Tag Archives: struggled

Why Gravenberch struggled at Bayern and what it says about Liverpool’s next signing – The Athletic

  1. Why Gravenberch struggled at Bayern and what it says about Liverpool’s next signing The Athletic
  2. Liverpool agree fee for Bayern Munich’s Ryan Gravenberch – sources – ESPN ESPN
  3. ‘He wasn’t happy with his situation’ – Bayern boss Thomas Tuchel confirms Ryan Gravenberch set to join Liverpool Goal.com
  4. Erik ten Hag knows Liverpool has made transfer masterstroke amid ‘enormous’ praise and late bid Liverpool.com
  5. ‘Sources indicate’: Liverpool could now receive a record-breaking transfer offer – journalist TBR – The Boot Room – Football News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Redfall Lost 70% of Its Arkane Austin Staff During Development, Struggled the Whole Way – The Escapist

  1. Redfall Lost 70% of Its Arkane Austin Staff During Development, Struggled the Whole Way The Escapist
  2. Arkane Studios Hoped Microsoft Would Cancel Redfall – IGN Daily Fix IGN
  3. Xbox’s newest exclusive was such a mess even the developers hoped Microsoft would cancel it gamingbible.com
  4. ‘Suicide Squad’ Should Be Terrified Of What Happened With ‘Redfall’ Forbes
  5. Report: Most of Arkane Austin’s Prey veterans quit during Redfall’s development, and the ones that stayed hoped Microsoft would cancel it PC Gamer
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Video shows Warner Bros. CEO David Zaslav struggled to speak at Boston University after protestors booed and told him to ‘pay your writers’ – Yahoo! Voices

  1. Video shows Warner Bros. CEO David Zaslav struggled to speak at Boston University after protestors booed and told him to ‘pay your writers’ Yahoo! Voices
  2. Graduates boo, turn backs on Warner Bros. CEO during commencement speech at Boston University KCAL News
  3. David Zaslav Gets Booed at Boston University Graduation Amid the Writers Strike Hollywood Reporter
  4. Writers Guild expected to picket Warner Bros. CEO’s appearance at BU commencement Boston News, Weather, Sports | WHDH 7News
  5. Boston University graduates boo David Zaslav’s bad commencement speech The A.V. Club
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Taron Egerton says he’s not ‘the right choice’ to play ‘statuesque’ James Bond: ‘I’ve always struggled with my weight’ – Yahoo! Voices

  1. Taron Egerton says he’s not ‘the right choice’ to play ‘statuesque’ James Bond: ‘I’ve always struggled with my weight’ Yahoo! Voices
  2. Why Taron Egerton Doesn’t Want To Be James Bond BuzzFeed
  3. Taron Egerton Gets Asked About All Those James Bond Casting Rumors, And Shares Exactly Why 007 Is A Tough Gig CinemaBlend
  4. Taron Egerton on James Bond Casting Rumors: ‘I Don’t Think I’m the Right Choice’ PEOPLE
  5. “I’ve always struggled with my weight”: After Losing Wolverine Role, Taron Egerton Reveals Why He’s Not Fit For $10B Franchise That’s Eyeing Henry Cavill as Leading Man FandomWire
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Late ‘Power Rangers’ Actor Jason David Frank Struggled With Mental Health Issues, Friend Says

By Corey Atad.

A friend is remembering the life of Jason David Frank.

Last week, the former “Power Rangers” star died by suicide at 49, and speaking with TMZ, his friend, MMA fighter Mike Bronzoulis, shared the actor’s mental health struggles.


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‘Power Rangers’ Star Jason David Frank Dead At 49

According to TMZ, “Jason was always open with him about bouts of depression and mental health struggles — though he kept it private from most people.”

Bronzoulis also explained that multiple members of Frank’s family had died from suicide, while his mother passed away a few years earlier from cancer, with the deaths all taking a toll on him.

Frank and Bronzoulis last spoke about a week before he died.

The MMA fighter recalled that he received a voicemail from his friend saying they needed to talk and that he was going through a lot, but Bronzoulis only discovered the recording after Frank died.


READ MORE:
‘Power Rangers’ Star Jason David Frank & Wife Had Loud Arguments The Evening Prior To His Death: Report

Mike said he last spoke to Jason roughly a week before his death. He even got a voicemail from Jason … saying he needed to talk, and he was going through a lot. Mike didn’t realize Jason left that voicemail until after he died.

Despite his struggles, Frank kept busy, and always worked to motivate his fans in-person and through his social media presence.

The Canadian Association for Suicide Prevention, Depression Hurts and Kids Help Phone 1-800-668-6868 all offer ways of getting help if you, or someone you know, may be suffering from mental health issues.



