Tag: health

  • First Turkish Total Artificial Heart Patient Discharged Using Freedom(R) Portable Driver

    First Turkish Total Artificial Heart Patient Discharged Using Freedom(R) Portable Driver

    First Turkish Total Artificial Heart Patient Discharged Using Freedom® Portable Driver

    45-Year-Old Father of Three Discharged From Florence Nightingale Hospital in Istanbul to Wait for Matching Donor Heart at Home With Family

    TUCSON, AZ–(Marketwire – Jun 22, 2011) – SynCardia Systems, Inc., manufacturer of the SynCardia temporary Total Artificial Heart, announced today that Florence Nightingale Hospital in Istanbul has discharged Turkey’s first Total Artificial Heart patient to wait for a matching donor heart at home using the Freedom® portable driver. Weighing 13.5 pounds, the Freedom driver is the world’s first wearable portable driver designed to power SynCardia’s Total Artificial Heart both inside and outside the hospital.

    “Initially, we had concerns about switching our patient to the Freedom driver because he is really a big guy,” said surgeon Prof. Dr. Deniz Suha Kucukaksu. “However, our patient experienced no differences with this wearable driver. We are excited to be able to discharge him with his Total Artificial Heart. The Freedom driver is so powerful that he can live a near normal life outside of the hospital while waiting for transplantation under safe conditions.”

    Omer Bayrak, 45, had been suffering from congestive heart failure since 2001. Four years ago, he underwent cardiac resynchronization therapy and received an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD). Last year, he was hospitalized 11 times for inotropic support.

    For 15 days prior to receiving SynCardia’s Total Artificial Heart, Mr. Bayrak had been in the cardiac intensive care unit. He was on the urgent list for heart transplantation but his cardiac function continued to worsen. As a result, he became the hospital’s first patient to receive SynCardia’s Total Artificial Heart.

    “I can do almost everything with my Freedom driver,” said Mr. Bayrak, who was discharged from the hospital on May 20. “Although I have no biological heart, I still have emotions. Before this illness period, I was against organ donation, but now I understand the importance of it.”

    The Freedom portable driver is CE approved for use in Europe and undergoing an FDA-approved Investigational Device Exemption (IDE) clinical study in the U.S. SynCardia recognizes and thanks Ufuk Yaranli and Natura Medikal Urunler Ltd., the Turkish distributor for the Total Artificial Heart, for their commitment and ongoing support of Florence Nightingale Hospital.

    About the SynCardia temporaryTotal Artificial Heart

    SynCardia Systems, Inc. (Tucson, AZ) is the privately-held manufacturer of the world’s first and only FDA, Health Canada and CE approved Total Artificial Heart. Originally used as a permanent replacement heart, the Total is currently approved as a bridge to transplant for people dying from end-stage biventricular heart failure. More than 900 implants account for more than 210 patient years of life.

    Similar to a heart transplant, SynCardia’s Total Artificial Heart replaces both failing heart ventricles and the four heart valves. It is the only device that eliminates the symptoms and source of end-stage biventricular failure.

    In March 2011, Fast Company magazine ranked SynCardia #20 among the World’s 50 Most Innovative Companies “for giving mobility to artificial heart recipients.”

    via First Turkish Total Artificial Heart Patient Discharged Using Freedom(R) Portable Driver.

  • Health and Dental Tourism: What’s Happening in Hungary, Turkey & Oklahoma?

    Health and Dental Tourism: What’s Happening in Hungary, Turkey & Oklahoma?

    In Hungary, the dental tourism profits reach a stunning 227 million Euros annually, which means that the country has got as much as 40% share of the entire European tourism market. However, Hungary sets the stakes even higher, and wants to achieve a figure two times higher in the following three years.

    dental tourism hungary turkey oklahomaAccording to the statement of Viktor Orban, Hungary’s prime minister, dental tourism is what will set the economy of the country back on track. There will be made huge investments in the dental care field, in order to be abler to offer even higher standard care for the patients that choose Hungary as their primary spot. Moreover, Hungarian dentists are going to be kept at home by being offered incentives.

