MHF Pain Management Centre

MHF Pain Management Centre Mahogany Health & Fitness Pain Management Centre is dedicated to the relief and healing of somatosens Pain relief is felt as early as a matter of minutes!!

MHF Pain Management Centre is a tested and proven health facility that specializes in the treatment of pain due to:

Sports Injuries
Low Back Pain
Frozen Shoulder
Neuropathy (nerve pain)
Pelvic Pain
Arthritic Pain, etc. We are a team of experienced and dedicated health professionals, led by Dr. Winston Dawes M.B.B.S., F.R.C.S.E., C.D., that are committed to pain relief, tissue healing, and rehabilitation.

15/07/2016

First Female-to-Male Sexual Transmission of Zika Reported
Robert Lowes | Disclosures
July 15, 2016

The New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) today announced that the first case of a woman transmitting the Zika virus to a man through s*x has surfaced in New York City. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is now rewriting its advice on how to deal with the public health threat.

Until now, all previously reported instances of s*xually transmitted Zika infection involved men spreading the virus to female or male partners.

According to an article published online today in the CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, DOHMH identified a young, nonpregnant woman in her 20s who had condomless vaginal in*******se with a male partner the day (day 0) she returned from a country with ongoing Zika transmission. She began experiencing Zika symptoms, including fever, fatigue, a maculopapular rash, and swelling of the extremities, as well as heavier than usual me**es on day 1.

On day 3, she visited her primary care clinician, who collected urine and blood specimens. A DOHMH lab detected Zika virus RNA in both serum and urine using real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR). Serum testing for a Zika antibody at a New York State health department lab was negative.

The woman's male partner experienced Zika symptoms on day 6 and also sought medical care. rRT-PCR performed at the DOHMH lab turned up Zika virus RNA in his urine, but not in his blood serum. As with his female partner, the state lab could not find Zika virus antibodies in his serum.

The CDC confirmed all the rRT-PCR results for urine and serum specimens from the couple, according to the MMWR article, written by DOHMH professionals.

Interviews with the man appeared to rule out other possible causes of his infection. He said he had not travelled outside the United States in the preceding 12 months, nor had he been bitten by a mosquito — the predominant transmission mode for the Zika virus — within the week before his symptom onset. He also said he had not engaged in s*x with anyone else recently and that his s*xual encounter with the female patient did not include oral or a**l in*******se.

The MMWR article stated that Zika virus in the woman's vaginal fluids or menstrual blood may have spread to the man during exposure to his urethral mucosa or undetected abrasions on his p***s. The authors pointed to earlier research that found the Zika virus in the female ge***al tract and vaginal fluid in particular.

More research is needed, they said, to determine how the Zika virus sheds in the ge***al tract and vaginal fluids, as well as the risk for transmitting the virus from a woman to a s*xual partner.

Zika Precautions Extended to Female Partners of Pregnant Women

In a news release, the CDC updated some of its advice on avoiding the Zika virus via s*x. The agency reiterated its past recommendations that all pregnant women use barrier methods during s*x or abstain from s*x if they have a partner who has traveled to an area with active Zika transmission, or who resides there. In light of the New York City case reported in MMWR, however, the CDC is now applying these recommendation to female s*x partners of pregnant women, even though no cases of woman-to-woman Zika transmission have been reported.

The CDC said it is updating its recommendations for s*xually active couples who are not pregnant, or who are concerned about pregnancy, and people "who want to reduce personal risk of Zika infection through s*x."

The Zika virus can cause serious birth defects, most notably microcephaly, characterized by unusually small head size and possibly severe developmental problems. As of today, the CDC has identified nine infants with birth defects as well as six lost pregnancies with birth defects in the United States where there is laboratory evidence of a possible Zika infection.

MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. Published online July 15, 2016.

