View allAll Photos Tagged urology,
Most patients visiting that department can get an urgent need to pee...no loo close by though. Jonathan received his biopsy results and he has Intermediary Prostate Cancer but has declined treatment for it. An Op is out of the question as cannot undergo an anaesthetic....He is fine about everything.. even my photo choice, although he thinks it a little odd..
BTW Jonathan has been under close observation for five years due to his younger brother dying from an aggressive form of this cancer aged 65.. the latest PSA just escalated fairly recently and exponentially so Jonathan and I knew it would be cancerous..
Relieved it doesn’t appear aggressive but not as low grade as we had hoped disappointingly..
Sadly, this is only a plumbing shop, but if my urologist had a sense of humour he'd get a sign like this one.
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Strobist: AB1600 with gridded 60X30 softbox overhead. AB800 with Diffused HOBD-W overhead. Triggered by Cybersync.
Pro-Optic 8mm ƒ3.5
More photos and full report on my website: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com/urbex/2014/11/07/urbex-dr-annas-hau...
After the death of her Husband the surgery was rented out to other doctors who used the place as a Urology Clinic, it appears that the Doctors wife continued to live at the property until somewhere between 2000-2010 when she moved into a nursing home leaving the property abandoned.
More photos and full report here: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com/urbex/2014/11/07/urbex-dr-annas-hau...
After the death of her Husband the surgery was rented out to other doctors who used the place as a Urology Clinic, it appears that the Doctors wife continued to live at the property until somewhere between 2000-2010 when she moved into a nursing home leaving the property abandoned.
More photos and full report on my website: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com/urbex/2014/11/07/urbex-dr-annas-hau...
After the death of her Husband the surgery was rented out to other doctors who used the place as a Urology Clinic, it appears that the Doctors wife continued to live at the property until somewhere between 2000-2010 when she moved into a nursing home leaving the property abandoned.
More photos and full report on my website: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com/urbex/2014/11/07/urbex-dr-annas-hau...
After the death of her Husband the surgery was rented out to other doctors who used the place as a Urology Clinic, it appears that the Doctors wife continued to live at the property until somewhere between 2000-2010 when she moved into a nursing home leaving the property abandoned.
More photos and full report here: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com/urbex/2014/11/07/urbex-dr-annas-hau...
After the death of her Husband the surgery was rented out to other doctors who used the place as a Urology Clinic, it appears that the Doctors wife continued to live at the property until somewhere between 2000-2010 when she moved into a nursing home leaving the property abandoned.
The urology operating room at Dr Anna's House and Medical Surgery.
View lots more images on my website -
As you get older, knowing where the toilet is becomes an essential part of daily life.
People may urinate more as they get older for a number of reasons, including medical problems like hypertension or diabetes. It may also be a symptom of infection. “That’s often the first thing we look at when people complain of frequent urination,” said Dr. Tomas Griebling, vice chairman of urology at the University of Kansas and a spokesman for the American Urological Association. Some medicines can also be the cause.
Getting older, Dr. Griebling said, does not necessarily mean more trips to the bathroom. But many people do notice that they have to go more often, and often the explanation lies with normal changes in the body.
As people age, their kidneys may become less adept at concentrating urine and may draw in more water from elsewhere in the body, said Dr. Brangman, a past president of the American Geriatrics Society. This means more urine is produced and sent on to the bladder which, as it happens, is not getting any younger, either, and may be losing some storage capacity.
www.nytimes.com/2013/01/24/booming/why-am-i-making-so-man...
More photos and full reporthere: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com/urbex/2014/11/07/urbex-dr-annas-hau...
After the death of her Husband the surgery was rented out to other doctors who used the place as a Urology Clinic, it appears that the Doctors wife continued to live at the property until somewhere between 2000-2010 when she moved into a nursing home leaving the property abandoned.
First International Urology Symposium on Cutting-Edge Minimally Invasive Urology
Sir H. N. Reliance Foundation Hospital and Research Centre is proud to announce its first international urology symposium on cutting-edge minimally invasive urology (including ‘live’ robotic surgeries), which will be held on February 20th & 21st in Mumbai.
