EBM - Appraising studies of therapy
An overview of critically appraising RCTs for the Monash Year 3B MBBS degree.
By: Evidence Based Medicine
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EBM - Appraising studies of therapy
An overview of critically appraising RCTs for the Monash Year 3B MBBS degree.
By: Evidence Based Medicine
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EBM - Cohort studies: harm
This presentation is part of a series of presentations aimed at EBM curriculum renewal in Australia. This presentations provides an overview of cohort studie...
By: Evidence Based Medicine
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Drop Vertical Jump | OSU Sports Medicine
The P4 ACL Preventive Sports Medicine Program assesses jumping mechanics and hamstring and quadriceps strength in a variety of ways. In this evaluation, the ...
By: osusportsmedicine
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Acupuncture Boca Raton - Heroes in Medicine 2014
Acupuncture Boca Raton - Heroes in Medicine award Nominee, Dr Rodney Dunetz, AP,DOM, talks about his being the first Acupuncturist ever nominated by the Palm...
By: Rodney Dunetz, AP, DOM
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VERY FUNNY - I can #39;t stop laughing - Funny Alternative Medicine
Funny Alternative Medicine.Have Fun! Do not try this at home VERY FUNNY/ Funny Video/ Funny videos/ Funny Funniest/funny/ funniest / Lol / comedy / Funny You...
By: Nocolino Funnylino
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VERY FUNNY - I can't stop laughing - Funny Alternative Medicine - Video
Single Leg Drop Jump | OSU Sports Medicine
The P4 ACL Preventive Sports Medicine Program assesses jumping mechanics and hamstring and quadriceps strength in a variety of ways. In this evaluation, the ...
By: osusportsmedicine
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Single Cross-Over Drop Jump | OSU Sports Medicine
The P4 ACL Preventive Sports Medicine Program assesses jumping mechanics and hamstring and quadriceps strength in a variety of ways. In this evaluation of th...
By: osusportsmedicine
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Natural Medicine the Beavertail Cactus
As seen in our last video, Martin Survival uses the Beavertail cactus pad as a substitute Aloe Vera one might find in a store. This is a show you do not want...
By: Martin Survival
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More Practices Adopt Team-Based Model Of Medicine
Going to the doctor used to mean a visit with one physician, but today, you can expect to see a whole team of caregivers. CBS 2 #39;s Dr. Max Gomez reports. Offi...
By: CBS New York
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Sabbath Service (Sabbath School Worship Service)
Medicine Hat Seventh-Day Adventist Church Live Sabbath Church Services and Sabbath School, Broadcast will start every Sabbath at about 9:15-9:30. All times a...
By: Medicine Hat SDA Church
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Redneck Betties VS Dirty South All-Stars @ Medicine Hat (April 19th, 2014) PART 1/2
http://www.comtv.ca Medicine Hat #39;s local web-based broadcaster!
By: Community TV
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Redneck Betties VS Dirty South All-Stars @ Medicine Hat (April 19th, 2014) PART 1/2 - Video
The Nectar of Plants: Essential Oils and Chinese Medicine with Josephine Spilka
An interview with Josephine Spilka on her web seminar "The Nectar of Plants", focused on essential oils and Chinese medicine.
By: Josephine Spilka
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The Nectar of Plants: Essential Oils and Chinese Medicine with Josephine Spilka - Video
PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:
21-Apr-2014
Contact: Lee-Ann Donegan leeann.donegan@uphs.upenn.edu 215-349-5660 University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
(PHILADELPHIA) Despite decades of common use for surgeries of all kinds, the precise mechanism through which general anesthesia works on the body remains a mystery. This may come as a surprise to the millions of Americans who receive inhaled general anesthesia each year. New research led by the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania investigated the common anesthetic sevoflurane and found that it binds at multiple key cell membrane protein locations that may contribute to the induction of the anesthetic response. Their findings will appear online in PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Science).
Previous studies have suggested that inhaled general anesthetics such as sevoflurane might work by inactivating sodium channels, specialized protein conduits that open in response to stimuli, like voltage changes, and allow sodium ions to cross the cell membranes of nerve cells. Despite the physiological importance of sodium channels and their possible role as general anesthetic targets, little is known about interaction sites or the mechanism of action.
