Semuapelayanan ini FREE of Charge, walaupun hanya untuk bertanya atau sekedar second opinion dari Dokter lain kita siap membantu .Jika Membutuhkan infomasi tentang Mahkota Medical Centre Melaka Malaysia, silahkan hubungi kantor perwakilan kami. Surabaya Representative Office Mahkota Medical Centre Jl. Barata Jaya XIX / 31C
DaftarDokter Spesialis di Malaka. Search. Mahkota Medical Centre. Lihat Profil » Dokter Saraf. Dokter THT. Dokter Tulang. Solusi berobat di dalam & luar negeri. Perwakilan resmi dari 3170 dokter spesialis dan lebih dari 150 rumah sakit berakreditasi Joint Commission International (JCI). Layanan Smarter Health 100% gratis.
Selamatsore, perkenalkan saya danang sefdyanto perwakilan Mahkota Medical Centre Surabaya Rep Office. kami adalah salah satu perwakilan di jawa timur. kami siap membantu dan memberikan: Di dokter saraf saya cek lab darah semua normal (hemagoblin dll lengkap, elektrolit) dan melakukan MRI juga hasilnya normal.
Vay Tiá»n Nhanh Ggads.
This city is the hub of medical research in Canada, with dozens of state-of-the-art facilities and new labs opening all the time. And Torontonians are the lucky beneficiaries, with access to fantastically talented doctorsâtheyâre the stars of the medical world and the people who may well save your life. Below, we profile these starsâthe cityâs top physicians. To assemble the list, we spoke to prominent figures in the cityâs medical community and polled nearly 1,000 Toronto doctors, asking them to nominate the best practitioners in prominent specialtiesâeverything from cancer care to urology. We asked respondents to take into account a Ânomineeâs skills, reputation and contributions to a medical field. Here are the doctors other doctors would trust with their lives. Doctor headshots courtesy of their respective institutions Image Shai Gil surgical oncology Jonathan Irish, 54 Chief of surgical oncology, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre The slick new OR that Jonathan Irish opened at Toronto General features one of the most advanced surgery technologies out there a mounted moveable CT scanner that slides across the entire length of a patientâs body, capturing real-time 3-D images that help surgeons like Irish manoeuvre slender and amazingly dextrous robotic arms fluidly inside the body. Irish works on patients with cancers that are hard to get at or too small to see, or that border sensitive tissues. Heâs had huge success removing miniscule tumoursâvisible only via the CT imagesâand heâs operated on advanced cancers of the head and neck, which are now easier to access through the nostril or skull base. Irish and his colleagues have performed over 50 of these surgeries since the OR launched last year. For patients lying amid this pile of impressive hardware, it all amounts to early intervention, less cutting and pain, quicker recovery, and a good chance you wonât have to come back. eye surgery Allan Slomovic, 62 Research director of the Cornea, Service, UHN Limbal stem cell disease delivers a swift one-two punch blindness and severe, stabbing eye pain. In 2010, when Allan Slomovic confirmed that a young Queenâs student named Taylor Binns had the rare disease, Binns had been suffering for more than two years. Slomovic decided a stem cell transplant was his only hope. The procedure involved harvesting stem cells from Binnsâs sisterâs eye, then attaching them to Binnsâs damaged cornea with a bit of tissue glue and tiny stitches. The stem cells worked their regenerative magic, replacing Binnsâs diseased cells. A month later, he was pain-free and able to drive a car. It was the first surgery of its kind performed in Canada. Since then, Slomovic has also developed the hospitalâs new cornea replacement program and is working to bring over a pioneering prosthetic therapeutic ocular lens from Boston, all part of his grand plan to make UHN the countryâs go-to ocular regenerative program. Brain Surgery Todd Mainprize, 43 Interim head of neurosurgery, Sunnybrook Heâs young by brain surgeon standards and has made a name in the risky field of tumour surgery, where many patients have fewer than 15 months to live. If Mainprizeâs clinical trials go well, ÂSunnybrook could soon be offering a groundbreaking treatment for brain tumours buried deep in the skull. He uses a Jetsons-esque helmet to zap tumours with powerful ultrasound waves without a single incision and without overheating the skull. To keep the skull temperature down, over 1,000 probes send ultrasound waves via separate trajectories, and once theyâve penetrated the bone they converge into one searing point that chars the tumour. The helmet can also be used to disrupt the protective blood-brain barrier, allowing chemotherapy to travel to the brainâs innermost reaches. It all sounds a bit kooky, Mainprize will admit, but he sees this as a huge advancement for treating not only brain cancer, but also potentially depression, schizophrenia and