The Anonymous Widower

London Air Ambulance Gets A Brain Scanner

The BBC are running a story this morning about the London Air Ambulance having a portable brain scanner and that they are able to scan injured patients on the way to hospital.

I’ve had a few brain scans in my time, but I can’t imagine one of the machines that have scanned me, being air-transportable in anything less than a C-130 Hercules.

But search the Internet and you find the device. It’s called an InfraScanner. It works using the same infra-red spectrum as a television remote control.

This superb piece of medical engineering, or others based on the same technology, must end up in the bag of every A&E doctor, or those who work in areas where there is a high risk of brain injuries, like sporting events or combat zones.

December 30, 2015 Posted by | Health | , | Leave a comment

Does This Mean I Won’t Get Dementia And Depression?

I have just read an article in The Times describing a diet for your brain.

They also publish the neurologist’s eating rules as down to Dr. David Perlmutter, in a book called Grain Brain.

So what does the diet advocate?  A lot of things that I stick to fairly well, like certain fruits, vegetables and oily fish, with possibly a glass of red wine a day.  But above all it says avoid gluten!

So far so good!

But then he’s an American from Florida!

January 18, 2014 Posted by | Health | , | Leave a comment

Aren’t Brains Wonderful!

For the first time, since I had my stroke in Hong Kong, I’ve switched back to the way I used to live my life twenty years ago.

I’ve gone back to wearing short-sleeved shirts, with a jumper over the top if it’s chilly.  For years I wore a simple windcheater type jacket with a large pocket, but no-one makes one now.  If I needed to carry more, then I carried by Dunhill briefcase loosely in my left hand.

It’s as though my brain has switched back and put me into this lifestyle that works for me.

It’s so practical. For example, I don’t use a dish-washer, as the previous tenants gave it a good fucking and I do the job so much better. So I just take off the jumper and get started.

I just went to get my newspaper.  Coming back, if I’m not reading the front page, I fold it up and hold it in my left hand.

All I need to do, is get my eyesight and left hand working correctly and I’m a new man.

The eyesight is pretty good now and I can even take my glasses off, whilst watching films and sporting events. But as my eyes get less dry from the better weather, they seem to be improving.

As to my left hand, it seems to work very well, but its measurement of temperature is bad.  I’m still typing mostly one-handed, but then it was always thus!

I notice too, when I put on a shirt, it isn’t the left hand that’s a problem, it’s the right. It could be just down to dry skin. I know for instance, that my nails aren’t back to their best.  Incidentally, whilst living in Suffolk after the stroke in 2010, by the autumn they were tip-top. So let’s put their state down to the cold and very dry weather of the last few months.

But I think my brain and its superb memory will pull me through. Although last night, I got annoyed when I couldn’t remember the name of the Adiran Lyne film, when Glenn Close boiled the bunny. But we have the Internet to solve those problems. It was, of course, Ben Hur! I can remember vividly sitting with Adrian Lyne by a pool in the South of France, watching our respective wives swimming.

One memory that thinks, I’m on the right track, is that my nails taste and feel exactly the same, as when I was a child, when I was a terrible nail-biter. I have this great desire, which I’m resisting, to bite them again.

I just don’t think I’m in any way unique, it’s just that I let my brain do its best!

April 25, 2013 Posted by | Health, World | | Leave a comment

How Little Possessions Matter!

Melanie Reid, who is one of my favourite columnists, has a piece today in The Times about how little possessions matter to her now, after breaking her back in a horse riding accident. It is one of her best, but then most are and that’s why she was last year’s Newspaper columnist of the year.

She talks about how possessions and what she calls stuff have lost their significance to her.  I would also say that since the loss of my wife and son to cancer and my stroke, there’s one thing that matters to me above all.  And that is my brain.  If one pair of shoes is more comfortable than another, then they are better.

I used to love driving and now all my cars have gone. But then I have no intention of driving again. But then too many idiots can drive, but how many have taken a train all the way to Nice and back as I have. And how many have wangled their way into the cab of an HST between Edinburgh and Inverness.