Instruction Manual for Android Users of RFHApp©
Urology Hospital in Mumbai: Urology Department at Sir H. N. Reliance Foundation Hospital and Research Centre offers comprehensive diagnosis & treatment for urological conditions.
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More photos and full reporthere: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com/urbex/2014/11/07/urbex-dr-annas-hau...
After the death of her Husband the surgery was rented out to other doctors who used the place as a Urology Clinic, it appears that the Doctors wife continued to live at the property until somewhere between 2000-2010 when she moved into a nursing home leaving the property abandoned.
Bruksela i sklepy z pamiątkami a tam wszechobecne statuetki siusiającego chłopczyka. Oj dużo tego..../
Brussels and souvenir shops and there's a little boy peeing statues, everywhere. Oh, a lot of this ....
Full report and more photos: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com/urbex/2014/11/07/urbex-dr-annas-hau...
After the death of her Husband the surgery was rented out to other doctors who used the place as a Urology Clinic, it appears that the Doctors wife continued to live at the property until somewhere between 2000-2010 when she moved into a nursing home leaving the property abandoned.
More photos and history here: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com/urbex/2014/11/07/urbex-dr-annas-hau...
After the death of her Husband the surgery was rented out to other doctors who used the place as a Urology Clinic, it appears that the Doctors wife continued to live at the property until somewhere between 2000-2010 when she moved into a nursing home leaving the property abandoned.
More photos and full reporthere: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com/urbex/2014/11/07/urbex-dr-annas-hau...
After the death of her Husband the surgery was rented out to other doctors who used the place as a Urology Clinic, it appears that the Doctors wife continued to live at the property until somewhere between 2000-2010 when she moved into a nursing home leaving the property abandoned.
Full report and more photos: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com/urbex/2014/11/07/urbex-dr-annas-hau...
After the death of her Husband the surgery was rented out to other doctors who used the place as a Urology Clinic, it appears that the Doctors wife continued to live at the property until somewhere between 2000-2010 when she moved into a nursing home leaving the property abandoned.
Well worth the trip to Toronto, this conference updated a wide range of topics relevant to men's health. Major advances are taking place in the medical world, and in particular, issues affecting men including the successful treatment of advanced prostate cancer. Affecting 1 in 7 men during their lifetime, prostate CA is now ranked first in Canada for overall death due to cancer, closely followed by lung and colorectal CA. The average life expectancy for advanced disease has gone from 2 to 7 years. Bravo to the worldclass University of Toronto department of Urology putting together an impressive series of lectures and also being at the forefront of many recent advances.
More photos and history here: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com/urbex/2014/11/07/urbex-dr-annas-hau...
After the death of her Husband the surgery was rented out to other doctors who used the place as a Urology Clinic, it appears that the Doctors wife continued to live at the property until somewhere between 2000-2010 when she moved into a nursing home leaving the property abandoned.
More Photos and Full report here: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com/urbex/2014/11/07/urbex-dr-annas-hau...
After the death of her Husband the surgery was rented out to other doctors who used the place as a Urology Clinic, it appears that the Doctors wife continued to live at the property until somewhere between 2000-2010 when she moved into a nursing home leaving the property abandoned.
More photos and history here: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com/urbex/2014/11/07/urbex-dr-annas-hau...
After the death of her Husband the surgery was rented out to other doctors who used the place as a Urology Clinic, it appears that the Doctors wife continued to live at the property until somewhere between 2000-2010 when she moved into a nursing home leaving the property abandoned.
More photos and full report here: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com/urbex/2014/11/07/urbex-dr-annas-hau...
After the death of her Husband the surgery was rented out to other doctors who used the place as a Urology Clinic, it appears that the Doctors wife continued to live at the property until somewhere between 2000-2010 when she moved into a nursing home leaving the property abandoned.
