• Facebook
  • Twitter
x

RealTime Images

  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Video
  • Blog
  • Archive
Show Navigation
Cart Lightbox Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
Next
{ 340 images found }
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • April 27, 2017 - New York, NY, United States - Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Stephen O’Brien is seen on a video monitor (left) in the Security Council chamber. The United Nations Security Council, presided over by US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley, held a meeting regarding the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Syria. At the meeting, Council members received a briefing from Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Stephen O’Brien (currently at UN in Geneva) via video-link. (Credit Image: © Albin Lohr-Jones/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170427_zaa_p133_128.jpg
  • A urology doctor delivered a baby boy during an eight-hour Air France flight from Paris to New York. Dr Sij Hemal, 27, was moments away from enjoying a glass of champagne in first class when he had to jump into action after 41-year-old passenger Toyin Ogundipe went into labor. Dr Hemal, a second-year urology resident at Cleveland Clinic’s Glickman Urological and Kidney Institute, safely delivered the baby — who was named Jake — before tying the umbilical cord with a makeshift surgical clamp… a shoe string. By chance, Dr Hemal had been seated next to a French pediatrician Dr. Susan Shepherd, who was able to help and gave the baby boy a clean bill of health upon delivery. Dr Hemal had been on a day-long journey from New Delhi, India, when the drama unfolded, and was making his way back to the U.S. after attending his best friend’s wedding the day before. “I was pretty tired from jet lag,” Dr Hemal said. “I thought I’d just have a drink and fall asleep. As it turned out, I’m glad I didn’t drink anything.” Ms Ogundipe, a banker who resides between the UK and Nigeria, was traveling with her four-year-old daughter Amy when she suddenly went into labor about midway into the December 17 flight, just as the jet skirted the southern coast of Greenland, 35,000 feet below. An emergency landing would have required a two-hour diversion to a U.S. military base in the Azores Islands, so Dr. Hemal recommended to the pilot they continue to JFK International Airport, which was still four hours away. “Her contractions were about 10 minutes apart, so the pediatrician and I began to monitor her vital signs and keep her comfortable,” Dr Hemal explained. The doctors used instruments and supplies in the flight’s scanty medical kit to routinely check Ms Ogundipe’s vital signs, including blood pressure, oxygen rate and pulse. But within the course of an hour, Toyin’s contractions accelerated; they occurred seven, then five and finally two minutes apart. “T
    MEGA147966_004.jpg
  • A urology doctor delivered a baby boy during an eight-hour Air France flight from Paris to New York. Dr Sij Hemal, 27, was moments away from enjoying a glass of champagne in first class when he had to jump into action after 41-year-old passenger Toyin Ogundipe went into labor. Dr Hemal, a second-year urology resident at Cleveland Clinic’s Glickman Urological and Kidney Institute, safely delivered the baby — who was named Jake — before tying the umbilical cord with a makeshift surgical clamp… a shoe string. By chance, Dr Hemal had been seated next to a French pediatrician Dr. Susan Shepherd, who was able to help and gave the baby boy a clean bill of health upon delivery. Dr Hemal had been on a day-long journey from New Delhi, India, when the drama unfolded, and was making his way back to the U.S. after attending his best friend’s wedding the day before. “I was pretty tired from jet lag,” Dr Hemal said. “I thought I’d just have a drink and fall asleep. As it turned out, I’m glad I didn’t drink anything.” Ms Ogundipe, a banker who resides between the UK and Nigeria, was traveling with her four-year-old daughter Amy when she suddenly went into labor about midway into the December 17 flight, just as the jet skirted the southern coast of Greenland, 35,000 feet below. An emergency landing would have required a two-hour diversion to a U.S. military base in the Azores Islands, so Dr. Hemal recommended to the pilot they continue to JFK International Airport, which was still four hours away. “Her contractions were about 10 minutes apart, so the pediatrician and I began to monitor her vital signs and keep her comfortable,” Dr Hemal explained. The doctors used instruments and supplies in the flight’s scanty medical kit to routinely check Ms Ogundipe’s vital signs, including blood pressure, oxygen rate and pulse. But within the course of an hour, Toyin’s contractions accelerated; they occurred seven, then five and finally two minutes apart. “T
    MEGA147966_003.jpg
  • A urology doctor delivered a baby boy during an eight-hour Air France flight from Paris to New York. Dr Sij Hemal, 27, was moments away from enjoying a glass of champagne in first class when he had to jump into action after 41-year-old passenger Toyin Ogundipe went into labor. Dr Hemal, a second-year urology resident at Cleveland Clinic’s Glickman Urological and Kidney Institute, safely delivered the baby — who was named Jake — before tying the umbilical cord with a makeshift surgical clamp… a shoe string. By chance, Dr Hemal had been seated next to a French pediatrician Dr. Susan Shepherd, who was able to help and gave the baby boy a clean bill of health upon delivery. Dr Hemal had been on a day-long journey from New Delhi, India, when the drama unfolded, and was making his way back to the U.S. after attending his best friend’s wedding the day before. “I was pretty tired from jet lag,” Dr Hemal said. “I thought I’d just have a drink and fall asleep. As it turned out, I’m glad I didn’t drink anything.” Ms Ogundipe, a banker who resides between the UK and Nigeria, was traveling with her four-year-old daughter Amy when she suddenly went into labor about midway into the December 17 flight, just as the jet skirted the southern coast of Greenland, 35,000 feet below. An emergency landing would have required a two-hour diversion to a U.S. military base in the Azores Islands, so Dr. Hemal recommended to the pilot they continue to JFK International Airport, which was still four hours away. “Her contractions were about 10 minutes apart, so the pediatrician and I began to monitor her vital signs and keep her comfortable,” Dr Hemal explained. The doctors used instruments and supplies in the flight’s scanty medical kit to routinely check Ms Ogundipe’s vital signs, including blood pressure, oxygen rate and pulse. But within the course of an hour, Toyin’s contractions accelerated; they occurred seven, then five and finally two minutes apart. “T
