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Name: Vegas Injury Lawyer
Location: United States
Birthday: 1/1/1930
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Expertise: Nevada Auto Accidents, Nevada Big-Rig Accidents, Nevada truck accident, 18 wheeler accident, motorcycle accidents, bicycle accidents, airplane accidents, plane crash, bus accident & train accidents, pedestrian accidents, hit & run accident, crosswalk accident, pedestrian car accident, boating & watercraft accidents, drowning, Swimming Pool Accidents, amusement park ride injury, amusement park accidents, construction site accidents, constriction site injury, drunk driver accidents, road design accidents, defective roads accidents, wrongful death, spinal cord injury, brain injury, closed head injury, traumatic Brain Injury, burn injury, burns, fire injury, animal attacks, dog bite, negligence, slip and fall injury, trip accident, slip trip & fall injuries, slip trip & fall accidents, premises liability, product liability, Las Vegas Nevada Attorney/lawyer.
Occupation: Las Vegas Spine & Brain Injury
Industry: Accident law in Las Vegas Neva


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Member Since: 8/20/2008

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Thursday, October 16, 2008

Las Vegas Nevada Lawyer Howard Roitman: Bar Newsletter

SBN E-Newsletter

NEWS:

* Law Suits Drive

* Family Law Exam

* Indigent Defense

 

UPCOMING CLE

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* Persuasion

* Real Estate

 

BAR PRODUCTS

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Featured CLE Seminar

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BATNAs, ZOPAs and Game Theory

 

* Communication Skills

* Strategies

* Decision Trees

* Ethics and more

 

Las Vegas Nov. 5

Reno Nov. 7

9:00 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. - 6 hrs CLE (incl. 0.5 ethics)

 

Download Form

Register Online

 

 

View past E-Newsletters

 

Don't only read the State Bar's E-Newsletter - check our website frequently to see the latest important news. Visit http://www.nvbar.org

 

E-Newsletter submissions: Kristen Bennett, kristenb@nvbar.org

 

State Bar of Nevada

600 E. Charleston Blvd.

Las Vegas, NV 89104

(800) 254-2797

FAX: (888) 660-0060

 

Northern Nevada Bar Ctr.

9456 Double R. Blvd., Ste. B

Reno, NV 89521

(775) 329-4100

FAX: (775) 329-0522

 

www.nvbar.org

 

E-Newsletter for the week of October 16, 2008

 

New Member Benefit Available: Data Backup from CoreVault

 

The State Bar of Nevada is pleased to partner with CoreVault to offer a new and important member benefit: online data backup service.

 

CoreVault offers bar members data backup and recovery services at a discounted rate. The service is automated and centrally managed to help law firms protect their data. It provides daily offsite protection, fast recovery of e-mails and files, data encryption and excellent customer service. In addition, CoreVault stores your data in two private, geographically separated data centers. You won't have to worry about losing your data and not being able to restore it due to virus, hard drive crash, accidental deletion, natural disaster, flood and the many other ways your critically important information can be lost.

 

If you would like to know more about this service or obtain a quick quote, call CoreVault at (866) 97NVBAR (976-8227) or e-mail sales@corevault.net. You can also visit CoreVault's website.

_______________________________________________________________________

 

Young Lawyers Law Suits Drive

 

In connection with Make a Difference Day (October 25), the Young Lawyers Section of the State Bar of Nevada will be collecting business attire (both casual and formal) for donation to Bristlecone Family Resources. Throughout the weeks of October 20 through October 31, please bring your "retired" business attire to one of the following drop-off locations:

 

Lionel Sawyer & Collins

c/o Laura Granier

100 W. Liberty Street, Suite 1100

Reno, Nevada 89501

Harley-Davidson Financial Services

c/o Megan Bowen

3850 Arrowhead Drive

Carson City, Nevada 89706

 

For more information, you may download a flyer. The YLS is looking forward to making a difference.

_______________________________________________________________________

 

Deadline Approaching for 2008 Family Law Specialization Exam

 

The deadline to register for the 2008 Family Law Specialization Exam is approaching. Applications are due November 7, and the exam itself will take place on December 6. To apply, visit the State Bar of Nevada website, and download, complete and submit the Specialization Exam Application. The application fee is $500.

