has become nationally recognized as a leader in obtaining positive outcomes in the application process due to their comprehensive suite of services, which includes in-depth consultations, securing special zoning permits, handling lease negotiations, and specifying specialized clinic equipment.

The company also provides their patented Medbox Dispensing System, which is the most secure and transparent method to assure patient verification and compliance with all state and local regulations. The system, whether by machine or the company's POS system, is currently in use by over 100 clinics nationwide, and provides assurance to state regulators that clinics are being operated legitimately, legally, and in accordance with all rules governing these types of clinics.

Arizona voters approved a Measure in 2010 that allows certain qualifying patients to obtain medical marijuana from a registered dispensary. The Arizona Department of Health Services accepted dispensary applications from May 14 thru May 25, 2012.

The DHS received 484 dispensary applications for 126 possible dispensaries. The state allows a maximum of one dispensary per each of the State's 126 Community Health Analysis Areas (CHAAs). Arizona, with its forward-thinking regulations and seed to sale transparent tracking is looking to be the gold standard for future States as they navigate ways to allow their citizens access to medical marijuana without creating a detriment to the community. According to Will Humble, Arizona's Department of Health Services Director, the DHS expects to award the Dispensary Certificates on August 7.

"Our company is focused on States that have polished regulations concerning medical marijuana. States like Arizona and now Connecticut are setting a proper example for other States moving forward that have learned a lesson from less organized States like California and Colorado. The numbers of medical marijuana clinics should be based on population density and awarded by the State, in a tightly regulated system," stated Dr. Bruce Bedrick, CEO of Medbox, Inc. "Policies need to be crafted on a State level at the onset in order for these clinics not to cause a nuisance on communities."

About Medbox, Inc:

Medbox is a leader in the development, sales and service of automated, biometrically controlled dispensing and storage systems for medicine and merchandise. Medbox has offices throughout the world, including New York, Tokyo and Toronto, and has their corporate headquarters in Los Angeles.

Medbox provides their patented systems, software and consulting services to pharmacies, urgent care centers, clinics, hospitals, and medical groups worldwide.

Medbox, Inc. is a publicly traded company, and is listed on the OTC Board, ticker symbol MDBX.

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Medicine Dispensing Systems, a Subsidiary of Medbox, Inc., Emerges as a Leader in Arizona Medical Marijuana Clinic ...

Shire's Advanced BioHealing Commits to Developing Regenerative Medicine Campus in San Diego

SAN DIEGO, June 11, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --

Shire plc, the global specialty biopharmaceutical company, announced today that its Regenerative Medicine business, Advanced BioHealing, Inc., has entered into a lease agreement with BioMed Realty Trust, Inc. which will allow the company to further expand its operational footprint and presence in the San Diego area over the next several years.

The new campus will provide Shire's Regenerative Medicine business the increased capacity it needs to meet future demand for its lead product, DERMAGRAFT, while offering additional space and infrastructure to manufacture new regenerative medicine products, in alignment with the business' strategic growth plan.

"We are committed to investing in and expanding our Regenerative Medicine business and with the signing of this lease, we are pleased to confirm and build our presence in San Diego with BioMed Realty as our real estate partner," said Kevin Rakin, Shire's Regenerative Medicine President. "This new campus will give us the flexibility and increased capacity we need to develop and manufacture new regenerative medicine therapies and build our foundation for continued growth in this exciting field."

Phase I of the site development will be in excess of 150,000 square feet and will house the company's manufacturing and associated support operations, commercial operations, corporate, and administrative functions. This expansion could create several hundred local jobs once the regenerative medicine campus is operational.

"Shire's commitment to growing its Regenerative Medicine business in San Diego is important to a region where one-in-10 people remain unemployed," said Congressman Brian Bilbray (CA-50). "This investment will not only provide additional opportunities for rewarding, high-paying jobs, but will ensure that San Diego remains a leader in the development of innovative patient care."

Shire expects to begin construction of the new campus in Sorrento Mesa in 2013, with initial occupancy targeted for 2014.

"We are pleased to enter into this partnership with Advanced BioHealing, which is the culmination of extensive, collaborative efforts by both companies to identify and execute on a real estate solution which will fully support their development and manufacturing needs," said Alan D. Gold, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of BioMed Realty. "We look forward to working closely with the Advanced BioHealing and Shire teams to develop this future multi-phase campus for the development and commercialization of important regenerative medicine therapies."

The company plans to maintain its current DERMAGRAFT manufacturing facility on North Torrey Pines Road in La Jolla, CA, which currently employs nearly 200 people.

