Thursday, July 28, 2016

Where else can you find Clermont Radiology online?

Clermont Radiology wants to be able to interact with our patients online as much as in person. We have a very interactive website, which includes a patient portal for patients to schedule their appointments and pay their bills, and we are very active on social media as well. Most of you know that we run a Facebook page, but did you know that we share content on Twitter, and on Instagram too? Check out our social media sites below!

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Facebook:



Clermont Radiology’s Facebook is where we share our blog posts first and foremost. Most of our followers are on Facebook, and if there’s news we want to share, we’re always on Facebook the most due to the amount of information we’re allowed to present. Our Facebook URL is at facebook.com/clermont.radiology/.


Twitter:



We post the same content on Twitter as we do on Facebook, except under 140 characters, of course. Our Twitter is at twitter.com/ClermontImaging.


Instagram:



A lot of people do not know this, but yes, we do have an Instagram! We’ve only been on for a few months, but we share on Instagram everything that we share on Twitter and Facebook. Follow us on Instagram at @clermontradiology.

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Be sure to follow Clermont Radiology on all of our social media sites (we post on Thursdays,) and if you’re in need of one of our many imaging services, contact us today!

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

5 Fun Things to Do in Lake County for August

I'll be honest with you, it was difficult to find activities to do in Lake County in August. I'm not sure what it is about the August shortage exactly, but I still managed to find something for you fitness nuts and artists, and two activities based around food -- the Mount Dora Seafood Festival and the O-Town Mac-Down (which isn't in Lake County but is close enough in nearby Kissimmee.) Isn't food-based things what we all secretly want anyway? Check out more information about August activities below!

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Saturday, August 13th, 2016

Waterfront Park

330 3rd Street, Clermont, 34711

If you’re a runner or just love a good fitness challenge, the Central Florida Triathlon Series & 5K in Clermont is perfect for you. The event includes a 5K, a Duathlon (Run-Bike-Run) and a Super Fun Sprint Triathlon for those who want a bit of a shorter distance. Post race, enjoy a food tent, beer, and themed entertainment.

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Donnelly Building

530 N Donnelly St., Mount Dora, 32757

Saturday, August 13th, 2016 – Sunday, August 14th, 2016

The Florida Highwaymen are Florida’s historic landscape artists, and they’ll return to Mount Dora to display and sell their artwork on Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. inside and outside the Donnelly Building in Donnelly Park.

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August 20, 2016 & September 17, 2016

Ski Beach

Lake Harris Drive, Leesburg, 34748

The theme of Lake Front Nights in Leesburg is “Keep it Local, Meet Your Neighbors.” There will be a live music, food trucks, beer and wine, and the tallest rock wall in Florida.

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Saturday, August 27, 2016 – Sunday, August 28, 2016

Elizabeth Evans Park

100 N Donnelly St., Mount Dora, 32757

The 2nd annual Mount Dora Seafood Festival  is a family friendly event filled with tons of fresh seafood, more than 100 exhibitors on hand with specialty food items, live music and drinks, a fun filled kids zone, plenty of crafts, and of course, pirates! (It’s free admission too!)

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Saturday, August 20, 2016

Osceola Heritage Park

1875 Silver Spur Ln, Kissimmee, 34744

Technically, the O-Town MacDown isn’t in Lake County, however, it deserves to mentioned, because it is located in Kissimmee, which really isn’t that far away from Lake County. The O-Town MacDown is a mac-n-cheese competition benefiting Give Kids The World Village. You’ll enjoy the best mac-n-cheese dishes from around the world, live entertainment, chef cooking demonstrations, a kid’s fun zone, vendor booths, and more. I know someone who went last year and they said there was so much mac-n-cheese they could barely move after tasting it all. 




Thursday, July 14, 2016

Exercise Improves Memory in Breast Cancer Survivors



Breast cancer survivors often complain of memory problems, but according to a study conducted by Northwestern University, moderate to vigorous physical activity can often alleviate symptoms such as stress and even memory problems.