I got the latter because of my most treasured possession and something I won’t gve away; my brain. It may not be perfect, but at least all the memory and creative bits are still there.

Melanie finishes her piece about how when being searched for a flight, she started to feel the hands of the security guard and says that things are still happening. A similar thing happened to me, when a young lady pushed her supermarket basket into my left leg and apologised. I said she needn’t, as I had felt it and that was good for my left leg.  So we laughed about it and carried on queuing. Perhaps, I should have asked her out for a drink, but that would be pushing my luck. The next time it happens I will.

Let’s hope she’s brown eyed and haired, as I lived with a blue-eyed blonde for forty years, and a change would be nice.

August 11, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel, World | , , | 3 Comments

Human Echolocation

We all know that bats use this, but surely humans can’t! Oh yes they can, if you believe what Wikipedia says here.

I was alerted to this story by yesterday’s Times Magazine, where they had an article about Daniel Kish. Perhaps he read Dark Universe by Daniel F. Galouey.  In my view it’s one of the best science fiction novels ever written.  And it’s still in print! I have a copy on my bookshelf and like all good science fiction, it has a yellow cover.

The trouble with people is that they use the creative part of their brains for all the wrong purposes rather than to improve themselves or the lives of others.

August 7, 2011 Posted by | Health, World | | Leave a comment

Rare Earth Prices May Hit Smart Phones

I’ve just been hearing on the BBC’s Wake up to Money, that rare earth prices are set to rise, as China imposes export restrictions.  This may mean that defence equipment won’t be able to get everything it needs and prices of devices like smart phones may rise.

Am I bothered?

Not really, as I believe that the real developments in the future in defence, security and medicine will be mind-based like software and no-one has ever proved to me any decent reason to buy a smart phone. After all who needs something physical to be smart?  Smartness comes from your own brain.

I can text, tweet and make phone calls from my trusty Nokia 6310i and it’s as smart as I need.  If it were smarter it might start to rule my life!  But, that’s my job!

December 29, 2010 Posted by | News, World | , , , | Leave a comment

Mind and Body Changes

In the previous post on Sudoku, I speculated how my problem solving ability was changing.

But this is not the only change that is happening.

Just after the second stroke in Hong Kong, my balance was not good and walking in a straight line was difficult.  In fact when I went to physiotherapy or  X-ray, it was always in a wheel chair.  Incidentally, once in Addenbrookes, I was generally left to my own devices, after the first few hours.  But that is in the main down to a difference in cultures.

But take what happened on my first day in Addenbrookes.  I was taken to a kitchen and asked to make a cup of tea for myself. It tasted better than any cup of tea, I have ever made.

What that cup of tea taught me, was that you have to think differently and take in all possible outcomes, when you do something.

Now that I’ve been home for a  few weeks and virtually looking after my cooking and personal needs on my own for the last three or so, I can see that my brain has developed new ways of doing things. As an example, I am sure, I’ve  devised new ways of doing things to get round the problems I have, say with my left hand. But then I’ve done this before, when my arm was broken at school. For years, I avoided using it, as it didn’t work too well, So I sometimes used my right hand, when everybody else would have used their left.

Underneath it all, we all have several ways of doing things and when one is no longer available, we just use another one we know or devise a new one. As an example, how many of us are naturally left-handed, but have been made to write with the other hand. And then you have Ken Rosewall, who some would say was the finest tennis player of all time, but he was naturally left-handed and had been made to play with his right by his father.

July 23, 2010 Posted by | Health | , , , | 1 Comment

Between Life and Death

This program on BBC1 last night, was not the sort of television I usually watch, as I jokily say I’m allergic to hospitals.  I suppose, that as I’ve seen the inside of them so much in recent years, what with the death of C and our youngest son, and now my strokes, it is quite understandable. 

