Tag Archives: eve

South Africa burn survivor gets cloned skin grafts

JOHANNESBURG —

A 3-year-old South African girl who suffered severe burns over 80 percent of her body after an accident at a family barbecue has successfully undergone a rare surgery in Africa that gave her a new layer of cloned skin, her surgeon said Tuesday.

“Everything went quite smoothly,” said Dr. Ridwan Mia, a plastic and reconstructive surgeon who performed the surgery Monday in a Johannesburg hospital. “She is sedated at the moment but she did well overnight.”

Isabella Kruger was injured on New Year’s Eve when a container of fire lighting fluid exploded. Mia said he did not hold much hope for her survival when he met her in January. Burn victims with injuries as severe as Isabella’s rarely survive, he said.

“She had swelled to three times her size from her injuries,” Mia said of the toddler.

Isabella was in the hospital for several months battling pneumonia and kidney failure, and suffered several cardiac arrests. Doctors eventually stabilized her so that Monday’s complex skin transplant surgery could be performed.

Mia and his team used enough cloned skin during the surgery to cover a placemat and stapled it in pieces onto Isabella’s wounds. On her face, doctors used absorbent stitch material instead of staples. the new skin had been created by cloning two samples of skin taken from one of the few parts of Isabella’s body to escape injury thanks to a diaper she was wearing at the time of the accident.

The samples were sent to Genzyme laboratory in Boston where the skin was cloned using mouse cells as a scaffold. the procedure has been used often in the U.S. and Europe but rarely in Africa, Mia said.

On Monday evening, a special courier arrived from Boston with a stainless steel container carrying about 30 to 40 grafts of Isabella’s new skin. thin, delicate and almost transparent, the skin was taken to a Johannesburg hospital by ambulance from the airport. the skin needed to be grafted onto Isabella within 24 hours of leaving the laboratory.

“It was like clockwork the way the skin arrived on time,” said Mia.

As Isabella was wheeled out of the surgery, her father Erwin Kruger expressed his relief to reporters.

“Everything looks great, it’s fantastic,” he said.

Isabella’s mother, Anice Kruger, who has been by her daughter’s bedside since the accident, looked equally relieved.

For the next seven days Isabella will be wrapped in foam and protective dressing. she faces two immediate challenges. the first is ensuring that she remains free of infection. the second challenge is to prevent the new skin from sliding off and not taking. Skin grafts are delicate and prone to tearing. Doctors will have to keep Isabella sedated to minimize the risk of tearing.

Bronwen Jones, founder of the Children of fire, a local charity dedicated to providing medical treatments for young burn survivors considers Isabella to be one of the luckier burn victims. Jones says their survival in South Africa often depends on their proximity to a hospital and whether the hospitals are properly equipped.

While there are no reliable statistics, Jones estimates that around 15,000 children are seriously injured every year. In impoverished areas the use of candles, paraffin stoves and open fires are often the causes of fire, particularly during the winter months. Tembisa Hospital, in the Gauteng province of South Africa, currently has 12 children in their burns unit.

In the case of Isabella, access to medical care at an early stage as well as her parent’s ability to raise money through social networking sites have all helped ease the burden.

Mia will be able to tell whether the skin has successfully taken after two weeks but he is optimistic given Isabella’s determination.

“She is a fighter,” says Mia.

Children of fire: http://www.childrenoffire.org/

South Africa burn survivor gets cloned skin grafts

South African burns victim gets cloned skin

A 3-year-old South African girl who suffered severe burns over 80 per cent of her body after an accident at a family barbecue has successfully undergone a rare surgery in Africa that gave her a new layer of cloned skin, her surgeon said.

“Everything went quite smoothly,” said Dr. Ridwan Mia, a plastic and reconstructive surgeon who performed the surgery Monday in a Johannesburg hospital. “She is sedated at the moment but she did well overnight.”

Isabella Kruger was injured on New Year’s Eve when a container of fire lighting fluid exploded. Mia said he did not hold much hope for her survival when he met her in January. Burn victims with injuries as severe as Isabella’s rarely survive, he said.