_______________________________________________________________________

 

Las Vegas Municipal Court Criminal Defense Selection Committee

 

The state bar is seeking applications for appointment to the Selection Committee of the Las Vegas Municipal Court to award contracts to criminal defense counsel in indigent cases. This program is in response to the Supreme Court's Order (ADKT 411) directing each judicial district to adopt a plan for the independent appointment of counsel to represent indigent defendants.

 

The person appointed will review applications and award contracts to defense attorneys in each department of Municipal Court. After awarding the initial round of contracts, the selection committee will meet annually to renew the contracts or award replacements.

 

To apply, please download and complete an application from our website. Mail it to Gale Skala, Governance Coordinator, c/o the State Bar of Nevada at 600 E. Charleston Blvd., Las Vegas, NV 89104, or fax to (702) 385-2878. The application deadline is November 21.

 


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Wednesday, October 15, 2008

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October 15, 2008

Las vegas Nevada Attorney-Howard Roitman: Spinal Courd Injury, back Injury

Las Vegas Nevada Lawyer Howard Roitman:Injury Law 

| Tel: (702) 631-5650 | Fax: (702) 631-5603

 

 

Howard R. Roitman, has been practicing law for 22 years. Howard R. Roitman is one of the first attorneys to be recognized by the State Bar of Nevada as a Certified Specialist in Estate Planning. He is a member of the Bar in Nevada, California, New York, and the District of Columbia. He is a graduate of Georgetown University Law Center (JD in 1984 and LL.M in taxation in 1985), and the Harvard Law School Mediation Program . He is a Certified Financial Planner (CFP®), Charted Life Underwriter (CLU), and a Chartered Financial Consultant (ChFC).

 

Howard Roitman serves as, A Settlement Judge at for Nevada Supreme Court; as a Short Trial Judge; Mediator and at The American Arbitration Association; is a member of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators; is a Mediator for the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, A member of the Construction Specifications Institute and a Board member of the Nevada and Federal Bar Associations ADR Committees. Howard Roitman has been practicing personal injury for over 15 years has settled hundreds of cases and has been the principle lawyer in hundreds of filled lawsuits on behalf of injury victims.

 

Spinal cord injury

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Spinal cord injury
Classification and external resources
ICD-10 G95.9, T09.3
DiseasesDB 12327 29466
eMedicine emerg/553  neuro/711 pmr/182 pmr/183 orthoped/425
MeSH D013119

Spinal cord injury causes myelopathy or damage to white matter or myelinated fiber tracts that carry sensation and motor signals to and from the brain. [1][2] It also damages gray matter in the central part of the spine, causing segmental losses of interneurons and motorneurons. Spinal cord injury can occur from many causes, including:

Contents

[hide]
//

[edit] Classification

The American Spinal Cord Injury Association or ASIA defined an international classification based on neurological levels, touch and pinprick sensations tested in each dermatome, and strength of ten key muscles on each side of the body, i.e. shoulder shrug (C4), elbow flexion (C5), wrist extension (C6), elbow extension (C7), hip flexion (L2). Traumatic spinal cord injury is classified into five types by the American Spinal Injury Association and the International Spinal Cord Injury Classification System.

  • A indicates a "complete" spinal cord injury where no motor or sensory function is preserved in the sacral segments S4-S5. Since the S4-S5 segment is the lower segmental, absence of motor and sensory function indicates "complete" spinal cord injury.
  • B indicates an "incomplete" spinal cord injury where sensory but not motor function is preserved below the neurological level and includes the sacral segments S4-S5. This is typically a transient phase and if the person recovers any motor function below the neurological level, that person essentially becomes a motor incomplete, i.e. ASIA C or D.
  • C indicates an "incomplete" spinal cord injury where motor function is preserved below the neurological level and more than half of key muscles below the neurological level have a muscle grade of less than 3.
  • D indicates an "incomplete" spinal cord injury where motor function is preserved below the neurological level and at least half of the key muscles below the neurological level have a muscle grade of 3 or more.
  • E indicates "normal" where motor and sensory scores are normal. Note that it is possible to have spinal cord injury and neurological deficit with completely normal motor and sensory scores.

In addition, there are several clinical syndromes associated with incomplete spinal cord injuries.

