Treating a Brain Tumor with “Ultrasonic screwdriver”

The new technological developments to diagnose and treat brain diseases is amazing! I am very interested in the high definition Fiber tracking and MR tracktology that Cottage Hospital is using to diagnose brain damage.

This article about treating brain tumors is extremely interesting. Scientists Have Breached The Blood-Brain Barrier For The First Time And Treated A Brain Tumor Using An “Ultrasonic Screwdriver” The technique allows the chemo to directly target the tumor behind the blood brain barrier. This is the first time it has been trialed on a human patient and it is a huge improvement over the technique trialed last year. It does require an invasive procedure of placing an ultra emitter into the brain.

Im sure there is a lot more to develop and perfect but it’s hopeful that technology is trying to pass the blood brain barrier to treat brain tumors.

 

Pop Culture and Drugs.

This week’s reading was interesting and relatable to my work environment. In addition, i work at the Boys and Girls Club of Oxnard, and work directly with teens ages 13-18 on a daily basis. Additionally, i can see that these young individuals currently watch television shows which displays an array of un-youthful behavior such as language, partying,  usage of alcohol, and illicit drugs use. Moreover, i can see the teens replicating certain artists and actors because it’s “cool,” and it’s “the thing to do.” Additionally, I myself don’t really watch television, but when i do i can see how these young individuals may be easily influenced. For example, Sternheimer mentioned the YouTube video of Miley Cyrus smoking saliva from a bong on her eighteenth birthday where she was pounced to be a bad role model. Despite her illicit behavior, there are still young viewers who grew up watching her shows, follow her music, which may ponder the though of, “well, if she’s doing drugs and gets away with it, then maybe i should try drugs.”

Moreover, in chapter 9, Sternheimer touches on a few topics such as smoking, alcohol, legal and illegal drugs. Additionally, I thought it was interesting when she mentioned that the Mental Health Services Administration suggest that about 5 million alcohol abusers have children under the age of eighteen living with them. That’s a very deep and sicking statistic, but unfortunately, it’s reality, and it may lead to the same behavior for the young individual because they see their own parents conducting these actions which may lead to lingering thoughts of drugs and alcohol being okay to do. Moreover, Sternheimer touched on how smoking has been declining, but one interesting section that caught my attention was when Sternheimer mentioned the National Survey on Drug Use, which stated that in 2010 fifty-five to fifty-nine-year-olds were equally binge drinking as sixteen-seventeen-year-olds. That was mind boggling!!!

Lastly, another interesting section that caught my attention was when Sternheimer mentioned Sean Combs and his Ciroc Vodka. According to Sternheimer, Combs appeared in ads for Ciroc Vodka, adding his brand of cool to portray Ciroc as the drink of high end clubs. This is another great example of how young individuals may look up to an artist (due to liking their music/movies/shows) and they see them in a whole different way that may trigger a negative perspective in possibly imitating the artist’s actions.

An Hour of Code with Star Wars

Code.org has a brand new tutorial for the Hour of Code 2015, in partnership with Disney and Lucasfilm — featuring Star Wars: The Force Awakens. Work with Rey to guide the new droid, BB-8, through a mission. Then, join Leia to create and share your own game in a galaxy far, far away.

Try an early preview of Star Wars: Building a Galaxy with Code

Students will learn to write JavaScript to power their games. For younger learners, a tablet-friendly, drag-and-drop version will be available in the next few weeks. You can also check out other options for all ages. And stay tuned… more tutorials are coming soon.

Prizes for every educator — and a behind-the-scenes “Making of Star Wars” experience

There are 80,000 Hour of Code events signed up worldwide. Help your students join in on this record-breaking event! One Hour of Code can be enough to inspire the course of their lives. Join in.

