Palmyra Animal Clinic adds new stem cell therapy to improve animals' lives

PALMYRA -- Gunny, an 8-year-old German shepherd, who has been suffering from painful arthritis in his hips, got a new lease on life Wednesday after receiving an injection of stem cells from his own body.

Gunny was the first of two dogs with degenerative joint disease who were treated with a new, faster and less expensive procedure at the Palmyra Animal Clinic, 920 E. Main St. The new process, which is available for dogs, cats and horses, uses stem cells taken from fatty tissue in the animals to combat osteoarthritis to improve their quality of life.

The process has been around for a decade, but with new technology, the local clinic is able to do the process in-house, in less time and at less cost. The clinic has been offering stem cell therapy since 2008.

While stem cell therapy has been commercially available for about a decade, Dr. Calvin Clements, owner of the clinic, said, "there was a several-day turnaround, multiple anesthesias, and it was considerable expense. With this technique, we have the ability to collect the cells, inject the cells and bank the cells."

The cost of the procedure is about $1,300, compared to $3,000 when sent out of house, Clements said.

On mobile? Click here to view photo gallery

On Wednesday, Clements and his associate, Dr. Richard Hann, used the new process - known as Adipose-Derived Stem Cell Procedure - for the first time in their office with Gunny, and Hudson, an 8-year-old toy fox terrier, who has arthritis in his knees.

Clements said an animal's pain from degenerative disease is similar to humans.

"Like the pain that anyone who has advanced joint degenerative disease experiences, at first, it doesn't hurt too bad but as time progresses some are in considerable pain. It can be very severe," he said.

"We're looking to improve their joint function. Stem cell therapy has really proven itself just by the outcome that we've had in patients when we were shipping it out," Clements said. "This is more convenient. It's a faster process. It's in-house, and we know how the samples are being handled from beginning to end."

Read this article:

Palmyra Animal Clinic adds new stem cell therapy to improve animals' lives

Palmyra vet treats dogs with stem cell therapy

Updated: Wednesday, April 16 2014, 06:10 PM CDT It's like a new lease on life for some pets in Lebanon County, after they got an improved type of stem cell therapy.

Gunney is an 8-year-old German Shepherd, suffering with severe hip pain. Doctor Calvin Clements is treating the dog with a new type of stem cell therapy, where cells are collected, harvested, and injected. This is all done in the Palmyra Office and all done on the same day.

This takes out the practice of shipping out the tissues and waiting days to get the cells back. In the end, it allows the animals to feel better, faster.

It will take Gunney just a few days to start feeling better, but a full month before the cells fully take. According to Doctor Calvin Clements, this therapy improves the animal's health by 85%.Palmyra vet treats dogs with stem cell therapy

See the article here:

Palmyra vet treats dogs with stem cell therapy

Enlightenment Truth Greater Community Spirituality (Chapter Eighteen) Part Three – Video


Enlightenment Truth Greater Community Spirituality (Chapter Eighteen) Part Three
https://www.newmessage.org/nmfg/Greater_Community_Spirituality.html Greater Community Spirituality presents a prophetic new understanding of God and human sp...

By: danielofdoriaa

More here:

Enlightenment Truth Greater Community Spirituality (Chapter Eighteen) Part Three - Video

Greater Community Spirituality (Chapter Eighteen) What Is Human Destiny? Part Three – Video


Greater Community Spirituality (Chapter Eighteen) What Is Human Destiny? Part Three
https://www.newmessage.org/nmfg/Greater_Community_Spirituality.html Greater Community Spirituality presents a prophetic new understanding of God and human sp...

By: TranscensionTV

Continue reading here:

Greater Community Spirituality (Chapter Eighteen) What Is Human Destiny? Part Three - Video

Religion, spirituality influence health

Religion and spirituality have distinct but complementary influences on health, new research from Oregon State University indicates.

Religion helps regulate behavior and health habits, while spirituality regulates your emotions, how you feel, said Carolyn Aldwin, a gerontology professor in the College of Public Health and Human Sciences at OSU.

Aldwin and colleagues have been working to understand and distinguish the beneficial connections between health, religion and spirituality. The result is a new theoretical model that defines two distinct pathways.

Religiousness, including formal religious affiliation and service attendance, is associated with better health habits, such as lower smoking rates and reduced alcohol consumption. Spirituality, including meditation and private prayer, helps regulate emotions, which aids physiological effects such as blood pressure.

The findings were published recently in the journal Psychology of Religion and Spirituality. Co-authors were Crystal L. Park of the University of Connecticut, and Yu-Jin Jeong and Ritwik Nath of OSU. The research was supported by a grant from the John Templeton Foundation.

No one has ever reviewed all of the different models of how religion affects health, said Aldwin, the Jo Anne Leonard endowed director of OSUs Center for Healthy Aging Research. Were trying to impose a structure on a very messy field.