  • The Central cord syndrome is associated with greater loss of upper limb function compared to lower limbs.
  • The Brown-Séquard syndrome results from injury to one side with the spinal cord, causing weakness and loss of proprioception on the side of the injury and loss of pain and thermal sensation of the other side.
  • The Anterior cord syndrome results from injury to the anterior part of the spinal cord, causing weakness and loss of pain and thermal sensations below the injury site but preservation of proprioception that is usually carried in the posterior part of the spinal cord.
  • Tabes Dorsalis results from injury to the posterior part of the spinal cord, usually from infection diseases such as syphilis, causing loss of touch and proprioceptive sensation.
  • Conus medullaris syndrome results from injury to the tip of the spinal cord, located at L1 vertebra.
  • Cauda equina syndrome is, strictly speaking, not really spinal cord injury but injury to the spinal roots below the L1 vertebra.

One can have spine injury without spinal cord injury. Many people suffer transient loss of function ("stingers") in sports accidents or pain in "whiplash" of the neck without neurological loss and relatively few of these suffer spinal cord injury sufficient to warrant hospitalization. In the United States, the incidence of spinal cord injury has been estimated to be about 35 cases per million per year, or approximately 10,500 per year (35 * 300). In China, the incidence of spinal cord injury was recently estimated to be as high as 65 cases per million per year in urban areas. If so, assuming a population of 1.3 billion, this would suggest an incidence of 84,500 per year (65 * 1300).

The prevalence of spinal cord injury is not well known in many large countries. In some countries, such as Sweden and Iceland, registries are available. About 450,000 people in the United States live with spinal cord injury (one in 670), and there are about 11,000 new spinal cord injuries every year (one in 30,000). The majority of them (78%) involve males between the ages of 16-30 and result from motor vehicle accidents (42%), violence (24%), or falls (27%). This is likely due to increased risk-taking behavior in men.

[edit] The Effects of Spinal Cord Injury

Divisions of Spinal Segments
Segmental Spinal Cord Level and Function
Level Function
Cl-C6 Neck flexors
Cl-Tl Neck extensors
C3, C4, C5 Supply diaphragm (mostly C4)
C5, C6 Shoulder movement, raise arm (deltoid); flexion of elbow (biceps); C6 externally rotates the arm (supinates)
C6, C7 Extends elbow and wrist (triceps and wrist extensors); pronates wrist
C7, T1 Flexes wrist
C7, T1 Supply small muscles of the hand
T1 -T6 Intercostals and trunk above the waist
T7-L1 Abdominal muscles
L1, L2, L3, L4 Thigh flexion
L2, L3, L4 Thigh adduction
L4, L5, S1 Thigh abduction
L5, S1, S2 Extension of leg at the hip (gluteus maximus)
L2, L3, L4 Extension of leg at the knee (quadriceps femoris)
L4, L5, S1, S2 Flexion of leg at the knee (hamstrings)
L4, L5, S1 Dorsiflexion of foot (tibialis anterior)
L4, L5, S1 Extension of toes
L5, S1, S2 Plantar flexion of foot
L5, S1, S2 Flexion of toes

The exact effects of a spinal cord injury vary according to the type and level injury, and can be organized into two types:

  • In a complete injury, there is no function below the "neurological" level, defined as the lowest level that has intact neurological function. If a person has some level below which there is no motor and sensory function, the injury is said to be "complete". Recent evidence suggest that less than 5% of people with "complete" spinal cord injury recover locomotion.
  • A person with an incomplete injury retains some sensation or movement below the level of the injury. The lowest spinal cord level is S4-5, representing the anal sphincter and peri-anal sensation. So, if a person is able to contract the anal sphincter voluntarily or is able to feel peri-anal pinprick or touch, the injury is said to be "incomplete". Recent evidence suggest that over 95% of people with "incomplete" spinal cord injury recover some locomotory ability.

In addition to a loss of sensation and motor function below the point of injury, individuals with spinal cord injuries will often experience other complications of spinal cord injury:

  • Bowel and bladder function is regulated by the sacral region of the spine, so it is very common to experience dysfunction of the bowel and bladder, including infections of the bladder, and anal incontinence.
  • Sexual function is also associated with the sacral region, and is often affected.
  • Injuries of the C-1, C-2 will often result in a loss of breathing, necessitating mechanical ventilators or phrenic nerve pacing.
  • Inability or reduced ability to regulate heart rate, blood pressure, sweating and hence body temperature.
  • Spasticity (increased reflexes and stiffness of the limbs).
  • Neuropathic pain.
  • Autonomic dysreflexia or abnormal increases in blood pressure, sweating, and other autonomic responses to pain or sensory disturbances.
  • Atrophy of muscle.
  • Superior Mesenteric Artery Syndrome
  • Osteoporosis (loss of calcium) and bone degeneration.
  • Gallbladder and renal stones.

