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Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Stroke published by this site and its partners.

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    May 9, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  1. Al Fritz dies at 88; Schwinn exec developed the Sting-Ray bike

    For much of the 1960s and the early 1970s, no suburban streetscape would have been complete without them: A squadron of kids clutching sky-high handlebars on low-slung bikes in eye-popping, hot-rod colors.
    For much of the 1960s and the early 1970s, no suburban streetscape would have been complete without them: A squadron of kids clutching sky-high handlebars on low-slung bikes in eye-popping, hot-rod colors. Equipped with a curved banana seat, the Schwinn...

    Tags: Barrington, Alzheimer's Disease

  2. May 11, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  3. Taylor Mead dies at 88; underground film legend and bohemian artist

    Taylor Mead, an underground cinema legend whose comic charm and sense of the surreal inspired Andy Warhol and other seminal figures in the alternative film world, died Wednesday in Denver. He was 88.
    Taylor Mead, an underground cinema legend whose comic charm and sense of the surreal inspired Andy Warhol and other seminal figures in the alternative film world, died Wednesday in Denver. He was 88. A fixture of bohemian New York who was also a poet...

    Tags: Robert Downey Jr., Poetry, Entertainment, Jack Kerouac, Arts and Culture

  4. May 5, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  5. How a 'million-dollar patient' got off a medical merry-go-round

    For more than two decades, Wanda Remo has battled one illness after another. Asthma, chronic lung disease, heart disease, high blood pressure, arthritis, depression, chronic pain, strokes. Specialists treat her lungs, her heart and her joints.
    For more than two decades, Wanda Remo has battled one illness after another. Asthma, chronic lung disease, heart disease, high blood pressure, arthritis, depression, chronic pain, strokes. Specialists treat her lungs, her heart and her joints. Her...

    Tags: Diseases and Illnesses, Physical Therapists, Wheezing, Health Treatments, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

  6. Apr 22, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  7. E.L. Konigsburg dies at 83; award-winning children's book author

    E.L. Konigsburg, who was one of the few children's authors to twice win the Newbery Medal, died Friday at a hospital in Falls Church, Va. She was 83. Konigsburg had a stroke the week before she died, said her son Paul. She won the Newbery Medal, one...

    Tags: Falls Church (Falls Church, Virginia), Jacksonville (Duval, Florida), Literature, Awards and Prizes, Authors

  8. Apr 19, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  9. Sam Jameson dies at 76; former longtime L.A. Times correspondent

    Sam Jameson, a former longtime Los Angeles Times foreign correspondent with a deep knowledge of and close personal affinity for Japan, his professional and personal base for half a century, died Friday at a Tokyo hospital. He was 76.
    Sam Jameson, a former longtime Los Angeles Times foreign correspondent with a deep knowledge of and close personal affinity for Japan, his professional and personal base for half a century, died Friday at a Tokyo hospital. He was 76. The cause of...

    Tags: Unrest, Conflicts and War, U.S. Military, Tokyo (Japan), Heart Failure, Japan

  10. Apr 17, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. Is the media to blame for the brain injuries of hockey players?

    Why is hockey such a violent and dangerous sport? Medical researchers from Canada have an answer: Blame the media.
    Why is hockey such a violent and dangerous sport? Medical researchers from Canada have an answer: Blame the media. “Media reports of an issue such as TBI in sport can contribute to an altered culture,” they write in a study published...

    Tags: Newspapers, Concussion, Medical Research, Sports, National Hockey League

  12. Apr 16, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. Heart attack, stroke not enough to prompt some people to shape up

    We all know that smoking is bad for us, that exercise is good for us, and that we should eat vegetables, whole grains and other nutritious foods. All of this advice is even more true for people who have had serious health scares due to heart disease or stroke.
    We all know that smoking is bad for us, that exercise is good for us, and that we should eat vegetables, whole grains and other nutritious foods. All of this advice is even more true for people who have had serious health scares due to heart disease or...

    Tags: Personal Income, Heart Disease, American Medical Association, Heart Surgery, Heart Attack

  14. Apr 8, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. Dodgers' Kenley Jansen has a healthy outlook

    addCustomPlayer('8cqmm3yooufw16fbocvnmn2rk', '', '', 600, 418, 'perf8cqmm3yooufw16fbocvnmn2rk', 'eplayer15'); SAN DIEGO — Kenley Jansen should be able to attend his newborn daughter's graduation and wedding ceremonies. No longer does the Dodgers'...

    Tags: Baseball, Petco Park, Cardiac Arrhythmia, San Diego Padres, Chemical Industry

  16. Apr 5, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  17. Letters: What brain mapping can't cure

    Re "Ambitious effort aims to map brain," April 3 Although I understand President Obama's humorous intent, I don't believe even the most exhaustive understanding of the workings of the brain could even come close to explaining "all kinds of things that...

    Tags: Science and Technology, Scientific Exploration, Interior Policy, Gun Control, Politics

  18. Apr 2, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. Obama outlines private-public project to study the brain

    Making good on a promise first hinted at during his State of the Union speech in February, President Obama on Tuesday unveiled the broad outlines of a scientific initiative aimed at mapping the human brain. The project's ambitious goals include understanding how the brain forms memories and controls human behavior; how it becomes damaged by conditions such as Parkinson's disease and autism; and how it can be repaired when afflicted by Alzheimer's disease, post-traumatic stress disorder and other illnesses.
    Making good on a promise first hinted at during his State of the Union speech in February, President Obama on Tuesday unveiled the broad outlines of a scientific initiative aimed at mapping the human brain. The project's ambitious goals include...

    Tags: Behavioral Conditions, Diseases and Illnesses, Unrest, Conflicts and War, Science, National Institutes of Health

  20. Apr 4, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times Exclusive
  21. New brain study should probe shallow recesses of tea party minds

    President Obama wants to invest an initial $110 million in a study of the human brain that could have benefits as great as those achieved by the Human Genome Project. Maybe the first study should be done on the one-track minds of tea party Republicans, who will undoubtedly oppose funding for the study because their brains are fixated on the single idea that government can do nothing right.
    President Obama wants to invest an initial $110 million in a study of the human brain that could have benefits as great as those achieved by the Human Genome Project. Maybe the first study should be done on the one-track minds of tea party Republicans,...

    Tags: Sarah Palin, Tea Party Movement, Same-Sex Marriage, George W. Bush, Louie Gohmert

  22. Mar 24, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  23. Finding a cruise with wheelchair accommodations

    <strong>Question:</strong> My husband had a stroke two years ago. He can walk short distances and maneuver some stairs, but we always take a wheelchair. I have just retired and would love to do some traveling, and a riverboat cruise in Europe is at the top of my bucket list. Are there trips that could accommodate this situation? Would shore excursions be a problem, or are we restricted to drive-bys?
    Question: My husband had a stroke two years ago. He can walk short distances and maneuver some stairs, but we always take a wheelchair. I have just retired and would love to do some traveling, and a riverboat cruise in Europe is at the top of my bucket...
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