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New York mom whose baby struggled with RSV has urgent message for parents

A mother of five is asking parents to keep their sick children at home after a recent respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) outbreak infected three of her daughters and led to a frightening hospitalization for one of them.

Carmen Bremiller, 27, of Barker, New York — in Broome County — has been caring for her daughters for several weeks and said the road to full recovery is ongoing.

Bremiller told Fox News Digital that all five of her children — Sophia, 10, Ashlynn, 6, Caroline, 4, Ava, 3, and Kinsley, 1 — caught the common cold in early September after they returned to in-person schooling for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic began.

EARLY, SURPRISING SURGE OF RSV IN KIDS HAS HOSPITALS, MEDICAL CENTERS CONCERNED 

She said she kept her children home for one week until they seemed to recover, but by early October, they exhibited cold-like symptoms once more. 

This included fevers, eye mucus and loss of appetite, according to Bremiller.

Carmen Bremiller is a mother of five young girls, pictured, from left to right, Sophia, 10, Ashlynn, 6, Kinsley, who is now 1, Ava, 3, and Caroline, 4.
(Courtesy Carmen Bremiller)

“I called their doctor’s office and talked to the nurse, wanting them to be seen, but was told they just had a cold and to treat it as such. So, that’s what I did,” Bremiller recalled.

Three of her daughters, who were all under the age of five, had high fevers and Bremiller reportedly gave them over-the-counter pain relievers to try to ease their discomfort.

IN BOSTON, RSV CASES IN KIDS CREATING A ‘CAPACITY DISASTER’ FOR ONE MAJOR HOSPITAL

Bremiller said she contacted her children’s doctor’s office again about her concerns because she felt the kids were sick for an abnormally long period, but she was repeatedly told their symptoms were likely connected to the earlier cold they had.

What is RSV?

    The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) defines the respiratory syncytial virus as a “common respiratory virus that usually causes mild, cold-like symptoms.” It can cause bronchiolitis and pneumonia in children under age 1.

Then, around Oct. 6, Bremiller said the local Head Start program where two of her daughters were enrolled reportedly informed her that there were confirmed cases of flu, pink eye, croup and RSV.

Bremiller said three of her daughters were then diagnosed with RSV after she took them to an urgent care for evaluation.

The baby stopped drinking fluids completely.

“My two middle children became pretty sick but got over it on their own and are doing much better,” Bremiller said. “Unfortunately, my youngest daughter didn’t do so well with it.”

Kinsley, who’s now a year old, experienced occasional fast breathing, but she didn’t appear to be in respiratory distress, according to Bremiller. 

Then she stopped drinking fluids completely.

Kinsley, 1, experienced low oxygen saturation after she developed pneumonia from an RSV infection. She was given an oxygen mask before doctors moved to ventilators and intubation. Kinsley was treated at the John R. Oishei Children’s Hospital in Buffalo, New York.
(Courtesy Carmen Bremiller)

When medical staff examined Kinsley on Oct. 12, her oxygen levels were found to be low, and they remained that way even when she was given an oxygen mask.

Bremiller said Kinsley was transferred to a children’s hospital in Buffalo via ambulance and that emergency room staff determined her child had pneumonia from a chest X-ray, while blood work confirmed RSV was still present.

COVID-19 OR RSV? SYMPTOMS TO WATCH FOR

Kinsley’s left lung had water in it, so she was moved to the ICU and put on an external ventilator, Bremiller recalled.

Her condition worsened and she had to be intubated and sedated.

“It was extremely hard seeing her like that,” Bremiller told Fox News Digital. “With a tube down her throat, completely unconscious, and all kinds of lines and IVs. I tried not to cry.”

She continued, “I felt responsible. How could I not know how sick she was? Why didn’t I take her in sooner? How could something like this happen so fast?”

Oxygen level: What’s a healthy reading?

    Oxygen saturation of 95% and above is “normal for healthy children and adults,” the CDC says. Pulse oximeters measure oxygen saturation levels; they look at the proportion of oxygenated hemoglobin in pulsing blood.

Kinsley’s three-week hospitalization included more medical scares for the child. 

There was a temporary blood clot from an arterial line in her leg, which required treatment; a change in color when her oxygen level dropped again, which required a ventilator switch; and signs of anemia, which required a blood transfusion, all according to Bremiller.

RSV SURGE RAISES QUESTIONS ABOUT REPEAT CASES: CAN YOU OR CHILD GET IT AGAIN? 

Kinsley’s vital signs took a hit when a mucus plug got stuck in her airway on Oct. 18, Bremiller said.

“She had low heart rate, low blood pressure and her oxygen level went down to 60%,” Bremiller recalled. “They gave her albuterol and that opened up her airways, got the mucus plug out and got her oxygen up. They gave her some medicine to also help with her blood pressure. After that, she seemed stable but had a high heart rate.” 

