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Gearing up for the game - Duration: 2:30.
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Utilities preparing for nor'easter - Duration: 1:33.
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KCSO: Deer to blame for crash into a fence - Duration: 0:57.
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Liver and Pancreas Institute for Quality at George Washington University Hospital - Duration: 4:59.
Pancreatic Cancer is one of the most difficult diagnosis and challenging clinical diseases that we face.
Most times patients will develop symptoms that occur fairly advanced in the disease.
And those symptoms could include a darkening of the urine,
a lightening of the stools, and yellowing of the eyes called jaundice.
Typically, if those symptoms occur, the patients should seek medical care right away
and ultimately get to specialty care for the treatment of the underlying tumor.
Patients who have cancers or tumors in the body or tail of the pancreas, which is the end of the pancreas,
typically don't present with those symptoms, but will present with symptoms of abdominal or back pain much later in the course of their disease
and, again, should seek medical attention or specialty care to treat the underlying condition.
Pancreatic Cancer occurs in 40 to 50 thousand patients each year in the United States and is the 4th leading cause of cancer deaths.
The treatments for pancreatic cancer include surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation.
However, the only cure for pancreatic cancer is surgery,
actual removal of the tumor and then reconnection of the remainder of the pancreas and organs to the intestinal track.
Oftentimes, patients will have a combination of surgery,
plus chemotherapy and radiation in order to prevent the tumor from coming back in the future.
Other patients, who present with more advanced disease, can only receive chemotherapy and radiation alone and typically that is not curative.
So, here at George Washington University Hospital, we have two unique treatments for pancreatic cancer;
one, is minimally invasive surgery, and two, is advanced vascular reconstruction,
or blood vessel reconstruction for tumors that are more advanced.
The first technique involves using small incisions and using the camera in the operating room
and long instruments in order to mobilize the tumor and do a resection.
The benefit of that is that there is less pain and a faster recovery after surgery
for patients who undergo minimally invasive surgery.
Therefore, they can go on to get the second stage of their treatment in a much better condition
and much faster than they would if they had undergone traditional open operations.
And as our chemotherapy improves, which it will, then those patients, more likely, will have a better outcome over time.
Second treatment involves patients who have more advanced disease.
One of the unique features about pancreatic cancer is that as it grows,
it can oftentimes involve the blood vessels that carry blood to and from the remainder of the small intestines.
And, traditionally, patients who had those tumors that involved the blood vessels were not considered candidates for surgery
and therefore would get chemotherapy and radiation alone, which we know is not curative.
Now, we are able to offer patients up front radiation treatment to those blood vessels as well as chemotherapy,
and as long as their cancers remain stable, then they are eligible to have a total pancreatectomy,
that is removal of the entire pancreas and also removal of segments of the blood vessels in reconstruction.
And we've seen that those patients do the same as patients who had no blood vessel involvement.
And so, we are able to offer surgery to a much larger proportion of patients
and hopefully end up with a better outcome for a larger pool of patients than would otherwise been offered in the past.
So, one of the more exciting areas of cancer therapy right now are techniques and treatments
that utilize our own immune system to attack cancer cells and we think that this is the future for cancer treatments.
By figuring out why your immune system does not attack cancer like it attacks a bacteria or a virus,
we now have drugs that allow the immune system to recognize cancer cells and therefore go and attack those cancer cells
cells just like they attack a common cold or a common virus.
We think the combination of those therapies
along with the new surgical treatments that we offer here at George Washington University Hospital
will provide better outcomes for patients with pancreatic cancer
and will provide a longer survival for patients with this dismal disease.
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Keep bundled up for a chilly weekend! - Duration: 0:30.
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Guide to Colors & Palettes (just in time for Huevember!) - Duration: 8:32.
*Music*
Hi everyone, it's me, Bibs, and today I am going to talk about colors
and about palettes! I will cover the primary, secondary, and tertiary colors
and the colors schemes that come with it. I will tell you ways to create contrast,
and common pitfalls with color, and how to avoid them. Hopefully, by the end of this video,
you will feel comfortable enough to experiment with colors and
carry the set of skills that I have told you and perhaps even participate in huevember with me this year.
All that being said, let's get started.
Color, scientifically speaking, is radiation that bounces off of an object and is interpreted by the eye.
Color is scientifically proven to cause certain feelings. (ex.) blue is calming, and yellow alerts to danger.
Here's a little bit of color vocabulary:
"Tone" is the color + gray. It can also be referred to as saturation.
"Tint" is the color + white, so it becomes lighter, and "shade" is the color + black, so it becomes darker.
Primary colors cannot be created from other colors, which would be red, yellow, and blue.
Secondary colors are made from mixing two primary colors. So red and yellow make orange,
yellow and blue make green, and red and blue make purple.
And the tertiary colors are created when a primary and a secondary color are mixed.
The color [names] are self-explanatory. Red-orange, yellow-green, blue-green... and thus.
Here on the color wheel I have listed a handy little guide. P is for primary so we can see the red the yellow and the blue,
[S] Secondary is all here, and tertiary is labeled by the "T"s
Now we can get into color schemes!
