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Personalized Unity Sand Ceremony Set Contempo Style Personalized Unity Sand Ceremony Set Contempo Style

Sale Price: $29.95

 

Description

Personalized 3 piece unity sand ceremony set features a cork stopper. 7.5" Center vase will hold up to 2 cups of sand and each 7.5" side pouring vase will hold about one cup. Free etching includes names, date of event and a short message on the center vase and a name on each of the side pouring vases...

Silver Bell Place Card Holders (12 count) Silver Bell Place Card Holders (12 count)

Sale Price: $4.99

 

Description

Silver Bell Place Card Holders (12 count) are made of metal with a working bell. Place Card Holders are in a heart shape with a white organza bow in the center. Holder measures approximately 2.75" high x 1...

Kate Aspen 12006NA Kissing Bells Place Card Holder Kate Aspen 12006NA Kissing Bells Place Card Holder

List Price: $30.00
Sale Price: $19.85
You save: $10.15 (34%)

 

Description

Bells will ring joyfully on your wedding day, when a single kiss at the altar changes your life forever! Give your guests—and yourselves—the pleasure of reliving the moment over and over again with our "Kissing Bell" Place Card/Photo Holder with a braided-heart handle...

Adele 19 Adele 19

List Price: $11.96
Sale Price: $7.74
You save: $4.22 (35%)

 

Description

ADELE 19

Lungs Lungs

Sale Price: $7.99

 
Come Away With Me Come Away With Me

List Price: $9.93
Sale Price: $5.15
You save: $4.78 (48%)

 

Description

14 tracks including DON'T KNOW WHY. Pop-jazz classic!

My Foolish Heart [VHS] My Foolish Heart [VHS]

Sale Price: $64.95

 

Description

After a long absence, Mary Jane visits her schoolfriend Eloise, and Eloise's daughter Ramona. Eloise drinks too much and is unhappily married to Lew Wengler. Eloise falls asleep and remembers her time with her true love, Walt Dreiser, at the beginning of the Second World War...

Wild Hearts Can't Be Broken [VHS] Wild Hearts Can't Be Broken [VHS]

List Price: $9.99
Sale Price: $8.99
You save: $1.00 (10%)

 

Description

Guaranteed to work or your money back - PLEASE NOTE ALL MONIES FROM THIS SALE GO TO A 501 (C)3 NO KILL ANIMAL SHELTER

Little Rascals, Vol. 3 [VHS] Little Rascals, Vol. 3 [VHS]

List Price: $9.98
Sale Price: $3.97
You save: $6.01 (60%)

 

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Volume 3: Teacher's Pet/ School's Out/ Love Business/ Spooky Hooky Teacher's Pet: It's the first day of school and the gang isn't ready for readin', writin'...or their new teacher Miss Crabtree. Jackie, Chubby and Farina decide to "welcome" her with gifts of sneezing powder, red ants and a mouse, but their scheme backfires in a case of Miss-taken identity...

Zebra Print, Black and Hot Pink Heart Wall Stickers,decals, Graphics Zebra Print, Black and Hot Pink Heart Wall Stickers,decals, Graphics

List Price: $28.99
Sale Price: $22.99
You save: $6.00 (21%)

 

Description

25 individually cut out Heart wall stickers in three designs, Zebra Print, Hot Pink and Black.

This set comes on a 18in by 25in panel.

The largest Heart is a Zebra print heart that measures about 10in by 9in...

Heart Transplantation India: a Boon for cardiac patients

Heart transplant surgery in India costs much lower than traditional hospitals in developed countries. Price advantage is, of course, a major selling point. India offers a range of world quality Doctors, hospitals and treatments at a fraction of world costs with comparable success rates and service levels. The additional warmth and natural caring that comes with India’s millennia heritage. Indian hospitals are skilled super specialists coupled with sound infrastructure and professional management, nurses and paramedical staff to take on international competition for the Heart Transplantation. India is one of the most favorable tourist destinations in the world. Medical treatment combines with tourism has come into effect, from which the concept of Medical Tourism is derived.

A heart transplant is an open-heart surgery in which a severely diseased or damaged heart is replaced with a healthy heart from a recently deceased person. Heart transplants have been successfully performed since 1967 in India. Unfortunately, the number of people waiting for a heart transplant is higher than the number of available organs. A patient generally becomes eligible for a heart transplant when diagnosed as having end-stage heart disease, all other medical interventions have failed and the patient is stable enough to sustain a major surgery.

In fact, the procedure actually consists of three operations. The first operation is harvesting the heart from the donor. The donor is usually an unfortunate person who has suffered irreversible brain  injury, called "brain death". Very often these are patients who have had major trauma to the head, for example, in an automobile accident. The victim's organs, other than the brain, are working well with the help of medications and other "life support" that may include a respirator or other devices. A team of physicians, nurses, and technicians goes to the hospital of the donor to remove donated organs once brain death of the donor has been determined. The removed organs are transported on ice to keep them alive until they can be implanted. For the heart, this is optimally less than six hours. So, the organs are often flown by airplane or helicopter to the recipient's hospital. The second operation is removing the recipient's damaged heart. Removing the damaged heart may be very easy or very difficult, depending on whether the recipient has had previous heart surgery (as is often the case). If there has been previous surgery, cutting through the scar tissue may prolong and complicate removal of the heart. The third operation is probably the easiest; the implantation of the donor heart. Today, this operation basically involves the creation of only five lines of stitches, or "anastomoses". These suture lines connect the large blood vessels entering and leaving the heart. Remarkably, if there are no complications, most patients who have had a heart transplant are home about one week after the surgery. The generosity of donors and their families makes organ transplant possible.

Heart Transplantation Procedure in India:

The actual surgical procedure takes an average of four hours. During the heart transplantation surgery, an incision is made over the breastbone, or sternum. The chest cavity is opened, and the individual is placed on heart-lung bypass machines that enable the body to continue to receive blood flow and oxygen while the damaged heart is being removed. Major vessels leading to and from the damaged heart are clamped off and detached. Then, the donor heart will take its place, and blood vessels reconnected. The heart-lung bypass machine will be disconnected, and the heart will be shocked with small paddles to initiate the first heartbeat of the transplanted heart. Surgeons will assess the function of the heart and make sure there are no leaks before closing the incision. While this explanation seems simple, the surgery is a complex procedure that requires a great amount of skill and experience to complete. The actual heart transplant is only the first part of a long process.

Who needs heart transplantation?

Every year in the India there are about 4,000 people who could benefit from a heart transplant. Unfortunately, there are only about 2,000 donor hearts available. Therefore, there is a careful selection process in place to assure that hearts are distributed fairly and to those who will benefit most from the donor heart. The heart is just a pump, although a complicated pump. Most patients require a heart transplant can no longer pump well enough to supply blood with oxygen and nutrients to the organs of the body. A smaller number of patients have a good pump, but a bad "electrical conduction system" of the heart. This electrical system determines the rate, rhythm and sequence of contraction of the heart muscle. There are all kinds of problems that can occur with the conduction system, including complete interruption of cardiac function causing sudden cardiac death.

While there are many people with "end-stage" heart disease with inadequate function of the heart, not all qualify for a he

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