    MEGA147966_005.jpg
  • A urology doctor delivered a baby boy during an eight-hour Air France flight from Paris to New York. Dr Sij Hemal, 27, was moments away from enjoying a glass of champagne in first class when he had to jump into action after 41-year-old passenger Toyin Ogundipe went into labor. Dr Hemal, a second-year urology resident at Cleveland Clinic’s Glickman Urological and Kidney Institute, safely delivered the baby — who was named Jake — before tying the umbilical cord with a makeshift surgical clamp… a shoe string. By chance, Dr Hemal had been seated next to a French pediatrician Dr. Susan Shepherd, who was able to help and gave the baby boy a clean bill of health upon delivery. Dr Hemal had been on a day-long journey from New Delhi, India, when the drama unfolded, and was making his way back to the U.S. after attending his best friend’s wedding the day before. “I was pretty tired from jet lag,” Dr Hemal said. “I thought I’d just have a drink and fall asleep. As it turned out, I’m glad I didn’t drink anything.” Ms Ogundipe, a banker who resides between the UK and Nigeria, was traveling with her four-year-old daughter Amy when she suddenly went into labor about midway into the December 17 flight, just as the jet skirted the southern coast of Greenland, 35,000 feet below. An emergency landing would have required a two-hour diversion to a U.S. military base in the Azores Islands, so Dr. Hemal recommended to the pilot they continue to JFK International Airport, which was still four hours away. “Her contractions were about 10 minutes apart, so the pediatrician and I began to monitor her vital signs and keep her comfortable,” Dr Hemal explained. The doctors used instruments and supplies in the flight’s scanty medical kit to routinely check Ms Ogundipe’s vital signs, including blood pressure, oxygen rate and pulse. But within the course of an hour, Toyin’s contractions accelerated; they occurred seven, then five and finally two minutes apart. “T
    MEGA147966_006.jpg
  • A urology doctor delivered a baby boy during an eight-hour Air France flight from Paris to New York. Dr Sij Hemal, 27, was moments away from enjoying a glass of champagne in first class when he had to jump into action after 41-year-old passenger Toyin Ogundipe went into labor. Dr Hemal, a second-year urology resident at Cleveland Clinic’s Glickman Urological and Kidney Institute, safely delivered the baby — who was named Jake — before tying the umbilical cord with a makeshift surgical clamp… a shoe string. By chance, Dr Hemal had been seated next to a French pediatrician Dr. Susan Shepherd, who was able to help and gave the baby boy a clean bill of health upon delivery. Dr Hemal had been on a day-long journey from New Delhi, India, when the drama unfolded, and was making his way back to the U.S. after attending his best friend’s wedding the day before. “I was pretty tired from jet lag,” Dr Hemal said. “I thought I’d just have a drink and fall asleep. As it turned out, I’m glad I didn’t drink anything.” Ms Ogundipe, a banker who resides between the UK and Nigeria, was traveling with her four-year-old daughter Amy when she suddenly went into labor about midway into the December 17 flight, just as the jet skirted the southern coast of Greenland, 35,000 feet below. An emergency landing would have required a two-hour diversion to a U.S. military base in the Azores Islands, so Dr. Hemal recommended to the pilot they continue to JFK International Airport, which was still four hours away. “Her contractions were about 10 minutes apart, so the pediatrician and I began to monitor her vital signs and keep her comfortable,” Dr Hemal explained. The doctors used instruments and supplies in the flight’s scanty medical kit to routinely check Ms Ogundipe’s vital signs, including blood pressure, oxygen rate and pulse. But within the course of an hour, Toyin’s contractions accelerated; they occurred seven, then five and finally two minutes apart. “T
    MEGA147966_002.jpg
  • A urology doctor delivered a baby boy during an eight-hour Air France flight from Paris to New York. Dr Sij Hemal, 27, was moments away from enjoying a glass of champagne in first class when he had to jump into action after 41-year-old passenger Toyin Ogundipe went into labor. Dr Hemal, a second-year urology resident at Cleveland Clinic’s Glickman Urological and Kidney Institute, safely delivered the baby — who was named Jake — before tying the umbilical cord with a makeshift surgical clamp… a shoe string. By chance, Dr Hemal had been seated next to a French pediatrician Dr. Susan Shepherd, who was able to help and gave the baby boy a clean bill of health upon delivery. Dr Hemal had been on a day-long journey from New Delhi, India, when the drama unfolded, and was making his way back to the U.S. after attending his best friend’s wedding the day before. “I was pretty tired from jet lag,” Dr Hemal said. “I thought I’d just have a drink and fall asleep. As it turned out, I’m glad I didn’t drink anything.” Ms Ogundipe, a banker who resides between the UK and Nigeria, was traveling with her four-year-old daughter Amy when she suddenly went into labor about midway into the December 17 flight, just as the jet skirted the southern coast of Greenland, 35,000 feet below. An emergency landing would have required a two-hour diversion to a U.S. military base in the Azores Islands, so Dr. Hemal recommended to the pilot they continue to JFK International Airport, which was still four hours away. “Her contractions were about 10 minutes apart, so the pediatrician and I began to monitor her vital signs and keep her comfortable,” Dr Hemal explained. The doctors used instruments and supplies in the flight’s scanty medical kit to routinely check Ms Ogundipe’s vital signs, including blood pressure, oxygen rate and pulse. But within the course of an hour, Toyin’s contractions accelerated; they occurred seven, then five and finally two minutes apart. “T
    MEGA147966_001.jpg
  • May 4, 2019 - New York, NY, United States - A Participant seen holding a placard during the Abortion rally at the Times Square in New York..People gathered in Times Square to protest against abortion law in New York State, the law legalizes late term abortion until the moment of birth. During the demonstration a doctor performed a live 4D ultrasound showing an unborn baby in the womb & callousness of late term abortion. (Credit Image: © Ryan Rahman/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20190504_zaa_s197_247.jpg