27/04/2016

High Intake of Sugar-Sweetened Beverages Associated With Coronary Artery Calcium
Deborah Brauser
April 25, 2016

SEOUL, KOREA — Drinking at least one sugar-sweetened carbonated beverage per day during the workweek may increase coronary artery calcium (CAC), new research suggests[1].

A study of more than 22,000 adults in South Korea without prior coronary heart disease showed that those who consumed five or more regular soft drinks per week had a fully adjusted CAC ratio of 1.7 vs the nonconsumers (95% CI 1.0–2.8).

This ratio was adjusted for age, s*x, physical activity, smoking, dietary factors, history of hypertension or hypercholesterolemia, and family history of Coronary Heart Disease.

"Our findings indicate that the cardiovascular hazards of carbonated-beverage consumption are evident even in the subclinical stages of atherosclerosis," note the investigators, led by Dr Sohyun Chun (Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea), adding that this type of drink "has become a major public-health and public-policy issue."

The findings were published online April 16, 2016 in the American Heart Journal.

14/04/2016

CDC: Zika Virus Definitely Causes Microcephaly
Brenda Goodman, MA
April 13, 2016

Dropping previous caution about the relationship between the Zika virus and the birth defect microcephaly, scientists said Wednesday there is no longer any doubt that Zika causes infants to be born with abnormally small heads and damaged brains.

The announcement marks a "turning point in the Zika outbreak," said CDC Director Tom Frieden, MD, adding that the findings would be published later Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

"The science now shows what the hundreds of impacted families have suspected all along. Zika virus is the cause of the tragic increase in microcephaly cases and other serious brain defects," Frieden said.

Though the virus had been strongly suspected to cause microcephaly and other serious birth defects, scientists had been careful to say that they didn't yet know whether the appearance of the two things together could be just a coincidence or whether it was a cause-and-effect relationship.

But in a press briefing, experts said there was now enough scientific evidence to prove that Zika causes microcephaly. By clearly laying out that evidence, scientists hope to dispel still-swirling rumors that other agents, such as a chemical that kills mosquito larvae, might be behind the outbreak of microcephaly, which was declared a worldwide public health emergency by the World Health Organization in February.

Experts said they also hoped the strong statement would serve as a wake-up call to Americans who aren't very worried about the Zika infection, at least according to recent surveys.

"My hope is that now that we can be more convincing that Zika virus does cause these severe birth defects in babies, that people will focus on our prevention messages more carefully," said Sonja A. Rasmussen, MD, director of the Division of Public Health Information Dissemination at the CDC.

Scientific Detective Work

The finding isn't based on any single piece of evidence, but on a collection of clues that satisfy two sets of formal scientific rules for determining causality, or whether a given agent causes a condition or disease.

The first set of rules they applied are called Shepard's criteria, after Thomas Shepard, MD, the Seattle pediatrician who first published them in 1994. Shepard's criteria are used to discern whether an agent could be a "teratogen," or something that can disrupt a baby's normal development in the womb.

The CDC scientists said they also met a separate test of causality, outlined by Sir Austin Bradford Hill in 1965.

To satisfy Shepard's criteria, scientists had to prove that at least three out of seven conditions were met.

First, they had to show that exposure happened during a critical window of development. Studies have shown that babies exposed to Zika in the first and second trimesters of pregnancy -- weeks when the brain is still forming -- are at greatest risk for microcephaly.

Second, they had to demonstrate that Zika causes a specific and repeating pattern of birth defects. Indeed, infants who develop microcephaly after Zika infection have distinct damage on brain scans. They also have extra skin on their scalps, eye damage, and their joints may be bent and splayed at odd angles when they're born.

Third, researchers had to show that a rare exposure causes a rare outcome. Rasmussen says this was proven by the rare cases of pregnant travelers who got Zika infections and gave birth to babies with microcephaly, which is a rare birth defect.

On top of that evidence, population studies from Brazil and French Polynesia have shown elevated rates of microcephaly among pregnant women infected with the virus, and more such studies are underway. Zika virus has now been isolated from the amniotic fluid surrounding affected babies, from their brain tissues through autopsy, and from spinal fluid.