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Shire's Advanced BioHealing Commits to Developing Regenerative Medicine Campus in San Diego

Family Medicine Center Brings New Primary and Preventive Care Options to West Kendall

MIAMI--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

West Kendall Baptist Hospitals new Family Medicine Center is now open, providing area residents with high-quality primary and preventive care. West Kendall residents can now turn to the Baptist Health Medical Group Family Medicine Center at West Kendall Baptist Hospital for all routine care needs, such as physical examinations (including school physicals), flu and allergy shots, non-emergency illnesses and injuries and chronic disease management.

The opening of the Family Medicine Center is the next step toward our goal of creating a comprehensive healthcare community here, said Javier Hernndez-Lichtl, CEO of West Kendall Baptist Hospital. Residents already turn to us for inpatient care, surgeries, emergencies and childbirth. Now we can serve their day-to-day care needs, as well, for the entire family.

The Family Medicine Center, conveniently located on the first floor of the hospitals Medical Arts Building, is designed to promote a vision of providing leading practices in education and compassionate care in a high-tech and high-touch environment. The state-of-the-art facility includes six private exam rooms, on-site laboratory, group meeting room, teleconference center and wireless computer tablets for patient registration. The Center will serve patients of all ages, including pediatric and geriatric patients.

"West Kendall residents are welcome to call and arrange a tour, said Agueda Hernndez, M.D., medical director of the Family Medicine Center. Our staff will be here to welcome you and assist in setting up your new care relationships and transferring records.

Staff physicians include Dr. Hernndez and Manuel Torres, M.D. They have admitting privileges at West Kendall Baptist Hospital as well as other facilities in the Baptist Health South Florida network. The Family Medicine Center will also function as the primary training ground for the West Kendall Baptist Hospital Family Medicine Residency Program, in affiliation with Florida International Universitys Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine, which will launch in the summer of 2013.

The Family Medicine Center is located in the Medical Arts Building adjacent to West Kendall Baptist Hospital, 15955 SW 96 Street. Regular office hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Most major forms of health insurance are accepted. For more information or to make an appointment, call 786-467-3140.

Since opening its doors in April 2011, West Kendall Baptist Hospital personnel have treated more than 30,000 patients in its emergency room, and welcomed more than 200 babies at the Beautiful Beginnings Family Birthing Suites. Other notable awards include becoming the first acute-care hospital in Florida to earn LEED Gold certification for its environmentally conscious facilities and practices, and ranking as the #1 Most Beautiful Hospital in Florida and fourth most beautiful nationwide.

About West Kendall Baptist Hospital

The newest member of the not-for-profit Baptist Health South Florida family, West Kendall Baptist Hospital is a LEED Gold-certified, patient- and family-centered facility serving one of South Floridas most vibrant, youthful and fast-growing communities. Beginning in 2013, the hospital will be home to an accredited family practice residency program through its affiliation with Florida International Universitys Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine. To learn more, visit WestKendallBaptistHospital.com.

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Family Medicine Center Brings New Primary and Preventive Care Options to West Kendall

MindChild Medical, Inc., Announces Results of National Fetal Monitoring Market Survey

NORTH ANDOVER, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

MindChild Medical, Inc., today announced results of a recently sponsored national survey of hospital administrators and obstetricians (NSFM3) focused on trends in fetal monitoring. Recent fetal monitoring literature suggests that of the 4.3 million US live births recorded in 20074, 1.4 million, or over 30%5, occurred where the mother had a BMI (Body Mass Index) exceeding 30kg/m2 considered the effective limit for existing non-invasive fetal monitoring technology6.

Key findings of the NSFM Survey included:

Michael G. Ross, MD, MPH7, Professor, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA commented, Noninvasive FHR monitoring may result in inadvertent monitoring of maternal heart rate, which can be mistaken for fetal heart rate, particularly in obese patients. The increase in maternal BMI seen nationally over the recent past is a troubling trend that has significant negative implications for the accuracy of existing non-invasive FHR monitoring technologies. The use of non-invasive surface electrodes can potentially improve in the monitoring of fetal heart rate and aid in prevention of adverse outcomes associated with mistaken maternal heart rate monitoring.

Previous Announcements

On February 22, 2012, MindChild reported formation of a Clinical Advisory Board for the MERIDIAN Line of Non-Invasive Fetal Heart Rate Monitors

On February 6, 2012, MindChild reported filing of a 510(k) Pre-Marketing Notification Application with the US Food and Drug Administration for the MERIDIAN Line of Non-Invasive Fetal Heart Rate Monitors

About the MERIDIAN Non-Invasive Fetal Heart Rate Monitor

MERIDIAN is a fetal monitor that non-invasively measures and displays Fetal Heart Rate (FHR). MERIDIAN acquires and displays the FHR tracing from abdominal surface electrodes that detect the fetal ECG signal (fECG). MERIDIAN may also be used to measure and display FHR using a Fetal Scalp Electrode (FSE). MERIDIAN is designed for women who are at term (> 36 completed weeks), in labor, with singleton pregnancies, using surface electrodes on the maternal abdomen. MERIDIAN is intended for use by healthcare professionals in a clinical setting.

