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Tag: medstar georgetown university hospital

  • How to prep your stomach for a Thanksgiving feast – WTOP News

    If you’re prone to heartburn and acid reflux, preparing your stomach ahead of Thanksgiving could be your best bet to avoid those symptoms.

    Many Americans will dig into Thanksgiving feasts on Thursday, indulging on rich, hearty dishes to mark the holiday.

    For some, the goal is to devour as big a meal as possible while avoiding discomforts such as heartburn and acid reflux.

    Dr. Joseph Jennings, gastroenterologist and hepatologist at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital, said the best way to avoid those symptoms is to avoid “overindulging.”

    “But that’s not in the spirit of Thanksgiving,” Jennings said.

    With that in mind, he said there are steps you can take to prevent pain or discomfort after feasting.

    Heading into the big day, Jennings said people should be proactive. If you’re prone to heartburn and frequently take antacids, he recommended taking that medication for a few days before the meal.

    Skipping breakfast won’t make room in your stomach for extra food, he said.

    “You actually might be a little bit more prone to discomfort, because your stomach is going to sort of be getting used to the fact that there’s no food in there, small and shrinking up a little bit,” he said. “Then you hit it with something big, and especially something rich and heavy, it might have a hard time with that.”

    Instead, he said to plan out calories for the day and perhaps have a smaller breakfast than usual.

    “I would focus on easy-to-digest foods,” Jennings said. “A Greek yogurt, scrambled eggs and then small servings of fruits are always a good idea.”

    Eating too much fiber the morning of Thanksgiving could make you feel too full to indulge. But he recommended eating fibrous foods in the days leading up to your celebration.

    “The other thing we can do leading up to a big event like this is trying to keep ourselves as regular as possible when it comes to going to the bathroom,” he said. “You don’t need to take laxatives or take any sort of purgatives.”

    Instead, he said to drink plenty of water before and during the meal.

    Jennings also recommended spacing out your feast and taking breaks between appetizers, the main course and dessert.

    “Giving your GI tract more time to do the processing that happens in the stomach and then getting it into the small intestines, creates more room and less discomfort,” Jennings said.

    That pacing goes for alcoholic beverages, too.

    “As we do enjoy some adult beverages on holidays, try to keep that in real moderation, because alcohol in general also is upsetting to the stomach,” Jennings said.

    After the meal has wrapped up, he said to avoid laying down.

    “Falling asleep on the couch watching football after your big meal is as American as apple pie,” he said. “But if you can get up and move around, especially in the hour or two after eating, gravity will help your body digest that food.”

    He said taking a walk after dinner could be a great option.

    “It actually will go a long way in both less heartburn, less reflux in the later evening, and actually even making some more space for some great desserts afterward,” he said.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Jessica Kronzer

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  • After years of dialysis, pancreas transplant gives DC man a new lease on life – WTOP News

    World Diabetes Day is the leading global campaign dedicated to raising awareness about diabetes mellitus. It takes place annually Nov. 14.

    Durrell Becton was just 17 years old when he found out he had Type 1 diabetes.

    He said he was having a number of health problems, including constant weakness, nausea, continual thirst and urination.

    “I was diagnosed maybe a month before I went off to college,” Becton told WTOP. “Come to find out that my blood sugar was over 1,000.”

    The normal range for healthy blood sugar is 60 to 120.

    That began years worth of treatments with insulin and, ultimately, dialysis when his kidneys failed.

    Becton is 38 now and has had a kidney and pancreas transplant from MedStar Georgetown University Hospital.

    “It’s life-changing,” Becton said. “As of right now, I’m totally (diabetes) and kidney disease free.”

    “There is (an epidemic) of diabetes in this country,” said Dr. Steven Potter, director of pancreas transplant surgery at MedStar Georgetown School of Medicine. “There are about 38 million people in the United States right now with diabetes.”

    Potter said that diabetes can be managed effectively with insulin treatments, proper diet and exercise. But severe cases, those in which a person’s kidneys have failed and they need to be on dialysis, can have a devastating effect on someone.

    “The cost of that, in terms of lives lost, is unbelievable,” Potter said. “Pancreas transplantation is an incredible intervention because it’s the only way to cure diabetes.”

