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Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Mirrors ease Cambodian amputees' phantom pain



Pov Sopheak lost his left leg in a landmine blast in 1990. Yet some nights the pain in his "left foot" is so bad he cannot sleep. Like many amputees, he suffers from phantom pain.
Now, after two decades of agony, the Cambodian is embracing an innovative technique that promises relief simply by using a mirror to trick the brain into "moving" the missing limb, allowing the pain to subside.
Sitting in a chair and holding a full-length mirror against his leg, Sopheak, 50, smiles self-consciously as some two dozen physical therapists gather around him.
It is their first mirror therapy training session at the Cambodia Trust, a rehabilitation charity for amputees in the central province of Kampong Chhnang.
But Sopheak visibly relaxes as he follows the instructions of visiting Canadian trainer Stephen Sumner to wriggle his right toes and keep his eyes on his foot's reflected image, super-imposed on the missing one.
"It's a new sensation. It's strange but in a good way," the former soldier, who now works as a security guard, told AFP. "I see my leg in the mirror and I feel happy, like my mind is at ease."
Sumner explains that the reflection of the intact limb can fool the brain into "seeing" two healthy legs, allowing it to once again send command signals to the phantom leg -- signals that would previously come back distressed because the limb was missing.
"Looking in the mirror, the brain suddenly enables you to move your phantom foot and do everything the real foot is doing," said Sumner, 51, who lost his left leg in a hit-and-run motorbike accident eight years ago.
"The brain just wants to be tricked. It's dying for release."
The theory, which also works to ease phantom arms out of painful or cramped positions, was developed in 1995 by neuroscientist Vilayanur S. Ramachandran from the University of California, San Diego, named as one of the world's most influential people by Time magazine in 2011.
But it only started taking off in the United States, Canada and Europe in the last few years -- its use boosted by soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan with missing limbs, neuroscientist Eric Altschuler, a mirror therapy expert who works with Ramachandran, told AFP.
At the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, mirror therapy is now routinely offered to amputees.
The neurological trickery also reached a wider audience after it featured in a 2009 episode of "House", a popular US medical drama.
But it is still largely unknown in Cambodia, a small country with tens of thousands of amputees as a result of traffic accidents, disease and, in most cases, landmines left over from decades of civil war.
Sumner, who says his own bouts of phantom pain felt like "lightning bolts through my foot", is determined to spread the message.
Backed by the Canadian non-profit End The Pain Project, he is training dozens of physicians and amputees across Cambodia and, crucially in this impoverished nation, handing out free mirrors -- full-length ones for legs, half-length ones for arms.
Phantom pain is thought to affect around 80 percent of all amputees and there are no drugs that can cure it, but Sumner stressed that the mirror method was not a quick fix.
"Mirror therapy won't cure you immediately. You have to keep at it for at least four weeks," he told the Cambodia Trust therapists, recommending two 10-minute sessions a day of flexing one's hand or foot.
It could even help double amputees.
"Even a simple prosthesis on one limb can work in the mirror. Even that's enough. The brain wants to be healed so much," Sumner said.
Sopheak said he hoped to keep up the routine and finally ease his suffering, which he said "feels like my leg is shaking" followed by a sharp pain in his phantom little toe and big toe.
Until now, he has tried to deal with his pain with diversions such as drumming or singing, by massaging his stump or by taking the occasional pain killer, to little effect.
While experts say mirror therapy can be a useful tool for many amputees, Altschuler, an associate professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation at the New Jersey Medical School, said it was important not to give "false hope".
"Nothing works for everybody," he said by telephone from the United States.
"The mirror is very helpful for movement-type problems like spasms or a clenched fist. It does not work for burning pain, for instance."
Still, Altschuler, who has just returned from training physical therapists in Haiti, said he was pleased the technique had reached Cambodia.
"It has the potential to have tremendous utility," he said. "Mirror therapy is inexpensive and easy. Patients can do it by themselves, allowing them to take control of their own health. Any mirror will do."
(c) 2012 AFP
"Mirrors ease Cambodian amputees' phantom pain." February 27th, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-02-mirrors-ease-cambodian-amputees-phantom.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

