Here are pics from our recent travels...
This is Dr. Sue the cancer vet lovin her some fuzzybutts...
This is Hudzers hammin it up and a toeheaded kid playing paddy cake on his belly
What Price Fame? This is Hudson on day 4 of the conference.
At the Mall of America, this is?????
These are the Puppy Up! ladies of Des Moines. From L to R, Julie, Chris, and Brooke (whose dog Gunner has cancer).
This is Beth in Madison whose beautiful Pyrenees, Czar, has metastatic bone cancer and one of the calendar boys in the 2014 Cancer Can't Keep a Good Dog Down calendar.
This is where the fat cats (again, sorry for feline references) sit above everyone else in Madison. It's a law - no structure can be higher than the capitol.
This is Yer Big Dog dancing with Lil Nana. Yep it gets lonely on the road... and FYI - he can two step.
This is the beautiful Memorial board that the folks in Ann Arbor created from their recent Puppy Up! walk.
This is Indiana pooping on a Church bush thereby damning his soul to an eternity of reruns of Garfield and Squirrel infomercials.
Sunday, October 27, 2013
The Murphy Mobile Rides Again
It's great to be back on the road again educating and raising awareness of cancer in pets and people and promoting the cause that we all so passionately believe in.
Two weeks ago, the Fuzzybutts and I drove from Newport RI, crossed the Berkshires, transversed upstate NY on into Erie and Northern PA, down to 80/90 to the Twin Cities to get to the Veterinary Cancer Society Conference in Minneapolis.
From there our travels took us to Des Moines IA onto to Madison WI then horseshoed up to Grand Rapids MI and did a slingshot around Ann Arbor MI back to the Chicago area for the upcoming Puppy Up! Walk next Saturday, the 2nd.
The only reason I bring up geography is that, when added to the 12,000 plus miles of the Summer of Murphy Tour last year, the Murphy Mobile has pretty much circumnavigated the Continental US, except for a few swaths here and there.
Next blog... 'This Is' - Pics from our travels!
Sunday, October 13, 2013
Press Release from AMC
AMC Awarded Research Grant From 2 Million Dogs Foundation
(New York, NY – September 17, 2013)
The Animal Medical Center is proud to announce that it has been selected to receive an $80,000 research grant in comparative oncology by the 2 Million Dogs Foundation, an organization committed to discovering the common links between canine and human cancers and the causes of these cancers through comparative oncology research.
In dogs, transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) is the most common tumor of the urinary tract. TCC typically presents at a very advanced stage and the majority of dogs diagnosed with this tumor are euthanized due to failure to control the local disease within the urinary tract. Current therapies include chemotherapy, radiation therapy, and surgical debulking but none are able to consistently produce lasting remissions.
The AMC research study being conducted in affiliation with Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center will be led by Dr. Chick Weisse, head of Interventional Radiology Service. This study will compare systemic chemotherapy levels experienced by a canine patient following intravenous (typical route) versus intra-arterial (image-guided) routes of chemotherapy administration in the same patient.
“At The AMC, recent advancements in interventional radiology techniques enable us to administer different drugs into the arteries feeding the actual tumors via minimally-invasive approaches - in order to achieve very high regional drug concentrations within the tumor - without the systemic side effects that would occur had these levels been administered intravenously,” said Dr. Weisse. The investigators hope to demonstrate higher achieved levels of chemotherapy within the targeted tissues as well as improved tumor remissions in canine patients with naturally occurring transitional cell carcinomas of the urinary bladder and urethra.
“2 Million Dogs is proud to be working with the Animal Medical Center and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, two of the most prestigious institutions in comparative oncology,” said Ginger Morgan, Executive Director and President of the Board of 2 Million Dogs Foundation.