Penn's Roderic Eckenhoff, MD, vice chair for Research and the Austin Lamont Professor of Anesthesiology and Critical Care leads a team of top medicine, chemistry, and biology researchers who were recently awarded an NIH grant to unravel the mysteries of anesthesia. This paper represents the team's most recent findings.
Researchers found that sevoflurane's interaction with sodium channels plays an essential role in the generation of the electrical impulses necessary for the communication between nerve cells in the brain. "We sought to understand the molecular basis of the interaction of sevoflurane with the sodium channel as a starting point to determine how similar anesthetics might elicit the anesthetic response," says the study's lead author, Annika Barber, PhD, a post-doctoral researcher in the department of Neuroscience at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. At the time the research was conducted, she was a doctoral candidate at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia.
In concert with the Institute for Computational Molecular Science of Temple University, Dr. Barber first used molecular dynamic simulation, a 3-D computer modeling method, to visualize possible interactions of sevoflurane with discrete parts of the bacterial sodium channel called NaChBac. This archetypal membrane protein is homologous to sodium channels found in human brain. "Given the physical and chemical properties of inhaled anesthetics, we expected binding to many possible sites; simulation, however, helped us limit and identify the sites where the binding of sevoflurane might actually change the function of the sodium channel," explained Barber. The team found three key binding sites possibly linked to the anesthetic response. The first involves the channel's sodium pore itself, which is plugged by sevoflurane; the second concerns the gate that governs opening and closing of the sodium channel in response to a voltage change across the membrane of a neuron; and the third surrounds a second gate that controls sodium flow by changing the shape of the channel's narrow pore. These three sites, researchers hypothesize, work together to turn off firing of electrical impulses in key neurons and thus, induce the anesthetic state.
The Jefferson researchers validated the functional significance of these sites by directly measuring the activity of the sodium channel and conducting additional computer simulations. They found that low doses of sevoflurane made voltage-dependent activation of the sodium channel more favorable. This surprising action could explain the excitatory phase many patients experience during the onset of sevoflurane anesthesia. However, as the concentrations of the anesthetic increased, sevoflurane begins to block the sodium channel which might ultimately contribute to the state of anesthesia. These dose-dependent mutually antagonistic effects, in a single ion channel were surprising to the group, and emphasize the complexity of anesthetic action.
"Precisely how these interactions at one ion channel fit into the global effects of anesthesia remains to be seen," says Barber, and adds "this study paves the way to map relevant general anesthetic binding sites in sodium channels and helps understand how their modulation by sevoflurane might determine the physiological processes implicated in general anesthesia".
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Penn Medicine researchers uncover hints of a novel mechanism behind general anesthetic action
4/10, Panel III Discussion
Panelists field questions from the audience.
By: Institute of Medicine
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Medicine Ball Push-Up - variation
By: Shashido Enterprises
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Integrative medicine vs western methods
Integrative medicine shifts the orientation of medicine from one of disease to one of healing and uses natural, less invasive interventions before costly, ag...
By: CNBCAfrica
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Board Review Cardiology-2 CARDIAC CATHETERIZATION AND SCANS, Indications, Types
Quick videos on MUST KNOW topics for the Internal Medicine Boards. It will be also very useful for the USMLEs and Medical Students rotating through medicine....
By: Doc Khan
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Board Review Cardiology-2 CARDIAC CATHETERIZATION AND SCANS, Indications, Types - Video
John Galeotti : Biomedical Image Guidance: (BIG) Ideas for Improving Tools of Medicine and Biology
Robotics Institute Seminar: April 15, 2014 John Galeotti Senior Project Scientist, Carnegie Mellon, Robotics Institute Abstract: Biomedical imaging systems a...
By: cmurobotics
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Medicine and the Flu with Abby
Medicine and the Flu with Abby.
By: Abby Nich
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Freshman S+L The Laughter is the Best Medicine Article Wk9 Spring 2014 Aft.
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By: Yusyuan Lin
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Freshman S+L The Laughter is the Best Medicine Article Wk9 Spring 2014 Aft. - Video