    On the other hand, Turkey has also become quite a favored dental tourism spot by foreign patients. Even medical and dental tourists from the US are traveling to Turkey for quality and cheap dental care.

    Between the years 2010 and 2014 there is estimated an increase of 26% in the field of medical & dental tourism on the market of Turkey. The government is spending a lot of money on marketing purposes for the country, while the costs of these medical services are indeed low but of high quality. In the private sector, there are also made some hefty investments, which will attract even more patients to the dental offices from Turkey. US medical travelers are also attracted by the country because Turkish hospitals have affiliations with several reputable American hospitals, such as John Hopkins or Harvard.

    The state of Oklahoma is becoming a more and more favored medical spot for oncology patients. There are offered proton therapy treatments which are available in very few regions across the US, and this fact will attract even more patients that need qualitative care in the field of cancerous diseases.

    In Costa Rica, things go from “dormant” to “robust” extremely quickly. While a few years ago, Costa Rica has been a popular medical tourist spot only for cosmetic surgery, now the country has developed a very strong healthcare system. Now, more and more medical tourists seek high quality care in fields such as oncology, cardiology, spinal cord surgery or orthopedics- because the prices are lower, and the quality of care extremely professional.

    If we have a look at the rest of the Latin America, we’ll notice a change in better as well. A couple of years ago, in Mexico or the Central Americas, there did not exist internationally accredited health facilities. Today, there are 14 Latin American health facilities operating, which have received their accreditation from the same commissions that offer accreditation to the famous US hospitals.

    The facilities are spread throughout Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Mexico – but following closely behind are El Salvador and Panama as well.

    According to Ian Youngman, researcher and writer who specializes in health care issues and health insurance in general, the fate of the medical and dental travel will go from global to local. Increasing costs for gas, accommodation, plus paying for treatments, will have patients choosing health facilities that are in the nearby of their location (US citizens seeking care within US, while Europeans will be traveling to countries within Europe).

    via Health and Dental Tourism: What’s Happening in Hungary, Turkey & Oklahoma? – Dental Health Magazine.

  • Cellphones harm memory, pregnancy, brain cells–in rats, mice & rabbits. Maybe.

    Cellphones harm memory, pregnancy, brain cells–in rats, mice & rabbits. Maybe.

    By Melissa Healy, Los Angeles Times/ For the Booster Shots Blog

    May 23, 2011, 7:38 p.m.

    Steady exposure to the electromagnetic radiation given off by cellphones during use may disrupt fetal development, disturb memory and weaken the barrier that protects the brain from environmental toxins, says a welter of new research being presented this week in Istanbul, Turkey.

    The authors of the studies, published in the past two years, highly preliminary and conducted on rabbits, mice and rats, suggested that the non-ionizing radiation emitted by cellphones and the base stations that broadcast cellphone signals may fundamentally damage cells by means other than the heat that they generate. That is a highly controversial assertion, because scientists have asserted that the only kind of radiation that causes cancer and DNA damage is ionizing radiation such as that emitted by nuclear material. The microwave radiation emitted by working cellphones simply does not have the power to scramble DNA or disrupt cell function, they say.

    The studies were conducted by scientists working under the umbrella of the Environmental Health Trust, a nonprofit organization devoted to identifying and controlling environmental health risks. The EHT has been especially active in showing that non-ionizing radiation emitted by cellphones is damaging to humans.

    In one of the studies reviewed in Istanbul, mice exposed to two hours per day of radio frequency emissions from a transmitting cellphone were less able to to learn and rerun mazes, suggesting that cellphone radiation might impair spatial memory — the kind of recall that helps us navigate from place to place. A second study found that the barrier between bloodstream and brain that protects the latter from most toxins became more permeable when male rats (although not females) were exposed to 20 minutes of radio frequency radiation such as that emitted by cellphones. A third study found that exposing pregnant and non-pregnant rabbits to six minutes a day of electromagnetic radiation led to the release of “secondary messengers, such as free radicals,” which in turn destroyed DNA and fat molecules. (The babies born after such exposures, however, were fine).