ÂAlzheimerâsâany neurological disease for which powerful medications could ride the ultrasound waves directly into the brain. Pediatrics Shoo Lee, 57 Pediatrician-in-chief and director of the Maternal Infant Care Research Centre, Mount Sinai Thirty years ago, parents with very sick or pre-term infants were shut out of the neonatal intensive care unit, their noses literally pressed to the glass, watching as their babies were swaddled, soothed and attended to by hospital staff. Lee, an accomplished neonatologist wooed to Sinai from Alberta, not only welcomed parents into the NICU, he tasked them with daily charting and monitoring, and actively consulted them in all decision-making. His Family Integrated Care Program, launched in 2011, was the first in North America to incorporate this level of parental care. Today, as Lee makes his NICU rounds, monitoring preemiesâ ventilation and prescribing life-saving treatments, he is aided by the keenly observed insights only a parent could glean. Trial studies showed that the parent-cared babies at Leeâs clinic gained more weight and suffered fewer infections compared with babies only under nursing care. The study has expanded to 20 other hospitals in Canada, and if results are favourable, we may be looking at a new standard of care, not just in neonatal ICUs, but in other areas of pediatrics as well. Heart Surgery Heather Ross, 51 Director of the Heart Transplant Program, Peter Munk Cardiac Centre, UHN At one of the provinceâs most advanced heart clinics, Ross sees the worst-off cardiac patients whose hearts wonât let them walk stairs or get dressed without gasping for air. After she exhausts all treatment options medications, bypass surgery, angioplasty, Ross shepherds patients through the long transplant process. One young mother came to her a few years ago with a rare and severe heart disorder. She was too sick for a mechanical heart often used as a temporary bridge to transplantation, plus she was tiny, so finding a small heart was an additional challenge. For several months Ross kept the patientâs heart pumping and her spirits high, until a donor finally came through. When Ross isnât saving the brokenÂhearted, she fronts an R&B band, appropriately called the Marginal Donors. Open-Heart Surgery Tirone David, 68 Head of cardiovascular surgery, UHN This veteran surgeon and once-mentor to Dr. Oz has performed 14,000 open-heart surgeries and invented some 20 surgical techniques, largely in the field of heart-valve repair. One procedure, aptly called the David Operation, he came up with in the OR when he realized the patientâs aortic valve, when cleared of scar tissue, didnât need replacing but some light support with a plastic tube. Today, 20 years after that pioneering surgery, itâs standard treatment all over the world. Davidâs colleagues and students speak of the âTirone factorâ when describing his surgical creativity. Heâs also known for beyond-the-call bedside care, staying late into the night to ensure his patient is in the clear. Though retirement is a niggle in the back of his mind, David is still a fixture in the OR and continues to tinker in the lab with new therapies in his exhaustive effort to improve heart-valve treatments. Allergies Gordon Sussman, 61 Director, Sussman Allergy and Immunology Clinic In the 1980s, Sussman was one of the guys who discovered latex allergies, among the most significant allergy findings in decades. Reactions were mistaken for epidemics in hospitals until ÂSussmanâs research pinpointed the source of the allergy a protein in the gloves. He worked with the latex industry and government to remove the offending ingredient, and today latex allergies cause barely a whimper. Lately, Sussman has been focused on peanuts and ways to desensitize the severely allergic. His clinical trials had anaphylactic patients, both kids and adults, eating increasing doses of peanut flour, then eventually whole peanuts. Today, he treats a handful of patients this way, offering some assurance that they wonât die if they mistakenly eat a peanut crumb on a restaurant salad. His clinic treats thousands of patients a year for everything from food allergies most commonly milk, eggs, peanuts and seafood to chronic hives, and pollen and dust mite allergies. Pharmacology David Juurlink, 45 Staff physician, general internal medicine and clinical pharmacology, Sunnybrook A decade ago, when scores of people started showing up in Toronto emergency rooms with dangerously high potassium levels in their blood, which can lead to serious heart problems, David Juurlink discovered many of them had been taking a popular heart drug in combination with a certain blood pressure medication. He sounded the first alarm about the risks of this interaction, and doctors eased up on prescriptions of the heart drug. Itâs these sorts of drug interactions and side effects that Juurlink researches, painstakingly teasing patterns from reams of medical