Looking at links between depression and insomnia




Looking at links between depression and insomniaPeople with both insomnia and depression who have found anti-depressants ineffective can draw hope from a new study currently recruiting in Melbourne.
Led by Doctorate of Clinical Psychology candidate Damon Ashworth and Associate Professor Shantha Rajaratnam of Monash University's School of Psychology and Psychiatry, the study is further examining the well-established link between sleep disorders and depression.
"New information is suggesting that, in some cases, insomnia pre-dates and leads to the depressive episode," Mr. Ashworth said.
"Even if the depression is treated, with anti-depressants or other methods, the sleep disorder remains. The pre-existing, untreated insomnia may actually hamper efforts to treat the depression, and can lead to relapse, even in cases where there has been an improvement." 
The current trial, a collaboration between Monash University, Monash Medical Centre and the Melbourne Sleep Disorder Centre, is seeking people who have not experienced as significant an improvement as they had hoped from anti-depressants.
It aims to see whether treating patients' insomnia lessens the severity of their depression.
"We know that insomnia and depression are highly interlinked. Previously, research has found that treating both sleep disorders and depression at the same time was effective. However, it wasn't clear which treatment was leading to the improvement," Mr. Ashworth said. 
"With this trial we are trying to better understand the relationship between depression and insomnia and develop a new, holistic treatment approach that will ultimately lead to the best long-term outcomes for patients."
Participants in the study would need to monitor their sleeping patterns and undertake four fifty-minute sessions of sleep education or Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I).
The CBT-I sessions would cover why insomnia occurs, behavioral and cognitive techniques to combat it, as well as relaxation sessions. Mr Ashworth advised that all these techniques have been shown to be helpful in dealing with sleep disorders.
More information: If you are interested in taking part in the study, please see the study website for more information and participation criteria. 
Provided by Monash University
"Looking at links between depression and insomnia." February 27th, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-02-links-depression-insomnia.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

SNOW ART --- ARTE CON NIEVE..
















































World’s Top 20 Most Expensive Watches





Diamonds, platinum, fancy tourbillons, chronographs, and perpetual calendars are only a few of the features watchmakers use to create the world’s rarest and most expensive timepieces. Scroll down to see the list of the 20 most expensive watches of the world.

20. Hublot
Million $ Black Caviar Bang

Price: $1,000,000
The case, crown dial, and Hublot’s Black Caviar Bang clasp are encrusted in baguette-cut black diamonds. The watch, which has no numbers on the face, has 544 diamonds, a total of 34.5 carats. It is 18-carat white gold and has an adjustable leather strap. In 2009, it won the Grand Prix de Genève Jewellery Watch prize. Founded in 1980, Hublot is a Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton subsidiary.


19. Jacob & Co.
Crystal Tourbillion

Price: $900,000
The 18 carat white gold case of the Crystal Tourbillion is covered in 17.48 carats of baguette diamonds and has a transparent skeleton tourbillion dial. The piece is finished with an alligator band with a 2.22 carat baguette diamond buckle. Jacob & Co. manufactured 18 white gold Crystal Tourbillion pieces, available in the New York City boutique.


18. Audemars Piguet
Jules Audemars Grande Complication

Price: $780,600
Audemars Piguet’s one-of-a-kind, self-winding skeleton watch has a titanium case and features a perpetual calendar indicating the hours, minutes, day, date, week, moon phases, month, and leap years. There is also a minute repeater and chronograph. It has a crocodile leather strap. The Jules Audemars Grande Complication is available exclusively at the watchmaker’s New York City boutique.


17. Breguet
Classique 5349 Grande Complication

Price: $755,000
This piece has twin rotating tourbillons in a platinum case lined with baguette-cut diamonds. The dial is pavéed with more diamonds. It contains more than 570 parts and has three patents to protect its “superior precision and technological mastery,” according to Breguet, which is today owned by Swatch.


16. Omega
Constellation Baguette

Price: $708,742
The one-of-a-kind piece, available at the Omega boutique in Geneva, shines with 459 Top Wesselton diamonds, totalling just over 30 carats. There are 146 baguette and trapeze diamonds on the dial, completely covering the 18-carat white gold case. Omega is owned by Swatch Group.


15. Vacheron Constantin
Malte Tourbillion Regulator

Price: $700,000
Part of Vacheron Constantin’s High Jewelry collection, the Malte Tourbillion Regulator has 263 baguette-cut diamonds in the dial and 274 baguette-cut diamonds in the case. It features a Tourbillion and is finished on a black leather strap. The case is in the Malte collection's classic tonneau (or barrel) shape. Founded in 1755, Geneva’s Vacheron Constantin is one of the world’s oldest watchmakers. Today, it is part of the Richemont Group.


14. Greubel Forsey
Quadruple Tourbillion

Price: $690,000
A total of 531 parts are used for two separate double tourbillons. This complex watch has an asymmetrical platinum case and an alligator leather strap. Founded by watchmakers Robert Greubel and Stephen Forsey at Baselworld in 2004, the company (in La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland) offers two and four billion mechanisms in the same watch case.