  • June 30, 2017 - New York, NY, U.S. - Police vehicles are seen outside Bronx Lebanon Hospital in New York. A rifle-wielding doctor stormed Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center Friday, gunning down at least six staffers before taking his own life, according to a senior law enforcement officials. Police have identified the shooter as 45-year-old Henry Bello, a former employee at the hospital. (Credit Image: © Yuan Yue/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20170701_zaf_x99_008.jpg
  • October 30, 2017 - Harrison, New Jersey, United States - Harrison, NJ - October 30, 2017: Sebastian Giovinco (10) of Toronto FC checked by doctor during MLS Cup first leg game against Red Bulls at Red Bull Arena Toronto won 2 - 1  (Credit Image: © Lev Radin/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20171030_zaa_p133_374.jpg
  • Sir JOHN HURT, CBE (22 January 1940 - 25 January 2017) was an English actor and voice actor whose career spanned six decades. He is know for his roles in: 'A Man for All Seasons' (1966), 'The Elephant Man' (1980), 'Nineteen Eighty-Four' (1984), 'The Hit' (1984), 'Scandal' (1989), 'The Naked Civil Servant' (1975), 'I, Claudius' (1976). and 'Doctor Who: Day of the Doctor' (2013). His character's final scene in 'Alien' has been named by a number of publications as one of the most memorable in cinematic history. He received two Academy Award nominations, a Golden Globe Award and four BAFTA Awards. He was knighted in 2015. PICTURED: Jan 15, 1985 - New York, New York, U.S. - JOHN HURT photographed at the NBC Building. (Credit Image: © McBride/face to face/ZUMA Wire)
    19850115_mda_f78_167.JPG
  • Madame Tussauds has unveiled this new Doctor Who exhibition which features a life-like wax replica of actress Jodie Whittaker. The immersive new zone, at Madame Tussauds in Blackpool, in the north of England, includes the figure and the TARDIS. Jodie, 36, is the first female incarnation of the The Doctor in the hit sci-fi TV series since it first aired in 1963. She was involved with the creation of the life-like wax figure, attending a sitting and ensuring every detail had been perfectly replicated, according to Madame Tussauds. Jodie - whose debut performance as the time-travelling alien was watched by 8.2 million people as the new series of the BBC show aired - said: “It’s an incredible honour to become part of the Madame Tussauds family, they’ve done such an amazing job." General Manager, Matthew Titherington said: “We are thrilled to announce the addition of a Doctor Who area to the attraction and welcome the first female Doctor Who wax figure. “The show has a hugely loyal following, not only in the UK but across the world." Mandatory credit MEGA/Madame Tussauds. 19 Oct 2018 Pictured: Dr Who zone. Photo credit: MEGA/Madame Tussauds / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA294284_005.jpg
  • Madame Tussauds has unveiled this new Doctor Who exhibition which features a life-like wax replica of actress Jodie Whittaker. The immersive new zone, at Madame Tussauds in Blackpool, in the north of England, includes the figure and the TARDIS. Jodie, 36, is the first female incarnation of the The Doctor in the hit sci-fi TV series since it first aired in 1963. She was involved with the creation of the life-like wax figure, attending a sitting and ensuring every detail had been perfectly replicated, according to Madame Tussauds. Jodie - whose debut performance as the time-travelling alien was watched by 8.2 million people as the new series of the BBC show aired - said: “It’s an incredible honour to become part of the Madame Tussauds family, they’ve done such an amazing job." General Manager, Matthew Titherington said: “We are thrilled to announce the addition of a Doctor Who area to the attraction and welcome the first female Doctor Who wax figure. “The show has a hugely loyal following, not only in the UK but across the world." Mandatory credit MEGA/Madame Tussauds. 19 Oct 2018 Pictured: Dr Who zone. Photo credit: MEGA/Madame Tussauds / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA294284_001.jpg
  • Madame Tussauds has unveiled this new Doctor Who exhibition which features a life-like wax replica of actress Jodie Whittaker. The immersive new zone, at Madame Tussauds in Blackpool, in the north of England, includes the figure and the TARDIS. Jodie, 36, is the first female incarnation of the The Doctor in the hit sci-fi TV series since it first aired in 1963. She was involved with the creation of the life-like wax figure, attending a sitting and ensuring every detail had been perfectly replicated, according to Madame Tussauds. Jodie - whose debut performance as the time-travelling alien was watched by 8.2 million people as the new series of the BBC show aired - said: “It’s an incredible honour to become part of the Madame Tussauds family, they’ve done such an amazing job." General Manager, Matthew Titherington said: “We are thrilled to announce the addition of a Doctor Who area to the attraction and welcome the first female Doctor Who wax figure. “The show has a hugely loyal following, not only in the UK but across the world." Mandatory credit MEGA/Madame Tussauds. 19 Oct 2018 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker waxwork figure. Photo credit: MEGA/Madame Tussauds / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA294284_002.jpg
  • Madame Tussauds has unveiled this new Doctor Who exhibition which features a life-like wax replica of actress Jodie Whittaker. The immersive new zone, at Madame Tussauds in Blackpool, in the north of England, includes the figure and the TARDIS. Jodie, 36, is the first female incarnation of the The Doctor in the hit sci-fi TV series since it first aired in 1963. She was involved with the creation of the life-like wax figure, attending a sitting and ensuring every detail had been perfectly replicated, according to Madame Tussauds. Jodie - whose debut performance as the time-travelling alien was watched by 8.2 million people as the new series of the BBC show aired - said: “It’s an incredible honour to become part of the Madame Tussauds family, they’ve done such an amazing job." General Manager, Matthew Titherington said: “We are thrilled to announce the addition of a Doctor Who area to the attraction and welcome the first female Doctor Who wax figure. “The show has a hugely loyal following, not only in the UK but across the world." Mandatory credit MEGA/Madame Tussauds. 19 Oct 2018 Pictured: Dr Who zone. Photo credit: MEGA/Madame Tussauds / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA294284_004.jpg
