Gastrointestinal Endoscopes
All About Gastrointestinal EndoscopesWoman looks through microscope
Woman looks through microscope
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| • | MicroSCoPE: April, 2008 Issue |
| by Sylvia Currie. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In This Issue 1. Starts tomorrow! Rethinking Teaching in the Sciences 2. Mark Your Calendars * SCoPE Seminar: Viral Professional Development June 2-22, 2008 * SCoPE Seminar: R2D2 - Empowering Online Learning: July 21 - August 3, 2008 * e/merge 2008 * If you would like an event to be listed, please contact Sylvia Currie scurrie@sfu.ca. Check the SCoPE calendar for a full list of online events that will be of interest to members. 3. Activity Recap * Seminar: Key Competencies for Second Life Moderators * Live Session: Social Media: Benefits for Researchers * Seminar and Live Session: Teaching and Learning Centres Revisited SCoPE seminars are always available for reading and afterthoughts. Access all past seminar discussions 4. PeriSCoPE * Take 10 minutes to complete the WebAIM cognitive disability and web accessibility survey * The 3rd issuse of Transformative Dialogues: Teaching and Learning Journal is now available. The theme is "Welcome to Change and Transition: Change in our Lives and Life in our Change". This issue features a literature review on Social Change and Diversity Education by Cathy Bray. * Deirdre Bonnycastle has posted the latest Active Learning Blog Carnival. This months Big Question is "How do you and your students assess how well they are achieving the course goals/objectives/learning plan?". Take a minute to add your comments! * Episode 4 of McToonish, a podcast about education, instructional design, and social capital is available. The topic for March: Professional Learning, Collaboration and Why I Blog * In response to an unusually large number of requests from SCoPE members who are seeking employment, we created a SCoPE group at Linkedin. This may help to connect individuals who are interested in employment in education or in connecting professionally on projects. Our member list is growing! * Follow SCoPE on Twitter * The SCoPE Facebook group and member networking is proving to be an effective way to get the word out about SCoPE events and keep up with members' activities. Stop by to write on the wall or start a discussion topic. * Check what SCoPE members are blogging about and subscribe to our SCoPE Bloggers feed. * Have you added your name and location to our Frappr Map? * Leave a message on the SCoPE Voicethread 5. About SCoPE SCoPE forms collaborating partnerships with many organizations to implement and promote community activities and products. This is a mutual exchange of support and services. Self-register at http://scope.lidc.sfu.ca 6. About MicroSCoPE MicroSCoPE is prepared by Sylvia Currie, Community Coordinator (scurrie@sfu.ca). Please spread the word about SCoPE activities. Distribute this newsletter!
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| • | Jurassic Turtles Could Swim |
| Around 164 million years ago the earliest aquatic turtles lived in lakes and lagoons on the Isle of Skye, Scotland, according to new research. | |
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| • | Plate Tectonics Started Over 4 Billion Years Ago, Geochemists Report |
| A new picture of the early Earth is emerging, including the surprising finding that plate tectonics on Earth may have started more than four billion years ago -- much earlier than scientists had previously believed. | |
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| • | Pharmacist returns to serve alma mater |
| Andrea Cameron’s relationship with the Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy began 15 years before she actually had an office on campus.... | |
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| • | Double-Balloon Enteroscopy Identified As Cost-Effective Approach For Obscure GI Bleeding |
| A cost-effectiveness analysis conducted by researchers at Stanford University Hospital in Calif., shows that an initial double-balloon enteroscopy (DBE) is a cost-effective approach for patients with obscure gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding. | |
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| • | Endoscopic Approach to Tracheoesophageal Fistulas in Adults |
| Publication year: 2008 Source: Techniques in Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, Volume 10, Issue 4, October 2008, Pages 155-163 William A., Ross , Jeffrey H., Lee Tracheoesophageal fistulas (TEF) in adults are primarily of malignant etiology with esophageal and lung cancers being the most common. Most cases of benign TEF have iatrogenic causes. Historically, the recommended treatment of TEF was surgical. Although this is still the case for benign TEF, endoscopic stent insertion is currently the recommended approach for malignant TEF, as well as benign TEF when the surgical approach must be deferred. Since the mid-1990s self-expanding metal stents (SEMS) have replaced rigid plastic prosthesis as the stent of first choice. SEMS close 89% of TEFs, although the rate of recurrence has been reported as high... |
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