records. In addition to solving epidemiological riddles, he also routinely gets called into Sunnybrookâs emergency room or intensive care unit to crack individual patient mysteries, Dr. Houseâstyle, like when a middle-aged schizophrenic man with a high fever recently fell into a coma. His doctors tried out treatments for all the plausible causesâeverything from heat stroke to any number of infectionsâbefore ÂJuurlink landed on the true source a rare, potentially fatal syndrome triggered by the patientâs Âantipsychotic medications. Following treatment, the patient was out of intensive care within a week. Emergency Room Care Sara Gray, 41 Physician, critical care and emergency medicine, St. Michaelâs Grayâs clinical expertise in both emergency and intensive care is a rare asset in medicine and became crucial when a young patient recently arrived at the St. Michaelâs Hospital emergency room with a gunshot wound to the abdomen, the bullet settling in his chest. It was a dire scene the whole way through, and after keeping him alive in the ER, she transferred into the ICU, where she could seamlessly shepherd him through surgery and the dicey recovery period. Gray also plays a major role in the hospitalâs ability to respond to crises. After she contracted SARS while on the job in 2003, she began to think about system-wide gaps and unpreparedness. A decade ago, most hospitals didnât have pandemic strategies. She studied disaster planning at Yale and recently wrote the general disaster plan for St. Mikeâs, which was tested during the G20 summit, ensuring simple but vital logistical improvements like extra beds and staff on standby. Skin Cancer Nowell Solish, 47 Director of the non-melanoma skin cancer clinic, Womenâs College Canadians are more likely to get non-melanoma skin cancer than all other cancers combined. Though it rarely kills people, growth can be fierce and highly disfiguring, and itâs these more aggressive tumours that Nowell Solish deals with on a daily basis. The clinic, which Solish was instrumental in launching in 1993, has become one of the busiest places in the country to treat facial tumours. The process is more difficult because of all the creases and crannies where cancer cells can hide, and because of cosmetic considerations. Solish is a master of Mohs surgery, a cautious approach of cutting out a tumour little by little to preserve as much normal tissue as possible, particularly important in facial surgeries. Patients need only a local anesthetic and a good book. After each surgical removal, they stick around while the lab processes the tissues. If ÂSolish can see unaffected skin on the edges of the tumour, he knows he got it all and the patient is done. If not, itâs back under the scalpel as many times as needed. Typically it takes Solish three rounds to get it all. And with a cure rate of 98 per cent, itâs not the worst way to spend a day. Childhood Obesity Jill Hamilton, 48 Endocrinologist and director of the Sick Kids Team Obesity Management Program STOMP Jill Hamiltonâs program treats severely obese kids and teens who have added Âcomplications like Type 2 diabetes or a brain tumour that is causing rapid weight gain. STOMP is the only pediatric program in Canada to perform bariatric surgery on adolescentsâstill an uncomfortable idea for many doctors. Of the 150 patients whoâve come through the program since 2010, 20 have had the surgery. One of the first was Nicholas Menecola, a Mississauga teen who maxed out at 340 pounds by the age of 16 and whose chronic leg pain kept him largely immobile. STOMPâs Âassessment team, led by Hamilton and made up of dietitians and psychologists, deemed Menecola a good candidate based on his circumstances and his aptitude for a total lifestyle overhaul. Three months after surgery, Menecola had lost 80 pounds. After two years, he weighed 189 pounds and was running and cycling daily. Because the surgery is relatively new to this age group, Hamilton has been studying the outcomes, hoping to increase our understanding of the rise of severe obesity. Gastroenterology Hillary Steinhart, 54 Head of gastroenterology, Mount Sinai The pre-eminent gastro doctor has treated thousands of patients over his 20-year career, and he increasingly sees young people suffering from gut-wrenching bowel conditions like Crohnâs and colitis. And he finds it particularly heartbreaking when women have to battle the decision of whether they can or should have children considering their chronic, often debilitating pain. When an 18-year-old nursing student came to Steinhart with a severe case of Crohnâs, she was malnourished, miserable from the pain and about to drop out of school. Steinhart put the young woman on an IV of Remicade and had one of the centreâs dietitians counsel her on a specialized diet. Food and nutrition play hugely into Steinhartâs treatments he published a recipe book for Crohnâs and colitis sufferers in 2008. Because she