Topic, "Therapeutic Hypothermia"
Hi. This month we will have a fascinating discussion at our Cafe Sci at
7PM on Wednesday 7 September, at Taste, in College Park.
When blood can't flow to one's heart or brain, those organs take little
time to suffer damage. Anecdotes of "freezing" injured people to help
them get better have been told since ancient Greece. Contemporary
medicine has only recently found good enough technology, understanding
of cellular biology, and a niche in the probabilities of outcomes to
use such a paradoxical technique in practice. Some advanced physicians
now lower patients' internal temperature in extreme circumstances, to
slow or stop damage, and buy time to treat injuries.
Charles F Hunley is a critical care fellow at Orlando Regional Medical
Center with a masters' in exercise physiology. He finished his masters'
at UCF in 2000, and graduated from Northeastern Ohio University College
of Medicine in 2007. He completed his internal-medicine residency at
ORMC in 2010. For the last four years he has done research at ORMC's
Translational Research Lab in critical care, emphasizing sepsis and
acute respiratory distress.
Directions
Taste
717 W. Smith Street
Orlando, United States
32804
Taste is near the corner of Princeton Street (really Smith Street after
the fork) and Edgewater Drive, so about 2 minutes from I-4 to parking.
One can park on the street or in the parking lot behind Taste.
* From Downtown and south, drive north ("east") on I-4 through
downtown. At the exit for Princeton Street, exit and turn
left/west.
* From Altamonte Springs and north, drive south ("west") on I-4
toward downtown Orlando. At the exit for Princeton Street, exit and
turn right/west.
From I-4, drive a few blocks to Edgewater Drive. At the intersection,
you should see a orange building ahead of you, labeled "Taste". Park on
the street or behind Taste.