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1-Feb-2002 12:00 AM EST
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Selected Participant in Women's Heartadvantage Campaign
Cedars-Sinai

In an effort to help women learn more about the symptoms and treatment of heart disease and heart attacks, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center has teamed with the Voluntary Hospital Association and hospitals nationwide in a program known as the "Women's HeartAdvantage Campaign."

Released: 16-Jan-2002 12:00 AM EST
Cedars-Sinai Cardiologist Offers a Dozen Sweet Heart Tips for Women
Cedars-Sinai

Heart disease and heart attacks claim the lives of more American women than men each year, and pose a greater threat to American women than all forms of cancer combined. Unfortunately, many women do not know that the symptoms of a woman having a heart attack can be significantly different from those of a man.

Released: 5-Jan-2002 12:00 AM EST
Cedars-Sinai Medical Tips for January 2002
Cedars-Sinai

Topics this month include: 1) Interleukin 12 research; 2) Alternative therapies to treat common cold may help avoid antibiotic resistance; 3) Kick-start the New Year with tips for kicking bad habits; 4) Chavez sisters' living liver transplant; 5) Tips for the flu season; 6) Endoscopic brain surgery for acoustic neuroma; 7) Pediatric orthopedic surgery

29-Dec-2001 12:00 AM EST
Modification to Deliver Interleukin 12 Directly Into Resistant Type of Brain Tumor
Cedars-Sinai

Physicians and scientists at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center's Maxine Dunitz Neurosurgical Institute describe an approach that "significantly prolonged" survival in mice with glioma -- an extremely deadly type of brain cancer that is highly resistant to treatment.

Released: 15-Dec-2001 12:00 AM EST
Sisters Hope to Increase Living Donor Organ Transplant in Hispanic Communities
Cedars-Sinai

The daughters and nieces of the co-founders of the United Farm Workers of America, AFL-CIO (UFW), are on a mission -- to increase understanding and awareness of living donor organ transplants, especially in Latino communities.

Released: 4-Dec-2001 12:00 AM EST
Results of Two Endoscopic Brain Surgeries in Less than a Year
Cedars-Sinai

After undergoing two highly specialized types of minimally invasive skull base brain surgery in less than a year -- one for an acoustic neuroma that was accidentally discovered and one for relief of the debilitating facial pain known as trigeminal neuralgia -- 69-year-old Rodney Blauer says he is feeling great this holiday season.

Released: 3-Dec-2001 12:00 AM EST
Holiday Tip Sheet from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Cedars-Sinai

1) Diabetes and the holidays; 2) Weight management during the holidays; 3) Depression and stress during the holidays; 4)Loneliness and grief during the holidays; 5) Coping with alcohol dependency during the holidays; 6) New experimental drug shown to slow growth of prostate cancer tumors in mice; 7) "Camera in a Capsule:" New imaging tests offers non-invasive alternative for patients with gastrointestinal bleeding.

Released: 21-Nov-2001 12:00 AM EST
Diabetes and the Holidays
Cedars-Sinai

Rich, sugary holiday foods offer a special challenge for people with diabetes. The Director of the Comprehensive Diabetes Outpatient Program at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center offers tips that help people with diabetes make healthful choices during the holidays.

Released: 20-Nov-2001 12:00 AM EST
Cedars-Sinai Nutritionist Offers Holiday Weight Management Tips
Cedars-Sinai

"Even if you're working to manage your weight, you can enjoy the wonderful foods of the holiday season as long as you do so in moderation," says a Cedars-Sinai Medical Center dietitian. Following are her "baker's dozen" holiday weight management tips.

2-Nov-2001 12:00 AM EST
Drug Shown to Slow the Growth of Prostate Cancer Tumors in Mice
Cedars-Sinai

A new experimental drug has been found to slow the growth of prostate cancer tumors in laboratory studies conducted at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. The findings, presented at the AACR-NCI-EORTC International Conference may lead to a new way to treat prostate cancer, a disease that strikes about 198,000 men each year.

Released: 27-Oct-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Cedars-Sinai Medical Tip Sheet for October
Cedars-Sinai

Topics included this month are: 1) White Muslim woman donates kidney to African American man; 2) 29-year-old woman with Long QT Syndrome receives lifesaving defibrillator; 3) New AHA Guidelines; 4) Possible precursor to optical biopsies in brain surgery; 5) Irradiated balloons.

Released: 17-Oct-2001 12:00 AM EDT
29-Year-Old Mother of Four Receives Life-Saving Defibrillator
Cedars-Sinai

Thanks to the combined efforts of the Divisions of Cardiology and Cardiac Surgery at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, The Larry King Cardiac Foundation and Guidant Corporation, a 29-year-old Hesperia, CA, woman whose family suffers from Long QT Syndrome was able to receive a life-saving medical device.

