Dr. Lamb and her colleagues developed a quick, simple test for Zika virus so easy to administer, you don’t even need a doctor. It’s a urine test that produces results in under 30 minutes
Prostate HDR brachytherapy typically takes two to three hours. Patients usually go home from the hospital the same day. In contrast to permanent seed, or low-dose-rate brachytherapy, with HDR, no radioactive material is left inside the patient after the procedure. Because the radiation dose is delivered directly inside the prostate, radiation exposure to nearby critical structures, such as the bladder and rectum, is minimized.
Facts and other prevention and heart health tips and information are packed inside “The Heart-Healthy Handbook,” featuring 140-plus essays written by more than 60 Beaumont Health experts and published by Monterrey, California-based publisher, Healthy Learning.
Courageous, quick action by Beaumont Hospital, Dearborn employees protected others from harm when a man entered the hospital on March 8 and set himself on fire inside an elevator in the first floor lobby.
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality recently awarded a $2.4 million grant to study a theory that could prevent thousands of C. difficile infections, relapses and deaths all over the world. Beaumont Health has developed a medical animation to help illustrate the research study.
When the USPSTF recommended against prostate-specific antigen screening for prostate cancer in 2012, researchers began studying what effect this would have on diagnosing and treating prostate cancer.
Unique technology saves life of healthy 54-year-old who nearly dies after contracting aggressive, H1N1, flu strain. A former non-believer, he now promotes regular flu shots as prevention
In less than 24 hours, Beverly Harshaw, 67, of Highland Park, went from hopping on a bus every day to her full-time housekeeping job at the Somerset Collection in Troy, to becoming totally unresponsive, family members said. They rushed her to the Emergency Center at Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak.
It’s the most common reason people go to their doctors – back pain. Eighty percent of adults will experience low back pain some time in their lives. In fact, chronic low back pain affects nearly one-third of the nation’s population. Now a minimally invasive, nerve ablating procedure, recently cleared by the FDA, might give some people with chronic low back pain a new treatment option.
Beaumont Children's clinical psychologist, Lori Warner, ph.d., a board-certified behavior analyst, Dr. Warner is also the director of the Ted Lindsay Foundation HOPE Center, and associate professor, Oakland University William Beaumont School, frequently speaks lectures on behavior management, toileting, feeding, autism diagnosis and treatment and parenting.
The 100 ton gantry has arrived in the United States from Belgium. It's a critical piece of the Proton Therapy Center which is under construction in Royal Oak, Michigan.
Could a one-a-day pill be the answer for women with stress urinary incontinence – a condition resulting in leakage with coughing, sneezing and laughing? Urologists at Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Michigan are seeking postmenopausal women with stress urinary incontinence, or SUI, for a research study of a compound that may strengthen pelvic floor muscle and reduce the leakage of urine.
Fetal imaging researchers at Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, receive $1.7 National Institutes of Health grant that may lead to treatment for growth restricted babies.
Beaumont Health recently launched the first of three technology pilot programs that enable patients to communicate with their physicians and care providers through virtual visits including e-visits, video visits and electronic check-ins.
After doctors removed a tumor on his spinal cord, Desmond Davis could not walk. Then, in September 2015, a Lokomat therapy machine gave Desmond more tools to teach his body to walk again. It looks like a high-tech treadmill with a strong harness to provide support and robotic braces to help move the patient’s legs.
In the beginning, the machine assisted his legs most of the time. The Lokomat includes a video screen that responds to Desmond’s movements and makes physical therapy feel like play. After working with the Lokomat for more than two months, Desmond can move his legs without much help from the machine.
Tony Price, 61, had virtually no lung capacity. His kidneys were shutting down. Sepsis, a potentially life-threatening infection, was setting in. He was dying and would not survive an ambulance ride. A helicopter saved his life. He remained in the hospital for more than three months, but checked out this week and is now home for the holidays.
Just after Denis Chubanyuk was born, people in his Russian hometown told his mother to bury him in the backyard. Eventually, a doctor diagnosed him with Apert’s syndrome. It’s a genetic condition where the skull fuses prematurely and prevents the brain from growing. A nonprofit organization connected the family with Beaumont Children’s Hospital. Then, Denis and his mother flew to America for a surgery that changed and saved his life.
Marv and Rhoda Perlin fell in love as teenagers, graduated from college together, got married, became teachers and raised three sons. After 61-years of marriage, the couple is now in their 80s and still do everything together, including getting their hips replaced.
Brittany Brown has watched her daughter, Amaree, 6, struggle with hundreds of seizures every day for the past six years. Now, a new treatment is providing hope.
Beaumont Hospital – Royal Oak urologists are studying the safety and potential effectiveness of a treatment for male stress urinary incontinence, using a man’s own muscle cells. The goal of the study is to strengthen the muscles controlling urination and control leakage after prostate cancer surgery.
Ken Peters, M.D., presented three papers at the International Neuromodulation Society’s 12th World Congress in Montreal. He and his team have had success in treating bladder issues and pelvic pain through a technique called neuromodulation. His presentations all addressed patient care issues.
Research finds an association between positive post-radiation therapy biopsy results and subsequent clinical outcomes in men with localized prostate cancer.
Noah Gochanour, 8, of Michigan, recently started complaining about pain that wouldn’t go away. Beaumont Children’s Hospital doctors evaluated Noah and discovered the reason for his pain and discomfort: Ewing’s sarcoma, a rare cancerous tumor in his shoulder.
Former 800-pound woman overcomes fall that strands her alone on apartment floor for three weeks with support of hospital staff and weight loss surgery.