[My] Life in Wisconsin

NFL- Harvin- Migraine Attack, Vikings


Vikings' Harvin has migraine attack at practice

By DAVE CAMPBELL, AP Sports Writer Dave Campbell, Ap Sports Writer
Thu Aug 19, 6:51 pm ET

EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn
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Percy Harvin experienced the scariest episode yet in a career plagued by migraine headaches when he collapsed at Minnesota Vikings' practice Thursday and was taken to a hospital by ambulance.

Coach Brad Childress left team headquarters after practice and spent the rest of the afternoon at the hospital with Harvin, who also got visits from other coaches and teammates.

"Percy appreciates everyone's concern," the coach said in a statement posted on the team website Thursday evening. "He is alert and resting comfortably, but will remain in the hospital overnight."

Harvin, who has dealt with migraines most of his life, returned to the field Monday after missing more than two weeks, but at the beginning of Thursday's workout the wide receiver experienced another episode that was scary enough for the Vikings to halt practice while their teammate received medical attention.

"To see a guy go down, it's never a good thing," defensive end Ray Edwards said. "Just pray that the Lord is with him and he gets back to us safely, and to his family most importantly."

Childress said that Harvin's episode was triggered when he looked up into a mostly cloudy sky to field a punt during a special teams drill. Harvin went inside to see team physician Dr. Sheldon Burns, then came back out to the field.

Soon after, Harvin was seen doubled over and trembling. Players and coaches stood in front of him to shield him while reporters watched from a distance as Harvin received medical attention.

"I don't know how they classify it," Childress said after practice. "Not really a seizure, but he had some trouble over here. I'd be remiss if I tried to qualify it one way or another. It seemed like he was stable."

The Vikings continued with practice for about five minutes while Harvin was being worked on, then drills were stopped. After Harvin was loaded into the ambulance, the team gathered on the field and took a knee in prayer. Players resumed their work for a few more minutes before calling practice over at least an hour early.

"It was an eye-opener," running back Adrian Peterson said. "It's been tough for him. I just encourage him the best way I can."

The ambulance did not leave immediately after Harvin was loaded, and it left without its siren or lights on. Though the situation didn't appear grave, the mood was somber.

"Obviously that one hit, and it hit hard," Childress said. "It's always scary for all of our guys when you see a teammate struggling with whatever."

Childress said that Harvin has had to go to the hospital for a migraine before, as a college star at the University of Florida.

"I've seen him with one before. I've gotten him off the field with one before. I've seen the start of one coming on before, but certainly nothing to that magnitude," Childress said.

Migraine triggers vary from person to person, but rising humidity and changes in barometric pressure can cause them, as can the glare of the sun.

Since Harvin started missing practice as a rookie last year, the Vikings have received all kinds of suggestions to treat the migraines. Harvin has sought treatment from expert after expert, but Thursday's episode was the latest example of how hard of a problem it is to solve.

"I think by this happening it kind of lets the team know exactly how hard it is," left tackle Bryant McKinnie said. "A lot of times it doesn't take place in front of us. So now by people actually seeing it, they see it's really not a joke.

"Some of us knew for real that he was really suffering from it," McKinnie said. "Maybe some other people in some of their minds they weren't sure, but I think they are aware now."

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Dear Mr. Childress;
He shook because he was in pain. It is enough to knock anyone to the ground.

***

But of course I am a Green Bay Packers fan(atic)- hehehe
I hope that Mr. Percy Harvin III's migraines might be controlled just enough to allow the kid to pursue his football dream.
Careers have been lost many times, and I would hate to see this happen to such a decent young man.

... and then (apparently from the idiots corner of the comments) came this- "Hey all you migriene suffer's,a sure quick cure,Put a loaded gun to area that hurts the worse,pull the dam trigger,guarntee,no more pain,works swell for bipolar probelms,tooth aches,runny nose,tearing,ear aches,"

My wish for the above (kinda stupid) commenter is that he might have one, full~blown, attack. Just one.