was so sick, he treated her with an anti-Âinflammatory drug not yet on the market, as well as a specific pair of antibiotics that, in combination, his clinical trials had found to help certain cases. Within two days, the young woman was eating normally and back at school. Last Steinhart heard, sheâd finished school, married and had two kids. General Surgery Ian McGilvray, 46 Specialist in transplant and surgical oncology, Toronto General McGilvray recently opened up a 27-year-old patient to find that his cancer had burned through a portion of his colon and invaded his pancreas as well as the blood vessels supplying his intestines. Twenty years ago this patient would have died; there was no safe surgical solution to get at cancer in the vasculature. Over his young career, ÂMcGilvray has honed a unique approach to treat these complex cases, employing the preservation techniques that are used for organ transplants. After removing most of the patientâs abdominal contents, literally piling them on a bench in the OR, McGilvray flushed the organs and intestines with cold preservation fluid, which puts tissues in a latent state long enough to buy time, in this case to carve out the tumours and rebuild the damaged vein using one taken from the patientâs leg which is a whole other story. Once all the parts were re-implanted and blood began flowing, everything âpinked up,â as they say in the OR, and two weeks later the young patient was home, going over admissions applicationsâfor medical school, no less. Otolaryngology Ralph Gilbert, 60 Otolaryngologist-in-chief, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre and UHN Microvascular reconstruction is an extremely delicate surgery that uses skin, muscle and bone tissue from the body to rebuild parts of the face, lost usually to cancer. Ralph Gilbert is a trailblazer in the field. Simply removing bone tissue from a shoulder blade, for example, requires detaching muscles and preserving the tiny blood vessels that feed it. To transplant the grafted tissue, Gilbert must reconnect all the miniscule arteries and veins using sutures finer than human hair. He has performed about 70 of these Âscapula-tissue transplants for upper jaw reconstruction using his own technique, which surgeons worldwide have since adopted. At Princess Margaret, the busiest hospital in the world for this type of surgery, Gilbert has spent his career refining this painstaking, microscopic procedure so that patients walk away not only cancer-free, but also able to speak, chew and swallow. Infectious Disease Allison McGeer, 61 Director of infection control, Mount Sinai McGeer has dealt with SARS, C. difficile and other terrifying superbugs impervious to antibiotics. But what she spends most of her time researching, giving talks and media interviews about, and chairing committees on, is the seasonal flu. She delivers this powerful nugget to whoever will listen get the flu shot, because you are more likely to die from influenza than any other infectious disease out thereâeven if youâre young and healthy. Thanks to her exhaustive bullhorning and research on the burdens of influenza among hospital staff, Toronto hospitals are now better at testing sick patients for influenza, which can quietly exacerbate other illnesses and whose symptoms are easily hidden or overshadowed. Not only do patients receive better treatment more quickly, but health care workers know whether to don gloves and face shields. For McGeer, itâs the tracking data that can show just how pervasive and dangerous the flu can be. Physiatry John Flannery, 50 Director of the Musculoskeletal and Multisystem Rehab Program, Toronto Rehab Institute, UHN Beyond the usual team of physiotherapists and nurses, John Flannery has expanded UHNâs rehab centre to collaborate with occupational therapists, pharmacists, social workers, dietitians and surgeons to be able to repair pretty much any body function imaginable. This stacked approach was put to the test last year, when a 19-year-old patient named Tom Fahlman landed at Flanneryâs centre from Regina. Heâd had a rare form of sarcoma and, because he was bedridden for nine months, his joints were seized. On top of that, Fahlmanâs leg muscles had contracted so much that his toes pulled downward in a permanent ballerina point. Flannery rarely sees someone so young so immobilized; most of his patients are older, recovering from surgeries and discharged within a month. After an oncologist discovered that Fahlman was in remission, Flannery orchestrated a game plan that would resurrect the poor guy a pharmacist okayed an off-label medication that ÂFlannery used to partially paralyze his calves, so that an orthopaedic surgeon could lengthen and stretch the muscles. Over the course of a year, an army of physiotherapists and nurses got him walking again. Maternal-Fetal Medicine Greg Ryan Head of fetal medicine, Mount Sinai As surgeries go, fetal operations are some of