About 2 Million Dogs Foundation
2 Million Dogs Foundation is committed to discovering the common links between canine and human cancers and the causes of these cancers through comparative oncology research. The organization will accomplish that mission through education and awareness, empowerment and mobilization and investment in research. For more information: http://www.2milliondogs.org
About The Animal Medical Center
The Animal Medical Center (AMC), located on the Upper East Side in New York City, is a non-profit veterinary center that has been a national leader in animal care since 1910. As an academic veterinary hospital, The AMC promotes the health and well-being of companion animals through advanced treatment, research and education. The AMC staff is comprised of over 100 veterinarians who utilize an interdisciplinary team approach combining expertise across specialty areas and services to care for your pet 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. For more information: http://www.amcny.org
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YBD's Notes 1: Chip Weisse, the principle investigator provided us with a Power Point Presentation that I wanted to share with you. However, how to convert it and post it here has been a serious pain in my arse, hence the delay.
(New York, NY – September 17, 2013)
The Animal Medical Center is proud to announce that it has been selected to receive an $80,000 research grant in comparative oncology by the 2 Million Dogs Foundation, an organization committed to discovering the common links between canine and human cancers and the causes of these cancers through comparative oncology research.
In dogs, transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) is the most common tumor of the urinary tract. TCC typically presents at a very advanced stage and the majority of dogs diagnosed with this tumor are euthanized due to failure to control the local disease within the urinary tract. Current therapies include chemotherapy, radiation therapy, and surgical debulking but none are able to consistently produce lasting remissions.
The AMC research study being conducted in affiliation with Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center will be led by Dr. Chick Weisse, head of Interventional Radiology Service. This study will compare systemic chemotherapy levels experienced by a canine patient following intravenous (typical route) versus intra-arterial (image-guided) routes of chemotherapy administration in the same patient.
“At The AMC, recent advancements in interventional radiology techniques enable us to administer different drugs into the arteries feeding the actual tumors via minimally-invasive approaches - in order to achieve very high regional drug concentrations within the tumor - without the systemic side effects that would occur had these levels been administered intravenously,” said Dr. Weisse. The investigators hope to demonstrate higher achieved levels of chemotherapy within the targeted tissues as well as improved tumor remissions in canine patients with naturally occurring transitional cell carcinomas of the urinary bladder and urethra.
“2 Million Dogs is proud to be working with the Animal Medical Center and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, two of the most prestigious institutions in comparative oncology,” said Ginger Morgan, Executive Director and President of the Board of 2 Million Dogs Foundation.
About 2 Million Dogs Foundation
2 Million Dogs Foundation is committed to discovering the common links between canine and human cancers and the causes of these cancers through comparative oncology research. The organization will accomplish that mission through education and awareness, empowerment and mobilization and investment in research. For more information: http://www.2milliondogs.org
About The Animal Medical Center
The Animal Medical Center (AMC), located on the Upper East Side in New York City, is a non-profit veterinary center that has been a national leader in animal care since 1910. As an academic veterinary hospital, The AMC promotes the health and well-being of companion animals through advanced treatment, research and education. The AMC staff is comprised of over 100 veterinarians who utilize an interdisciplinary team approach combining expertise across specialty areas and services to care for your pet 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. For more information: http://www.amcny.org
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YBD's Notes 1: Chip Weisse, the principle investigator provided us with a Power Point Presentation that I wanted to share with you. However, how to convert it and post it here has been a serious pain in my arse, hence the delay.
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
On God and Google
This isn't the first time my I-Phone has altered the course of things for me. One of our supporters asked for my help on a cancer related issue and in my haste, I texted my reply as 'At your service' but autocorrect sent it as 'At your cervix'.
Sunday, I was on my way to the flagons, dragons, and wenches of the Renaissance Festival in Connecticut and when I typed in the address for it at 14 Stott Avenue, Google Maps autocorrected it for 14 Scott Street.
And that took me to a place I've never been to before, but to a known yet forgotten land.
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The Saint Peters and Saint Paul Church sits atop a rolling Northeastern hillside in Norwich, and it was there I found the 14 stations of the Cross. It's a beautiful, bucolic place of pray and it'll now and always be one of my just circles.
I walked the grounds, reflected on its grace and glory and historical significance, wept for our loved ones lost by cancer, then got back in my car and carried on to the Renaissance festival.
Our path isn't up to us. I forgot about that. Shit. I forgot about a lot of things. But I just got reminded. It's up to Google. And God.
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