Released: 5-Oct-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Caucasion Muslim Organ Donor Gives a Kidney to African American Christian at Jewish Hospital
Cedars-Sinai

Even though recent events have in some cases focused on differences among religious and ethnic groups, here's a wonderful story about a White American Muslim woman who donated one of her kidneys to an African American Christian man whom she had not previously known. The transplant took place at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles -- a Jewish hospital.

Released: 28-Sep-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Expert Available to Discuss New AHA Guidelines
Cedars-Sinai

C. Noel Bairey Merz, MD, is available to discuss the new AHA Guidelines. A board-certified specialist in cardiovascular diseases, she has served since 1991 as Director of the Preventive and Rehabilitative Cardiac Center at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. She currently serves as Chair of the American College of Cardiology's Prevention of Cardiovascular Diseases Committee.

Released: 26-Sep-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Irradiated Balloons May Help Prevent Plaque Re-Growth in Blocked Arteries
Cedars-Sinai

Cardiologists at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles are participating in a randomized clinical trial studying the use of irradiated balloons to help prevent blocked arteries from developing recurring blockages.

Released: 21-Sep-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Cedars-Sinai Tip Sheet Offers Tips for Kids, Teens, Adults, on Coping With Anxiety
Cedars-Sinai

The Sept. Tip Sheet from Cedars-Sinai focuses on experts, services and programs that may be helpful in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 events. Included are: 1) Teen Hotline Helps Young People Cope With Recent Tragedy; 2) Psychological Trauma Center Offers "Tips for Parents" to Help Children Cope; Loss and Grief Support Programs Open to Those Who have Lost Loved Ones; 4) Expert on Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Available for Interviews; 5) Blood Donations.

Released: 20-Jul-2001 12:00 AM EDT
July Tip Sheet from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Cedars-Sinai

1) Father's Day Living Liver Transplant; 2) Palm Pilots, Wireless Modems & Cutomized Software Enable Physicians to Access Patient Updates from Anywhere, 24/7; 3) Summer Safety for Kids; 4) Research Detects Mechanism that Appears to Enable Deadly Brain Tumors to Progress.

16-Jul-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Mechanism Appears to Enable Deadly Brain Tumors to Progress
Cedars-Sinai

Using a technique called "gene array" that allows them to analyze thousands of genes in one experiment, scientists at Cedars-Sinai's Maxine Dunitz Neurosurgical Institute have identified a new mechanism that may be a critical step in the development of a type of malignant brain tumor (glioblastoma multiforme or GBM) that has historically been virtually impervious to treatment.

Released: 12-Jul-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Daughter Gives Living Liver Transplant to Dad
Cedars-Sinai

For most kids, a new necktie, a good book, or even a favorite music album are considered typical Father's Day gifts. But this year, Angel Molina, a 21-year-old from Albuquerque, NM, gave her dad a new liver.

Released: 10-Jul-2001 12:00 AM EDT
High Tech and High Touch: Wireless Technology for Physicians
Cedars-Sinai

A growing number of physicians at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center are consulting their Palm Pilots these days in order to access a patient's medical information from anywhere -- 24 hours a day. What they learn enables them to make time-sensitive medical decisions affecting their patients' care.

Released: 27-Jun-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Increase in Children's Risk of Accidental Injuries
Cedars-Sinai

Even though summer is the season for sun and fun for kids, it's also the time for death and injury. According to the Medical Director of the Children's Health Clinic at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.

Released: 27-Jun-2001 12:00 AM EDT
June Medical Tip Sheet from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Cedars-Sinai

1.) A new experimental artificial disc (spine); 2.) A "Baker's Dozen" Weight Management Tips; 3.) New Diagnostic Tool Improves Detection of Lung Cancer That has Spread; 4.) Hope n the Horizon for Allergy Sufferers - Anti-IgE Drugs; 5.) Expert on Medical Aspects of Organ Transplantation Receives Award.

25-Jun-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Diagnostic Tool Improves the Detection of Lung Cancer that Has Spread
Cedars-Sinai

A new diagnostic imaging agent has been found to improve detection of lung cancer that has spread, enabling physicians to provide better treatment options for patients with lung cancer, according to the Director of Nuclear Medicine and Co-Chairman of Imaging at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. The new agent may also reduce the overall costs of patient care by eliminating unnecessary surgeries.

Released: 16-Jun-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Tips on Successful Weight Management
Cedars-Sinai

It's no secret that obesity is one of the top health problems facing Americans. Half of us are overweight and a third are obese -- contributing to more than 300,000 deaths each year. A registered dietitian at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center's outpatient Nutrition Counseling Center offers a "baker's dozen" tips on successful weight management.

