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FETAL SURGERY: THE NEW NORMAL

FETAL SURGERY: THE NEW NORMAL

ANDREA MONGLERL

It’s 1981, and a woman, seven months pregnant with twins, knows that one of her unborn babies will probably die. He has a blocked urinary tract, a life-threatening condition.

But he doesn’t die. Instead, something unprecedented happens. A doctor in San Francisco opens the woman’s abdomen and performs the first successful fetal surgery. The baby is born, leads a normal childhood and grows up.

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RISKS TIED TO HEARTBURN DRUGS

RISKS TIED TO HEARTBURN DRUGS

BY TAMARA BHANDARI, KRISTINA SAUERWEIN

Millions of americans take prescription drugs called PPIs, or proton pump inhibitors, to treat heartburn, ulcers and other gastrointestinal problems. And many of these PPIs are widely available as over-the-counter drugs under brand names that include Prevacid, Prilosec, Nexium and Protonix. While ppis are effective at reducing stomach acid, they have also been linked to health problems, including low magnesium levels, bone fractures and the gut infection C. Difficile.

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GUT MICROBES VS INFLUENZA

GUT MICROBES VS INFLUENZA

BY JIM DRYDEN

Microbes that live in the gut don’t just digest food. They also have far-reaching effects on the immune system. A new study shows that a particular gut microbe can prevent severe flu infections in mice, likely by breaking down naturally occurring compounds called flavonoids. These compounds are commonly found in foods such as black tea, red wine and blueberries.

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GATHERING EVIDENCE

GATHERING EVIDENCE

BY ANDREA MONGLER
ILLUSTRATION FROM NLM/SCIENCE SOURCE/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY

For thousands of years, bloodletting was a widely accepted and commonly used treatment for a variety of illnesses. The practice stemmed from the belief that disease was caused by an imbalance of the four bodily fluids, or “humors”: phlegm, black bile, yellow bile and blood. Doctors and their patients believed that restoring health required a rebalancing of those humors through the draining of “excess” blood from the body.

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TREATING PAIN IN THE E.D.

TREATING PAIN IN THE E.D.

BY CONNIE MITCHELL

Pain is a constant in most any hospital emergency department, or e.d., and its treatment and management is a continual challenge. Health care teams working in these high-pressure environments see a high volume of patients with everything from life-threatening trauma to relatively minor health care needs. And they are on the front line of pain control for tens of thousands of people each year. Our nation’s concern about opioid use and the related search for non-addictive pain interventions is one force behind a new program at barnes-jewish hospital: P.T. (Physical Therapy) in the E.D.

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