  • Madame Tussauds has unveiled this new Doctor Who exhibition which features a life-like wax replica of actress Jodie Whittaker. The immersive new zone, at Madame Tussauds in Blackpool, in the north of England, includes the figure and the TARDIS. Jodie, 36, is the first female incarnation of the The Doctor in the hit sci-fi TV series since it first aired in 1963. She was involved with the creation of the life-like wax figure, attending a sitting and ensuring every detail had been perfectly replicated, according to Madame Tussauds. Jodie - whose debut performance as the time-travelling alien was watched by 8.2 million people as the new series of the BBC show aired - said: “It’s an incredible honour to become part of the Madame Tussauds family, they’ve done such an amazing job." General Manager, Matthew Titherington said: “We are thrilled to announce the addition of a Doctor Who area to the attraction and welcome the first female Doctor Who wax figure. “The show has a hugely loyal following, not only in the UK but across the world." Mandatory credit MEGA/Madame Tussauds. 19 Oct 2018 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker waxwork figure. Photo credit: MEGA/Madame Tussauds / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA294284_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: New Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker is all smiles the morning after her new role was announced as she is spotted out for a stroll with American actor husband Christian Contreras and their 2 year old daughter in London. 17 Jul 2017 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker, Christian Contreras. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA55890_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: New Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker is all smiles the morning after her new role was announced as she is spotted out for a stroll with American actor husband Christian Contreras and their 2 year old daughter in London. 17 Jul 2017 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker,. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA55890_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: New Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker is all smiles the morning after her new role was announced as she is spotted out for a stroll with American actor husband Christian Contreras and their 2 year old daughter in London. 17 Jul 2017 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker,. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA55890_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: New Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker is all smiles the morning after her new role was announced as she is spotted out for a stroll with American actor husband Christian Contreras and their 2 year old daughter in London. 17 Jul 2017 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker,. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA55890_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: New Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker is all smiles the morning after her new role was announced as she is spotted out for a stroll with American actor husband Christian Contreras and their 2 year old daughter in London. 17 Jul 2017 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker,. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA55890_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: New Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker is all smiles the morning after her new role was announced as she is spotted out for a stroll with American actor husband Christian Contreras and their 2 year old daughter in London. 17 Jul 2017 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker, Christian Contreras. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA55890_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: New Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker is all smiles the morning after her new role was announced as she is spotted out for a stroll with American actor husband Christian Contreras and their 2 year old daughter in London. 17 Jul 2017 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker, Christian Contreras. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA55890_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: New Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker is all smiles the morning after her new role was announced as she is spotted out for a stroll with American actor husband Christian Contreras and their 2 year old daughter in London. 17 Jul 2017 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker, Christian Contreras. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA55890_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: New Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker is all smiles the morning after her new role was announced as she is spotted out for a stroll with American actor husband Christian Contreras and their 2 year old daughter in London. 17 Jul 2017 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker, Christian Contreras. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA55890_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: New Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker is all smiles the morning after her new role was announced as she is spotted out for a stroll with American actor husband Christian Contreras and their 2 year old daughter in London. 17 Jul 2017 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker, Christian Contreras. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA55890_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: New Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker is all smiles the morning after her new role was announced as she is spotted out for a stroll with American actor husband Christian Contreras and their 2 year old daughter in London. 17 Jul 2017 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker,. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA55890_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: New Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker is all smiles the morning after her new role was announced as she is spotted out for a stroll with American actor husband Christian Contreras and their 2 year old daughter in London. 17 Jul 2017 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker, Christian Contreras. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA55890_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: New Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker is all smiles the morning after her new role was announced as she is spotted out for a stroll with American actor husband Christian Contreras and their 2 year old daughter in London. 17 Jul 2017 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker, Christian Contreras. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA55890_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: New Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker is all smiles the morning after her new role was announced as she is spotted out for a stroll with American actor husband Christian Contreras and their 2 year old daughter in London. 17 Jul 2017 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA55890_001.jpg