13. de Grisogono
Meccanico dG S25D

Price: $590,000
Founded in Geneva in 1993 by Fawaz Gruosi, de Grisogono recently launched a Meccanico dG set with baguette diamonds at this year’s Baselworld. This Meccanico dG, of which there are 20 units, was designed in three variants: baguette diamonds (in photo), white pavé diamonds, and black pavé diamonds. The version featured above, made of 18 carat pink gold, is set with 126 baguette-cut white diamonds. It displays two time zones and has analog and digital displays and a power reserve indicator. It is also water-resistant to a depth of 30 meters.


12. A. Lange & Söhne
Tourbograph “Pour le Mérite”

Price: $508,900
Honey gold was used for the case of this limited edition watch, of which A. Lange & Söhne has manufactured only 50 units. The watch has a one-minute tourbillion as well as a double chronograph. The Tourbograph “Pour le Mérite” can be purchased in New York City, Dresden, Shanghai, and Tokyo. Like Glashütte Original, the company is based in the former East Germany. After the Soviet occupation, the region’s once-thriving watchmaking industry foundered. Lange, founded in 1845, shut down and was revived in 1990. Today it is part of the Richemont Group.


11. Chopard
Secret

Price: $508,000
This watch has a square pavé-set diamond dial and frame inside a case composed of brilliant, square and baguette-cut diamonds (19 carats) on the satin strap and baguette-cut diamond clasp. Chopard has manufactured only two Secret watches so far. Geneva-based Chopard, which was founded in 1860, is still privately owned.

10. Montblanc
Grand Tourbillion Heures Mysterieuses in platinum

Price: $365,750
Although once known primarily for its signature fountain pens, Richemont-owned Montblanc has recently transformed its brand into that of a jeweller and watchmaker. Its most expensive watch is the Grand Tourbillion Heures Mysterieuses in platinum, of which only one has been made. This tourbillion is available in 18-carat white gold (in photo), limited to eight pieces at $319,000 each. The 18-carat red gold version, also limited to eight pieces, is $302,500.


9. Concord
C1 Tourbillion Gravity

Price: $320,000
One of the unique features of this watch, which has an 18-carat white gold case, is the second display on the side of the tourbillon carriage. The C1 Tourbillion Gravity also features a flyback chronograph and 84-hour power reserve and is water resistant to 30 meters. Although founded in Biel, Switzerland, in 1908, Concord today is owned by Movado Group, based in Paramus, N.J.


8. IWC
Grande Complication

Price: $318,000
IWC first launched the Grande Complication about 20 years ago. It combines a perpetual calendar with moon phase, minute repeater, and chronograph with an automatic movement. This version has a platinum case and bracelet. The Richemont-owned IWC recently redesigned it in a Portuguese-style case ($220,567). A total of 50 pieces are produced annually.


7. Breitling
Grande Complication

Price: $280,716
Unveiled at Baselworld 2010, this pocket watch has a perpetual calendar displaying the date, day, month, leap years, moon phases and a minute repeater that strikes the hours, quarters, and minutes on demand. It comprises almost 700 parts. The case, made of 18-carat yellow gold, features an engraving of Walter Owen Bentley, founder of Bentley Motors, one of Breitling’s partners.


6. Panerai
L’Astronomo Luminor Tourbillion 1950 Equation of Time in rose gold

Price: $235,000
Recently presented at the 2010 Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie in Geneva as a tribute to Galileo Galilei, the L’Astronomo will be made in a limited number of about 30. While ordering the piece, clients must specify their hometown, which is engraved on the back near a rotating sky chart of the city. The dial also displays the sunrise and sunset times of the chosen city. Panerai is owned by Richemont.


5. Porsche Design
Indicator P´6910 in rose gold

Price: $225,000
Made of about 800 individual parts and developed by 12 engineers and watchmakers, the Porsche Design Indicator P´6910 is the world’s first chronograph with a mechanical digital stopwatch function display. It can record up to 9 hours and 59 minutes. In 2008, the Indicator, available in three design variants, was presented in rose gold with PVD-coated titanium.


4. Glashütte Original
Julius Assmann 4 in white gold

Price: $161,000
Glashütte Original introduced this piece for the Assmann edition in 2007. It can be worn as a wristwatch or pocket watch, featuring a unique retrograde hour display and tourbillion. The watch is also offered in red gold and rose gold ($145,000). More information is available through Tourbillion Boutiques in New York, Las Vegas, and Los Angeles. Glashütte Original is one of the few watchmakers in the former East Germany that uses its own proprietary movements. It is owned by Switzerland’s Swatch Group.


3. JeanRichard