But for some reason, I didn’t turn the program off last night.  Partly because it was Addenbrookes, I suppose and I do have a respect for the place after what they have done for my family.  I’ve also played tennis with several of the doctors and know the cutting-edge ethos of the hospital, which is pushing the boundaries of what is possible.

In the end I found it very uplifting and almost supportive of my recovery, albeit from a very minor problem to those shown in the program. I could relate to all the people in the program on various levels, as a scientist, a father and a patient.

If there is one lesson we should all learn from last night’s program, it is that we shouldn’t stop funding units, such as this at Addenbrookes, in these times of austerity.  You can’t put a price on human life and with this units, there must be much they are learning that can be applied across the NHS and the wider world. There are  also other lessons to be learned by us all and let’s hope that someone, who watched the program last night, is moved to improve his behaviour or driving skills, so that he avoids the need for going to hospital. That would be a positive benfit for everyone and everything.

We might all learn that human life is precious!

July 14, 2010 Posted by | Health, World | , , , | 3 Comments

The Accidental Artist

Tommy McHugh was on the television this morning.  He’s an artist, who had never painted before he had two brain aneurysms.  This is his story from The Times.

Amazing!

March 12, 2010 Posted by | News | , | Leave a comment

Keeping Your Brain Healthy

Look at any list of symptoms for coeliac disease and you’ll find a lot of them are concerned with brain or mental problems.

  • Mild Depression
  • Feelings of Inadequacy
  • Gait Ataxia/Apraxia
  • Lightheadness and Fainting
  • Migraine or Persistent Headaches
  • Mood Swings
  • Sleep Disturbance

I used to suffer from most of these except for sleep disturbance.

Once I went on a gluten-free diet all of these symptoms cleared up.  Now I know that I am a special case in that I’m a coeliac, but once the B12 levels were back up to normal, all of the symptoms disappeared.  Research at Oxford University has indicated that higher B12 levels may help brain health.

It would be interesting to repeat their experiments with coeliacs. When a hospital diagnoses a coeliac, they should immediately undergo the tests before starting a gluten-free diet.  And then they should be tested at intervals after starting the diet.  My body actually reacted quite quickly in that my dandruff cleared up after about two weeks.

Now I know several people who have MS.  One has sent me a link to an article about a new treatment for the disease called The Liberation Treatment. Here are the first couple of paragraphs.

Amid the centuries-old castles of the ancient city of Ferrara is a doctor who has come upon an entirely new idea about how to treat multiple sclerosis, one that may profoundly change the lives of patients.

Dr. Paolo Zamboni, a former vascular surgeon and professor at the University of Ferrara in northern Italy, began asking questions about the debilitating condition a decade ago, when his wife Elena, now 51, was diagnosed with MS.

He found that in some patients, the blood flow to the head was restricted and by improving this using standard surgical procedures, their health improved.  Here’s a couple of paragraphs from the article.

One of those patients was Buffalo resident Kevin Lipp. Lipp had MS for over a decade, and as part of the study, discovered he had five blocked veins in his neck. After undergoing the Liberation Treatment 10 months ago, he says he hasn’t had a single new MS attack.

Zamboni emphasizes that the Liberation Treatment does not make people in wheelchairs walk again. Rather, it seems to stop the development of further MS attacks, and in some cases, improves movement and decreases the debilitating fatigue that are the hallmarks of MS.

It may not cure MS, but it is all very interesting.

I tend to look on the body, as an engineer would look on a machine or a car.  Machines don’t work well if they don’t have all of the things they need like fuel, electric power, oil, water and all the other necessities.

Is the body any different to my car in that respect?

And now today, it has been reported that those who develop Alzheimer’s are less likely to get cancer.

This would appear to push things in another direction, as research at Nottingham University has shown that coeliacs are less likely to get breast cancer. Diagnosed coeliacs have on the whole healthy brains because they eat well, so this research might show the opposite.

We need to do a lot more research to find all of these links.

December 24, 2009 Posted by | Health | , , , , , | 2 Comments