Every organizer worldwide will receive a gift card to Amazon, iTunes or Windows Store.
One school in every US state will win $10,000 worth of technology for your school.
One lucky classroom will win an exclusive, behind-the-scenes “Making of Star Wars” experience with the visual effects team who worked on Star Wars: The Force Awakens!
100 participating classrooms will win a BB-8 droid robots that students can program.
I couldn’t be more excited to share Star Wars: Building a Galaxy with Code with you today. Code your own game, share it, and tell us what you think.

Hadi Partovi,
Founder, Code.org

SCI

 

I found a very interesting article about recent advances in SCI treatment from the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (2015). One important change that heavily influences both ADLs and quality of life for many of these patients in the improvements in wheelchairs. Wheelchairs have become much lighter and easier to maneuver, providing better comfort and improving mobility. There are even wheelchairs under development that could climb stairs! This would be an incredible advance. I have spoken with several disabled people who use chairs that cited access difficulties as a major barrier to quality of life improvement. Though most basic buildings are wheelchair accessible, many are not. Additionally, those that are technically wheelchair accessible may not actually be conducive to chair use.

Another exciting new technology this article discussed is a type of electrical stimulation device. This device is implanted in the body and can help with hand movement, improving ADLs. Variations of this device can also help with bladder and bowel function. According to this article, ten year ago bladder and bowel related infections were the leading cause of death among people with SCIs. Today, the leading cause of death is the same as the general population: heart disease. I think this is an incredible milestone in a long road.

 

References

American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (2015). Advances Made in Treatment of  Spinal Cord Injuries. Retrieved from https://www.aapmr.org/patients/conditions/neurologic/sci/Pages/sciadvance.asp

A Critical Window for Recovery After Stroke

A Critical Window for Recovery After Stroke

The BLAM (Brain, Learning, Animation, and Movement) lab at John Hopkins University is focusing research on promoting optimal recovery for patients suffering a stroke or TBI. Their Kata Project is a collaboration between neuroscientists, robotics, computer science, and animation.

dolphinStroke is one of the leading causes of disability in the US. Scientists at John Hopkins University have identified that there is a period of endogenous hyperplasticity that occurs directly after an ischemic brain injury. During this period, motor coordination and movement improves at a much greater rate than later in the recovery period. They found that patients typically improve during the first month following a stroke and then plateau at a new level of functioning that is only a fraction of their baseline functioning.

Motor rehabilitation is often delayed immediately following a stroke. The first two weeks after a stroke is typically spent in an inpatient hospital environment focusing on medical stabilization. During much of this time the patient is alone and immobile. Unfortunately, by delaying rehabilitation efforts, there is concern that we are not optimizing recovery by taking advantage of the hyperplasticity period following ischemia.

John Hopkins University has been experimenting by looking at the level of functioning regained by mice that suffered a stroke. Immediately following a stroke, mice were placed in one of two environments. In the control environment the mice were primarily alone and immobile (similar to an inpatient hospital environment during medical stabilization). The experimental environment was an enriched environment filled with other mice, toys, and visual and physical challenges. Mice in the enriched environment recovered much more quickly and to a higher level of functioning than those in the control environment.

A pilot study is now being undertaken to see what gains can be made by placing a stroke patient in a more enriched and challenging environment immediately following a stroke. The BLAM lab developed an immersive gaming environment including 3D exoskeletal robotics and non-invasive brain stimulation.

standardEnriched

In the “game” the patient manipulates the robotic arm to control a 3D dolphin and complete challenges. The hope is that this type of  stimulation can be incorporated in the acute care setting immediately after a stroke and we can better take advantage of the hyperplasticity period. Per John Hopkins, pilot data has been promising. Regardless of the data on motor functioning, patients seem to be having a lot of fun playing the game. Being in a position of control seems to be very rewarding for patients after they have lost so much control through the disease process.

References:

Johns Hopkins Departments of Neurology and Neurosurgery. (2015). Funding a Lab of the Future. NeuroNow, Winter 2015, 1-4. Retrieved from http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/news/publications/neuronow/files/sebindoc/m/r/4187BEB7CC3B446264EA2DD3CE8EBEDA.pdf.