    The Istanbul meeting, convened by the Environmental Health Trust and Gazi University, comes a day before the International Agency for Research on Cancer — an agency of the World Health Organization — is to meet to decide whether research has demonstrated that radio frequency electromagnetic fields emitted by mobile phones are potentially cancer-causing. The agency has overseen a 10-year, $14-million epidemiological study called the Interphone Study Group, an international consortium of researchers that set out to determine whether cellphone use is linked to increased rates of gliomas or meningiomas (both forms of brain cancer), parotid gland cancer or cancer of the acoustic nerve.

    The Interphone Study Group’s findings, released in May 2010, failed to establish that mobile phone use raises an individual’s risk for any of the cancers. But after the international effort turned up a troubling but ambiguous signal that brain cancer was more common among the heaviest cellphone users they surveyed, the group decided further research on the subject was “merited.”

    via Cellphones harm memory, pregnancy, brain cells–in rats, mice & rabbits. Maybe. – latimes.com.

  • Turkey’s Universal Hospital Chain to Get $140 Million Investment

    Turkey’s Universal Hospital Chain to Get $140 Million Investment

    By Ercan Ersoy

    Asia Debt Management Capital of Hong Kong, PGGM NV and the World Bank’s International Finance Corp. agreed to invest $140 million for a 26 percent stake in Turkish hospital chain Universal Saglik Yatirimlari Holding AS.

    Universal, which runs 18 hospitals in 12 cities, will use the proceeds to invest in more sites in Turkey, especially in smaller towns, Chairman Azmi Ofluoglu said in an e-mailed statement from the four companies. They didn’t say how much of a stake each of the buyers will acquire. Istanbul-based Daruma Corporate Finance advised the seller in the deal, they said.

    Turkey’s economic growth is attracting investors in the country’s burgeoning health-care industry. The economy expanded 8.9 percent last year, the fastest pace since 2005, and may grow 4.6 percent this year, according to April 11 estimates from the Washington-based International Monetary Fund.

    Abraaj Capital Ltd., the Middle East’s biggest private equity firm, bought 54 percent of hospital operator Acibadem Saglik Hizmetleri & Ticaret AS for about $606 million in 2007 and 2008. Carlyle Group, the world’s second-biggest private equity firm, bought 40 percent of hospital operator Medical Park Saglik Grubu AS for an undisclosed price in 2009. Argus Capital Partners and Qatar First Investment Bank last year purchased 40 percent of hospital chain Memorial Health Group.

    To contact the reporter on this story: Ercan Ersoy in Istanbul at eersoy@bloomberg.net

    To contact the editor responsible for this story: Benedikt Kammel at bkammel@bloomberg.net

    via Turkey’s Universal Hospital Chain to Get $140 Million Investment – Bloomberg.

  • Erdogan Seeks Re-Election as Turkish Health-Care Plan Trumps Headscarves – Bloomberg

    Erdogan Seeks Re-Election as Turkish Health-Care Plan Trumps Headscarves – Bloomberg

    erdoganPrime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is pushing out a nationwide system of personal healthcare that may win him more votes in next year’s election than all his rows with Turkey’s secular-minded generals.

    Next month Erdogan’s government says it will complete a network of family doctors — one for every 3,500 Turks. That’s a first for the European Union membership candidate where infant mortality is 17 in a thousand, the highest in the 33-nation Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

    The overhaul is the latest step in a drive toward universal healthcare that has won record approval ratings. It’s key to Erdogan’s bid to win a third term, explaining his willingness to stretch the budget as medical spending is set to rise five times faster than overall costs next year. The World Bank says outlays are manageable, and pollsters say the benefits they buy matter more to most Turks than Erdogan’s bid to rein in the military and ease curbs on religious symbols such as the headscarf.

    via Erdogan Seeks Re-Election as Turkish Health-Care Plan Trumps Headscarves – Bloomberg.