This is as good a parody in print as I’ve seen in quite awhile. I had to shoot it at an angle due to terrible reflections. It took some time, using Snapseed, to deepen the image and knock down the reflections.
Sadly, I do not know who created this piece, but I think it is great.
200813-N-DA693-1057
SAN DIEGO (Aug. 13, 2020) Capt. Sean Stroup, a urologist assigned to Naval Medical Center San Diego’s (NMCSD) Urology department (center), Lt. Matthew Christian (left) and Lt. Cmdr. Christine Herforth (right), urology residents assigned to NMCSD, prepare a robotic surgical system for a pyloplasty procedure Aug. 10. NMCSD’s mission is to prepare service members to deploy in support of operational forces, deliver high quality healthcare services and shape the future of military medicine through education, training and research. NMCSD employs more than 6,000 active duty military personnel, civilians, and contractors in Southern California to provide patients with world-class care anytime, anywhere. (U.S. Navy video by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Jake Greenberg)
We are suppliers Urology stents, urology catheters, catheters These tools avoid the internal problems by passing out the urine to the bladder effectively and easily.
The Postcard
A postally unused postcard that was printed in Great Britain by Photo Precision Ltd. Note the Post Office (BT) Tower in the background.
Middlesex Hospital
Middlesex Hospital was a teaching hospital located in the Fitzrovia area of London. First opened as the Middlesex Infirmary in 1745 on Windmill Street, it was moved in 1757 to Mortimer Street where it remained until it was finally closed in 2005.
Its staff and services were transferred to various sites within the University College London Hospitals NHS Trust. The Middlesex Hospital Medical School, with a history dating back to 1746, merged with the medical school of University College London in 1987.
History of the Middlesex Hospital
The first Middlesex Hospital opened as the Middlesex Infirmary in Windmill Street in 1745. The infirmary started with 15 beds to provide medical treatment for the poor. Funding came from subscriptions and, in 1747, the hospital became the first in England to add lying-in (maternity) beds.
Prior to 1773, the wards in the hospital were named as 'Men's Long Ward', 'Men's Square Ward up One Pair of Stairs' or 'Two Pairs of Stairs'. Wards were later named after the chief nurse of each ward.
Naming of wards after governors and medical staff of the hospital began with wards Percy, Clayton, Villeneau and Pyke, named after Hugh Percy, 1st Duke of Northumberland, Sir Kenrick Clayton, John Villeneau and the benefactor Pyke.
The large amount local construction work without safety regulations resulted in one-in-four admissions being due to trauma, and Percy ward became the accident ward.
The foundation stone for the second Middlesex Hospital, in Mortimer Street, was laid in 1755. The central block of the new hospital opened in 1757.
Over the years extra wings were added but, in 1924, it was decided that the building was structurally unsound, and an entirely new building would be required.
The Duke of York, later King George VI, having visited the hospital on the 26th. June 1928 to lay the foundation stone of the new building, returned on the 29th. May 1935 to open the completed building. The hospital had been completely rebuilt, on the same site and in stages, without ever being closed, paid for by more than £1 million of donations from members of the public.
After coming under the management of the Bloomsbury Health Authority in 1980, the Middlesex Hospital became associated with various specialist hospitals in the local area. In 1992 the local urology hospitals, St. Paul's, St. Peter's and St. Philip's, were closed, with services transferred to new accommodation in the Middlesex Hospital.
The Middlesex Hospital Medical School
The Middlesex Hospital Medical School traced its origins to 1746 when students were 'walking the wards'. The motto of the medical school, Miseris Succurrere Disco, was provided by one of the deans, Dr William Cayley, from Virgil's passage about Queen Dido aiding a shipwreck:
"Non ignara mali, miseris succurrere disco.
(Not unacquainted with misfortune myself,
I learn to succour the distressed)".
The medical schools of the Middlesex Hospital and University College Hospital merged in 1987 to form the University College and Middlesex School of Medicine (UCMSM). UCMSM itself merged with the Royal Free Hospital School of Medicine in 1998 to form the UCL Medical School.