An Important Step, But...

Despite the proof they now have in hand, researchers said there were still many key questions left to be answered.

At the top of the list, Rasmussen says, is to try to understand the degree of risk Zika infections might pose to pregnant women. That is, after an infection, how often will a fetus develop birth defects? Current studies suggest that somewhere between 1% and 29% of babies born to infected mothers get microcephaly.

Researchers would also like to know when a developing infant is most vulnerable to the virus, and whether it may cause a spectrum of related problems, ranging from stillbirth and miscarriages on the severe end to learning disabilities on the milder end.

Researchers said they still don't know whether Zika might be acting alone, or whether it only has its worst effects in concert with other agents or infections, like dengue fever.

Though the information is an important scientific step, Rasmussen said it doesn't change CDC recommendations.

"There's no change in our guidance about travel or preventing s*xual transmission," she said.

Zika is mainly spread through mosquito bites, but cases in which infected men passed the virus to their s*x partners have also been seen.

SOURCES:

The New England Journal of Medicine, April 13, 2016.

26/12/2015

In the spirit of the Season and with warmest regards, we at MHF Pain Management Centre would like to wish you and yours a Happy and Healthy Christmas Season, and a Prosperous New Year. We would also like to wish a Happy Birthday to Dr. Winston Dawes, who celebrates his day today.

Be sure to visit us in the New Year at our office at Shop #69 Wi******er Business Centre for treatment of your knee pain, frozen shoulder, low back pain, shingles nerve pain and whatever else ails you. We offer quick and effective pain relief of a wide variety of conditions. See you soon!

01/12/2015

Well after posting our campaign to get to 100 Likes, we achieved our objective and then some - over 200 Likes in under two days!!!

Thanks everyone!!

But let's not stop there, let's keep spreading the word and inviting all our Facebook Friends to Like our page. Here we can learn about the conditions that are painfully relevant to all of us at some point or another. We can also get an introduction to the structures that make up our body and what can sometimes go wrong with them too. Most importantly, we can hear from YOU!

Have you already had a treatment at MHF Pain Management Centre? Well, let us know how it was. Share your experiences with us on the Page so we can all learn from it.

29/11/2015

Thanks everyone, we've made it to 79 Likes in just under 2 weeks!!!! We appreciate the support, but there's more work to be done. We need to make it to 100 Likes this week!!

How do we make that happen? Simple, just invite persons on your Friends List to Like the Page and have them do the same. That's all it takes to turn everyone on to the end of their pain!!! Let's go!!

The Spinal Column is a source of severe pain in many men and women. It runs from the base of your skull, along your back...
24/11/2015

The Spinal Column is a source of severe pain in many men and women. It runs from the base of your skull, along your back, to your pelvic girdle. It consists of 33 bones stacked on top of each other like pancakes, with a central ca**l through which the spinal cord runs. In between each of these bones, or vertebra, are gel-filled cartilaginous discs that act as shock absorbers.

These discs behave similarly to the tires on your car, and may sometimes bulge, or even burst. This may happen at any level of the spinal ca**l and, when it does, it may touch the spinal cord and send shooting pain down the region of the cord below the bulge. Sometimes the pressure on the spinal cord is so severe that it cuts off nerve signals to the muscles resulting in weakness.

Sometimes these discs may simply run flat, and when that happens, the bones of the spinal column get closer and closer together, eventually rubbing against each other. This is known as Spondylosis, or arthritis of the spine. This causes the spine to lose its flexibility and also causes the nerves which come off the spinal cord to get "pinched", which can also cause pain and weakness. For a better picture of how your spinal column looks, check out the link below.

http://www.knowyourback.org/Pages/Definitions/AnatomySpine/Bones/SpinalColumn.aspx

The spine (also called the vertebral column or spinal column) is composed of a series of bones called vertebrae stacked one upon another. There are four regions of the spine:

21/11/2015

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