Rugby photograph

Rugby

Use attributes for filter !
Weather11°C, Wind S at 35 km/h, 87% Humidity
Shire county Warwickshire
Local timeSunday 08:17
Dialling code01788
District Rugby District
Clubs and Teams Rugby Town F. C.
Rugby Lions
Rugby Borough F. C.
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2468710
Send edit request

About Rugby


Rugby is a market town in Warwickshire, England, close to the River Avon. The town has a population of 70,628 making it the second-largest town in the county. The town is the main settlement within the larger Borough of Rugby which has a population of 100,500.

Players told to 'sit it out' under new concussion guidance

Players told to 'sit it out' under new concussion guidance
Apr 28,2023 12:50 am

...By Jim ReedHealth reporterAnyone with suspected concussion must be immediately removed from football, Rugby and other sports and rest for at least 24 hours, under new guidance for grassroots clubs...

William and Kate support opposite sides at Six Nations

William and Kate support opposite sides at Six Nations
Feb 25,2023 3:31 pm

... Prince William is the patron of the Welsh Rugby Union, while his wife Catherine is patron of English Rugby after taking over from Prince Harry...

Nicky Campbell: School abuse still haunts me

Nicky Campbell: School abuse still haunts me
Jul 27,2022 3:10 am

... " Being in a changing room at 10 years old - after Rugby - seeing a teacher abuse my friend...

Transformational therapy cures haemophilia B

Transformational therapy cures haemophilia B
Jul 21,2022 7:10 am

... The sport he wanted to play - Rugby - was completely off limits...

How Falklands War and rugby led to 40-year friendship

How Falklands War and rugby led to 40-year friendship
Jan 3,2022 4:07 am

...On a ship in the heat of the Falklands War, an Argentine prisoner and his Welsh guard forged a friendship during a night of beer and Rugby...

Rugby World Cup final: England fans gear up for South Africa clash

Rugby World Cup final: England fans gear up for South Africa clash
Feb 16,2020 7:45 am

...England fans arrived in Yokohama ahead of the final England fans are glued to television screens up and down the country as 15 men in white line up to face South Africa in the Rugby World Cup final...

All you need is mud: Japan's new spin on rugby

All you need is mud: Japan's new spin on rugby
Feb 16,2020 7:43 am

...Players slosh through a game of tambo Rugby in Kyoto, western Japan It s charming everyone from shrieking schoolkids to professional Rugby players, but Japan s newest all-weather sport is anything but good clean fun...

Rugby World Cup Japan: Eight things to know as the event comes to Asia

Rugby World Cup Japan: Eight things to know as the event comes to Asia
Feb 16,2020 6:20 am

...The Rugby world Cup in Asia for the first time The giants of Rugby union-preparing for the sprint-and scrummage your way through a new kind of Rugby World Cup: the Japanese variety...

Transformational therapy cures haemophilia B

Feb 16,2020 6:14 am

A " transformational" therapy has effectively cured people with The Bleeding disorder haemophilia B, say British doctors.

The Treatment corrects a genetic defect that leaves people's blood struggling to clot and stop bleeding.

Elliott Mason, who was part of The Trial which tested the therapy, says his life now feels " completely normal".

The medical team says the majority of adults with haemophilia could be cured in The Next three years.

From The Day Elliott was born, he was unable to make enough of a crucial protein called clotting factor IX. When you cut yourself and it scabs over, clotting factor IX is one of The Proteins that stops The Bleeding .

It meant Elliott grew up " anxious of getting hurt" and teachers " wrapped me up in bubble wrap". The sport he wanted to Play - Rugby - was completely Off Limits .

" I didn't like the fact that I was different and not able to do things, " he says.

At one point, Elliott was having injections of factor IX every other day in order to prevent a deadly bleed.

But he managed to stay healthy, unlike many others with haemophilia who face severe damage to their joints from The Bleeding .

" We have a lot of young patients in excruciating agony and there's nothing we can do to reverse the joint damage, " says Prof Pratima Chowdary, from The Royal Free Hospital and University College London.

Gene therapy

Elliot was given an engineered virus that was filled with the instructions for manufacturing The Missing factor IX.

The Virus acts like a microscopic postman that delivers the blueprints to the liver, which then starts producing the clotting protein.

It was a one-off infusion that took about an hour to drip into Elliott's body.

He recalls being " astonished" to see the amount of factor IX in his blood go from only 1% of normal levels to normal.

The findings, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, showed nine out of 10 patients given the therapy no longer needed their clotting factor IX injections.

" I've not had any treatment since I had my therapy, it's all a miracle really, well it's science, but it feels quite miraculous to me, " says Elliott, who now lives in London.

" My Life is completely normal, there's nothing that I have to stop and think 'how might my haemophilia affect this?'. "

For Elliott, that includes skiing and riding a motorbike.

'Very excited'

" We're very excited by the results, " said Prof Chowdary.

She says there was a " transformational impact" about a year after the therapy, when suddenly people realised: " I don't need to worry about my haemophilia at all. "

This trial is just the latest in a series of breakthroughs in treating both haemophilia A and B.

Prof Chowdary told me she's now " looking for my next job" as curing haemophilia " will be a reality for the majority of The Adults in The Next one to three years. "

But there are still questions which need answering:

Clive Smith, chairman of the Haemophilia Society, said: " This initial data is promising, but we continue to monitor gene therapy trials closely and cautiously, as with all new treatments.

" If they are shown to be safe and effective, NICE [National Institute for Health and Care Excellence] and the NHS must work together to make these innovative treatments available. "



Source of news: bbc.com

Related Persons

Next Profile ❯