SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Biotech / Medical : Chromatics Color Sciences International. Inc; CCSI -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JanyBlueEyes who wrote (4719)10/19/1998 11:19:00 PM
From: Gerald F Bunch  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5736
 
Jbird

"In the memoir "Boy," Roald Dahl wrote of how, when he was very small, his tonsils were pinched out, in the doctor's office, without benefit of any anesthetic"

Iwonder when this happened? Probably in the 1930's. I had my tonsils removed in 1949, and it was a very pleasant experience. when I awoke from the anesthesia, I was very hungry and let it be known in no uncertain terms. subsequentially the nurse's brought me chicken broth and ice cream. My throat was tender but I was hungry and I wolfed it downn. What all this boils down to, if a child can't handle a little heel prick. This country is going to end up being a bunch(no pun intended) of little momma's babys pansy's because of all the liberal bleeding hearts

GB



To: JanyBlueEyes who wrote (4719)10/20/1998 5:15:00 PM
From: USRX888  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5736
 
Hows your buddy Skipard...janybird...

Don't hear much from him lately.......What happened to the best company in 33 years of working in the stock market......



To: JanyBlueEyes who wrote (4719)10/24/1998 5:19:00 PM
From: JanyBlueEyes  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 5736
 
Transcript WNBC-TV New York City - Broadcast On 10/16/98

Dr. Max Gomez reporting:

If you've ever had a baby, especially a preemie, there's a reasonable chance your child suffered a problem called newborn jaundice and maybe even spent a little time under some special UV lights to treat the problem. You might also remember the painful blood tests your little tyke had to endure. But now there's a better way.

Meet little Claire Siege. She and her twin brother Benjamin are less than forty-eight hours old, spending a few days in the intensive care unit because they were born about a month prematurely. It's Claire, though, who has a slight problem, one that affects many newborns, especially preemies.

Claire is slightly jaundiced because her liver's not quite ready to process recycled red blood cells. That leads to the build-up of a metabolic by-product called bilirubin, which can cause brain damage.

Dr. Ian Holzman (Mt. Sinai Med Ctr): They get mental retardation, hearing loss, funny movements. Not common, but it is something that we used to see a lot with bilirubins that were very high.

Dr. Gomez: Fortunately, something as simple as ultraviolet light converts bilirubin into a form that can be excreted by the body until the baby's liver is able to do the job itself. But in the meantime, the bilirubin level has to be monitored and that means this, painful heal sticks that draw blood as often as three times a day. Claire doesn't like it and either do Mom and Dad.

(Picture shows baby crying while getting blood drawn from heel)

Amy Siege (Claire's Mother): It's hard because you can tell it's painful for them and we rather they didn't have to do it. But you know it's for the best. They need to know this information.

Dr. Gomez: Now compare the heal stick to this, a handheld device called the TLc-BiliTest that has just been approved by the FDA and can actually measure bilirubin levels within seconds by using a photographic flash. No pain, no blood, and the information can be downloaded into a computer to track the baby's progress.

(Picture shows a sleeping baby being checked with the BiliTest)

Dr. Holzman: So it'll cut out a blood test, we'll be able to screen more babies, and I think the good part will be that we'll have much less risk of a baby ever getting kernicterus.

Scott Siege (Claire's Father): If it gives us the information that we need without having to stick either of them with a needle, then I think that's great.

Dr. Gomez: The BiliTest was tested on more than two thousand babies to demonstrate that it was accurate for newborns of all races and birth weights, both premature and full term, and even in babies whose skin color changed due somewhat to the time spent under the UV lights.

And you can learn more about this and other medical stories on our website. It's located at newschannel4.com. Again, that is newschannel4.com. The BiliTest should be available by the end of the year, so we should be seeing and hearing a lot fewer tears and crying in the newborn nursery.

Dean Shepherd, anchor: You feel so sorry for them.