the toughest, but many of Ryanâs tiny patients suffer from conditions that would be fatal after birth. In 2009, he was part of the team that performed Canadaâs first in-utero heart surgery. Guided by ultrasound and using a fine needle, a balloon catheter was threaded into the babyâs heart and inflated to open a restricted valve. Constantly evolving technologies have made fetal heart procedures possible, and surgeons like Ryan are always testing new techniques. After completing animal trials, Ryan, in a world first, successfully inserted a coronary artery stent to create a channel in a blocked membrane between the upper chambers of a fetusâs heart. Not long ago, every baby born with this condition died; today, 50 to 75 per cent of them have better than a fighting chance. Breast Cancer Pamela Goodwin, 59 Director of the Marvelle Koffler Breast Centre, Mount Sinai Sheâs a world leader in breast cancer research and one of the reasons Sinaiâs Marvelle Koffler Breast Centre exists. When the dedicated breast clinic opened in 1995, it was the countryâs first, offering everything from diagnosis to treatment to emotional support. Goodwin works on high-risk and resistant cancers, and has treated a particularly challenging subset of breast cancer patients young pregnant women. Outside the clinic, Goodwinâs research focuses on risk factors. Her pioneering studies show that women with high insulin levels in their blood often heavy or obese patients have worse cancer outcomes, because insulin has a way of switching on breast cancer cells. Her findings have since led to a multinational study of more than 3,500 women to see if taking a common diabetes drug to lower insulin levels will improve survival odds. Thanks to Goodwinâs work, researchers are now studying the effect of insulin on prostate, brain and other cancers, which could lead to remarkably simple, yet important, treatment advances. Nephrology Jeffrey Zaltzman, 54 Director of renal transplants, St. Michaelâs Say you want to donate a kidney, but the recipientâs blood type is A, and yours is B. Itâs now a viable procedure at St. Michaelâs thanks to Zaltzman and his team, who are using an innovative device that allows transplants among incompatible blood types. In this case, the recipientâs blood plasma would be pumped through the device and cleansed of B-antibodies, which would have attacked and ultimately rejected your kidney. This filtration happens a few times before and sometimes after surgery. The laundered blood tricks the body long enough to accept the foreign organ with a little help from immunoÂsuppressive drugs. St. Michaelâsâwhere more than one third of live donors have mismatched blood typesâis so far the only hospital in Canada offering this new route out of donor-Âwaiting-list hell. Parkinsonâs Disease Anthony Lang, 62 Director of the Morton and Gloria Shulman Movement Disorders Clinic, Toronto Western No Canadian has studied Parkinsonâs disease quite like Lang, and itâs impossible to overstate his influence in the field of movement disorders. He built and staffed the clinic at Toronto Western from scratch, starting in the mid-â80s as its sole neurologist. Itâs now world renowned and staffed with a team of nine specialized neurologists hand-picked by Lang who handle 10,000 patient visits a year from across the globe. Langâs clinic was the first in North America to treat advanced ÂParkinsonâs with deep brain stimulation using stereotactic neuroÂsurgery, a â60s-era practice Lang helped refine. Electrodes deliver a high-Âfrequency current to parts of the brain to help tame the tremors and rigidity of Parkinsonâsâso drastically for some patients that they could move freely for the first time in years without each step being hijacked by violent jerking. Gynecology Lisa Allen, 46 Site chief of gynecology, Womenâs College; head of gynecology, Mount Sinai; head of pediatric gynecology, Sick Kids Allen jokes that she never wears heels to work because of all the running around she might do in a day performing high-risk gynecological surgeries at Mount Sinai, doing quick outpatient procedures at Womenâs College Hospital or treating young girls at Sick Kids who are plagued with everything from ovarian cancers to torsion a rare âtwistingâ of the ovary. She most commonly treats girls with heavy or painful periods, which could be a Âsymptom of conditions such as endoÂmetriosis. Allen has the kind of deft and delicate bedside manner thatâs key when talking to a shy 12-year-old about painful bleeding or vaginal discomfort. Sometimes, she simply has to reassure girls that theyâre normal. Knee Surgery David Backstein, 44 Head of orthopaedic surgery, Mount Sinai Backstein has been called the Mike Holmes of medicine, because his speciality is fixing knee surgeries gone bad. Itâs the toughest kind of orthopaedic surgery, because thereâs often significant loss of bone and soft tissue, and more scar tissue to circumvent, while skin