I have said many times that when there are people that do kill themselves- and who seemingly "had everything to live for" - when there is no reason to commit suicide, (not that there ever is), that I would lay good money on the fact that they were dealing with migraine.
Think about that before you are so callous as to be the idiot above.

XOXO
Me

See also:
Percy Harvin's Migraine Issues Could Lead To Disaster  CLICK
By Tanner Thoms   (Senior Analyst) on August 19, 2010



Oil Doesn't Float?!?


http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129304546&ft=1&f=1001

Who the heck changed my 4th grade biology???

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Giant Oil Plume Found Lurking Below Surface Of Gulf


by Dan Charles
August 20, 2010

Scientists have mapped out, for the first time, the underwater path that some petrochemicals took after gushing from BP's oil well in the Gulf of Mexico. It's an important new piece in a huge scientific puzzle.

Researchers are trying to figure out where as much as half of the spilled oil has gone.

Christopher Reddy, a co-author of the new study, says it was a big surprise when scientists first reported that large amounts of oil and oil compounds were staying underwater, rather than rising to the surface.

"If you’d asked me -– and I've been studying oil spills for 15 years -– whether or not you would see oil in the subsurface, I would have said 'No,'" he said at a news conference on Thursday. "Doesn't oil float?"

The phenomenon is fascinating, but also troublesome, he says, because if scientists don't know where the oil is, they also don't know what harm it may be causing.

In June, Reddy and his colleagues from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution took a research ship to the scene of the spill. They lowered a sensor deep into the water and towed it in a large circle around the blown-out well, looking for particular hydrocarbons that are easy to detect.

The sensor picked up a hydrocarbon signal southwest of the well, in a layer of water 3000 feet below the surface.

Richard Camilli, another researcher from WHOI, says they then sent down a new device -– a small unmanned submarine called Sentry.

"We had Sentry fly at a constant depth in kind of a zigzag pattern, moving out from the well site, tracking the plume," he said.

If you'd asked me -- and I've been studying oil spills for 15 years -- whether or not you would see oil in the subsurface, I would say, 'No, doesn't oil float?'"

The hydrocarbons, including benzene and toluene, were highly diluted in the water. They were coming from the gushing well, but they weren't spreading out in all directions. Instead, they followed an invisible underwater channel just over a mile wide and 650 feet thick. The researchers tracked that channel southwest for 22 miles, until bad weather forced them to stop.

They looked for signs that microorganisms are feasting on those petroleum products and breaking them down, but didn't see any. Reddy says they don't know exactly why.

"Microbes are a lot like teenagers," he says. "They work on their own time, at their own scale. They do what they want when they want."

There are many other unknowns. Reddy and his colleagues don't yet know how much of the oil from the well is in this plume. They hope to arrive at an estimate in a few months, after analyzing all their water samples. They also don't know how toxic the plume may be to wildlife.

Yet this is the best-documented case so far of oil flowing underwater. It was released on Thursday by the journal Science.

"This is a big piece of the puzzle," says Steven Murawski, science adviser for fisheries at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Murawski is trying to put the whole puzzle together. He is in touch with many of the research vessels –- as many as seven on any given day -– that are working in the Gulf of Mexico.

Murawski says additional scientific reports about oil in the deep sea around the well will be released in the coming weeks. But he'd like to see more scientists working in other places, such as on the continental shelf, the wide shallow area close to shore where most fish live. Murawski says he’s drafting plans to expand such research.


From the comments, when asked... N E (Native_Earthling) wrote:
"Dr. Christopher Reddy specializes in marine chemistry & geochemistry at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. He has a Ph.D. in Chemical Oceanography, and researches organic contaminants in coastal and oceanic waters..."

Friday, August 20, 2010 4:20:21 AM



Related NPR Stories

Gulf Spill May Far Exceed Official Estimates May 13, 2010


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Do the math- 3000 feet is over half a mile down! 
What else might be there, suffering, from this unforgivable breach of man?

XOXO
Me