One of the findings discovered by the study, which was published in Psycho-Oncology on July 8th, is that memory problems in the cancer survivors were most likely caused by the high-stress levels experienced, instead of specifically the chemotherapy or radiation treatments.

"Our research suggests these self-reported memory problems may be emotionally related," said lead author Siobhan Phillips, assistant professor of preventive medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. "These women are frightened, stressed, fatigued, tapped out emotionally and have low self-confidence, which can be very mentally taxing and can lead to perceived memory problems."





Physical activity has long been praised as a combatant of high anxiety and depression as well as a booster of self-confidence, so it is interesting to note how physical activity has even more psychological benefits than previous thought, and is associated with lower levels of perceived memory impairment as well.

“We found moderate to vigorous physical activity actually benefits women psychologically and that, in turn, helps their memory,” Professor Phillips said.  

Moderate to vigorous physical activity, including brisk walking, jogging, biking, or a high energy exercise class, were directly linked to fewer subjective memory problems in breast cancer survivors. Subjective memory is an individual’s perception of their memory.


The memory and exercise data were looked at by investigators in two study arms: one in self-reported data for 1,477 women across the country; and the other in accelerometers worn by 362 women. The findings that connected moderate to vigorous physical activity to improved memory were consistent across both groups. 



Wednesday, July 6, 2016

The Father of Modern Chemotherapy

Sidney Farber in 1947, during his children's cancer remissions research.


Born on September 30th, 1903 in Buffalo, New York, Sidney Farber was a pediatric pathologist who is widely considered the “Father of Modern Chemotherapy.”

After being rejected from US medical schools in the mid-1920’s due to his Jewish heritage, Farber relocated to Europe where he excelled at the Universities of Heidelberg and Freiburg in Germany. He later entered Harvard Medical School as a second-year student and graduated in 1927 at the age of 24.

Later, he trained in pathology at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston and was appointed as resident pathologist at Boston Children’s Hospital, before becoming an assistant in pathology at Harvard in 1928.

While working on a research project at Harvard, he evaluated aminopterin, (which is the 4-amino derivative of folic acid with immunosuppressive properties,) and discovered that it could be used to induce remissions among children with leukemia. He published his findings in 1948 in The New England Journal of Medicine, using a study of 16 children with leukemia and showcasing that 10 of them had shown clinical, hematologic, and pathologic evidence of improvement. This spurred the development and use of other chemotherapeutic agents, including the now widely used methotrexate, which is similar to aminopterin but with fewer side effects.


Sidney Farber with a patient.


During this time, Dr. Farber and the Variety Club (a charitable organization formed by people in the entertainment industry who wished to offer financial help for scientific efforts) launched the Children’s Cancer Research Fund in order to raise money for childhood cancers. They found a little boy by the name of Einar Gustafson with a rare form of lymphoma and nicknamed him “Jimmy” in order to protect his privacy. Jimmy was then featured on a radio show in which the show’s host asked listeners to send funds for the Children’s Cancer Research Fund, and Jimmy was able to help the foundation raise $231,000 in only 8 minutes. The Children’s Cancer Research Fund was later renamed the Jimmy Fund, and the Children’s Cancer Research Foundation, which funded Dr. Farber’s clinic in Boston, later started treating patients of all ages and became the Sidney Farber Cancer Center and then later the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.

In the 50’s and 60’s, Dr. Farber made even more advances in cancer research, which also included the concept of “total care”, in which a variety of services are offered for cancer patients and their caregivers, including clinical care, nutrition, social work, and counseling -- all in one place.

Throughout the rest of his life, Dr. Farber continued to raise funds for cancer research, and between 1957 and 1967 the annual budget of the National Cancer Institute had increased from $48 million to $178 million.


Dr. Farber passed away from cardiac arrest while working in his office in 1973 at the age of 70. His tireless efforts and continuous research to create new and innovative ways for treating cancer have saved millions of lives all over the world. He most definitely deserves his recognition as one of the greatest scientists to have ever lived.