Released: 14-Jun-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Tips for Coping with Allergies This Summer
Cedars-Sinai

Director of the Division of Pulmonary/Critical Care Medicine at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, offers tips for coping with allergies this summer and also provides information on the new anti-IgE drugs, which are expected to revolutionize allergy treatment.

Released: 14-Jun-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Stanley C. Jordan, M.D. Recognized for More than Two Decades of Research
Cedars-Sinai

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center's Stanley C. Jordan, M.D., was recognized for more than two decades of research when the American Society of Transplantation presented him with its Novartis Established Investigator Clinical Science Award on May 14.

Released: 8-Jun-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Experimental Artificial Disc Being Tested
Cedars-Sinai

For patients with back problems, a new, experimental artificial disc currently being tested at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and nine other centers nationwide, may prove a viable alternative to disc fusion surgery, especially for young, active patients.

11-May-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Brain Cell Protein and Dystonia
Cedars-Sinai

Researchers at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center have identified a new protein in brain cells that may help to regulate muscle control and movement. The protein, called torsinB, is closely related to torsinA -- a protein that in its defective form -- has been linked to the development of early-onset dystonia.

Released: 8-May-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Discovered by Accident, Acoustic Neuroma Removed Endoscopically
Cedars-Sinai

For 68-year-old Rodney Blauer, Marina del Rey, CA, trigeminal neuralgia turned out to be a good thing. The debilitating facial pain in his left jaw, universally acknowledged as the most painful affliction known to adults, led to the accidental discovery of an unrelated tumor on the opposite side of his brain. That acoustic neuroma was completely removed in an endoscopic at the Cedars-Sinai Skull Base Institute in Los Angeles.

Released: 8-May-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Opens a Fresh Recruiting Campaign
Cedars-Sinai

With staffing shortages affecting hospitals nationwide, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, the largest not-for-profit hospital in the western United States, is launching a concerted, sustained marketing campaign designed to draw new talent and distinguish Cedars-Sinai from other hospitals in the region. The campaign focuses on the medical center's ongoing effort to increase diversity of ethnicity and gender, and also targets the underlying reason many people decide to pursue a healthcare career in the first place.

Released: 8-May-2001 12:00 AM EDT
6-Year-Old's Life Back to Normal After Surgery to Remove Brain Tumor
Cedars-Sinai

Within 24 hours of being diagnosed with a pilocytic astrocytoma, 6-year-old Isabella Gutierrez was undergoing pediatric neurosurgery during which the tumor was completely removed. Her recovery has been rapid: quickly regaining normal walking skills, her double vision has gone away, and she has no more headaches and no more vomiting.

Released: 27-Apr-2001 12:00 AM EDT
April Tip Sheet from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Cedars-Sinai

Topics in this month's medical tip sheet from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center include: 1) Cardiologist Named Director of Women's Health Program; 2) Temodar is First New FDA-Approved Brain Cancer Fighting Drug in More than 20 Years; 3) Very Low Doses of New Drug Reduces Complicatins of Bone Metastases in Patients with Metastatic Brain Cancer and Multiple Myeloma; More. . .

Released: 27-Apr-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Marathon Runner Defies Statisics to Survive Heart Attack
Cedars-Sinai

After collapsing from a heart attack while running the Los Angeles Marathon, 49-year-old John Davidson has made what doctors call a miraculous recovery. Despite requiring CPR from fellow runners at the scene for approximately 15-17 minutes, then being in a coma for six days, Davidson has no discernible cardiac damage on EKG, on echocardiogram, nor on examination. And there's no neurologic damage.

Released: 18-Apr-2001 12:00 AM EDT
7th and 8th Graders Learn How Declassified Military Tech Aids Medicine
Cedars-Sinai

On May 30, 120 seventh- and eighth-grade students from Los Angeles-area schools will learn how researchers at Cedars-Sinai's Maxine Dunitz Neurosurgical Institute are adapting declassified military technology for medical uses. Scientists at the Institute are using thermal imagers to detect brain tumors and malformed arteries in the brain that can cause strokes.

Released: 13-Apr-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Heart Transplant Recipient Finds Employment in Liver-Kidney Transplant Program
Cedars-Sinai

This June, Glenn Matsuki will celebrate the 6th anniversary of his heart transplant. What makes him truly unique is that has subsequently found employment as management assistant for the Liver Transplant program at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.

Released: 5-Apr-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Clinical Trial Studies Effectiveness of FDA-Approved Brain Cancer Fighting Drug
Cedars-Sinai

A clinical trial to study the effectiveness of Temodar, the first new brain cancer fighting drug to receive FDA approval in more than 20 years, is underway at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center's Maxine Dunitz Neurosurgical Institute in Los Angeles.