Kinsley, 1, developed pneumonia in her left lung from her RSV infection. Doctors had to intubate and medically sedate her in October after ventilators failed to aid her breathing alone.
(Courtesy Carmen Bremiller)

As days went on, Kinsley was sedated once more and was placed in a prone position (belly down), so that secretions could exit her impacted lung. Kinsley reportedly showed improvement but was placed back on a ventilator. 

Kinsley underwent a computed tomography (CT) scan to check her lungs and a pulmonologist conducted a bronchoscopy — a procedure that allows doctors to examine lungs and air passages — on Oct. 24, according to Bremiller.

Medications and breathing tests were given to Kinsley. Slowly, she began to recover.

“Kinsley has a long road ahead of her until she’s back to 100%.”

“On Oct. 29, my baby was officially off the ventilator,” Bremiller said, later adding that Kinsley also came off the feeding tube, IVs, arterial lines and sedation medication. 

“I cried as I was finally able to hold her again after two-and-a-half weeks, which felt like years.”

SURGE IN RSV COULD BE LINKED TO ‘IMMUNITY DEBT’: DR. MARTY MAKARY

Kinsley was hospitalized for 24 days. She returned home on Nov. 4.

“This whole experience was an up-and-down rollercoaster for Kinsley,” Bremiller told Fox News Digital.

“Kinsley’s official diagnosis was RSV, pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and now asthma,” she continued. “She’s on an inhaler four times a day. After about three months they will reevaluate.”

HOSPITALS OVERWHELMED AS RSV CASES IN CHILDREN SURGE NATIONWIDE

Bremiller said the child is still recovering and is being closely watched.

The 1-year-old is currently on “a lot of different medications” and she has follow-up appointments with doctors and specialists; these include a pulmonology reevaluation and a sleep study to determine if Kinsley has sleep apnea, Bremiller said.

“Kinsley has a long road ahead of her until she’s back to 100%,” Bremiller said.

Kinsley, 1, is still recovering from RSV, pneumonia and acute respiratory distress syndrome. After her hospitalization, she was diagnosed with asthma.
(Courtesy Carmen Bremiller)

Recently, Bremiller’s four other children have developed coughs; and while she tried her best to keep Kinsley away from that exposure, including removing her children from the Head Start program, Kinsley has been experiencing a mucus-filled cough and noisy breathing.

Kinsley’s nurses have been checking on her daily and Bremiller said she’s been treating her with a nasal suction device, nasal spray, humidifier and an albuterol inhaler. 

Kinsley’s oxygen is around 95%. The child is now eating and drinking well, Bremiller said.

“This whole experience was an up-and-down rollercoaster for Kinsley.”

“As of Nov. 13, the nurse said her lungs sound clear, but thinks she could have croup now. They will still be coming out periodically to check in on her,” Bremiller added.

While Bremiller said she thinks Kinsley is “a little fighter,” she can’t but feel “extremely nervous with her being sick again so soon.” 

She told Fox News Digital that she wants parents to know that they shouldn’t send their kids to school or day care if they’re sick.

DOCTORS ON HIGH ALERT AS RSV WREAKS HAVOC ON BABIES, SMALL CHILDREN

“You may be frustrated and not able to find someone to watch them so you can work, but figure it out,” Bremiller said. 

“You may even blame the school for getting your child sick in the first place. And that may be true, but it doesn’t make it right or OK to knowingly send your child to school with a virus that’s contagious and harmful to other children.”

Bremiller also said, “My baby didn’t go to day care or school; her older sisters got sick from school and brought it home. Just know not everyone is your child and not everyone has the immune system your child has. Your child might be fine, but that doesn’t mean someone else’s will be. So, please think twice before sending your sick kids to school.”

“Just remember next time, my baby could be your baby.”

Kinsley, who’s now 1 year old, was hospitalized from Oct. 12 to Nov. 4 after her RSV infection led to pneumonia and other respiratory ailments.
(Courtesy Carmen Bremiller)

Bremiller added that she thinks parents should take their sick children to a doctor immediately, even for lesser symptoms.

“Even when we were at the hospital, I was in complete denial [as to] how sick she actually was. My only regret is not getting her there sooner.” Bremiller continued.

The Bremiller family has launched a GoFundMe to help cover Kinsley’s medical costs.

“I’ve never been the type to ask for handouts. My husband and I were both out of work while she was in the hospital, and we already live paycheck to paycheck with having five kids,” Bremiller said. 

AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS URGES BIDEN ADMINISTRATION TO DECLARE EMERGENCY OVER ‘UNPRECEDENTED’ RSV SURGE   

“We weren’t expecting any of this to happen.”