A complementary color scheme are the two opposites on the color wheel.
So "red and green" or "yellow and purple"... "blue and orange"...
Those are the very common complementary color schemes. Split complementary is
/almost/ complementary, but instead of choosing the color "opposite,"
it's the two colors on the left and on the right of that color.
So instead of being "red and green" it would be red and bluish-green with yellow-green.
Or green with reddish purple and red-orange.
Split complementary still has a lot of contrast but it also adds a lot of harmony.
since [split complementary] is not as harsh.
*music*
Double complementary and triangle color schemes... You should be very careful with them because
the more colors you add to a piece the easier it is to lose focus.
*music* A double complementary scheme is kind of self-explanatory.
It tends to form a rectangle on the color wheel. So you would have, maybe, red, purple
orange, and blue on your piece. Or you would have... *music*
green, red, orange, and blue. *music*
A triangle color scheme is evenly spaced on the color wheel
and often has a nice contrast to it.
So we'd have red, blue, and yellow
or purple, orange, and green.
*music*
An Analogous color scheme are the colors that are next to each other on the color wheel,
Usually just two or three [colors]. So (ex) red, red-orange, and orange;
or yellow-orange, yellow, and yellow-green. [Analogous] has a lot of harmony and unity but
compared to a complementary color scheme there's less contrast.
Here are a few examples. You would the the blue-violet, the reddish-violet, and the normal violet.
Or you would have yellow green, yellow-orange, and yellow.
It's a very nice way to put all your colors together without just using the same color.
Speaking of just using the same color, there are monochrome color schemes,
where it's just one color and taking advantage of all its tones and tints and shades to make the piece.
It is a good practice for tonal range, but if you're not careful it can be really boring
so if you're using all grays, if you use grays that are too close to each other it might become very boring to look at.
I have two examples here: one in red and one in blue.
There is a difference in the tints and shades (within the color scheme) so that the eye travels around the piece
without being bored or without getting lost. Speaking of the eye getting bored of lost,
Common pitfalls is: when there's too much contrast, too /little/ contrast, if it's muddy, of if
it's called "eye strain" when it happens, which is really common among beginner artists.
When [the colors] are so bright that the viewer's eyes might hurt if they look at it because
[the artists] go wham on the saturation and they put it as bright as can be
and then the colors get lost. Alternatively, while it's not eye strain, when there's too much contrast
the red is really red, the green is really green, the blue is really blue... so where is the viewer supposed to look?
You can't quite tell what I want you to look at here Alternatively when there's too little contrast
everything is really close in tone and there's nothing to focus on.
Here, you have the color which looks very gray and odd.
And then when you go to the tone you can't even tell where one color ends and the other begins
because they all look like one gray blob. When it's muddy, the is (can be) a nice tonal range,
But everything is really gray. It's in between of being proper gray and being a color that pops out
so it's just in this in between zone where it all becomes /muddy/ and it all blends together.
So how do you avoid this? Well, you think about what color you want to "pop out"
So, in this scenario, I would want the hair to come out more than anything.
So I would think about that and make the blue brighter here, and make the red softer
so that the eye travels here. I would add the green for a bit of an accent,
And I would make sure that the tonal range is different enough that the eye travels
directly to what to what I want [the viewer] to look at.
In this case the background is white; the eye will immediately focus on what's darker.
So the face is light and the hair pins are at a bit of an in between and then the hair is a lot darker.
And that is how you can use saturation, tone, tints and shades... and very them to create contrast.
So what you want to stand out you make one thing, and what you want to frame it you make another [color].
The light red is- leads the eye towards the dark blue hair and vice versa.
The viewer's eye will travel around the piece without getting lost or hurting their eyes like eye strain would.
Hopefully I have explained things well enough that you can go and experiment with color to make a unique piece,
and there is no "wrong" way to do art, so just try to see what different color schemes
you like and want to experiment with, and maybe you'll like brighter colors or more gray colors
It's really up to you; I can't tell you how you want to do your art. And I know you can do it.
Y'know, if you put your mind to it you will find what you enjoy most.
So! Try huevember this year with me this year! It's good practice with colors and I'm confident that we'll both do a wonderful job together!
*music* Here's a final little question, think of it as a bit of a "pop quiz"
Hmm... What color scheme is this? You can either leave the answer as a comment or just quiz yourself.
The answer will be in the video description. So...
By the way, I think you'll get it right ;) I have faith in you. :)
All that being said, I think we're done for today! I want you to work hard and to keep doing what you're doing!
I know you can do it! Bye-bye!
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City of Savannah proposing restricted hours for tours - Duration: 1:41.
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How the Trump administration and pro-ACA groups are preparing for open enrollment - Duration: 1:36.
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Convicted sexual predator running for Coalinga City Council as write-in candidate - Duration: 2:36.
For more infomation >> Convicted sexual predator running for Coalinga City Council as write-in candidate - Duration: 2:36. -------------------------------------------
Marriage Solutions For Females |ఆడవారు పేరులో ఈ అక్షరాలు ఉండి ఈ తేదీల్లో పెళ్ళి చేసుకుంటే నష్టపోతారు - Duration: 2:44.
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