Come to Marys Event
THERE WILL BE SPECIAL PERFORMERS BY MINNESOTA ANGELS, COLLABORATION, CHRIS MOUA, RED RAIN, NA LEE, KURT VATLAND, LORENZO MICHELUTTI, NU LEE, WATCHING LEONA, UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA DANCE TEAM, ST. CATHERINE CHEER TEAM, RECORDING ARTIST LATOSHA EVENS, ATR, HEAT, PROPANE, FAITH, TOP COMEDIAN BOIMA FREEMAN AND SOOO MUCH MORE!!!
NOT ONLY DO WE HAVE AMAZING PERFORMERS THERE WILL ALSO BE TOP MODELS LIKE NOU LI, MIN HEE, LINDA LEE, ANGELINA VU, JUSTIN WILLIAM POHL, LONG HER AND MANY MORE!!!SO COME WATCH THEM ALL STRUCK THERE STUFF ON SET WITH TOP PHOTOGRAPHERS!!
AND NOW WE PRESENT MISS MARY LEE!!! THE NEW THE NEXT THE NOW!
PLEASE COME AND HELP SUPPORT MY EVENT BECAUSE NOT ONLY WILL THIS HELP ME BUT I WILL BE DONATING 20% OF THIS FUND TOWARDS THE "University Pediatrics Foundation" TO HELP ALL THE KIDS!!!
FOR MORE INFO EMAIL ME AT [email protected]
HOLLYWOOD THEME; RED CARPET SO PLEASE DRESS FORMALLY!!
FEB. 5TH 2007 EVERYONE GO AND GET A COPY OF THE PIONEER PRESS NEWSPAPER!!! MY STORY IS ON IT SO GO READ ABOUT ME AND GET TO KNOW ME A LITTLE BETTER!!!!! Link http://www.twincities.com/mld/twincities/living/16609760.htm
I will be Feature on GURL.COM Soon... Ill keep you all posted so you can go read about my story if your out of state!!
APLASTIC ANEMIA is a disease of the bone marrow. The bone marrow stops making enough red blood cells, white blood cells and platelets for the body. Any blood cells the marrow does make are normal, but there are not enough of them. Aplastic anemia can be moderate, severe or very severe. People with severe or very severe aplastic anemia are at risk for life-threatening infections or bleeding. Aplastic anemia is a rare disease. About 3 out of every 1 million people in the United States get aplastic anemia each year. The disease appears more often in eastern Asian countries, where it affects about 15 out of every 1 million people. It can affect people of any age. To diagnose aplastic anemia, doctors look at samples of blood and bone marrow. In aplastic anemia, the numbers of red blood cells, white blood cells and platelets in the blood are all low. There are two types of samples that can be collected from the bone marrow. A bone marrow aspiration uses a needle to extract a small amount of liquid marrow. A bone marrow biopsy uses a special needle to remove an intact core of marrow. Aspirations and biopsies are both usually taken from the back of the hip bone.In aplastic anemia, the marrow samples show low numbers of cells. The few cells that do appear are normal (not cancer cells). Based on the number of cells that appear, doctors diagnose the disease as moderate, severe or very severe aplastic anemia. Moderate aplastic anemia sometimes becomes severe over time, so doctors will watch for signs the disease is changing. For many patients with severe or very severe aplastic anemia, a marrow or cord blood transplant is the preferred standard treatment. A transplant replaces the abnormal cells in the bone marrow with healthy blood-forming cells from a family member or unrelated donor or cord blood unit.The donor for a transplant must closely match the patient's tissue type. The best donor is usually a matched sibling. For patients who do not have a suitable donor in their family, doctors may search the National Marrow Donor Program (NMDP) Registry for a matching adult volunteer donor or cord blood unit.A transplant can offer the best chance for a cure of aplastic anemia, but it is not an option for all patients. A transplant may be a good option for patients who have a suitable donor or cord blood unit and are healthy enough to tolerate a transplant. Children and young adults tend to do better than older patients, but advances in transplant have enabled more older patients to undergo a transplant successfully.Transplants for aplastic anemia can have serious risks. However, doctors have developed treatment methods to address many of these risks and transplant outcomes have improved in the last decade.One risk that is greater for patients with aplastic anemia than for many other diseases is graft rejection or graft failure (when the transplanted cells do not grow and make blood cells for the body). Having many transfusions increases the risk of graft rejection because the patient's immune system may develop antibodies that can react against the transplanted cells. Today, doctors give aplastic anemia patients as few transfusions as possible. The transfused blood is also commonly treated with radiation and filtered to remove the white blood cells. These practices have improved transplant outcomes.Another serious risk of transplant for patients with aplastic anemia is graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). This is a common transplant complication that can range from mild to severe. For patients who receive a transplant to treat leukemia or another cancer, GVHD may be associated with a beneficial graft-versus-leukemia effect. However, there is no benefit to GVHD for patients with aplastic anemia. Advances in the treatment of GVHD have reduced this risk, but doctors continue to search for better treatments.
MARY'S PLACE HOMELESS SHELTER Mary Jo and the Kids Please help Donate, its a very hard and sad things to know that people dont have a home to go to, but with Gods blessing, Mary Jo help provided for the ones who are lost. Help put a smile on someones face who has been struggling...we all can make a difference.
Sharing and Caring Hands 525 North 7th Street Minneapolis, MN 55405 612-338-4640 Office Hours M-Th: 8:30 am - 4:30 pm
Without him i wouldn't be here...he saved my life, and he is my life. I live for only Jesus. For the longest i thought i did it on my own...but it was my father who was with me since day 1. As i receive the blessings he gives me everyday..i give it all back to him, i give him all of me.
He saved me...not only from this world but forever lasting Life. Thank you my Lord~Lee may lei is my Chinese name...it means Rose.
My Passion.....Dance
GO GET IT! MAKE IT HAPPEN...