There can be some overlap of the influences of religion and spirituality on health, Aldwin said. More research is needed to test the theory and examine contrasts between the two pathways. The goal is to help researchers develop better measures for analyzing the connections between religion, spirituality and health and then explore possible clinical interventions, she said.

Original post:

Religion, spirituality influence health

Editorial: Grow in spirituality and grace

Good Friday is the pinnacle of Holy Week, the most solemn part of the Triduum that leads to Easter Sunday. Catholics all over the world, including in the Philippines, observe it with reverence and devotion. It was on Good Friday that Jesus Christ give up His life to save humanity. The holy day is spent by meditation on the Passion of Christ, Stations of the Cross, the Santo Entierro procession, senakulo or passion play, Visita Iglesia, Seven Last Words, fasting and abstinence, Holy Hour, and church services.

In predominantly Catholic Philippines, flagellants roam the streets and the reenactment of Jesus life in some provinces, drawing both local and foreign tourists. Government offices, schools and establishments such as shopping malls are closed on Good Friday.

Good Friday rites in many parts of the country are a Mammoth procession in San Pablo, Laguna; Moriones Festival in Marinduque; Bala-an Bukid in Iloilo City; Huge 14th station in Iguig, Cagayan; Stations of the Cross at Lourdes Grotto in Novaliches, Quezon City; amulet hunting in Sipalay, Negros; 45 Five Statues in Paete, Laguna; Capilya in Zamboanga; Cenaculos in Taguig City; and Pagtaltal sa Jordan, Guimaras.

No masses are celebrated on Good Friday; statues, crosses, and paintings are covered in dark cloth. The only service is the somber ceremony of the cross, with liturgy consisting of three parts: Liturgy of the Word, Veneration of the Cross, and Holy Communion. After the ceremony, priest and people leave in silence, the altar bare except for the cross and two or four candlesticks.

In the 4th Century, the Church began observing the Friday before Easter as the day associated with Christs sacrifice.

In the 6th Century, the word Good Friday was adopted by the Roman Church. Two possible origins for Good Friday the first Gute Freitag (German for good or holy Friday) may have come from the Gallican Church in Gaul (modern-day France and Germany). The second may be a variation on Gods Friday, where good was used to replace God, a word viewed as too holy to be spoken aloud. A historical event occurred on Good Friday in 1998 when the Irish and British governments signed a peace treaty in Belfast ending the differences between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. Since the peace treaty was signed on Good Friday on April 10, 1998, it was called the Good Friday Agreement.

On this observance of Good Friday, we pray for Gods mercy and blessings for the Filipino people and our Republic of the Philippines. May each one of us grow in spirituality and grace. MAY GOD BLESS US ALL!

Go here to see the original:

Editorial: Grow in spirituality and grace

Barbara Brown Taylor Faces the Darkness

U.S. Religion Darkness is often treated as evil, a vast unknown and the Ultimate spiritual enemy. But as Barbara Brown Taylor believes, it may save us all Marco Grob for TIME

Subscriber content preview. or Sign In

From the moment God declared, Let there be light, Scripture christened light as holy and condemned darkness to hell. The Christian liturgy soaked in the theme in the centuries that followed. The Book of Common Prayer addresses God as O Light and begs, Be our light in the darkness, O Lord. Hymns followed suit, from Amazing Grace to the hit In the Light from Christian hip-hop band dc Talk.

But theologian Barbara Brown Taylor sees it differently. As impossible as it is to imagine faith without light, it is equally hard to imagine a world without darkness. We are taught to fear darkness as children, she says, when parents line the halls to the bathroom with nightlights to scare away the closet monsters. As we grow older, the monsters take a different shape: darkness descends with the call that a loved one has cancer, months of unemployment, a child with an addiction or an unanswered prayer.

The preacher in Taylor points out that darkness was often the setting for humanitys closest encounters with the divine. God appeared to Abraham in the night and promised him descendants more numerous than the stars. The exodus from Egypt happened at night. God met Moses in the thick darkness atop Mount Sinai to hand down the Ten Commandments. Jesus was born beneath a star and resurrected in the darkness of a cave.

This appears in the April 28, 2014 issue of TIME.

To continue reading: or Sign In

Read more here:

Barbara Brown Taylor Faces the Darkness

Skylab, the First 40 Days (1973) – Documentary on the Skylab Space Station – Video


Skylab, the First 40 Days (1973) - Documentary on the Skylab Space Station
Nasa documentary on the Skylab mission. Skylab orbited the Earth from 1973 - 1979 and it was the first manned space station. Watch documentaries on http://ww...

By: Manic Movies

See the article here:

Skylab, the First 40 Days (1973) - Documentary on the Skylab Space Station - Video