1-Apr-2001 12:00 AM EST
New Drug Reduces Complications of Bone Metastases
Cedars-Sinai

Researchers at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center report that very low doses of a potent new drug called zoledronic acid reduces the complications that arise from multiple myeloma and breast cancer that has spread to the bone. (Cancer, 4-1-01)

Released: 28-Feb-2001 12:00 AM EST
4 More Genes in the Development of Malignant Brain Tumors
Cedars-Sinai

Researchers at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center's Maxine Dunitz Neurosurgical Institute have identified four genes that may play a role in the development of certain types of malignant brain tumors. (International Journal of Oncology, 2-01)

Released: 22-Feb-2001 12:00 AM EST
High Blood Levels of Hepatitis C in Patients Co-Infected with HIV
Cedars-Sinai

Researchers at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center report that high amounts of Hepatitis C in the blood and simultaneous co-infection with HIV may be linked to a greater risk of developing AIDS and AIDS related death. (J. of Infectious Diseases, 2-15-01)

Released: 10-Feb-2001 12:00 AM EST
Renowned Orthopedic Surgeon Joins Cedars-Sinai
Cedars-Sinai

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center announces the appointment of John J. Regan, M.D., an internationally recognized orthopedic surgeon, to Director of Research and Education at the new Cedars-Sinai Institute for Spinal Disorders, the largest multidisciplinary spinal center in the Western United States.

1-Feb-2001 12:00 AM EST
Dendritic Cell "Vaccine" Shows Early Promise
Cedars-Sinai

A new type of "vaccine" therapy targets the immune system against glioblastoma multiforme (glioma) cancer cells. In what is believed to be the first study of its kind on glioma cells, dendritic cell immunotherapy extended the median length of survival. A larger Phase II study is now underway. (Cancer Research 2-1-01)

Released: 20-Jan-2001 12:00 AM EST
Popular Dietary Supplements Effectiveness for Osteoarthritis
Cedars-Sinai

Researchers at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center are now enrolling patients in a large multi-center clinical trial to determine whether two popular nutrition supplements -- glucosamine and chondroitin sulfate -- reduce the knee pain associated with osteoarthritis.

Released: 5-Jan-2001 12:00 AM EST
Cedars-Sinai Medical Tip Sheet for January, 2001
Cedars-Sinai

This month's medical tip sheet from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center includes information on irritable bowel syndrome, the new gene therapeutics institute, children's brain tumors, a fully endoscopic procedure to remove skull-base tumors, hyperhidrosis, a wife-to-husband living liver transplant and more.

Released: 16-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Holiday Joy: Wife Donates Half Her Liver to Husband
Cedars-Sinai

On Nov. 2, 2000, a husband and wife from Orange County, CA, each underwent four-hour operations at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. The purpose of the twin-surgeries was to reclaim the life of the husband, Tom Stich, 56.

14-Dec-2000 12:00 AM EST
Irritable Bowel Syndrome, Intestinal Bacteria May be Linked
Cedars-Sinai

Researchers at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center may have identified the cause of Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), a gastrointestinal condition that afflicts about 20 percent of the adult population and is diagnosed in twice as many women as men. (The American Journal of Gastroenterology, 12-00)

Released: 23-Nov-2000 12:00 AM EST
Malignant Tumor 7 Years After Radiosurgery
Cedars-Sinai

Researchers at the Cedars-Sinai Maxine Dunitz Neurosurgical Institute in Los Angeles have documented development of a malignant tumor 7 years after radiosurgery to treat a benign tumor. (Lancet, 11-00)

Released: 23-Nov-2000 12:00 AM EST
Laparoscopic and Thoracoscopic Procedures for Children
Cedars-Sinai

Thanks to its new Pediatric General Surgery Program, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center now offers children the minimally invasive, laparoscopic and thoracoscopic procedures that have been available to adults for years.

Released: 23-Nov-2000 12:00 AM EST
Relief for People with Hyperhidrosis
Cedars-Sinai

A new outpatient procedure at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center's Hyperhidrosis Center now offers relief for people with hyperhidrosis -- excessive sweating. Performed endoscopically, with four tiny incisions, complete recovery is measured in several days.

Released: 21-Nov-2000 12:00 AM EST
Cedars-Sinai Holiday Tip Sheet
Cedars-Sinai

1) Coping with diabetes during the holidays; 2) Coping with depression and dress during the holidays; 3) Successful weight management during the holidays; 4) Coping with loneliness and grief during the holidays; and 5) Coping with alcohol dependency during the holidays.

Released: 17-Nov-2000 12:00 AM EST
Laser Technology Provides Long-Term Angina Relief to Heart Patients
Cedars-Sinai

The results of a long-term study on transmyocardial revascularization were presented Nov. 15, 2000, at the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions 2000. TMR is a breakthrough laser therapy that provides significant pain relief to severe angina patients.



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