About the Fetal Heart Monitoring Market

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MindChild Medical, Inc., Announces Results of National Fetal Monitoring Market Survey

SafeStitch Medical®, Inc. Will Attend the Abdominal Wall Reconstruction Conference to Present the AMIDâ„¢ Hernia …

MIAMI--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

SafeStitch Medical, Inc. (SFES), will attend the Abdominal Wall Reconstruction Conference (AWR) in Washington DC, June 14-16, 2012 to present the AMID Hernia Fixation Device (AMID HFD).

We are excited to be exhibiting at the AWR this year. The AMID Hernia Fixation Device is used for both inguinal and ventral hernia surgeries. We believe the ventral hernia repair market can benefit from the AMID HFD, said Jeffrey Spragens, President and CEO of SafeStitch Medical.

For inguinal hernia repair using the Lichtenstein method, the innovative design of the AMID HFD fixates mesh by delivering staples in a parallel plane to the femoral vessels, which may help avoid vascular injury. The AMID HFD allows for mesh manipulation, mesh fixation and skin closure.

Ventral hernia repair can be complex and time consuming. The AMID HFD is easy to use, has a stapler counter and mesh manipulators that position the mesh before staple firing. We believe the AMID HFD avoids the need for suture placement and tying and may make large ventral hernia repair simpler, said Dr. Charles Filipi, Chief Medical Officer of SafeStitch Medical.

The Abdominal Wall Reconstruction Conference is being held at the JW Marriot in Washington DC, June 14-16, 2012. Please visit booth #302 in the Capitol Ballroom to learn more about the AMID Hernia Fixation Device.

The AMID Hernia Fixation Device is sold nationwide.

About Dr. Charles Filipi

Dr. Charles Filipi is SafeStitchs Chief Medical Officer and Professor of Surgery in the Department of Surgery at Creighton University School of Medicine in Omaha, Nebraska. He has published 101 peer reviewed articles and 50 book chapters. He has been the inventor on over 15 patents and five years ago became medical director of SafeStitch Medical, Inc. Dr. Filipi continues to see patients one day a week and devotes five days a week to research. His primary interests are intra-luminal surgery for the correction of gastroesophageal reflux disease and obesity, Barretts esophagus mucosal excision, stapled inguinal hernia repair and esophageal force feedback dilation.

About SafeStitch Medical, Inc.

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SafeStitch Medical®, Inc. Will Attend the Abdominal Wall Reconstruction Conference to Present the AMID™ Hernia ...

OSF teams up with medical school on training project

June 11, 2012 Updated Jun 11, 2012 at 4:43 PM CDT

PEORIA,Ill --OSF Saint Francis Medical Center in Peoria is teaming up with the University of Illinois College of Medicine to enhance training and performance of health care professionals.

The partnership will bring a new Jump Trading Simulation and Education Center to the hospital campus.

On Monday morning, construction crews put the last beam in place on the 51million dollar facility. Officials are planning on training up to 30,000 healthcare professionals including doctors in the first year after its opening next April.

"This is a much safer environment than doing training out in the field. We can carefully control the circumstances and we can allow for training in an environment where no patient can ever receive an injury," said OSF Jump Trading Simulation & Education Center Chief Medical Officer Dr. John Vozenilek

The six story building will include an education center, a virtual intensive care unit, and an innovation laboratory plus other training features.

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OSF teams up with medical school on training project

Hospital awards Jami Grimes-Flannery scholarship to attend medical school

Mt. Carmel native and MCHS graduate Jami Grimes-Flannery has been awarded a scholarship from Wabash General Hospital to attend medical school beginning in August.

Ms. Grimes-Flannery recently graduated from the University of Southern Indiana with a degree in biology and in February was accepted into Medical School at the University of Illinois-Chicago College of Medicine.

According to WGH CEO Jay Purvis the signing of the scholarship agreement took place recently at the hospital. The agreement states that after completing medical school and residency requirements Ms. Grimes-Flannery will return to become a member of the Wabash General Hospital medical staff. At this time her plans are to pursue a career as a general surgeon.

Ms. Grimes-Flannery graduated from Wabash Valley College in 2010 with an Associate in Science degree and then continued her college studies at USI graduating this spring. She was the recipient of several awards and participated in a wide variety of activities during her college years. Jami also was an employee of Wabash General Hospital during her years at WVC and USI. Her cumulative GPA at these schools was 3.89.