  • September 11, 2017 - Ankara, Turkey - The construction site of a new road project is pictured after cutting through the Middle East Technical University's (METU) forested campus in Ankara, Turkey on September 11, 2017. The university's rector Prof. Dr. Mustafa Versan Kok recently announced that the rectorship and the Ankara Metropolitan Municipality signed a protocol on a new road project of 4.8 kilometres in length passing through the university with the destruction around 24 hectares of the forest land. In the late evening hours of September 09, approximately 500 trucks and construction equipments with hundreds of police officers escorting them unexpectedly started to cut down the trees in the land a day after the signing the protocol. (Credit Image: © Altan Gocher/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170911_zaa_n230_302.jpg
  • November 2, 2018 - Ankara, Turkey - Turkish doctors take part in a protest against violence in healthcare in Ankara, Turkey on November 2, 2018. 'We started this watches as a part of protests in response to the Turkish government's new draft law that will leave thousands of medical workers unemployed, instead of protecting us against violence in hospitals', a doctor said to the photographer during the protest. (Credit Image: © Altan Gocher/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20181102_zaa_n230_113.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Michael Jackson’s doctor Conrad Murray is set to cause new anguish for the family of the late singer after giving a shocking new interview about the star’s father Joe Jackson. The disgraced 65-year-old medic - who was found guilty and jailed for the King of Pop’s manslaughter – has made astonishing claims about the family patriarch just over a week after his death. Jackson, who was the brains behind the Jackson 5 group, died in LA on June 27 aged 89 with his wife Katherine by his side. But just days after Joe’s death, Murray unleashed a brutal verbal attack and branded him one of the “worst father’s in history” in a video obtained by US website ‘The Blast’. In other shocking claims he also addressed allegations that pop singer Michael – who died at the age of 50 on June 25, 2009 – was chemically castrated as a child via hormone injections to delay puberty and maintain his high-pitched voice. The former doctor said in the video: “Joe Jackson was one of the worst fathers to his children in history. “The cruelty expressed by Michael that he experienced at the hands of his father, particularly the bad treatment and moreover, the fact that he was chemically castrated to maintain his high pitched voice is beyond words. “I knew and cared for Michael very well and he told me of the many sufferings at the hands of his father that he encountered. “It was dreadful and beyond imagination and words. “I would not shed a single tear for the passing of this cruel and evil man, Joe Jackson. “It is said that only the good die young. I hope Joe Jackson finds redemption in hell.” Michael Jackson was under the care of Murray at the time of his passing in 2009. The doctor was subsequently convicted of involuntary manslaughter and served two years in prison for administering the lethal dose of the powerful anesthetic, propofol, that killed the pop star. In 2010 Joe Jackson filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Murray but later dropped the
    MEGA248972_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Michael Jackson’s doctor Conrad Murray is set to cause new anguish for the family of the late singer after giving a shocking new interview about the star’s father Joe Jackson. The disgraced 65-year-old medic - who was found guilty and jailed for the King of Pop’s manslaughter – has made astonishing claims about the family patriarch just over a week after his death. Jackson, who was the brains behind the Jackson 5 group, died in LA on June 27 aged 89 with his wife Katherine by his side. But just days after Joe’s death, Murray unleashed a brutal verbal attack and branded him one of the “worst father’s in history” in a video obtained by US website ‘The Blast’. In other shocking claims he also addressed allegations that pop singer Michael – who died at the age of 50 on June 25, 2009 – was chemically castrated as a child via hormone injections to delay puberty and maintain his high-pitched voice. The former doctor said in the video: “Joe Jackson was one of the worst fathers to his children in history. “The cruelty expressed by Michael that he experienced at the hands of his father, particularly the bad treatment and moreover, the fact that he was chemically castrated to maintain his high pitched voice is beyond words. “I knew and cared for Michael very well and he told me of the many sufferings at the hands of his father that he encountered. “It was dreadful and beyond imagination and words. “I would not shed a single tear for the passing of this cruel and evil man, Joe Jackson. “It is said that only the good die young. I hope Joe Jackson finds redemption in hell.” Michael Jackson was under the care of Murray at the time of his passing in 2009. The doctor was subsequently convicted of involuntary manslaughter and served two years in prison for administering the lethal dose of the powerful anesthetic, propofol, that killed the pop star. In 2010 Joe Jackson filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Murray but later dropped the