“She had swelled to three times her size from her injuries,” Mia said of the toddler on Tuesday.

Isabella was in the hospital for several months battling pneumonia and kidney failure, and suffered several cardiac arrests. Doctors eventually stabilized her so that Monday’s complex skin transplant surgery could be performed.

Mia and his team used enough cloned skin during the surgery to cover a placemat and stapled it in pieces onto Isabella’s wounds. on her face, doctors used absorbent stitch material instead of staples. The new skin had been created by cloning two samples of skin taken from one of the few parts of Isabella’s body to escape injury thanks to a diaper she was wearing at the time of the accident.

The samples were sent to Genzyme laboratory in Boston where the skin was cloned using mouse cells as a scaffold. The procedure has been used often in the US and Europe but rarely in Africa, Mia said.

on Monday evening, a special courier arrived from Boston with a stainless steel container carrying about 30 to 40 grafts of Isabella’s new skin. thin, delicate and almost transparent, the skin was taken to a Johannesburg hospital by ambulance from the airport. The skin needed to be grafted onto Isabella within 24 hours of leaving the laboratory.

“It was like clockwork the way the skin arrived on time,” said Mia.

As Isabella was wheeled out of the surgery, her father Erwin Kruger expressed his relief to reporters.

“Everything looks great, it’s fantastic,” he said.

Isabella’s mother, Anice Kruger, who has been by her daughter’s bedside since the accident, looked equally relieved.

For the next seven days Isabella will be wrapped in foam and protective dressing. she faces two immediate challenges. The first is ensuring that she remains free of infection. The second challenge is to prevent the new skin from sliding off and not taking. Skin grafts are delicate and prone to tearing. Doctors will have to keep Isabella sedated to minimize the risk of tearing.

Bronwen Jones, founder of the Children of Fire, a local charity dedicated to providing medical treatments for young burn survivors considers Isabella to be one of the luckier burn victims. Jones says their survival in South Africa often depends on their proximity to a hospital and whether the hospitals are properly equipped.

While there are no reliable statistics, Jones estimates that around 15,000 children are seriously injured every year. In impoverished areas the use of candles, paraffin stoves and open fires are often the causes of fire, particularly during the winter months. Tembisa Hospital, in the Gauteng province of South Africa, currently has 12 children in their burns unit.

In the case of Isabella, access to medical care at an early stage as well as her parent’s ability to raise money through social networking sites have all helped ease the burden.

Mia will be able to tell whether the skin has successfully taken after two weeks but he is optimistic given Isabella’s determination.

South African burns victim gets cloned skin

Extreme dental hygiene, science on tap and record-breaking mezuzah

  • Tweet

By Marcy Oster · May 22, 2012

ISRAEL UNDER THE RADAR

JERUSALEM (JTA) — Here are some recent stories out of Israel that you may have missed:

Legislating a long weekend

Israel for the first time could have a long weekend once a year.

A proposal approved by the Ministerial Committee for Legislation moves the Independence Day national holiday to the Thursday of the week in which the 5th of Iyar, the Hebrew anniversary of the day that Israel became a state, falls. the committee’s backing this week means the measure is likely to be adopted.

Friday is the start of the weekend in Israel.

Independence Day, or Yom Ha’atzmaut, is the only national holiday in Israel that is not also a religious Jewish holiday. It is marked by barbecues, day trips and community celebrations, often including fireworks.

Memorial Day would be moved to the Wednesday of the week in which Independence Day is celebrated.

If the 5th of Iyar now falls on a Friday or Saturday, it is moved to the Thursday before in order to prevent the desecration of Shabbat. If it falls on a Monday, it is moved to Tuesday to prevent preparations for Memorial Day eve ceremonies on Shabbat.

Lawmaker Zevulun Orlev of the Jewish Home Party said he would have to consult with religious Zionist rabbis due to the halachic implications of changing the day of Yom Ha’atzmaut for convenience and a long weekend, since the mourning of the omer period is suspended for the day, which also has religious significance for the Orthodox Zionist community.

