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Patrick Henry Hughes - Inspirational Story
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Saúde - Nova unidade de Estimulação Cerebral em Coimbra - RTP Noticias, Vídeo
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Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy: This rare disorder is a call to arms for doctors and patients to control seizures
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John Travolta's 16-year-old son, Jett, who suffered from uncontrolled seizures, died suddenly on Jan. 2, 2009, while on vacation with his family in the Bahamas. After an autopsy, “seizure” was listed as the cause of death. Later that year, in another heart-wrenching case, Steve Wulchin went to wake his 19-year-old son, Eric, and found him lying on the floor of their home in Boulder, CO. Eric, whose last seizure was six months before, had died unexpectedly during the night.
These two high-profile cases have heightened public awareness of sudden unexplained death in epilepsy (SUDEP), a rare disorder responsible for 2 percent to 18 percent of deaths in people with epilepsy... (cont)
http://journals.lww.com/neurologynow/Fulltext/2010/06060/Sudden_Unexpected_Death_in_Epilepsy__This_rare.11.aspx
These two high-profile cases have heightened public awareness of sudden unexplained death in epilepsy (SUDEP), a rare disorder responsible for 2 percent to 18 percent of deaths in people with epilepsy... (cont)
http://journals.lww.com/neurologynow/Fulltext/2010/06060/Sudden_Unexpected_Death_in_Epilepsy__This_rare.11.aspx
Speak Up: Rising Above Limits and Labels—I fulfilled my dreams in spite of a cerebral palsy
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Free AccessAuthor InformationFrom 1993 to 1995, Shanna McCoy served on the Governor's Developmental Disability Planning Council for Arkansas, and is still a member of the Arkansas Disability Coalition.
My mother was the kind of woman you didn't want to say no to. When a pediatrician told her that I would never read, walk, or talk, my mother responded, “My daughter will be walking by the time I'm through.” It took me a long time to even sit up and stand on my own, but two and half years later, my mother was right. I was able to walk.
At the age of 18 months I was diagnosed with cerebral palsy. The cause: severe brain trauma from a forceps injury during birth. No one volunteered this information; a receptionist accidentally left my medical records on the desk and my mother decided to look through them.
But I never really accepted the fact that I was “Disabled” with a capital “D.” As a child, I convinced myself that I was an ordinary girl who possessed some extraordinary gifts.
O…
My mother was the kind of woman you didn't want to say no to. When a pediatrician told her that I would never read, walk, or talk, my mother responded, “My daughter will be walking by the time I'm through.” It took me a long time to even sit up and stand on my own, but two and half years later, my mother was right. I was able to walk.
At the age of 18 months I was diagnosed with cerebral palsy. The cause: severe brain trauma from a forceps injury during birth. No one volunteered this information; a receptionist accidentally left my medical records on the desk and my mother decided to look through them.
But I never really accepted the fact that I was “Disabled” with a capital “D.” As a child, I convinced myself that I was an ordinary girl who possessed some extraordinary gifts.
O…
Proyecto Foltra - Defienden el tratamiento con hormonas para mejorar a los pacientes con daño cerebral
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TODO Castilla y León - 10 de diciembre de 2010
El catedrático de Fisiología Humana de la Universidad de Santiago Jesús Devesa Múgica ha defendido este viernes en Salamanca el tratamiento con hormonas de crecimiento y melatonina unido a prácticas de fisioterapia, logopedia y terapia ocupacional para mejorar la calidad de vida de los personas con daño cerebral.
Así lo ha señalado en una rueda de prensa previa a su intervención en la Universidad de Salamanca (USAL), en la que ha explicado su Proyecto FOLTRA, Fe, Optimismo, Lucha y Trabajo, encaminado a la ayuda para la rehabilitación física e intelectual del paciente neurológico, con daño cerebral o periférico, congénito o adquirido.
Devesa Múgica ha sostenido que inició del programa debido a "la necesidad", tras su sufrir su hijo mayor un grave accidente de tráfico.
A él le aplicó "de forma empírica" todo lo que le había reportado la investigación realizada durante más de treinta años en hormona del crecimiento.
De este m…
El catedrático de Fisiología Humana de la Universidad de Santiago Jesús Devesa Múgica ha defendido este viernes en Salamanca el tratamiento con hormonas de crecimiento y melatonina unido a prácticas de fisioterapia, logopedia y terapia ocupacional para mejorar la calidad de vida de los personas con daño cerebral.
Así lo ha señalado en una rueda de prensa previa a su intervención en la Universidad de Salamanca (USAL), en la que ha explicado su Proyecto FOLTRA, Fe, Optimismo, Lucha y Trabajo, encaminado a la ayuda para la rehabilitación física e intelectual del paciente neurológico, con daño cerebral o periférico, congénito o adquirido.
Devesa Múgica ha sostenido que inició del programa debido a "la necesidad", tras su sufrir su hijo mayor un grave accidente de tráfico.
A él le aplicó "de forma empírica" todo lo que le había reportado la investigación realizada durante más de treinta años en hormona del crecimiento.
De este m…