Archive for November, 2015

Update On Gordie Howe (Now 87) – Feeling Happy and Healthy

Tuesday, November 24th, 2015

By Mike G. Morreale – NHL.com Staff Writer

NEW YORK — Gordie Howe’s son, Mark Howe, said his father has his personality back and has been living comfortably with his brother Murray Howe and Murray’s wife at their home in Sylvania, Ohio.

Brothers Mark and Marty Howe were here to represent the family on a float that will be part of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade on Thursday. They spoke to NHL.com about the health of the legendary Hockey Hall of Fame member Monday.

“I talk to [Murray] frequently and dad is eating and sleeping a lot in the early-morning hours and spending quality time during the afternoon and evenings,” Mark Howe said.

Mark Howe said he plans on visiting his father, brother and sister-in-law, Colleen, after Thanksgiving.

“The most difficult thing for him right now is probably his speech,” he said. “He’s getting around pretty well and he knows who you are. I do a lot of Facetime [communication] with him and he knows me. When he’s speaking, every so often it disappears so he does a lot of hand gesturing. Other than that, from where he was a year ago to now it’s just amazing how well he’s doing.”

Howe, 87, had a series of strokes in 2014, including a major one in October that left him unable to walk and disoriented. Although he made progress in the two weeks following the stroke, during which he was able to move a couple of steps with a walker and regain some strength on his right side, his health declined to the point where he couldn’t stand, walk or feed himself.

“We had seen something in Dad that we had never seen before [at that time] and that was dad quitting,” Mark Howe said. “He didn’t want to partake in any physical therapy or eating, lost 35 to 40 pounds in six weeks and his life was basically going down the tubes.”

On Dec. 8, 2014 he was taken to the Novastem clinic in Tijuana, Mexico, to have administered an initial injection of stem cells into his spine. Neural stem cells were injected into Gordie Howe’s spinal canal on the first day and he had mesenchymal stem cells given by intravenous infusion on the second day. Neural stem cells (NSCs) are self-renewing cells that generate the main phenotype of the nervous system.

Mark Howe, one of Gordie Howe’s four children, said the improvement his father made following the first round of treatment was miraculous.

“Dad had the will to want to live again and I’ve never seen a better competitor or fighter in my life, “Mark Howe said.

Gordie received a second round of stem-cell treatment at the same clinic in June 2015.

“His swallowing has improved and his spirits have improved,” said Marty Howe, who said he visited his father earlier this month. “I couldn’t really understand a thing he was saying prior to the stem-cell treatment. But now I can understand about 70 percent of what he says. He whispers when he talks so it’s very difficult anyway, but it’s been wonderful. He can go out bluegill fishing [with Murray] and for half-mile walks. He goes to the mall and grocery shopping; he can do so much more than before.”

In May, the Gordie Howe International Bridge, which will span the Detroit River between Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, was named in honor of Mr. Hockey, who was born in Saskatchewan and spent 25 seasons with the Detroit Red Wings. The bridge is scheduled to open in 2020.

Howe was represented at the naming of the bridge by Marty and Murray. Gordie Howe watched the ceremony online from Lubbock, Texas, where he was living with his daughter, Cathy, at the time.

“There’s a lot of pride involved to have a bridge named after your father,” Marty said. “To me it was a similar feeling to standing on the blue line for the national anthem. It’s something that brings the hairs on the back of your neck to stand up.”

Howe won the Stanley Cup four times with the Red Wings, and had 801 goals and 1,850 points in 1,767 regular-season games covering 26 seasons. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1972.

Source:   www.nhl.com

Stem Cell Injection To Help Arm Movement After Stroke

Sunday, November 22nd, 2015

Stem Cell Injection

Source: http://home.bt.com/

A 66-year-old woman has become the first in England to undergo a stem cell brain injection to help recover the use of her arm after she suffered a stroke.

Diederik Bulters, a consultant neurosurgeon at Southampton General Hospital, and his team – which consisted of 17 colleagues – carried out the procedure after the woman lost functional movement in her arm when she suffered a stroke a year ago.

The treatment, which will be trialled on 41 patients as part of a UK-wide study known as Pisces II, works by delivering stem cells into the part of the brain that is believed to help generate new nerve cells.

The technique was first used in 2010 at Glasgow’s Southern General Hospital for an early-stage study, which involved a total of 11 patients aged in their 60s, 70s and 80s, which found it was safe and preliminary findings showed promising results.

Every year, around 110,000 people in England suffer a stroke and it is the third largest cause of death behind heart disease and cancer.

A hospital spokesman said: “The majority of strokes are caused by a blockage of blood flow in the brain, known as ischaemic stroke, and around half of all survivors are left with permanent disabilities, with the most common being paralysis of the face, arm and leg on one side of the body.

“After initial treatment for a stroke, which involves having clot-busting drugs administered within several hours of the onset of the condition, there are no existing treatments, other than ongoing rehabilitation, to alleviate the disabilities caused as a result.”

Mr Bulters said: “This is a really exciting study and we are delighted to be a part of it and be able to offer some of our patients the opportunity to trial this potentially revolutionary treatment.

“The treatment was tested successfully in a small, early-stage study in Scotland, which showed the technique to be safe, so what we need to do now is quantify how much benefit is derived from it.”

He added: “While we have made great strides in this country in treating the onset of a stroke, there is little that can currently be done to improve the lives of so many survivors who are left permanently disabled as a result – but this project could change that.”

A second patient, a 72-year-old woman, has now received the injection at Southampton General Hospital and the study is under way at 11 other units in the UK.