Bremiller said that she and her husband may be out of work for longer as they take Kinsley to more medical appointments. In addition, they’ve applied and were approved for family medical leave.

“But we have not received it yet,” Bremiller added, “and it’s only a portion of what his [her husband’s] income usually is.”

“We weren’t expecting any of this to happen.”

Bremiller noted that she knows that other American families are struggling in the current economy, so prayers and well wishes for Kinsley are welcome.

She also wants people to know that some children’s hospitals offer snacks and drinks in family waiting rooms on a donation basis, so it could be helpful to donate shelf-stable meals and toiletries to local hospitals if guidelines allow it.

RSV: What families need to know

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and Children’s Hospital Association (CHA) sent a letter to President Joe Biden and Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra to declare a national emergency response to recent RSV and influenza outbreaks, according to a joint press release issued on Nov. 14.

About 58,000 children under age five are hospitalized for RSV each year; the respiratory illness causes 100-500 deaths annually, according to data from the CDC.

The AAP and CHA said their request for an emergency declaration and federal support is being made because RSV has catastrophic potential that requires immediate action in light of COVID-19.

RSV is contagious

“Respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, is a highly contagious illness that most children will experience before age two,” Dr. Steven L. Goudy, a pediatric ear-nose-throat (ENT) specialist from Brookhaven, Georgia, and founder of the Dr. Noze Best nasal suction device, told Fox News Digital. 

“Symptoms typically develop within two to five days of exposure and last for one to two weeks,” Goudy, who has not treated Kinsley, continued. 

“While the early phase is usually mild, little ones will often experience more acute symptoms as the illness progresses. Some complications of RSV require hospitalization for respiratory distress or dehydration.”

Goudy said common signs of RSV infection include congestion or a runny nose.

Congestion and runny nose are a common symptom of colds, flu, RSV and more.
(iStock)

“Watch for signs of respiratory distress such as rapid breathing, labored breathing, color changes of the lip (pale or blue), nasal flaring, wheezing, changes in alertness or changes in body position to breathe,” Goudy warned. 

“Notify your provider if you are ever concerned. Suction the nose of babies and toddlers who are unable to blow their nose.”

If a child has been infected with RSV, Goudy said it’s important to monitor their breathing and hydration status (including wet diapers and tears), and to keep infected children away from other children, as “RSV and the flu are spread through respiratory droplets and close person-to-person contact,” he added.

Goudy advised parents and caregivers that it’s important to set boundaries with anyone who comes in close contact with babies and young kids — “such as washing their hands beforehand, avoiding kissing the baby, and wearing a mask,” he said.

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“A person is typically contagious for a few days prior to showing symptoms, [but you should] be sure to keep your child home from school or day care until they’re fever free for 24 hours and until your child does not need additional help with suctioning,” Goudy continued. 

“There is not currently a vaccine for RSV.”

RSV, flu and other respiratory illnesses are spreading

Dr. Kristina Deeter is a specialty medical officer for pediatric critical care at Pediatrix Medical Group, a national pediatric care network. 

Deeter, who has not treated Kinsley, told Fox News Digital that RSV infections and influenza cases are building up in southern states.

Other “common respiratory viruses” that typically occur during winter are “players” as well, including rhinovirus, adenovirus and human metapneumovirus, according to Deeter.

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“Normally these viruses cause mild infections, but we are concerned that symptoms could be worse this year as everyone’s immune systems have not seen these viruses much in the last couple of years,” Deeter said.

Medical experts are urging people to get flu and COVID-19 vaccinations.
(iStock)

“In addition, Europe is already seeing an uptick in new COVID variants that we are going to have to follow carefully, as they might also affect our children more severely this time around,” she added.

Deeter said she recommends flu vaccines for children over six months of age and COVID-19 vaccines for children ages five and up.

“This vaccine has been proven safe and effective in decreasing the severity of COVID infection, and both the influenza and COVID vaccines have only very minimal side effects reported,” Deeter said.

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“Our children have already lost too much time in school throughout the last two to three years,” she continued. 

“It’s incredibly important for their psychosocial and intellectual development to be able to attend school regularly and interact with their peers and teachers.”

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Commanders RB Brian Robinson Jr. struggled with suspects in shooting

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Washington Commanders running back Brian Robinson Jr. “was able to wrestle a firearm away” from one of the two male assailants attempting to rob him Sunday before the other shot him twice, D.C. police said Monday.

The pair approached Robinson after he left a storefront in the 1000 block of H Street NE shortly before 6 p.m. Robinson was taken to MedStar Washington Hospital Center for treatment of injuries that are not believed to be life-threatening. On Monday, he wrote on Instagram that he had undergone surgery that “went well.”