and muscles have to be moved around to patch infected areas. He performs a few of these surgeries a week at Sinai, which has become renowned for such complex redos, as well as for having among the shortest knee surgery wait times in the province 70 days. This has a lot to do with Backsteinâs constant system tweaks better-timed pain medication and physiotherapy, and less time on the operating table. Sinai surgeons currently Âperform more than 600 hip and knee Âreplacements a year. The need for his services will only increase as more of us get older and creakier. Infertility Ellen Greenblatt, 57 Director of the Centre for Fertility and Reproductive Health, Mount Sinai Unlucky couples of a certain demographic will likely recognize the name Greenblatt, a sought-after fertility doctor whoâs known for compassion and cutting-edge care. Of the thousands of patients who come through her clinic every year, more than half get pregnant. She sees about 50 new patients a week and, increasingly, cancer patients who want to freeze their eggs, embryos or sperm before undergoing potentially sterilizing chemo, radiation or surgery. Under Greenblatt, Sinaiâs fertility centre was one of the first to offer these urgent oncofertility services, and it remains the busiest clinic of its kind in the province. In the lab, she and her colleagues are working on methods to pinpoint the window of time a uterus is most receptive to an embryoâa potentially groundbreaking boost to IVF success rates. Pain Medicine Allan Gordon, 69 Director of the Wasser Pain Management Centre, Mount Sinai When Gordon started Sinaiâs pioneering pain clinic in 1999, many doctors still didnât believe in the existence of fibromyalgia, a syndrome characterized by widespread pain and fatigue, easily dismissed, like many chronic pain conditions, as psychosomatic. Gordonâs clinic is like a warm embrace for people whoâve lived for years with every kind of pain you can imagine headaches, irritable bowel Âsyndrome, and genital, joint, back and muscle pain. ÂGordon uses a hospital-wide team of varied specialists offering not only conventional physical treatments massage, physiotherapy, chiropractic and acupuncture but also psychiatry and cognitive behavioural therapy to get at pain from all angles. Itâs not an approach a recent patient expected when she came to Gordon with debilitating pain. They spent an hour talking about her divorce, depression and alcoholism, which went on to shape the treatment plan a mix of emotional and physical approaches that work to tackle the acute pain while also arming the patient with long-term coping strategies. Internal Medicine Donald Redelmeier, 53 Staff physician, general internal medicine, Sunnybrook In 1997, Redelmeier was the first to correlate cellphone use and car accidents using real-world data, and his research went on to inform regulations around the world. The idea for the study struck while he was on the phone with a patient who crashed his car during the conversation. His work inspired a slew of studies on driving culture, showing that changing lanes increases your chances of a crash threefold, accidents are more frequent on election days, and getting a traffic ticket decreases your odds of dying in car crash in the following few months by 30 per cent. His knack for drawing conclusions from seemingly random phenomena proves useful for his day-to-day clinical work at Sunnybrook. As an internist, Redelmeier treats people with multiple life-Âthreatening illnesses, for example, a 75-year-old going in for hip-replacement surgery who also has Âdiabetes, hypertension, osteoporosis, a history of cancer and strokes, and chronic kidney disease. Itâs Redelmeierâs job to deal with everything but the hip problem. Before surgery, he must determine which of the patientâs dozen medications must be stopped and in what sequence, and which are absolutely essential. He also counsels the family on possible post-op problems, basically attending to all the extra details so the surgeons donât have to. âI donât have anything to do with sutures and scalpels,â he says, âbut everything else is mine.â Plastic Surgery Marc Jeschke, 46 Director of the Ross Tilley Burn Centre, Sunnybrook When a young burn Âvictim recently landed in Jeschkeâs care, the patient had been languishing in a hospital bed for two years after barely surviving a house fire. Much of his body was still an open, oozing wound. He couldnât speak or move, and was maxed out on painkillers and antibiotics. Considering the extent of the infection and the absence of even a patch of skin to graft, most surgeons would have turned him away. But Jeschke, in a worldwide first, took a stab at stem cell treatment. He concocted a serum of potent stem cells from donor amniotic fluid, which he applied underneath one of the wounds. When he uncovered the area a week later, the infection had improved enough to allow new skin growth. Within three months, the patient