    MEGA248972_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Michael Jackson’s doctor Conrad Murray is set to cause new anguish for the family of the late singer after giving a shocking new interview about the star’s father Joe Jackson. The disgraced 65-year-old medic - who was found guilty and jailed for the King of Pop’s manslaughter – has made astonishing claims about the family patriarch just over a week after his death. Jackson, who was the brains behind the Jackson 5 group, died in LA on June 27 aged 89 with his wife Katherine by his side. But just days after Joe’s death, Murray unleashed a brutal verbal attack and branded him one of the “worst father’s in history” in a video obtained by US website ‘The Blast’. In other shocking claims he also addressed allegations that pop singer Michael – who died at the age of 50 on June 25, 2009 – was chemically castrated as a child via hormone injections to delay puberty and maintain his high-pitched voice. The former doctor said in the video: “Joe Jackson was one of the worst fathers to his children in history. “The cruelty expressed by Michael that he experienced at the hands of his father, particularly the bad treatment and moreover, the fact that he was chemically castrated to maintain his high pitched voice is beyond words. “I knew and cared for Michael very well and he told me of the many sufferings at the hands of his father that he encountered. “It was dreadful and beyond imagination and words. “I would not shed a single tear for the passing of this cruel and evil man, Joe Jackson. “It is said that only the good die young. I hope Joe Jackson finds redemption in hell.” Michael Jackson was under the care of Murray at the time of his passing in 2009. The doctor was subsequently convicted of involuntary manslaughter and served two years in prison for administering the lethal dose of the powerful anesthetic, propofol, that killed the pop star. In 2010 Joe Jackson filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Murray but later dropped the
    MEGA248972_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Michael Jackson’s doctor Conrad Murray is set to cause new anguish for the family of the late singer after giving a shocking new interview about the star’s father Joe Jackson. The disgraced 65-year-old medic - who was found guilty and jailed for the King of Pop’s manslaughter – has made astonishing claims about the family patriarch just over a week after his death. Jackson, who was the brains behind the Jackson 5 group, died in LA on June 27 aged 89 with his wife Katherine by his side. But just days after Joe’s death, Murray unleashed a brutal verbal attack and branded him one of the “worst father’s in history” in a video obtained by US website ‘The Blast’. In other shocking claims he also addressed allegations that pop singer Michael – who died at the age of 50 on June 25, 2009 – was chemically castrated as a child via hormone injections to delay puberty and maintain his high-pitched voice. The former doctor said in the video: “Joe Jackson was one of the worst fathers to his children in history. “The cruelty expressed by Michael that he experienced at the hands of his father, particularly the bad treatment and moreover, the fact that he was chemically castrated to maintain his high pitched voice is beyond words. “I knew and cared for Michael very well and he told me of the many sufferings at the hands of his father that he encountered. “It was dreadful and beyond imagination and words. “I would not shed a single tear for the passing of this cruel and evil man, Joe Jackson. “It is said that only the good die young. I hope Joe Jackson finds redemption in hell.” Michael Jackson was under the care of Murray at the time of his passing in 2009. The doctor was subsequently convicted of involuntary manslaughter and served two years in prison for administering the lethal dose of the powerful anesthetic, propofol, that killed the pop star. In 2010 Joe Jackson filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Murray but later dropped the
    MEGA248972_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Michael Jackson’s doctor Conrad Murray is set to cause new anguish for the family of the late singer after giving a shocking new interview about the star’s father Joe Jackson. The disgraced 65-year-old medic - who was found guilty and jailed for the King of Pop’s manslaughter – has made astonishing claims about the family patriarch just over a week after his death. Jackson, who was the brains behind the Jackson 5 group, died in LA on June 27 aged 89 with his wife Katherine by his side. But just days after Joe’s death, Murray unleashed a brutal verbal attack and branded him one of the “worst father’s in history” in a video obtained by US website ‘The Blast’. In other shocking claims he also addressed allegations that pop singer Michael – who died at the age of 50 on June 25, 2009 – was chemically castrated as a child via hormone injections to delay puberty and maintain his high-pitched voice. The former doctor said in the video: “Joe Jackson was one of the worst fathers to his children in history. “The cruelty expressed by Michael that he experienced at the hands of his father, particularly the bad treatment and moreover, the fact that he was chemically castrated to maintain his high pitched voice is beyond words. “I knew and cared for Michael very well and he told me of the many sufferings at the hands of his father that he encountered. “It was dreadful and beyond imagination and words. “I would not shed a single tear for the passing of this cruel and evil man, Joe Jackson. “It is said that only the good die young. I hope Joe Jackson finds redemption in hell.” Michael Jackson was under the care of Murray at the time of his passing in 2009. The doctor was subsequently convicted of involuntary manslaughter and served two years in prison for administering the lethal dose of the powerful anesthetic, propofol, that killed the pop star. In 2010 Joe Jackson filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Murray but later dropped the
    MEGA248972_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Michael Jackson’s doctor Conrad Murray is set to cause new anguish for the family of the late singer after giving a shocking new interview about the star’s father Joe Jackson. The disgraced 65-year-old medic - who was found guilty and jailed for the King of Pop’s manslaughter – has made astonishing claims about the family patriarch just over a week after his death. Jackson, who was the brains behind the Jackson 5 group, died in LA on June 27 aged 89 with his wife Katherine by his side. But just days after Joe’s death, Murray unleashed a brutal verbal attack and branded him one of the “worst father’s in history” in a video obtained by US website ‘The Blast’. In other shocking claims he also addressed allegations that pop singer Michael – who died at the age of 50 on June 25, 2009 – was chemically castrated as a child via hormone injections to delay puberty and maintain his high-pitched voice. The former doctor said in the video: “Joe Jackson was one of the worst fathers to his children in history. “The cruelty expressed by Michael that he experienced at the hands of his father, particularly the bad treatment and moreover, the fact that he was chemically castrated to maintain his high pitched voice is beyond words. “I knew and cared for Michael very well and he told me of the many sufferings at the hands of his father that he encountered. “It was dreadful and beyond imagination and words. “I would not shed a single tear for the passing of this cruel and evil man, Joe Jackson. “It is said that only the good die young. I hope Joe Jackson finds redemption in hell.” Michael Jackson was under the care of Murray at the time of his passing in 2009. The doctor was subsequently convicted of involuntary manslaughter and served two years in prison for administering the lethal dose of the powerful anesthetic, propofol, that killed the pop star. In 2010 Joe Jackson filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Murray but later dropped the