    World Diabetes Day is the leading global campaign dedicated to raising awareness about diabetes. It takes place annually Nov. 14 and is organized by the International Diabetes Federation.

    “I feel great! I feel way more inspired than I was before,” Becton said.

    To learn more about diabetes and strategies to manage it, visit the federation’s website.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Alan Etter

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  • Montgomery County woman receives first-of-its-kind surgery to repair her ankle – WTOP News

    Montgomery County woman receives first-of-its-kind surgery to repair her ankle – WTOP News

    A woman was allergic to metal, so she could not have the traditional surgery to repair her ankle. Now, she is considered a “pioneer” after receiving a first-of-its-kind surgery using only plastic components.

    Orthopedic surgeon Paul Cooper holds a replica all-plastic ankle implant, like the recently implanted in a Montgomery County, Maryland woman. (Courtesy MedStar Georgetown University Hospital)

    A Montgomery County, Maryland, woman received a first-of-its-kind surgery to repair her ankle — and it was done using only plastic components.

    Dr. Paul Cooper, an orthopedic surgeon at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital in D.C., performed the all-plastic ankle replacement surgery on the 71-year-old woman a week ago.

    The woman is allergic to metal, so she could not get the traditional surgery that involves metal components.

    “Six months ago, this was not even a practical option and it just happened to fall in our lap that the technology matured perfectly in sync with this patient,” Cooper said.

    The product that was used in the surgery, a thermal molded polymer, has been used in the aerospace industry and for use in vehicles for many years. But about 10 years ago, it started to be used in the medical field as a product called PEKK — first used as a replacement in craniotomies, then other uses, such as spine tumors and “other orthopedic specialties.”

    Cooper, who has been helping patients with joint surgeries for 30 years, said the use of this plastic for this kind of procedure for joints will be a game-changer in medicine: “You can trim it or cut it, as opposed to metal in the operating room to adjust as needed.”

    Previously, surgeons have had to scrape patient’s bones to get the metal replacements to fit, but Cooper said the quality of the plastic for joint replacement is good: “Its very similar in strength to (metal) that has been used in the past.”

    As far as the woman who received the surgery, Cooper said “she woke up in less pain than she went to sleep with,” adding “she’s very excited to be a pioneer.”

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Kyle Cooper

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  • A veteran nurse on Nurse Appreciation Week and why the job remains rewarding – WTOP News

    A veteran nurse on Nurse Appreciation Week and why the job remains rewarding – WTOP News

    The nursing field is filled with challenges. During National Nurses Week, WTOP talked to Candie Daniels, the assistant director of the neuroscience ICU at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital.

    The nursing field is filled with challenges. According to the American Association of Colleges of Nursing, the median age of registered nurses is 46, and more than one quarter of registered nurses say they plan to retire or leave the profession over the next five years.

    During National Nurses Week, WTOP talked to Candie Daniels, the assistant director of the neuroscience ICU at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital.

    Daniels said there’s a wide spectrum of careers in the health care field, but, for her, the attraction to nursing was the opportunity to provide direct care to patients. And there was a family connection.

    “I come from a family of nurses. My grandparents were nurses, my mother’s a nurse, my aunt’s a nurse,” she said.

    And when it comes to working in her chosen area, she said, “Neuroscience has just evolved — what we can do for patients today, what we couldn’t do for them even just 10 years ago, five years ago, is just amazing.”

    Daniels, who has been working at the Georgetown hospital for 23 years, said she’s often asked by job applicants why she’s spent so much of her career there.

    She said she tells them: “There’s a professional respect between the providers and nurses.”

    Daniels said a good example is how rounds are conducted: “Physicians do not finish rounds without looking at the nurse and saying, ‘anything else? Did we miss anything, any other input that you’d like to provide?’”

    There are bad days, Daniels said, as there are in any job. But she adds: “The good days, and even the small, good things you can do for a patient, can wipe away a week of bad days.”

    So, during National Nurses Week, what can patients and their families do to show their appreciation?

    “Honestly, it’s just a ‘thank you,’” she said. “No one ever wants it or expects it,” but she said thank you means a lot.

    Another thing that nurses treasure, said Daniels, is an update on how a patient is doing.

    “We love to get letters and cards back from families and patients because we love to know how they’re doing,” she said.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Kate Ryan

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