Desmienten que Ricky Martin se vaya a casar

Una representante de Ricky Martin negó que el cantante se casaría en una ceremonia en Nueva York a finales de enero, como informó un diario puertorriqueño.

“Es una noticia sin fundamentos. No hay planes de boda”, dijo su publicista, Róndine Alcalá, a PeopleEnEspanol.com.

Por su parte, Helga García, portavoz del intérprete en Puerto Rico, explicó al diaro El Nuevo Día: “El asunto personal de Ricky ni de ningún otro artista con los que trabajo es algo que yo discuto, pero en este momento te diría que eso no es correcto”.

Anteriormente, el diario publicó que una fuente cercana al cantante informó que Martin y su pareja Carlos González Abella contraerían nupcias el 28 de enero en una ceremonia en Nueva York, en donde el cantante tiene residencia y donde participará en el musical Evita en abril de este año en el teatro Marquis.

Cabe señalar que hasta ahora Martin de 40 años ha negado tener planes de casarse con González Abella, pero sí está a favor de la unión entre personas del mismo sexo.

Martin, quien a menudo usa su cuenta de Twitter para comunicarse con sus seguidores, publicó hace un momento en dicha red social, justo cuando se sigue dilusidando en los medios el tema de su posible matrimonio, un comentario indicando que “De lo que veas, cree la mitad. De lo que leas, no creas nada”.

Aunque el cantante no se ha expresado sobre el tema de su supuesta boda, bien podría ser esta su reacción a las informaciones que han sido publicadas al respecto.

Cortesia de PeopleenEspanol.com

HEADPHONE MUSIC EASES ANXIETY DURING PROSTATE BIOPSIES. go to web site best noise cancelling headphones

States News Service January 9, 2012 DURHAM, NC — The following information was released by Duke University Health System:

By Duke Medicine News and Communications Tuning in to tune out may be just what’s needed for men undergoing a prostate biopsy, according to researchers at the Duke Cancer Institute.

The Duke team found that noise-cancelling headphones playing a classical melody may reduce the pain and anxiety of the often uncomfortable procedure.

The finding, published this month in the journal Urology, points to a simple and inexpensive way to help an estimated 700,000 U.S. men who undergo a prostate biopsy a year. The procedure is essentially the only way to diagnose prostate cancer, which strikes one in six men during their lifetimes.

“It’s a matter of shifting attention, so the music provides a distraction from the procedure,” said Matvey Tsivian, MD, a Duke urologic oncology fellow and lead author.

For the study, which was conceived by medical students and had no outside funding, the Duke team enrolled 88 patients and randomly assigned them to three groups. The first had no headphones; the second wore the noise-cancelling headphones but heard no music; and the third wore the headphones and listened to Bach concertos.

Blood pressure was taken before and after a trans-rectal biopsy, which is an intrusive procedure involving an ultrasound probe and a spring-loaded needle that has a loud trigger. The noise alone causes many men to flinch even if they report no pain, and 20 percent of men experience high stress and anxiety about the procedure. web site best noise cancelling headphones

Among study participants in both groups with no musical intervention, diastolic blood pressure remained elevated after the procedure, compared to before. But the men who wore the headphones and listened to Bach had no such spike in blood pressure. Diastolic blood pressure often rises as a function of stress and anxiety.

Study participants who had the music also reported less pain, as measured by questionnaires. The researchers said they did not determine whether the choice of music might have had an impact.

“We couldn’t study all the permutations and variables, but it’s evident that this kind of approach works,” said Thomas Polascik, MD, director of Urologic Oncology at the Duke Cancer Institute and senior author of the study. “This is something that could be broadly employed. It’s easy and inexpensive — a set of headphones and music. That’s it.” In addition to Tsivian and Polascik, study authors included Peter Qi; Masaki Kimura; Valerie Chen; Stephanie Chen; and Tong J Gan.

Deja tu comentario