[edit] The Location of the Injury

Knowing the exact level of the injury on the spinal cord is important when predicting what parts of the body might be affected by paralysis and loss of function.

Below is a list of typical effects of spinal cord injury by location (refer to the spinal cord map to the right). Please keep in mind that while the prognosis of complete injuries are predictable, incomplete injuries are very variable and may differ from the descriptions below.

[edit] Cervical injuries

Cervical (neck) injuries usually result in full or partial tetraplegia (Quadraplegia). Depending on the exact location of the injury, one with a spinal cord injury at the cervical level may retain some amount of function as detailed below, but are otherwise completely paralyzed.

  • C3 vertebrae and above : Typically lose diaphragm function and require a ventilator to breathe.
  • C4 : May have some use of biceps and shoulders, but weaker
  • C5 : May retain the use of shoulders and biceps, but not of the wrists or hands.
  • C6 : Generally retain some wrist control, but no hand function.
  • C7 and T1 : Can usually straighten their arms but still may have dexterity problems with the hand and fingers. C7 is generally the level for functional independence.

[edit] Thoracic injuries

Injuries at the thoracic level and below result in paraplegia. The hands, arms, head, and breathing are usually not affected.

  • T1 to T8 : Most often have control of the hands, but lack control of the abdominal muscles so control of the trunk is difficult or impossible. Effects are less severe the lower the injury.
  • T9 to T12 : Allows good trunk and abdominal muscle control, and sitting balance is very good.

[edit] Lumbar and Sacral injuries

The effect of injuries to the lumbar or sacral region of the spinal canal are decreased control of the legs and hips, urinary system, and anus.

[edit] Central Cord and Other Syndromes

uncomplete cord syndromes

Central cord syndrome (picture 1) is a form of incomplete spinal cord injury characterized by impairment in the arms and hands and, to a lesser extent, in the legs. This is also referred to as inverse paraplegia, because the hands and arms are paralyzed while the legs and lower extremities work correctly.

Most often the damage is to the cervical or upper thoracic regions of the spinal cord, and characterized by weakness in the arms with relative sparing of the legs with variable sensory loss.

This condition is associated with ischemia, hemorrhage, or necrosis involving the central portions of the spinal cord (the large nerve fibers that carry information directly from the cerebral cortex). Corticospinal fibers destined for the legs are spared due to their more external location in the spinal cord.

This clinical pattern may emerge during recovery from spinal shock due to prolonged swelling around or near the vertebrae, causing pressures on the cord. The symptoms may be transient or permanent.

Anterior cord syndrome (picture 2) is also an incomplete spinal cord injury. Below the injury, motor function, pain sensation, and temperature sensation is lost; touch, proprioception (sense of position in space), and vibration sense remain intact. Posterior cord syndrome (not pictured) can also occur, but is very rare.

Brown-Séquard syndrome (picture 3) usually occurs when the spinal cord is hemisectioned or injured on the lateral side. On the ipsilateral side of the injury (same side), there is a loss of motor function, proprioception, vibration, and light touch. Contralaterally (opposite side of injury), there is a loss of pain, temperature, and deep touch sensations.

[edit] Treatment

Treatment for acute traumatic spinal cord injuries have consisted of giving a high dose methylprednisolone if the injury occurred within 8 hours. The recommendation is primarily based on the National Acute Spinal Cord Injury Studies (NASCIS) II and III. Some of the claims of the studies have been challenged as being from faulty interpretation of the data.

Scientists are investigating many promising avenues of treatment for spinal cord injury. Thousands of articles in the medical literature describe work, mostly in animal models, aimed at reducing the paralyzing effect of injury to the spinal cord and promoting regrowth of functional nerve fibers. Despite the devastating effects of the condition, commercial funding for spinal cord cure research is limited, owing primarily to the small size of the population of potential beneficiaries. Despite this, a number of experimental treatments have reached controlled human trials. In addition, nerve protection and regeneration strategies are being studied in more common conditions like Alzheimer's Disease, Parkinson's Disease, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and Multiple sclerosis. There are many similarities between these neurodegenerative diseases and spinal cord injury, and this research adds considerable new information relevant to spinal cord injury treatment.

