Active Low-Carber Forums

Active Low-Carber Forums (http://forum.lowcarber.org/index.php)
-   LC Research/Media (http://forum.lowcarber.org/forumdisplay.php?f=4)
-   -   Speaking of Slimfast... are they joining the low carb bandwagon? (http://forum.lowcarber.org/showthread.php?t=106831)

whyspers Tue, May-20-03 18:12

Speaking of Slimfast... are they joining the low carb bandwagon?
 
I ran across an interesting article and while they don't say that they have low carb products in development...it sure is interesting that they won't comment on it and say they missed the low carb bandwagon...lol. Very, very interesting :)


http://www.dailytelegraph.co.uk/mon...xfrontcity.html

L

faeriegirl Tue, May-20-03 18:16

"Its inventor, Dr Robert Atkins died from a blood clot in the brain last month at the age of 73." ??????

Lisa N Tue, May-20-03 19:01

Quote:
Originally posted by faeriegirl
"Its inventor, Dr Robert Atkins died from a blood clot in the brain last month at the age of 73." ??????


While misleading because they don't list the cause, it's techically accurate. Dr. Atkins fell and suffered a subdural hematoma (blood clot in the brain) as a result of striking his head on the sidewalk when he fell. Even though emergency surgery was performed to remove the blood clot and relieve the pressure it caused on the brain, he eventually died from the injury.

gotbeer Tue, May-20-03 19:27

The clot was NOT in his brain!
 
The error is that the clot was NOT in his brain.

Link to authors/source

Background: An acute subdural hematoma (SDH) is a rapidly clotting blood collection below the inner layer of the dura but external to the brain [emphasis added] and arachnoid membrane. Two further stages, subacute and chronic, may develop with untreated acute SDH. Each type has distinctly different clinical, pathological, and imaging characteristics.

Generally, the subacute phase begins 3-7 days after acute injury. (Surgical literature favors 3 days; radiological, 7).

The chronic phase begins about 2-3 weeks after acute injury.

Pathophysiology: Typically, low-pressure venous bleeding of bridging veins (between the cortex and venous sinuses) dissects the arachnoid away from the dura and layers out along the cerebral convexity. Cerebral injury results from direct pressure, increased intracranial pressure (ICP), or associated intraparenchymal insults.

In the subacute phase, the clotted blood liquifies. Occasionally, in the prone patient, the cellular elements layer, which can appear on CT imaging as a hematocritlike effect.

In the chronic phase, cellular elements have disintegrated, and a collection of serous fluid remains in the subdural space. In rare cases, calcification develops.

Frequency:

In the US: Frequency is related directly to the incidence of blunt head trauma. An SDH is the most common type of intracranial mass lesion, occurring in about a third of those with severe head injuries (Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS] score <9).
Mortality/Morbidity: Acute SDH is associated with high mortality and morbidity rates.

Simple SDH accounts for about half of all cases and implies that no parenchymal injury is present. Simple SDH is associated with a mortality rate of about 20%.

Complicated SDH accounts for the remaining cases and implies that parenchymal injury (eg, contusion or laceration of a cerebral hemisphere) is present. Complicated SDH is associated with a mortality rate of about 50%.

Age: The majority of SDHs are associated with age factors related to the risk of blunt head trauma. Certain age factors are related to more unusual variants of this disease.

SDH is more common in people older than 60 years. The elderly are predisposed to cerebral atrophy because they have less resilient bridging veins. Moreover, these veins can be damaged more easily in the elderly.

Since the adhesions existing in the subdural space are absent at birth and develop with aging, bilateral SDHs are more common in infants.

Interhemispheric SDHs often are associated with child abuse.


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 00:47.

Copyright © 2000-2024 Active Low-Carber Forums @ forum.lowcarber.org
Powered by: vBulletin, Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.