was discharged. Though it was an extremely rare case, Jeschke became thoroughly convinced of the power of stem cells, which he and his team are now using to develop a 3-D skin printer, quite possibly the next revolution in burn treatment. Radiation Oncology Jean-Philippe Pignol, 52 Radiation oncologist, Odette Cancer Centre, Sunnybrook The odds of beating breast cancer these days are so good that some research has veered in the luxurious direction of making treatment more convenient and efficient. Today, because of Pignolâs work on portable radiation, a patient with early-stage breast cancer can walk into ÂSunnybrook at noon and be done treatment by 1, never having to return. Instead, about 80 tiny radioactive âseedsâ are implanted into the tumour. Pignol was the first to apply this highly targeted treatmentâalready used for certain kinds of prostate cancerâto breast tumours. Heâs now testing other treatments that deploy nanoparticles, which are so miniscule they exist somewhere between a solid and a liquid. Similar to the seeds, these gold nanobombs, as theyâre called, are inserted into the breast to slowly release radiation, and they can actually follow the natural migration of cancer cells. They eventually dissolve, leaving patients with no trace of the treatmentâor the cancer. Urology Tony Finelli, 45 Surgeon, oncology and urology, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre Finelli specializes in whatâs been called minimally invasive prostate surgery. Rather than perform the standard seven-centimetre cut across the abdomen, Finelli, with the help of a robot named da Vinci, can get at the prostate via a few small incisions and remove it through the belly button. He launched the hospitalâs urology laparoscopic program nine years ago and proved that such techniques result in less pain and blood loss, and, perhaps most important to patients, a quicker return to regular potency. Finelli performs two robotic prostatectomies a week, and today almost 40 per cent of the hospitalâs prostatectomies are done this way, compared with four per cent when Finelli started. The deft touch of a robot has been even more beneficial for surgeries to remove small kidney tumours, which, if done the extremely painful old-fashioned way, require a 10-centimetre incision and, in some cases, a few broken ribs. Pediatric Surgery Jacob Langer, 57 Surgeon, Sick Kids Langerâs area of interest is surgery on newborns with birth defects, but he does it all removes kidneys, performs the odd circumcision and treats cancers as well as the gamut of pediatric surgical conditions. And once every few years he gets patients like the Mufuka brothers, Tinashe and Tinotenda, conjoined infant twins from Zimbabwe who captured international media attention when they were flown to Toronto by a medical Âcharity in 2004. They arrived malnourished, attached at the abdomen and liver. Langer had participated in only three twin-separation surgeries throughout his career; theyâre extremely rare, highly complex and can often be unsuccessful depending on where the kids are joined. The five-hour surgery went about as smoothly as they go, and after a few months in recovery, the boys, now 10, returned home. Though it was an exceptional kind of surgery, if Langer can expertly deal with conjoined twins, your kidâs appendectomy should be a breeze. Geriatric Care Samir Sinha, 37 Director of geriatrics, Mount Sinai and UHN Sinha is exactly the sort of doctor you want taking care of your aging mother. He spends nearly an hour with every patient on each visit two hours with new referrals. He makes house calls, about 10 a month, with an old-fashioned medical bag, rooting through patientsâ fridges to make sure thereâs food, sometimes getting lost in their life stories. Since being recruited from Johns Hopkins three years ago, Sinha has pushed geriatric care to new heights at Sinai by instituting a Âhospital-wide strategy for elder acute care and ensuring all frontline hospital staff are trained in senior care. He has introduced simple changes, like keeping people mobile, making them get out of bed for meals, and paying more attention to medication combinations and dosages. Under Sinha, the length of hospital stays for the elderly has dropped by 17 per cent, and there have been fewer falls. He was recently selected by the province to lead a seniors strategy on transportation, housing services, job opportunities and elder abuse, so that, as he says, everyoneâs golden years are golden. Images Markian Lozowchuk
3 reviewsUnclaimed Medical ClinicsOpen900 AM - 430 PMSee hoursWrite a reviewAdd photoPhotos & videosSee all 14 photosAdd photoLocation & Hours140 The EsplanadeToronto, ON M5A 4P5St. LawrenceGet directionsMon900 AM - 430 PMTue900 AM - 430 PMWed900 AM - 430 PMOpen nowThu900 AM - 430 PMFri900 AM - 430 PMSatClosedSunClosedLoading interface...Loading interface...Loading interface...
dokter syaraf di mahkota medical centre