Jami is the daughter of Dr. W.R. and Rebecca Hardy of Mt. Carmel. Her first year of medical school will be at the University of Illinois Champaign-Urbana campus beginning in mid-August. Subsequent years will be at the Rockford Campus of the University of Illinois.

With some 300 employees, a 10-year analysis of expanding Wabash General Hospital services, including the opening of a new Medical Office and Rehabilitation Building in 2011, was reviewed by Wabash County Council and termed an economic engine for Wabash County by Commission Chairman Charles Sanders.

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Hospital awards Jami Grimes-Flannery scholarship to attend medical school

Ohio University to open medical school at Cleveland Clinic's South Pointe Hospital

WARRENSVILLE HEIGHTS, Ohio --A new medical school, an extension of Ohio University's Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, will open at Cleveland Clinic's South Pointe Hospital.

The Clinic and OU, which announced the affiliation today, will invest a combined $49 million to address the growing shortage of primary care doctors in Ohio.

The agreement builds on a longstanding relationship between the Clinic and the Athens-based medical school, which have partnered to train physicians for 35 years. South Pointe Hospital is one of the largest osteopathic teaching hospitals in the state and OU students have done third- and fourth-year clinical rotations there for decades.

The first class of 32 medical students is scheduled to begin July 2015, assuming approvals by the American Osteopathic Association Council on Osteopathic College Accreditation and the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association.

An osteopathic physician and a medical doctor both attend four years of medical school. They complete their training during the same residency programs and pass the same licensing exams.

The difference is in the teaching style and focus during medical school. Osteopathic schools instruct students to look at the whole patient, not just symptoms, which is now being embraced by medical schools. Osteopathic students also are educated in osteopathic manipulative treatment, which is manual diagnosis and treatment. Not all osteopathic physicians use that in their practice.

OU will spend $36 million, which includes renovating a building on the South Pointe Hospital campus and hiring faculty and staff. The Clinic's contribution of $13 million includes the building renovations as well as medical education support. The Brentwood Foundation, a nonprofit, private foundation that advances osteopathic medicine, is providing a $5 million grant to South Pointe Hospital and $6 million to graduate medical education.

"Cleveland Clinic and the Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine share a dedication to excellence in patient care, research and medical education," said Dr. Toby M. Cosgrove, Cleveland Clinic President and CEO in a news release. "This collaboration will help improve quality for patients, stimulate medical innovation and improve the economic health of our communities."

The affiliation shows how public and private collaborations can create jobs and improve the quality of life for Ohioans, OU President Roderick McDavis, said in a release.

"Our medical students will be offered expanded education opportunities with world-renowned experts at the Cleveland Clinic," he said. "With our partners, with this additional site, we are a university of promise for our students and for the citizens of our great state."

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Ohio University to open medical school at Cleveland Clinic's South Pointe Hospital

OU, Cleveland Clinic announce new medical-school campus

By Encarnacion Pyle

The Columbus Dispatch Monday June 11, 2012 3:40 PM

Ohio University and the Cleveland Clinic announced this afternoon that they have agreed to develop a $49.1 million medical-school campus to help fill a growing need for primary-care doctors in northeast Ohio.

Ohio University will contribute $36 million towards the extension campus that will be at the Cleveland Clinics South Pointe Hospital, a 179-bed acute-care community teaching hospital that has served the citys southeast suburbs since 1957, officials said at a news conference.

The Cleveland campus is expected to open with 32 students in July 2015.

Cleveland Clinic and the Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine share a dedication to excellence in patient care, research and medical education, Dr. Toby M. Cosgrove, the Cleveland Clinics president and CEO said in a news release. This collaboration will help improve quality for patients, stimulate medical innovation and improve the economic health of our communities.

OU is working on similar, $24 million medical college campus in Dublin with OhioHealth.

The Dublin City Council unanimously voted in April to give the Athens university 70 acres surrounding the property and two buildings that OU is buying at 7001-7003 Post Rd., just off Rts. 161/33 interchange. The college is expected to open with at least 50 students in fall 2014.

The money from Ohio University for the Cleveland project will be used to renovate a building on the South Pointe campus, as well as pay for staff, faculty and operations costs for the campus. The Cleveland Clinic will provide $13.1 million for capital improvements and renovations to the building and staff and operational support.

Cleveland Clinic officials also have committed to increasing its post-graduate residency and fellowship positions for students. After graduation, young doctors are required to do three to seven years of residency training under the supervision of more-experienced physicians before they can take medical-board exams and go into practice.

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OU, Cleveland Clinic announce new medical-school campus