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In the early decades since the introduction in the early '80s of immunoglobulin therapy many studies tried to identify which clinical indications might benefit from the therapy, which treatment’s schedules are effective and safe. It is universally accepted that immunoglobulin therapy is a life-saving treatment in patients with PID. The rise of new indications for further different clinical conditions resulted in a steady increase in demand for immunoglobulins. Currently the consumption of immunoglobulin for PID represents a small fraction of the market. In the recent past we have been observing: 1) An increase in the demand for plasma and in the consequent need to increase the number of do...
In an incubated petri dish in a Boston laboratory, a cluster of eight living cells holds the key to a daring new era of medical science. These cells come from a human embryo, containing genetic material from my wife, Paulina, and me, obtained through in vitro fertilization (IVF). Research using these cells holds enormous potential to cure a fatal disease, saving the lives of countless children and relieving their families of unspeakable pain. We lived that pain ourselves. When our son was born we didn't know what a tortuous road stretched ahead of us- how our baby would suffer, and how we'd suffer with him. We didn't know he'd spend nearly 1,000 days in seven different hospitals, see more th...
Thomas Jordan served with the Hillsborough, North Carolina Militia, during the Revolutionary War. He married Prudence Harguis (Hargis), daughter of Samuel and Ester Whiteside Hargis, at Hillsborough, North Carolina, in 1783. They had at least three sons. He died ca. 1816. His grandson, Samuel Hargis Jordan (1824-1891) married Martha Ann Nichols in 1845. They had five children who reached adulthood. Descendants listed lived in North Carolina and elsewhere.
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