    MEGA248972_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Michael Jackson’s doctor Conrad Murray is set to cause new anguish for the family of the late singer after giving a shocking new interview about the star’s father Joe Jackson. The disgraced 65-year-old medic - who was found guilty and jailed for the King of Pop’s manslaughter – has made astonishing claims about the family patriarch just over a week after his death. Jackson, who was the brains behind the Jackson 5 group, died in LA on June 27 aged 89 with his wife Katherine by his side. But just days after Joe’s death, Murray unleashed a brutal verbal attack and branded him one of the “worst father’s in history” in a video obtained by US website ‘The Blast’. In other shocking claims he also addressed allegations that pop singer Michael – who died at the age of 50 on June 25, 2009 – was chemically castrated as a child via hormone injections to delay puberty and maintain his high-pitched voice. The former doctor said in the video: “Joe Jackson was one of the worst fathers to his children in history. “The cruelty expressed by Michael that he experienced at the hands of his father, particularly the bad treatment and moreover, the fact that he was chemically castrated to maintain his high pitched voice is beyond words. “I knew and cared for Michael very well and he told me of the many sufferings at the hands of his father that he encountered. “It was dreadful and beyond imagination and words. “I would not shed a single tear for the passing of this cruel and evil man, Joe Jackson. “It is said that only the good die young. I hope Joe Jackson finds redemption in hell.” Michael Jackson was under the care of Murray at the time of his passing in 2009. The doctor was subsequently convicted of involuntary manslaughter and served two years in prison for administering the lethal dose of the powerful anesthetic, propofol, that killed the pop star. In 2010 Joe Jackson filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Murray but later dropped the
    MEGA248972_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_002.jpg
  • Meet the first-ever baby born in the US using the womb of a deceased donor. This adorable little girl, born in June at the Cleveland Clinic, is the first-ever US baby to be carried to term in a womb from a deceased donor. It is just the second such birth ever to occur in the world, with the first happening in Brazil last year. The mother, who is in her mid-30s, is part of a research trial at the Ohio hospital, involving ten women in their 20s and 30s who were born without a uterus, leaving them infertile. Uterine transplants have enabled more than a dozen women to give birth, usually with wombs donated from a living donor such as a friend or relative. However, doctors are now hailing this latest case a medical breakthrough as it was just the second to be completed using a dead donors organ. The transplants were pioneered by a Swedish doctor who did the first successful one five years ago. The Cleveland Clinic announced the latest groundbreaking birth on Tuesday July 9. The clinic has done five uterus transplants so far and three have been successful, with two women waiting to attempt pregnancy with new wombs. In all, the clinic aims to enroll ten women in its study. 09 Jul 2019 Pictured: Image from the operating room during the groundbreaking birth at the Cleveland clinic. Photo credit: Cleveland Clinic / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA462433_002.jpg
  • Meet the first-ever baby born in the US using the womb of a deceased donor. This adorable little girl, born in June at the Cleveland Clinic, is the first-ever US baby to be carried to term in a womb from a deceased donor. It is just the second such birth ever to occur in the world, with the first happening in Brazil last year. The mother, who is in her mid-30s, is part of a research trial at the Ohio hospital, involving ten women in their 20s and 30s who were born without a uterus, leaving them infertile. Uterine transplants have enabled more than a dozen women to give birth, usually with wombs donated from a living donor such as a friend or relative. However, doctors are now hailing this latest case a medical breakthrough as it was just the second to be completed using a dead donors organ. The transplants were pioneered by a Swedish doctor who did the first successful one five years ago. The Cleveland Clinic announced the latest groundbreaking birth on Tuesday July 9. The clinic has done five uterus transplants so far and three have been successful, with two women waiting to attempt pregnancy with new wombs. In all, the clinic aims to enroll ten women in its study. 09 Jul 2019 Pictured: Tommaso Falcone, M.D. Photo credit: Cleveland Clinic / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA462433_003.jpg
  • Meet the first-ever baby born in the US using the womb of a deceased donor. This adorable little girl, born in June at the Cleveland Clinic, is the first-ever US baby to be carried to term in a womb from a deceased donor. It is just the second such birth ever to occur in the world, with the first happening in Brazil last year. The mother, who is in her mid-30s, is part of a research trial at the Ohio hospital, involving ten women in their 20s and 30s who were born without a uterus, leaving them infertile. Uterine transplants have enabled more than a dozen women to give birth, usually with wombs donated from a living donor such as a friend or relative. However, doctors are now hailing this latest case a medical breakthrough as it was just the second to be completed using a dead donors organ. The transplants were pioneered by a Swedish doctor who did the first successful one five years ago. The Cleveland Clinic announced the latest groundbreaking birth on Tuesday July 9. The clinic has done five uterus transplants so far and three have been successful, with two women waiting to attempt pregnancy with new wombs. In all, the clinic aims to enroll ten women in its study. 09 Jul 2019 Pictured: Permi Uma, M.D. Photo credit: Cleveland Clinic / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA462433_004.jpg