Coach Ron Rivera said Monday that Robinson is “doing well” and “it’ll be a matter of time before he’s back out here.” He declined to give a timeline for Robinson’s recovery or be specific about the extent of his injuries, but Rivera noted that both Robinson and his doctors were “very positive.”

Authorities have not identified the suspects, who D.C. Police Chief Robert J. Contee III said probably are 15 to 17 years old. Police described the assailants as having shoulder-length dreadlocks and said one wore a black or brown shirt with yellow smiley faces on it. One firearm was recovered about a block south of the shooting.

Prince George’s County police said the vehicle the two used to flee the scene was recovered Sunday evening in the 1500 block of Jutewood Avenue, about four miles from FedEx Field. The car was reported stolen in Prince George’s County on Friday afternoon.

Commanders’ Brian Robinson Jr., shot twice in D.C., is in stable condition

According to the incident report from Sunday’s shooting, Robinson told police he was shot in the leg. The Commanders issued a statement Sunday night confirming that Robinson was stable and saying his family and a contingent of team officials had joined him at the hospital. Rivera was among those who visited, along with team owners Daniel and Tanya Snyder, team president Jason Wright, General Manager Martin Mayhew, running backs coach Randy Jordan, chief medical officer Anthony Casolaro and director of mental wellness and clinical services Barbara Roberts.

“I’ve gotten several phone calls as a head coach, unfortunately, but this one was one of the harder ones,” Rivera said. “… He really is more than just a football player. He is really a heck of a young man.”

The coach said he was watching film of Robinson when he got the call about the shooting. He immediately told Jordan, and the two drove together to the hospital.

Before practice Monday morning, Rivera brought his players together for a team meeting to talk about Robinson and the incident. He asked players to “do the best they could” in practice that morning, and he came away pleased by their effort.

“You never want to see something like that happen,” defensive tackle Jonathan Allen said. “By the grace of God, he’s okay. Non-life-threatening [injuries], and he’s going to be okay. That’s the most important thing right now.”

Allen said he heard the news through his brother, then went on social media to see the headlines and additional news of the shooting. Wide receiver Terry McLaurin, who has been somewhat of a mentor to Robinson over the past few months, said he also saw the news on social media and his immediate thought was whether Robinson was okay.

“Once we found that out, that it was not life-threatening injuries, I just started praying for him and his recovery, not just physically but mentally,” McLaurin said. “You can’t really predict it, so it seems like situations like this or some of the things that we’ve been through as a team over the last couple of years came out of nowhere. It’s hard to just predict stuff like that that’s happening. But when it does happen, we try to come together. We try to reach out to the people who are affected. I’m a big believer in prayer. So I’ll continue to pray for those people in those situations.”

Quarterback Carson Wentz heard the news in a group text with his offensive linemen, then reached out to Rivera for more information.

“It caught us all off guard yesterday on an off day [from team activities],” Wentz said. “… It’s a wake-up call to everybody. There are real-life problems out there in this world, but thankfully Brian’s doing well, I’m told, and I look forward to seeing him.”

Rivera said that, in talking with others on the Commanders staff, he could “feel the anger swelling up” about Robinson’s situation and about gun violence in the United States. Sporting a “Wear Orange” T-shirt to support the gun violence prevention movement, he urged more discussion about gun safety and said it can’t be a partisan issue.

Brian Robinson Jr. was patient at Alabama. Next up: Commanders’ backfield.

“What we saw in this case and others is just a wanton use of a firearm that hurts somebody,” D.C. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) said Monday.

The Commanders’ primary focus now is the health of their running back, whom they picked in the third round of this year’s draft after he starred at Alabama. Robinson finished his college career ranked 10th in Crimson Tide history in rushing touchdowns (29) and 11th in rushing yards (2,704). He impressed in the offseason with Washington and was on track to earn a significant role in its offense.

Rivera said the Commanders expect to receive an update on Robinson’s health and from there will discuss the best path forward for the player and the team. It is possible Washington will place him on the non-football injury list, which would require him to miss at least the first four games of the season but would allow him to play later in his rookie year, health permitting.

“Life is hard. It really is,” McLaurin said. “In our position, where … we play a kid’s game but get paid a lot of money [and have] a lot of eyes and attention on us, people kind of forget that we are still human sometimes and things do affect us on and off the field.”

He added: “We’re going through a lot of adversity, and as a leader I try to put myself in a position to make myself available to help in any way that I can.”

Lauren Lumpkin and Katie Mettler contributed to this report.

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For years, a man struggled to breathe. Then doctors discovered a tooth growing in his nose.

Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images

  • Doctors discovered a 38-year-old man with difficulty breathing had a tooth growing in his nose.

  • They surgically removed it and his symptoms resolved.

  • Ectopic teeth in other areas of the mouth aren’t uncommon, but finding them in the nose is rare.