Krakauer, J. (2015, March 7). A Critical Window for Recovery After Stroke [Video File]. Retrieved from http://tedxtalks.ted.com/video/A-Critical-Window-for-Recovery

Dust to Digits: Writing Our Stories Through Family Photographs

I wrote this post as a guest contribution for Digital Writing Month. I hope it will inspire you to to reach back in time, learn a new story about yourself, write, and share.

 Each photograph is read as the private appearance of its referent: the age of Photography corresponds rather precisely to the explosion of the private into the public, or rather into the creation of new social value, which is the publicity of the private: the private is consumed as such, publicly.”      – Roland Barthes, Camera Lucida, p. 98


When I was a little girl, my mother often shared her old family photographs with me. The photographs were stored in a tin trunk under my parents’ bed. Kneeling on the floor, pulling out that trunk, cracking it open, and unleashing the musty scent contained inside became our ritual for initiating our travel through time. My mom, a first-generation born American who was born to two German immigrants, would share stories about her family members. 

Photographs were especially important to my mom, as she experienced the tragic loss of her sister and only sibling at the age of 39 and the sudden passing of her mother just two years later. Looking at and sharing stories about the images imprinted on the old torn piece of paper was — and still is — her way of visiting her loved ones. There was a palpable connection between my mom and the time and space of the fading figures portrayed in the images, it was as if the photographs had a magical ability to collapse time for her.

We repeated this tradition numerous times throughout my childhood, often with my two sisters. I also ventured into the tin box on my own sometimes, gazing into the fading eyes of relatives who I had never met. Over time, the photographs became familiar to me; yet, there was one that I secretly treasured more than the others. It was a small, sepia-toned image printed on cardstock (known as a carte de visite). It measured about 2” by 3”. The corners were torn and the surface of the image was heavily scratched. On the back, my mother had written the name of my maternal great grandmother in pen, but aside from that there were no identifying marks on the print.

Despite the ambiguity of the photograph’s context, this image resonated with me. “You are my great grandmother,” I used to think to myself, as if she were there in the room with me. My great grandmother lived in Germany until the age of 99 and passed away when I was quite young. I never met her. I would scour the surface of that image with my eyes, in a desperate quest to know her. I wanted so much to find that “something” that would transport me from the floor of my parents’ bedroom to that moment she stood in front of the camera’s lens.

Through this search, I recall admiring her appearance. I wondered if I’d be fortunate enough to grow into the beautiful woman she was. I would gaze at her dress and imagine what the fabric felt like and what color it was. I resented the scratches that removed the details of her face, as I believed that’s where her essence would be revealed to me. Yet, I never found what I searched for in that photograph.

A photograph’s punctum is that accident which pricks me (but also bruises me, is poignant to me). -Roland Barthes, Camera Lucida, pp. 26-27

At some point through the years, however, my mother shared more about my great grandmother that transformed how I related to that photograph and, ultimately, how I understood myself. There was an old postcard mixed in with the photos in the trunk that had a message composed in hand-written script on the back, which I could not read — and neither could my mother. She explained that it was a postcard my great grandmother wrote to her husband (my great grandfather) during World War I, sometime after he left for battle. It was postmarked August 16, 1915. My mother also pointed out a phrase, written more rigidly in red ink in the blank space near the postmark stamp. One word was decipherable: “gefallen” with the date August 25, 1915 just below. Gefallen. The German word for “killed in action.”

I imagined my great grandmother writing that postcard by candlelight, after getting her five young daughters settled into bed for the night.  I imagined the care it took to write in such detailed, beautiful German script (known as Sütterlin). I imagined her taking the time to be sure the ink had dried. And I imagined her slipping the postcard into a cloth mailbag, picturing it arriving in her husband’s warm hands. 

