Kphi Selfie museums are popping up across the country
TAMPA, Fla. 鈥?A Tampa man is warning others about the symptoms of rectal cancer after his diagnosis at the age of 35. Alex Mojica said he brushed off symptoms until he could no longer ignore the pain. He drove himself to the emergency room after experiencing abdominal pain. I drove myself to the hospital, almost crying. I could barely even drive there myself, but I made it, he said.Once in the emergency room, he received a CT scan and later an MRI. Doctors discovered a mass and then scheduled him for a colonoscopy. Dr. Elizabeth Myers, a colorectal surgeon at St. Joseph s Hospital, showed ABC Action News his colonoscopy results. Here s the tumor right here, occupying about 75% of the circumference of the wall of the rectum, said Dr. Myers as she pointed to the imaging. Mojica went through radiation and chemotherapy and later needed surgery to remove the tumor. He ha stanley cups uk s no family in Florida, he said. The doctors and nurses at St. Joseph s Hospital turned into his friends and family. At the same time, his 43-year-old sister was battling esophageal cancer and died in February. I couldn t be there for my sister beca stanley cup use I was in my own battle. Sometimes I feel that guilt now that she s not here with me, he said. St. Josephs Hospital Dr. Myers said she is see stanley tumbler ing younger patients diagnosed with colon and rectal cancer. She believes diet is a factor. I think, in large part, we think it has to do with our diet and our environment. We are now in an era Shal Minneapolis city resilience officer helping community rebuild
The Wallace s giant bee is as big as a human thumb.That might be frightening to most people, but scientis vaso stanley ts were delighted when a team of researchers recently found it in Indonesia.It s the largest bee in the world, and scientists feared it might be extinct -- until now.A group of researchers made a stunning rediscovery of the elusive critter and took the first photos and vide stanley vaso o of a living Wallace s giant bee on January 25.The team -- composed of natural history photographer Clay Bolt, entomologist Eli Wyman, behavioral ecologist Simon Robson and ornithologi stanley cup st Glenn Chilton -- spent years studying the bee and slogged around in humid Indonesia forests for days before stumbling upon one.The rediscovery has renewed hope that more of the region s forests are home to the rare species. The International Union for Conservation of Nature classifies this species as vulnerable due to mining and quarrying.Only two other lucky fellows are documented to have seen it in person before. The first was British naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace, who discovered the giant bee in 1858 while exploring the tropical Indonesian island of Bacan. Entomologist Adam Messer became the second in 1981.The team went from termite nest to nest in the forests of remote islands known as the North Moluccas, Bolt said.They had some information about the bee s habitat and behavior from Messer s paper, and they examined satellite imagery to become familiar with t