A 38-year-old man who had been struggling to breathe through his right nostril for years finally discovered the surprising culprit — a rogue tooth — after visiting clinicians at a Mount Sinai ear, nose, and throat clinic.

The man hadn’t suffered any blows to the face, and didn’t have any visible face or head abnormalities, the doctors wrote in a December report in the New England Journal of Medicine.

But he did appear to have a deviated septum, or when the bone and cartilage that separates the nostrils is off-center or crooked, and bone-like growths protruding from the back of his nose.

When the doctors, oral and maxillofacial surgeons Dr. Sagar Khanna and Dr. Michael Turner, conducted a more invasive exam, they found “a hard, nontender, white mass” in the right nostril. It had all the characteristics of an “inverted ectopic tooth,” or a essentially an upside-down tooth in the wrong place.

The surgeons removed the tooth, which turned out to be 14 millimeters, without complication. Three months later, the patient was breathing normally.

Rogue teeth typically grow in other areas of the mouth — not the nose

Ectopic teeth aren’t uncommon, but they typically grow in other parts of the mouth like the roof if there’s not enough room along the gumline, according to Australian orthodontis Dr Peter McMahon. Like a lot of orthodontic issues, genetics play a role in your risk. Women are more likely to experience ectopic teeth, which begin to develop in utero.

It’s rare to see teeth in the sinuses, however. In order to add more to the literature on the topic, one 2013 paper described six instances in which chompers grew in the maxilary sinus, or the cavities below the cheeks, above the teeth, and on the sides of the nose, according to Healthline.

One 21-year-old woman had experienced pain and swelling over her cheek for a month, and another 48-year-old woman had heaviness and numbness near her left cheek and lip for months. A couple of the patients described didn’t have major symptoms, but their out-of-place teeth were discovered during scans for other procedures.

The clinicians recommend removing the teeth and surrounding cysts, which can become cancerous.

Read the original article on Insider

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Why Tesla Soared as Other Automakers Struggled to Make Cars

For much of last year, established automakers like General Motors and Ford Motor operated in a different reality from Tesla, the electric car company.

G.M. and Ford closed one factory after another — sometimes for months on end — because of a shortage of computer chips, leaving dealer lots bare and sending car prices zooming. Yet Tesla racked up record sales quarter after quarter and ended the year having sold nearly twice as many vehicles as it did in 2020 unhindered by an industrywide crisis.

Tesla’s ability to conjure up critical components has a greater significance than one year’s car sales. It suggests that the company, and possibly other young electric car businesses, could threaten the dominance of giants like Volkswagen and G.M. sooner and more forcefully than most industry executives and policymakers realize. That would help the effort to reduce the emissions that are causing climate change by displacing more gasoline-powered cars sooner. But it could hurt the millions of workers, thousands of suppliers and numerous local and national governments that rely on traditional auto production for jobs, business and tax revenue.

Tesla and its enigmatic chief executive, Elon Musk, have said little about how the carmaker ran circles around the rest of the auto industry. Now it’s becoming clear that the company simply had a superior command of technology and its own supply chain. Tesla appeared to better forecast demand than businesses that produce many more cars than it does. Other automakers were surprised by how quickly the car market recovered from a steep drop early in the pandemic and had simply not ordered enough chips and parts fast enough.

When Tesla couldn’t get the chips it had counted on, it took the ones that were available and rewrote the software that operated them to suit its needs. Larger auto companies couldn’t do that because they relied on outside suppliers for much of their software and computing expertise. In many cases, automakers also relied on these suppliers to deal with chip manufacturers. When the crisis hit, the automakers lacked bargaining clout.

Just a few years ago, analysts saw Mr. Musk’s insistence on having Tesla do more things on its own as one of the main reasons the company was struggling to increase production. Now, his strategy appears to have been vindicated.

Cars are becoming increasingly digital, defined by their software as much as their engines and transmissions. It’s a reality that some old-line car companies increasingly acknowledge. Many, including Ford and Mercedes-Benz, have said in recent months that they are hiring engineers and programmers to design their own chips and write their own software.

“Tesla, born in Silicon Valley, never outsourced their software — they write their own code,” said Morris Cohen, a professor emeritus at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania who specializes in manufacturing and logistics. “They rewrote the software so they could replace chips in short supply with chips not in short supply. The other carmakers were not able to do that.”

“Tesla controlled its destiny,” Professor Cohen added.

Tesla sold 936,000 cars globally in 2021, an 87 percent increase for the year. Ford, G.M. and Stellantis, the company formed from the merger of Fiat Chrysler and Peugeot, all sold fewer cars in 2021 than they did in 2020.