Extreme dental hygiene

Doctors kept giving Bat-El Panker the brush-off as she tried to convince them that she had swallowed her 9 1/2-inch toothbrush.

Panker, 24, of Kiryat Yam, visited two hospitals in northern Israel before she was able to convince a doctor that she had accidentally swallowed her green, white and orange toothbrush while brushing her teeth before bed. It slipped down her throat as she bent over the faucet to drink some water with the brush in her mouth. 

The plastic toothbrush did not show up on X-rays, leading doctors at the first hospital to send her home. "I begged for another exam — I knew I’d swallowed a big toothbrush — but no one believed me," she told Ynet. "they thought I was crazy."

Doctors at Carmel Hospital believed her story, but also did not see the object on an X-ray or ultrasound. they finally located it in her stomach using a sophisticated CT scan. 

The doctors were able to remove the toothbrush without resorting to surgery by coaxing it up the esophagus with a diagnostic endoscope.

It is not known whether Panker will keep the toothbrush as a memento of her extreme dental hygiene.

The lion sleeps tonight — or maybe not

Danny the Israeli lion is moving in with two lioness babes from the Netherlands.

Safari Israel, the Tel Aviv-Ramat Gan Zoological Center, sent Danny, a 5-year-old male lion, to his new home at the Belgian Zoological Park, where he will be joined by two female lions from the Netherlands.

Staff from the new Belgian park studied how to care for lions with staff from the Safari. Park officials had decided to move Danni from the Safari due to problems with another male lion, but are hopeful that he will sire offspring.

Hanging up its paddles

Israel’s Table Tennis Association is hanging up its paddles.

Instead of training Israeli athletes for future Olympic competition, the association has ceased operation due to budget cuts.

The cuts stem from a decision to treat table tennis as an individual and not a team sport, which slashed its government funding in half.

The closure of the association means that Israel will not participate in next month’s European Youth Championships in Austria, according to Haaretz. And Israel was fielding a contender — Nicole Trosman, 15, a candidate for the 2016 Olympics. Trosman is currently training in China.

Beer — and science — here

Science was on tap in Tel Aviv bars.

Scientists and research students visited 55 bars and coffee houses in Tel Aviv last week to teach on topics ranging from astrophysics to quantum mechanics over a cold one.

The Weizmann Institute’s annual Science on Tap program is popular with bar patrons, and the scientists would probably do it even without the free beer as it enables them to ply their trade up close and personal.

The institute hopes through the program to spark interest about science in young people and maybe attract some new students.

Bar patrons reportedly signed up weeks in advance to participate in the program, which grew from 40 bars last year. Maybe they find science more palatable when they are a little tipsy?

Playboy wants part of Israel’s action

Playboy is trying to break into the Israeli market again, this time with its own line of condoms.

A Playboy lingerie line and the Playboy Channel were not successful in the Jewish state, but Hugh Hefner is hoping to score big with its condoms.

A retired 25-year Israel Defense Forces captain is the products distributor in Israel, according to Ynet.

Israel’s major drugstore chains have expressed interest in the project, which will be launched at an event in July featuring the storied Playboy bunnies.

Rest in peace?

The medieval Jewish scholar Maimonides is said to be rolling over in his grave over plans to turn his tomb in Tiberias into a major pilgrimage site.

Maimonides, also known as the Rambam, spoke out against pilgrimages to rabbis’ tombs when he was living, and he would not be happy with the announced $10 million renovation to his place of eternal rest.

The renovation, funded mostly by foreign donors, will include a glass enclosure of the tomb housing a 3-D eternal flame and a laser beam rising from the tomb several miles into the air.

Maimonides did not believe in mysticism, and wrote in his seminal work the Mishneh Torah that headstones should not be erected on graves and that people should not visit graves.

Maimonides was born in Spain in 1135 and died in Egypt in 1204.

Mezuzah on a world record roll

Visitors to the emergency room of the Kaplan Medical Center in Rehovot may be kissing the world’s largest mezuzah on their way in. 

The 4-foot, 7-inch tall bronze mezuzah recently donated to the center may soon take its place in the Guinness Book of World Records.