Advances in the science of spinal cord injury treatment are newsworthy, and considerable media attention is drawn towards new developments. Aside from the use of methylprednisolone, none of these developments have reached even limited use in the clinical care of human spinal cord injury. Around the world, proprietary centers offering stem cell transplants and treatment with neuroregenerative substances are fueled by glowing testimonial reports of neurological improvement. Independent validation of the results of these treatments is lacking.[3]

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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Las Vegas Nevada Lawywer Howard Roitman: Wills Trusts and Estates

Scales of justice
Wills, trusts and estates
 

Las Vegas Nevada Lawyer Howard Roitman:Injury Law 

| Tel: (702) 631-5650 | Fax: (702) 631-5603

 

 

Howard R. Roitman, has been practicing law for 22 years. Howard R. Roitman is one of the first attorneys to be recognized by the State Bar of Nevada as a Certified Specialist in Estate Planning. He is a member of the Bar in Nevada, California, New York, and the District of Columbia. He is a graduate of Georgetown University Law Center (JD in 1984 and LL.M in taxation in 1985), and the Harvard Law School Mediation Program . He is a Certified Financial Planner (CFP®), Charted Life Underwriter (CLU), and a Chartered Financial Consultant (ChFC).

 

Howard Roitman serves as, A Settlement Judge at for Nevada Supreme Court; as a Short Trial Judge; Mediator and at The American Arbitration Association; is a member of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators; is a Mediator for the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, A member of the Construction Specifications Institute and a Board member of the Nevada and Federal Bar Associations ADR Committees. Howard Roitman has been practicing personal injury for over 15 years has settled hundreds of cases and has been the principle lawyer in hundreds of filled lawsuits on behalf of injury victims.

 

 




Part of the common law series

Estate planning is the process of accumulating and disposing of an estate to maximize the goals of the estate owner. The various goals of estate planning include making sure the greatest amount of the estate passes to the estate owner's intended beneficiaries, often including paying the least amount of taxes and avoiding or minimizing probate court involvement. Additional goals typically include providing for and designating guardians for minor children and planning for incapacity.

Contents

[hide]
Wills
Wills (legal history)
Joint wills and mutual wills
Will contract · Codicil
Holographic will · Oral will
Sections
Attestation clause
Residuary clause
Incorporation by reference
Contest
Testamentary capacity
Undue influence
Insane delusion · Fraud
Property disposition
Lapse and anti-lapse
Ademption · Abatement
Acts of independent significance
Elective share · Pretermitted heir
Trusts
Express · Constructive · Resulting
Common types
Bare · Discretionary
Accumulation and Maintenance
Interest in possession
Charitable · Purpose · Incentive
Other types
Protective · Spendthrift
Life insurance · Remainder
Life interest · Reversionary interest
Honorary · Asset-protection
Special needs (Supplemental Needs)
Governing doctrines
Pour-over will · Cy-près doctrine
Estate administration
Intestacy · Testator · Probate
Power of appointment
Simultaneous death · Slayer rule
Disclaimer of interest
Related topics
Living will (advance directives)
Totten trust
Other common law areas
Contract · Tort · Property
Criminal law · Evidence

For those of you I can not serve, because I am not licensed where you are located or for any other reason:

Lawyer referral service

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

A lawyer referral service is typically offered by state and local bar associations as a public service. The purpose of a lawyer referral service is to increase access to justice by referring members of the general public to lawyers in private practice or to legal aid organizations or agencies.

Generally, a lawyer referral service sets minimum qualification standards for lawyers who list with the service to receive referrals. Referral service administrators use a rotation method to ensure that all lawyers have a fair chance of receiving referrals. The initial cost to the potential client is usually modest. In many cases, there is a maximum fee set by the bar association for the initial consultation with the lawyer.

Referral services refer to lawyers in most areas of law, including but not limited to criminal law, family law, real estate law, personal injury, estate planning and administration, employment law and insurance law.

  • Legal      500 - a worldwide resource advertising lawyers with various      specialist

 

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawyer_referral_service"

Categories: Legal aidViewsArticle Discussion Edit this pageHistory Personal tools Log in / create accountNavigation Main page Contents Featured contentCurrent events Random article InteractionAbout WikipediaCommunity portalRecent changesContact WikipediaDonate to WikipediaHelpToolboxWhat links hereRelated changesUpload fileSpecial pagesPrintable versionPermanent linkCite this page

 

 

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