Riyadh: The medical team saved the life of a pilgrim whose heart stopped beating for more than ten minutes in the courtyards of the Prophet’s Mosque in Madinah, the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) reported.
The rapid intervention of the rescue team in the Madinah health sector received an urgent notification that a 70-year-old Pakistani pilgrim named Mu’tamir had become unconscious following breathing issues.
Ambulance services were provided immediately.
The medical team instantly started CPR with electric shocks for more than 10 minutes until the heart started beating. He was transferred to Al-Safiah Healthcare Center.
It is noteworthy that the Al-Safiah Center has received seven cases of heart failure, 48 cases of critical respiratory illness, and eight cases of heart attacks at the courtyards of the Prophet’s Mosque since the beginning of this year.
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New York: Trying to switch to drinks and food that are low on calories and carbohydrate to avoid sugar? These are often loaded with an artificial sweetener called erythritol and can raise your risk of a major adverse cardiac event such as heart attack, stroke or death, warned a study.
Erythritol is about 70 per cent as sweet as sugar and is produced through corn fermentation and often mixed to sweeten stevia, monk fruit or add bulk to low-calorie products.
The artificial sweetener is also used as a common replacement for table sugar and is often recommended for people who have obesity, diabetes or metabolic syndrome and are looking for options to help manage their sugar or calorie intake.
After ingestion, erythritol is poorly metabolised by the body. Instead, it goes into the bloodstream and leaves the body mainly through urine. The human body creates low amounts of erythritol naturally, so any additional consumption can accumulate.
Researchers from Cleveland Clinic in the US also found that erythritol, when added to whole blood or isolated platelets was found to make platelets easier to activate and form a clot.
The findings, published in the journal Nature Medicine, are based on a study of more than 4,000 people in the US and Europe.
“Our study shows that when participants consumed an artificially sweetened beverage with an amount of erythritol found in many processed foods, markedly elevated levels in the blood are observed for days — levels well above those observed to enhance clotting risks,” said Stanley Hazen, from Lerner Research Institute at Cleveland Clinic.
“It is important that further safety studies are conducted to examine the long-term effects of artificial sweeteners in general, and erythritol specifically, on risks for heart attack and stroke, particularly in people at higher risk for cardiovascular disease.”
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On a flight from Stockholm to Los Angeles, a passenger suffers a cardiac arrest. But he is very fortunate in misfortune.
STOCKHOLM – A serious medical incident occurred on a scheduled flight from Stockholm to Los Angeles. A passenger suffers cardiac arrest while flying on his birthday. But in his distress, an unexpected rescue overtakes him. Heart specialists happen to be on board who saved the man’s life, as pilot Henrik Nielsen explains to ekstrabladet.dk in an interview about his career.
City
Stockholm
Surface
188 km²
Population
975,551
Founded
1252
Man suffers cardiac arrest on plane with 56 doctors on board
Nielsen describes the situation: “That was the worst possible timing. Everything was so far away. We looked for the nearest airport but it was four hours away.” So the on-board staff took immediate first-aid measures, as stern.de previously reported. The staff is not always so caring, as shown by an airplane accident in which the crew exited the plane before the passengers.
But when the other passengers became aware of the situation, the almost hopeless situation quickly took a turn for the better. Because 56 doctors who were on their way to a medical congress in the USA flew with them on exactly this flight.
Cardiac specialists rush to the rescue of man on flight in cardiac arrest
There were also heart specialists among the passengers, who are optimally trained for precisely such situations. So the doctors quickly took care of the emergency. Nielsen explains: “They stabilized his health and then explained to us in detail what was wrong with the man”.
The man was able to continue the flight and land safely with the other passengers on the ground for further treatment. But instead of going to the emergency room, he went to his family to celebrate his 40th birthday with them. Thanks to the treatment and diagnosis on board, however, according to the doctors, all that is needed is a visit to a specialist at a later date. In Madrid a pilot had recently even left the plane because the birth of his child was imminent.
#Fortunately #dozens #heart #specialists #board
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( With inputs from : pledgetimes.com )
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Srinagar, Feb 21: A tourist from Gujrat died of a heart attack in Srinagar hospital on Tuesday, official sources said.