Measured by vehicles delivered globally, Tesla vaulted past Volvo and Subaru in 2021, and some analysts predicted that it could sell two million cars this year, as factories in Berlin and Austin, Texas, come online and a plant in Shanghai ramps up production. That would put Tesla in the same league as BMW and Mercedes — something few in the industry thought possible just a couple of years ago.

G.M. and Ford, of course, sell many more cars and trucks. Both companies said last week that they sold around two million vehicles last year just in the United States.

Tesla, which rarely answers questions from reporters, did not respond to a request for comment for this article. It has said little publicly about how it managed to soar in a down market.

“We have used alternative parts and programmed software to mitigate the challenges caused by these shortages,” the company said in its third-quarter earnings report.

The performance is a stark turnaround from 2018, when Tesla’s production and supply problems made it an industry laughingstock. Many of the manufacturing snafus stemmed from Mr. Musk’s insistence that the company make many parts itself.

Other car companies have realized that they need to do some of what Mr. Musk and Tesla have been doing all along and are in the process of taking control of their onboard computer systems.

Mercedes, for example, plans to use fewer specialized chips in coming models and more standardized semiconductors, and to write its own software, said Markus Schäfer, a member of the German carmaker’s management board who oversees procurement.

In the future, Mercedes will “make sure we have customized, standardized chips in the car,” Mr. Schäfer said in an interview on Wednesday. “Not one thousand different chips.”

Mercedes will also design its own vehicle hardware, he said. Without mentioning Tesla, Mr. Schäfer added, “Probably some others were earlier going down this road.”

Doing more on its own also helps explain why Tesla avoided shortages of batteries, which have limited companies like Ford and G.M. from selling lots of electric cars. In 2014, when most carmakers were still debating whether electric vehicles would ever amount to anything, Tesla broke ground on what it called a gigafactory outside Reno, Nev., to produce batteries with its partner, Panasonic. Now, that factory helps ensure a reliable supply.

“It was a big risk,” said Ryan Melsert, a former Tesla executive who was involved in construction of the Nevada plant. “But because they have made decisions early on to bring things in house, they have much more control over their own fate.”

As Professor Cohen of Wharton pointed out, Tesla’s approach is in many ways a throwback to the early days of the automobile, when Ford owned its own steel plants and rubber plantations. In recent decades, the conventional auto wisdom had it that manufacturers should concentrate on design and final assembly and farm out the rest to suppliers. That strategy helped reduce how much money big players tied up in factories, but left them vulnerable to supply chain turmoil.

It also helps that Tesla is a much smaller company than Volkswagen and Toyota, which in a good year produce more than 10 million vehicles each. “It’s just a smaller supply chain to begin with,” said Mr. Melsert, who is now chief executive of American Battery Technology Company, a recycling and mining firm.

The Tesla lineup is also more modest and easier to supply. The Model 3 sedan and Model Y sport utility vehicle accounted for almost all of the company’s sales in 2021. Tesla also offers fewer options than many of the traditional carmakers, which simplifies manufacturing.

“It’s a more streamlined approach,” said Phil Amsrud, a senior principal analyst who specializes in automotive semiconductors at IHS Markit, a research firm. “They are not trying to manage all these different configurations.”

Tesla software, which can be updated remotely, is considered the most sophisticated in the auto business. Even so, the company’s cars likely use fewer chips, analysts said, because the company controls functions like battery cooling and autonomous driving from a smaller number of centralized, onboard computers.

“Tesla has fewer boxes,” Mr. Amsrud said. “The fewer the components you need right now, the better.”

Of course, Tesla could still run into problems as it tries to replicate the growth it achieved in 2021 — it is aiming to increase sales about 50 percent a year for the next several years. The company acknowledged in its third-quarter report that its creative maneuvering around supply chain chaos might not work so well as it increased production and needed more chips and other parts.

The electric vehicle market is also becoming much more competitive as the traditional carmakers belatedly respond with models that people want to buy rather than the small electric vehicles typically made to appease regulators. Ford said this past week that it would nearly double production of the Lightning, an electric version of its popular F-150 pickup truck, because of strong demand. Tesla’s pickup truck won’t go on sale for at least another year.

The outlook for the traditional carmakers is likely to improve this year as shortages of semiconductors and other components ease, and as manufacturers get better at coping.

Tesla vehicles still suffer from quality problems. The company told regulators in December that it planned to recall more than 475,000 cars for two separate defects. One could cause the rearview camera to fail, and the other could cause the front hood to open unexpectedly. And federal regulators are investigating the safety of Tesla’s Autopilot system, which can accelerate, brake and steer a car on its own.

“Tesla will continue to grow,” said Stephen Beck, managing partner at cg42, a management consulting firm in New York. “But they are facing more competition than they ever have, and the competition is getting stronger.”