While I don’t know the details of how the situation actually occurred, I also imagined how she must have felt upon receiving the returned postcard, a love letter transformed into a death notice. I imagine how she went about her life after that moment. How that experience transformed her, made her reach inside and embrace the strength she didn’t know she had. I imagine how that strength was transferred to her five young daughters, now fatherless, in war-torn Germany. “War hero” meant something very different to me from that moment on.

After learning of that story, I never looked at the photograph of my great grandmother the same again. Her body, once a graceful representation of female beauty, conveyed power and pride. The scratches on the surface and the torn corners were less of a nuisance from that point. Instead, I related to them as footprints tracing a long, arduous journey. I wondered where the photograph had been and who had held it. I wondered about photographs that I didn’t have access to and others that were never taken.
But that wasn’t all that changed for me. I also began to relate to myself differently. As I grew up, I felt the strength of my great grandmother inside myself. Knowing her story and imagining what her life experiences were like empowered me to know I too was strong. I wasn’t just a “pretty little girl;” I was her great granddaughter. And my mother was her granddaughter. And my grandmother was one of those little girls tucked in bed as she wrote that postcard. While I have had many empowering experiences in my lifetime, this story opened a new way of understanding where I came from, who I was, and what I could do.  

Personal photographs are like treasures. They document our past and connect us with those who lived before us. However, the stories we associate with a photograph construct the way we relate to it and the way we remember and value the subject(s) rendered upon its surface.
In our digital age, any photograph — no matter how old — can become a liquid photograph, enabling us to share stories with the world through blog posts, like this one. This is an ideal strategy for engaging students in the process of writing, because the process of writing fades away and becomes invisible when our efforts are focused on sharing a story. Last year, I sent my online community college students on a “Photo Quest.” One of the topics from which they chose was titled, “Who am I?” This topic’s task was to excavate a story from their past through a conversation with a family member about an old photograph (an alternative topic was provided for students who did not have access to family photographs and/or family members). One of my students shared this story about a photograph of him and his sister, each clutching a toy. The photograph led to a conversation with his mom, which unearthed a story about his first day of kindergarten in Tijuana, Mexico. Before that Photo Quest, he had no memory of attending kindergarten in Mexico. That event was, as he wrote, “something that was just swept under the rug, not really a secret, but just never mentioned and eventually just forgotten.” 

Connecting our formalized curriculum with our students’ real-world experiences is fundamental to ensure learning is relevant. Using old photographs to connect students with the past is not only a great strategy for engaging students, it’s also way to excavate the marginalized stories from the past that will otherwise be forgotten.

An Inspiration: Make Writing … Digital

Search around those old boxes or file cabinets, and dig out some old photographs. What stories simmer beneath the surface of the visual? What stories do they tell? What stories can you tell about the stories they tell? Consider perusing the United States Library of Congress collections of historical photographs, or find out if your own country of origin has its own collection. What do photos say about the country?

We hope you will share your work across the various Digital Writing Month spaces that you inhabit. That could be right here at the Digital Writing Month blog; at your own blog or writing space; on Twitter with the #DigiWriMo hashtag; in the DigiWriMo Google Plus Community; at the DigiWriMo Facebook page; or wherever you find yourself writing digitally.

Made Contact! 2

 

As with the previous week I was to make contact with members of the group I was studying which was the LGBTQ community and they have been so gracious enough to contact  me back. One thing I am getting from this week rather than last week is a much bigger response, not in how many people responded but in how long the response was. people gave me lengthy paragraphs, and I am very grateful for them. One person even told me I could use their name if it helped. I declined saying that I am keeping everything confidential, but it was great to know that people are willing to give their name. I’m not sure a lot of people would be willing to do that. Also, I thanked those previously who had commented before and went on further saying that their comments were really beneficial to my class.