The parchment inside the mezuzah is nearly 2 feet long when rolled out. 

It was donated by Israeli-French businessman Shmuel Flatto-Sharon, who has made an official request with Guinness to record it as the largest mezuzah in the world, according to Ynet.  

Don’t miss out! Get the JTA Daily Briefing delivered FREE to your inbox!

  • Tweet

Click to login and write a letter to the editor.

This article was made possible by the support of readers like you. Donate to JTA now.

Extreme dental hygiene, science on tap and record-breaking mezuzah

Aum cult fugitive was turned away from Tokyo police station

A simple change of heart during the few minutes’ walk from one Tokyo police station to another could have kept Makoto Hirata, one of Japan’s most wanted men, at large indefinitely.

It has emerged that Hirata, a former member of the Aum Supreme Truth doomsday cult, was sent away by the officer on duty when he first tried to turn himself in, late on new Year’s Eve.

The policeman thought it was a prank. But the supposed prankster was a former member of a fanatical group whose members carried out a fatal sarin gas attack on the Tokyo underground in 1995, killing 12 people and making 6,000 others sick. the terrorist attack remains the worst on Japanese soil.

Hirata, wanted in connection with the kidnapping and death earlier that year of a civil servant whose sister was trying to leave the cult, tried again but failed to convince the officer that the face that had been staring down from 150,000 wanted posters for almost 17 years was his.

According to media reports, the 46-year-old suspect was arrested only after he walked, at the officer’s urging, to a smaller police station several hundred metres away.

Hirata’s hair was longer than in photographs taken in the mid-1990s but his facial features and physique had barely changed during the years in hiding.

“He apparently hasn’t had any plastic surgery,” a police source told the Yomiuri Shimbun daily.

Only sketchy details have emerged of Hirata’s life as a fugitive since his arrest, in the early hours of Sunday. According to the Yomiuri he claimed shame had led him to turn himself in after he witnessed the misery caused by the 11 March earthquake and tsunami.

“The senseless scenes from Tohoku after the earthquake made me question by own situation,” he was quoted as telling Taro Takimoto, a lawyer who helped people leave the cult, and who agreed to meet the suspect in custody. “I decided I would turn myself in before the year was up.”

How Hirata managed to evade detection for so long remains a mystery. Dressed in jeans and a quilted jacket, he was carrying a rucksack containing underwear, clothes, shampoo and other items. “He was as neat as a pin,” one officer was quoted as saying.

He reportedly refused to explain the 100,000 yen (£834) in cash found in his possession, although he is understood to have received 10m yen from the cult shortly after the attacks.

Hirata is suspected of conspiring to kidnap and confine Kiyoshi Kariya, a notary official who died after cult members injected him with an anaesthetic to get him to talk about his sister, who had escaped from the group. Hirata is not thought to have taken part in the gas attacks that destroyed Japan‘s faith in its public safety on the morning of 20 March 1995.

Aum’s former leader, Shoko Asahara, and 12 other senior cult members have been given the death penalty, although these sentences have not been carried out. A further two cult members – Katsuya Takahashi and Naoko Kikuchi – remain at large.

Police also suspect Hirata was involved in the 1995 attempted murder of Takaji Kunimatsu, the then chief of the national police agency. He denies any involvement in the shooting, and reportedly decided to avoid arrest in connection with that crime by turning himself in after the statute of limitations expired in 2010.

Police suspect Hirata’s decision was influenced by the death last July of his mother, to whom he was very close.

In the few reported comments he has made to investigators, Hirata appears to be trying to distance himself from the cult, which has renamed itself Aleph and claims to eschew violence but remains under police surveillance. He reportedly told Takimoto, who was injured in a separate sarin attack in 1994, that he no longer believed in the teachings of Asahara, adding that the former guru deserved to be hanged.

<a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jan/04/aum-tokyo-makoto-hirata-sarin?newsfeed=truetag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jan/04/aum-tokyo-makoto-hirata-sarin?newsfeed=trueWed, 04 Jan 2012 07:33:23 GMT”>Aum cult fugitive was turned away from Tokyo police station