The carmaker’s fundamental advantage, which allowed it to sail through the chip crisis, will remain, however. Tesla builds nothing but electric vehicles and is unencumbered by habits and procedures that have been rendered obsolete by new technology. “Tesla started from a clean sheet of paper,” Mr. Amsrud said.

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US intelligence community ‘struggled’ to brief Trump, CIA study says

Although Trump spent substantial time with briefers on a routine basis throughout the transition period, his free-wheeling style and deep mistrust of the intelligence community presented them with “greater challenges” even than President-elect Richard Nixon, who blamed the CIA for his election loss in 1960 and cut the agency out as president, the history found.

The 40-page narrative — a regular update to a CIA book on briefing presidents-elect written by a retired intelligence officer — offers only a few new details but confirms widely reported press accounts of the former President’s approach to intelligence.
It offers an inside window into the intelligence community’s struggle to adjust to a president who was “suspicious and insecure about the intelligence process” and, in the words of former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, prone to “fly off on tangents.” And it narrates how, at every turn, the relationship between the new President and the intelligence community was undermined by the political imbroglio stemming from the Trump campaign’s alleged relationship to Russia.

“Looking back at the Trump transition, one must conclude that the IC achieved only limited success with what had always been its two fundamental goals with the briefing process: to assist the president-elect in becoming familiar with foreign developments and threats affecting US interests with which he would have to deal once in office; and to establish a relationship with the new president and his team in which they understood how they could draw on the Intelligence Community to assist them in discharging their responsibilities,” the history recounts.

‘The system worked, but it struggled.’

The history reports that during the transition period, Trump was typically “pleasant and courteous” during his briefings, which were given by career intelligence officers drawn from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the CIA, the Defense Intelligence Agency, the FBI and the Department of State. Together, the team of 14 briefers “comprised the largest and most organizationally diverse group of experts ever deployed for transition briefings of candidates and presidents-elect.”

Even later in his presidency, at moments when Trump was publicly expressing deep frustration with the intelligence community, “briefings continued as usual and Trump’s demeanor during the sessions remained the same,” the history reports.

But as the intelligence community was drawn into the major political dramas surrounding Trump — in particular, the public furor over a dossier compiled by a former British intelligence officer containing purported compromising information on the president-elect that Trump believed had been leaked by the IC — he increasingly lashed out at the intelligence community in public.

According to one previously unreported anecdote, Trump during his second pre-election briefing on Sept. 2, 2016 assured his briefers that “the nasty things he was saying publicly about the intelligence community “don’t apply to you.”

“Trump was like Nixon, suspicious and insecure about the intelligence process, but unlike Nixon in the way he reacted,” the history reads. “Rather than shut the IC out, Trump engaged with it, but attacked it publicly.”

Clapper says Trump was ‘fact-free’

The history also confirms myriad press accounts of Trump’s dissociative style during intelligence briefings.

“The irreconcilable difference, in Clapper’s view, was that the IC worked with evidence,” according to the history. “Trump ‘was fact-free—evidence doesn’t cut it with him,'” according to Clapper.

Trump rarely, if at all, read the daily classified briefing book prepared for him during the transition, according to the lead intelligence analyst responsible for briefing the president-elect.

“He touched it. He doesn’t really read anything,” the history quotes Ted Gistaro, the career CIA analyst tapped for the job. Still, as is typical, the intelligence community tailored the briefing book to the new president, reducing the number and the length of articles. Former Vice President Mike Pence reportedly told briefers to “lean forward on maps.” Clapper agreed with Gistaro, saying “Trump doesn’t read much; he likes bullets.”

Trump would “listen to the key points, discuss them with some care, then lead the discussion to related issues and others further afield,” according to the history.

Unlike previous presidents-elect — and some members of his own national security team — Trump himself received no briefings on the CIA’s covert action programs until several weeks after his inauguration. The history terms this chain of events “a significant departure from the way briefings were handled during the previous two transitions,” but does not offer an explanation.

The history primarily focuses on Trump’s time as a candidate and president-elect, and only briefly covers his relations with the intelligence community during his presidency. It reports that after the 2020 election, Trump’s “PDB” — his presidential daily briefing — continued only for a time.

Trump typically received the PDB twice a week while in office. He was scheduled to resume receiving the PDB on January 6 after a holiday break, the history reveals. But according to an interview with Beth Sanner, Trump’s regular briefer, none were scheduled after the assault on the US Capitol that took place that day.

The history also provides some insight into briefings given to 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton, recounting one pre-election intelligence briefing given to Clinton at the FBI field office in White Plains, New York, in August of that year.

“Given all that Clinton was going through related to her handling of personal emails during the campaign, Gistaro regretted that the first question the security officer asked Clinton as she approached the room was whether she had any cell phones with her,” the history recounts. “The Secretary very professionally assured the questioner that she had left her cell phones at home.

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