Closure and Redevelopment
The Middlesex Hospital closed in December 2005. The main hospital building in Mortimer Street was sold to developer Project Abbey (Guernsey) Ltd., a company controlled by Christian and Nick Candy, and was demolished in 2008.
The building was used, just before it was demolished, in the film Eastern Promises. Candy and Candy failed in plans to redevelop the site into a 273-apartment luxury accommodation complex, named "NoHo Square", and transferred the property to the nationalised Icelandic bank, Kaupthing Bank.
The site was then purchased by Clive Bush and Daniel Van Gelder's Exemplar Properties and Aviva Investors in July 2010. Exemplar decided against retaining either the Candy and Candy designs or the NoHo Square name, and instead appointed new architects to prepare new designs. Following a public exhibition, a planning application for the proposed scheme was submitted in September 2011.
Planning consent for the new development, now called Fitzroy Place, was granted in February 2012. The new development, which combines 295 homes with 240,000 sq. ft of offices, including the regional headquarters for cosmetics multinational Estée Lauder, was completed in 2016.
Fitzrovia Chapel
The former chapel of the Middlesex Hospital by John Loughborough Pearson is now the only surviving building of the Hospital. The chapel was completed after the architect's death under the supervision of his son, Frank, also an architect.
The chapel was structurally complete by the mid-1920's; the surrounding hospital was then demolished and rebuilt around it between 1928 and 1929. The chapel was not formally opened until 1929, by which time much of the lavish interior decoration of marbles and mosaic in a mix of Italian Gothic and Romanesque styles had been added, giving it the appearance it broadly retains today. The chapel is a Grade II* Listed building.
The fabric of the chapel was allowed to decline in the closing decades of the Middlesex Hospital, with water ingress through the roof causing substantial damage to the fabric of the building. The chapel fabric and interior was subject to a £2m restoration, and the building re-endowed with maintenance funds by Exemplar Properties. Never consecrated, named or dedicated, the chapel was given the name "Fitzrovia Chapel".
Paintings by Frederick Cayley Robinson
For nearly 100 years, four giant paintings welcomed visitors to the reception area of the Middlesex Hospital. The Acts of Mercy were painted in 1912 by Frederick Cayley Robinson, a distinctive yet elusive British artist, after being commissioned by Sir Edmund Davis, one of the governors of the hospital. Prior to the demolition of the hospital, the art was purchased by the Wellcome Library.
Notable Patients
People who died at the hospital include:
-- William Gerhardie, novelist and playwright (1977)
-- Peter Sellers, actor (1980)
-- Jane Carr, actress.
People who were treated there include:
-- Sir Winston Churchill (1962)
-- Jeffrey Bernard (1997).
Designed for short term bladder catheterization. Made from medical grade thermo-sensitive PVC material. Non-irritant to delicate mucous membranes of urethra. Perfectly finished closed distal end for smooth & painless insertion. www.angiplast.com/product/urology/nelaton-catheter
Having just been given the 'all clear' in relation to tests for prostate cancer I felt I had to look for a photo that brought me especially happy thoughts to help me celebrate, so, back to 'The Needles', and my flight with Tony. It's been a hard few weeks, what with the tests and then the 6 week wait for the results. I am so aware I am one of the lucky ones this time. A big 'thank you' to the staff at my doctor's surgery in Eddlesborough and the doctors and nurses at the Urology Department of the Luton and Dunstable Hospital.
If you have a problem 'down there', Go Get It Checked, caught early it is curable.
Urology is a part of health maintenance or health protection. It’s also known as genitourinary surgery.
It treats or deals with diseases with male and female urinary tracts(kidney, ureter, bladder, and urethra.
It also treats the male organs to make babies (penis and testes). Basically, it is a treatment for male organs.
Urologists are the ones who treat or cure male reproductive organs. Urology is a branch of medicine.
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ADDRESS- A-17, Abhiyanta Nagar, Ram Nagari more, Ashiana-Digha Road, Patna, Bihar 800025