They said that a tourist who was staying in the Srinagar hotel along with his family complained of chest pain. He was shifted to SMHS Hospital Srinagar where doctors declared him dead.
The deceased has been identified as 47-year-old Muhammad Maqsood Hussain, a native of Ahmadabad, Gujrat. [KNT]
Hyderabad: Her prefix is doctor. But it could well have been an author. Faced with a career choice, she picked up the stethoscope. But later she plunged for the pen as well. And now she wields both of them with equal ease. So much so that sometimes it becomes difficult to tell the doctor from the writer.
That’s Dr. Azra Raza for you. An oncologist by profession and a writer by passion. This Pakistan-born Professor of Medicine is making waves as a cancer expert and also as an author of no mean repute. While her research on myelodysplastic syndrome and acute myeloid leukaemia showed that low blood counts were not a result of bone marrow failure but the effect of a hyper-proliferative state in the marrow tissue, her books have received critical acclaim and brought out the sensitive writer in her. Dr. Raza expresses her passion best by quoting Hamlet:
This above all: to thine own self be true, And it must follow, as the night the day, Thou canst not then be false to any man
It might sound unusual for a health professional to be so passionate about poetry. But Dr. Raza thinks otherwise. For her poetry and science are the two sides of the same coin since both require creativity to unravel the mystery. “Knowing about human genomics is pure poetry. Both poetry and science go for the grand themes of life,” she once remarked.
Right from her childhood Dr. Raza was attracted to both science and literature. Her obsession with ants led her to read all about biology and pathology of myeloid malignancies. “If I had grown up in the West, I am confident that I would be a scientist and not physician,” she told an interviewer many years later. In pursuit of her dream she landed up in the US soon after graduating from the Dow Medical College, Karachi. She started working at Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo, New York. A bright student, she became a full-fledged professor at the Rush University in Chicago when she was just 39. Later she was named the first Director of the Division of Haematology and Oncology at the University of Massachusetts.
As her career looked up, Dr. Raza dedicated herself to grander themes. She focused all her expertise in finding the cause and cure of cancer. All through her research it was humanism that was the guiding principle of her philosophy. She realised that human conduct is governed by a series of incidents where one act is the result of another. She started harnessing all her knowledge and desires for the service of humanity. Her practice and ultimate goals underwent subtle changes. “Each individual patient acquired a special place in my life and caring for their physical and emotional needs became my prime concern,” says Dr. Raza who lost her husband, Harvey Preisler, to cancer. Interestingly, both of them had worked hard to find a cure for the disease.
In an interview given to Scott Douglas Jacobsen of In-Sight, she reveals many facets of her life. Her exemplary work in cancer research helped her bag many awards including the prestigious Hope Award for Cancer Research. After the death of her husband, she became a voracious reader. She gobbled up the 100 Great Books of the Western Literary Tradition right from Euripides and Aeschylus to Rushdie and Morrison. Poetry also proved a great motivator for her. She loves to read Shakespeare, Dante, Milton and quotes Ghalib at the drop of a hat. Her perfect recital of long ghazals by rote leaves one speechless.
While contributing to numerous medical journals, Dr Raza has made a mark as a creative writer. She has written a total of six books. Her book, The First Cell, makes an interesting read. It explores cancer from every angle – medical, scientific, cultural and personal. She has also come up with an interesting book on Mirza Asadullah Khan Ghalib, one of the greatest of Urdu poets. In her book, A Tribute to Ghalib, Dr. Raza reinterprets 21 ghazals of the maestro along with co-author, Sara Suleri Goodyear. The book tries to illustrate the great range of the poet’s work.
Dr. Raza continues her dalliance with medicine and literature. Despite her awesome credentials she persists with hard since she believes success is not something to be achieved but must be won continuously. As Mark Twain remarked, continuous improvement is better than delayed perfection.
Mumbai: Shahnawaz Pradhan, best known for featuring in series “Mirzapur” and movie “Raees”, has died following a heart attack, actor Yashpal Sharma said. He was in his late 50s.
Pradhan complained of severe chest pain, fell unconscious and suffered a heart attack during an award function here on Friday evening. He was immediately rushed to Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital but the doctors couldn’t revive him.