Of course I asked the same question as the previous week, “Hello friends :) I am a university student learning about the magnitude of social media, and I have a question for you all. What does it mean to you as a member and/or ally of the LGBTQ community to be able to connect with others on social media?” The responses were as follows: “Social media means literally everything to me it isn’t just a place to update media and what’s new but a place to meet new people and make friends we find people who understand what your going through when people you know can’t quite catch what they need to social media is where I can relax and know that there’s people out there who face the same problems as I do or anyone of the LGBTQ community would,” “…being part of the lgbt doesn’t change my view of social media unless social media’s topic is about lgbt. then the things the people say and do will change that answer. and if social media is attacking lgbt then to me it means social media is homophobic or just avoids problem so it makes them ignorant or or they haven;t been educated/educated well so they say what they were taught to not taught….” “Social media means the same to me as it would anyone else. There are things that are offensive, things that are funny, and things I relate to. Just like everyone else.”

I feel as though this week’s theme of comments back is of one in which if social media has to do with the LGBTQ community then it is enriching. Furthermore, the lgbtq community is like any other community. It has its ups and downs, funny posts, trolls, relatable stuff, cool pictures, countless memes. It is a community in which people can get together and interact with one another, it just so happens they are all apart of the LGBTQ community. That’s all.

Engage 3

So again I engaged in social media. Via Twitter and facebook on the topic of higher education affordability . I tweeted to politicians @JebBush @HilaryClinton, and @SenSanders. I also commented or Replied to posts I saw on the topic. But to no avail how ever I did get a favorite on a post on starbucks paying for their employees education.  that I tweeted to a friend. College rather higher education in other countries is now a popular topic because of the education reform strong hold  in South Africa its been discussed for at least a week. And the starving students and strike going on at Missouri U had a few days. I feel as though these events are being looked at and talked about but not thoroughly being discussed. The ideas for improvement are there but everyone is so hush hush about it. I came across a post that had ideas and ways to make college affordable. But its only a program for certain schools. The should just branch out. I also found a  photo  on loans.

How Did the Commenting Go?

This week we were asked to try and engage with the organization or group that was our topic. My topic is health care. Last week I tried commenting on one of the posts from the organization that I chose for my topic.

This week I decided to send this organization, World Health Organization (WHO), a direct message. I told them that I was a student and that I am reaching out to them for a project. My topic is health care and I found their organization to be really helpful and interesting. So I asked them “How has social media influenced or helped spread action for your cause or need?”. I did not get a response. What I did get was one like from a man who went to Colombio University. That was the only like I received and the only contact that I got a break through from. I tried commenting on more posts throughout the week and liking more things, but all to no avail.

Maybe these people have more on their mind than some girl who has to do some project. Or they are working on some super deadly disease and trying to cure people who have it. Or even trying to help the refugees or the people in Africa with a disease. It could be anyone of those things actually. They are a pretty active group. Today they posted about the war in Syria and “The cost of War” and they posted about getting people vaccinated in Africa for Meningitis A.

If you care to check this organization out here is a link WHO

My blog 2015-11-10 23:54:59

As the challenge remains the same, I’ve came to a realization. For weeks now I have been attempting to come up with a way for me to be good, even great at being a good participator in my social issue. This Syrian refugee crisis has been one of the worst in history, and here we are living peacefully. For me to come to this realization I had to sit and think of what my true passion is. I like to consider myself an artist and love photography.
Normally I use my Instagram to display photos I’ve took and places I’ve gone. I’ve never used it to be active on a particular social issue. This week, I decided to do so.
I did this for the reason that I looked for something that has been a part of me for so long, and mixing it with something that is currently happening in the world.
I’ve always wanted to travel and capture many scenes.
It’s so interesting to me how this Transfer Year class assignment has engaged me and motivated me to even consider traveling to make this issue known much more tha it currently is. We live, in peace. We have a place we can call home. Unfortunately it is not the same for these refugees stacked in camps with low resources.
If it were our families we would do anything in our power for that injustice to end. We may not to do the same in this case, but I strongly encourage all to try. Anything helps, from simply #UNiV349DCspreading the word on this issue.