  • Meet the first-ever baby born in the US using the womb of a deceased donor. This adorable little girl, born in June at the Cleveland Clinic, is the first-ever US baby to be carried to term in a womb from a deceased donor. It is just the second such birth ever to occur in the world, with the first happening in Brazil last year. The mother, who is in her mid-30s, is part of a research trial at the Ohio hospital, involving ten women in their 20s and 30s who were born without a uterus, leaving them infertile. Uterine transplants have enabled more than a dozen women to give birth, usually with wombs donated from a living donor such as a friend or relative. However, doctors are now hailing this latest case a medical breakthrough as it was just the second to be completed using a dead donors organ. The transplants were pioneered by a Swedish doctor who did the first successful one five years ago. The Cleveland Clinic announced the latest groundbreaking birth on Tuesday July 9. The clinic has done five uterus transplants so far and three have been successful, with two women waiting to attempt pregnancy with new wombs. In all, the clinic aims to enroll ten women in its study. 09 Jul 2019 Pictured: First US baby born using a deceased donors womb. Photo credit: Cleveland Clinic / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA462433_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_016.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_024.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_027.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_021.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_022.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_019.jpg
  • Meet the first-ever baby born in the US using the womb of a deceased donor. This adorable little girl, born in June at the Cleveland Clinic, is the first-ever US baby to be carried to term in a womb from a deceased donor. It is just the second such birth ever to occur in the world, with the first happening in Brazil last year. The mother, who is in her mid-30s, is part of a research trial at the Ohio hospital, involving ten women in their 20s and 30s who were born without a uterus, leaving them infertile. Uterine transplants have enabled more than a dozen women to give birth, usually with wombs donated from a living donor such as a friend or relative. However, doctors are now hailing this latest case a medical breakthrough as it was just the second to be completed using a dead donors organ. The transplants were pioneered by a Swedish doctor who did the first successful one five years ago. The Cleveland Clinic announced the latest groundbreaking birth on Tuesday July 9. The clinic has done five uterus transplants so far and three have been successful, with two women waiting to attempt pregnancy with new wombs. In all, the clinic aims to enroll ten women in its study. 09 Jul 2019 Pictured: Tzakis Andreas, M.D. Photo credit: Cleveland Clinic / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA462433_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_026.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Jessica Alba takes her newborn baby boy, Hayes to the doctor in Beverly Hills. The boy was born on New Year's Eve and is Cash Warren's third child with Alba. 05 Jan 2018 Pictured: Jessica Alba. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA141116_023.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_007.jpg
  • February 2, 2020, Zouping, Binzhou Township, Shandong Province, China: Overwhelmed with emotion, nurses hug. Hands and hugs as nurses comfort each other. They are part of a eight nurse and doctors team, taking care of patients who have new coronavirus COVID-19 pneumonia, in the isolation ward in Zouping People's Republic Hostipal with a empty bed behind them. (Credit Image: © Dong Naide/TPG via ZUMA Press)
    20200202_zan_z03_005.jpg
  • ALL HANDS ON DECK: February 2, 2020, Zouping, Binzhou Township, Shandong Province, China: Overwhelmed with emotion, nurses hug. Hands and hugs as nurses comfort each other. They are part of a eight nurse and doctors team, taking care of patients who have new coronavirus COVID-19 pneumonia, in the isolation ward in Zouping People's Republic Hostipal. (Credit Image: © Dong Naide/TPG via ZUMA Press)
    20200202_zcc_t49_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: First female Time Lord Jodie Whittaker clutches onto a hot water bottle as she films new series of Doctor Who in a 17th-century village. 21 Feb 2018 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker. Photo credit: Stephen Vernon/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA168973_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: First female Time Lord Jodie Whittaker clutches onto a hot water bottle as she films new series of Doctor Who in a 17th-century village. 21 Feb 2018 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker. Photo credit: Stephen Vernon/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA168973_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: First female Time Lord Jodie Whittaker clutches onto a hot water bottle as she films new series of Doctor Who in a 17th-century village. 21 Feb 2018 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker. Photo credit: Stephen Vernon/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA168973_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: First female Time Lord Jodie Whittaker clutches onto a hot water bottle as she films new series of Doctor Who in a 17th-century village. 21 Feb 2018 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker. Photo credit: Stephen Vernon/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA168973_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: First female Time Lord Jodie Whittaker clutches onto a hot water bottle as she films new series of Doctor Who in a 17th-century village. 21 Feb 2018 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker. Photo credit: Stephen Vernon/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA168973_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: First female Time Lord Jodie Whittaker clutches onto a hot water bottle as she films new series of Doctor Who in a 17th-century village. 21 Feb 2018 Pictured: Jodie Whittaker. Photo credit: Stephen Vernon/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA168973_004.jpg
Next