Monday, September 18, 2006

Reunion discussion: the importance of embryology

This past weekend we had the 46th year reunion of our University of Manitoba Medical Class of 1960 in Winnipeg. At our final event - breakfast at Earl's in Polo Park - I was sitting next to the wife of one of my classmates, Wilson R. an endocriniologist who practices in London, Ontario. His wife said that this past summer Wilson received a special award in Edmonton for his work on diabetes.


After expressing my congratulations to Wilson who was sitting across the round table from me I mentioned that as an alumnus of the University of Alberta (where I received my M.Sc. in Biochemistry from in 1952) that I had the opportunity some 2 years ago to hear one of their transplantation team speak on the research they were doing in Edmonton on islet cell transplantation. (see my earlier blog) I further mentioned that I had commented at the presentation that although the islet of Langerhan beta cells reside in the pancreas, they are actually nervous tissue since embryologically they were derived from the neural crest - much like the chromaffin cells of the adrenal gland. (see my other blog).

WhenWilson commented that newborns with congenital Rubella syndrome (babies born to mothers who are exposed to Rubella during their pregnancy) often also have diabetes as part of their Rubella syndrome, I was glad because it added further support to my theory. I strongly believe we should be treating Diabetes as a neurological disease, just like polio - a disease which causes muscular weakness and paralysis because of its cytotoxicity not to myotomes but to neurons.

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Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Prostate-Is it a growing problem?

A few days ago I saw an infomercial about an elderly man who in describing his urinary complaints of frequency and a decrease flow of urine as having a "going problem ". When he went to his doctor was told that he had a "growing problem " and not a "going problem ". The infomercial very cleverly did this by adding 2 letters specifically inserting a "r" before the "0" and a "w" after it. They also included a diagram of the enlarging prostate gland around the urethra which they intimated was compressing the urethra and was responsible for the symptoms.
If in fact this is the etiology of the frequency, urgency and decreased stream flow, then why dont the urologists do what cardiovascular surgeons do when they have a narrowing and/or blockage of the coronary vessels- insert a bypass. A urethral bypass might prove less traumatic than a TUR (trans urethral resection ).