Archive for September, 2009

Satellite TV for PC Review ? TV for PC ? Watch TV on your PC

“Satellite TV for PC” is a Television service that enables you to “watch TV on your PC” for free. Many Television viewers from all over the world have realized the benefits of TV for PC and they have already switched from the regular Satellite TV and cable service to Satellite TV for PC due to its advantages and benefits.

To get service all you are required to do is to join the Satellite TV for PC website at a small fee that is half of what you pay every month on Cable Television bills. This small registration fee earns you a lifetime membership to the site and also enables you to download the “TV for PC” software that enables you to watch over 3500 live digital Satellite Television channels on your PC for free.

The channels you receive are high quality channels from all major cities and states worldwide. Since the TV channels are transmitted via the internet the TV signal you receive can not be affected by harsh weather and terrain and therefore you can watch Television from any part of the world without inconvenience. The channels you receive come in all categories from movies and music, sports, documentaries, wildlife, adult channels with parental control features and much more.

In the current harsh economic times, Satellite TV for PC has enabled Television viewers save money because with Satellite TV for PC there are no monthly bills and no cost of installation like in the case of Satellite dish systems and cable were you end up spending almost 200$ on installation and 95 – 100$ on monthly bills. With Satellite TV for PC all you are required to do is to download the TV for PC software and install, that’s it. No additional hardware and equipment required, no special skills needed, you receive over 3500 regularly updated TV channels on your PC instantly. Click here to preview and download Satellite TV for PC.

Plastic Surgeons Are Using Increasingly Sophisticated Techniques to Optimize Breast Reconstruction

Breast reconstruction is a vital component of the overall treatment plan of breast cancer patients. In some countries breast reconstruction is required by law. It is being performed with increasingly sophisticated techniques to optimize the appearance, and feel of the reconstructed breast limit donor site morbidity and provide a long term result. The use of autologous tissue allows the reconstruction of a breast which looks and feels most like a normal breast. The advent of perforator flaps now allows for minimal donor site morbidity and good flap durability. The abdomen is an ideal source of tissue for breast reconstruction. Most patients who develop breast cancer are at an age when they also have excess skin and fat overlying the abdomen. The fat is typically soft and easy for the surgeon to shape and closely approximates the feel of a normal breast. In addition, an added bonus of an abdominal donor site for most patients is the improved abdominal contour after flap harvest which approximates that of an abdominoplasty or ‘tummy tuck’ while minimizing donor site morbidity.

The DIEP (deep inferior epigastric perforator) flap is a central component in the state-of-the-art practice of breast reconstruction and usually our first choice of flap from the abdomen. The soft tissue can be transferred from the abdomen safely through this the construction of a new breast without the sacrifice of rectus muscle or fascia. Perforator flaps such as the DIEP flap can trace their origins back to the work of Stuart Milton in the 1960s. At that time, wound closure flaps were random pattern flaps based on the geometric principle of a length to width ratio of approximately 1.5′1. Using a porcine model, Dr Milton in 1970 and 1971 demonstrated that flaps of a much greater length to width ratio could be elevated safely when based on a known underlying vessel. This led to the concept of the axial pattern pedicle flap, which was first reported in MacGregor and Jackson’s description of a groin flap in 1972. Later, in 1982, Hartrampf would use the pedicle flap concept to transfer abdominal tissue to the chest for reconstruction mammoplasty using the superior epigastric artery and the rectus abdominus muscle as a carrier.

Music of My Life

Album Description
Legendary singer/songwriter Neil Sedaka will release his first new studio album in over 10 years with The Music of My Life. The new album features 12 songs that showcase Sedaka at his finest with timeless melodies and superior song craft. All songs were written and co-produced by Sedaka himself as well as a new collaboration between Sedaka and Grammy winning producer David Foster. Celebrating six decades of songwriting and a monumental career,Sedaka remarks,”This migh… More >>

Music of My Life

The 50 Greatest Pieces of Classical Music

The 50 Greatest Pieces of Classical Music

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