Sharma, who was also present at the event, shared a note on Instagram detailing the incident.
“Today I attended this program in Mumbai… Everything was going great… Hundreds of artists were present but shortly after receiving the award our beloved artist Shahnawaz had an attack…
“The whole program stopped with the help of the people and the doctor picked him up and took him to Kokilaben Hospital which was the closest but no one could save him and he passed away… May his soul rest in peace and courage to the family,” Sharma wrote.
Pradhan has played character roles in films “M.S. Dhoni: The Untold Story”, “Khuda Haafiz”, “Raees” and “Phantom”; web series “The Family Man” and “Hostages”, and TV show “Krishna” and “24” among others.
Rajesh Tailang, who worked with Pradhan in Prime Video series “Mirzapur”, paid tribute to the actor in a Twitter post.
“Shahnawaz bhai aakhiri salaam!!! You were an amazing person and a great actor. Had a great time working with you in Mirzapur’ #purushram #mirzapur,” Tailang wrote.
Many actors commented on Tailang’s post including Anup Soni, Rohitash Gour, and extended their condolences.
Cine And TV Artistes’ Association (CINTAA) body expressed condolences on the demise of Pradhan on their official Twitter handle and wrote that the last rites will be held on Saturday in Mazgaon at 12.30 pm.
My wife is amazing at a lot of things: spotting a typo from 10 paces, retaining obscure facts about medieval English food customs and, as seems almost obligatory these days, making sourdough bread. The one thing she is absolutely awful at, however, is art. Back in the 80s, her art teacher wrote in her end-of-year report: “Claire has a tendency to be highly experimental – which I would praise, were it not for the fact that her examination pieces were experiments which appeared to have gone very badly wrong.”
I tell you this not in order to publicly shame her – how could I, as the owner of a D-grade German O-level? – but to highlight how wonderful it was when, in 1996, on our first wedding anniversary, AKA our “paper” anniversary, she presented me with a papier-mache heart that she had sculpted with her own fair hands.
There is something undeniably romantic about gestures that involve artistic creation. It’s the willingness to lay it all on the line, the readiness to make oneself vulnerable, that I admire. All the more so when you have been told that, at best, you are a “trier”, while, at worst, you are in danger of negatively skewing your school’s exam results.
Mike Gayle and his wife, Claire.
When, with no small degree of meekness, my wife handed me a large box wrapped in gift paper on the morning of our anniversary, I eagerly tore it open, fully expecting to find a copy of Independence Day on VHS (I had been dropping hints like crazy)or a box of cherry liqueurs (my favourite of all the confections). Instead, lying on a bed of tissue paper in an old shoe box was the aforementioned papier-mache heart. I loved it immediately.
The idea had come to her, she told me, after trawling the aisles of HMV for gift inspiration. Finding none, it dawned on her that she should instead make something – something made from paper.
Several weeks later, having gathered all the materials together – wallpaper paste, a couple of small cereal boxes, old newspapers and paint – she began her first art project since leaving school. Whenever I was out of the house, she would add a couple of layers of gluey paper to the boxes, which she had sandwiched together to make a basic frame for the heart. Day by day, layer by layer, she sculpted and moulded her work until it resembled the organ classically perceived as the seat of the emotions. Finally, after a week of drying it out in the airing cupboard (a place I never ventured, clearly), she added the first of several coats of paint.
Claire’s love heart.
The time and effort my wife put into her creative endeavour was an obvious, but nonetheless utterly gorgeous, metaphor for her love for me. Had she given me a copy of the classic Will Smith movie or a customary box of chocolates, I would undoubtedly have been pleased. But I can also guarantee that the video would have long since been dispatched to Oxfam, the liqueurs regretted as soon as I stepped on the bathroom scales.
A quarter of a century later, however, the heart still has pride of place on a shelf in our living room. Its bright-red paint might be chipped and faded, its paper-and-glue surface more than a little fragile, but it’s there watching over us nonetheless, having become a regular talking point with our kids and houseguests. It’s an exquisite reminder of our love – and why you shouldn’t always listen to your art teacher.
Mike Gayle is the author of Museum of Ordinary People and A Song of Me and You, which will be published in July (Hodder & Stoughton)
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( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )