welcome to my blog !

I opened my first practice in the Medical Arts Building at Northwest Hospital. I practiced there over a year before moving to my current office at 7201 5th Avenue NE. While at Northwest, I was invited by Bill Turska N.D. in Mist, Oregon to come and help him. He was my first mentor. He was an old-timey Naturopath that had a history of incredible cures. I would work with him on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Saturdays, and at my practice in Seattle on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays. One night when we had finished working with clients, Dr. Turska and I stayed up and talked for a long time into the night. When I woke up the next morning, I felt different, like I was no longer a young Doc working with a mentor but two colleagues working together.

December 31 2008

AIDS UPDATE

Tagged Under :

COMBIVIR A BOON

“Combivir” made big waves when it was approved last fall; it’s the first AIDS drug that packs two proven HIV-fighters, AZT and 3TC. As a result, Combivir users can take just two pills each day instead of seven. This will make an effective drug regimen easier to swallow, says Bradley Baker, M.D., of Chicago’s Center for Special Immunology.
RU486 STOPS HIV?

A lab study at the University of Pennsylvania found that RU486 (the French “abortion drug” that causes instant menstruation in women) disables an HIV protein that attacks immune-system cells. “RU486 may be helpful in fighting the immune-system suppression in HIV-positive people,” says David Weiner, Ph.D., associate professor of pathology.
NO SNEEZY ANSWER

Last year, the FDA warned that antihistamines that contain terfenadine (Seldane) and astemizole (Hismanal) can cause irregular heartbeats when combined with certain other drugs. Some anti-HIV protease inhibitors, such as nelfinavir, are on the danger list. Always ask your pharmacist about possible drug interactions. A prescription antihistamine, loratadine (Claritin), shouldn’t pose any threat.
HIV AND STROKES

In examining 236 stroke patients (ages 19 to 44) in an Atlanta hospital, researchers found that at least 25 were HIV-positive–not a likely coincidence. HIV-positive patients may face a higher risk of stroke, says study author Adnan Qureshi, M.D., of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. People fighting HIV who experience dizziness, slurred speech, or weakness on one side should seek immediate treatment.

BONUS

BONUS

Post a comment