PREVENTION OF BRONCHITIS AND EMPHYSEMA
April 22nd, 2009 | Posted by admin | Category: General healthNo Comments
• Stop smoking. Given that bronchitis is an inflammatory condition of the airways with an excessive production of mucus, the best preventive is to stop smoking if only because the smoke itself damages the air passages, so adding to the problem. Early bronchitic changes can be reversed by stopping smoking and, of course, other problems connected with smoking will go too.
There is plenty of evidence to show that children of parents who smoke have more chest infections than other children, and a London study of 10,500 schoolchildren found that even as early as 11 their lungs are being seriously affected. Those smoking up to six cigarettes a week suffered from colds and coughs and were more likely to be short of breath after exercise than the non-smokers. Obviously stopping children smoking is a major preventive measure against this vast problem.
A study of British doctors was started in 1951. By 1964 it had been found that the death rate from chronic bronchitis of those smoking up to 14 cigarettes per day was seven times that of non-smokers and of those smoking 15-24 daily, twenty times. In various studies pipe and cigar smokers come out better than cigarette smokers as regards bronchitis, and those who have only ever smoked pipes and cigars have a risk only very slightly greater than non-smokers.
• Clean up polluted air. Most western countries are now more vigilant about smoke pollution than in the past and the Clean Air Acts in the UK (1956 and 1968) have undoubtedly played their part in reducing the toll of these diseases. The small fall in deaths from bronchitis and emphysema seen in recent years can almost certainly be put down to these measures. Local authorities were given the power to create smokeless zones. Such measures have made the old British ’smogs’ a thing of the past.
Vitamin A appears to be valuable for those who live in highly polluted air zones. Ozone and other air pollutants destroy vitamin A by oxidation, so anyone living in a polluted area should take more of the vitamin as a protective, especially in the winter months. Liver, herring, eggs, milk, margarine, butter and carrots are good sources, but the easiest way of taking this vitamin is in fish-liver-oil capsules.
• Breathing exercises are probably worth trying at the first sign of bronchitis.
• Take more exercise. One study of very severe bronchitis and emphysema patients who had only about 25 per cent of normal lung function left and were thus suffering from shortness of breath and limited activity, gave graded exercises in a training schedule on a stationary bicycle. When the tension on the bicycle was set to produce a feeling of ‘work’ but not ‘exhaustion’ at the end of the exercise, most of the patients felt better. At first the subjects were allowed only seven minutes on the bicycle but this was slowly worked up to twenty minutes. Exercise increases the rate of mucus production and makes it easier to cough up. People undergoing regular exercise like this report an improvement in their symptoms and are aware that the vicious circle of shortness of breath, no exercise, more shortness of breath, can be broken.
• All bronchitics cough and this is healthy. Don’t use cough suppressants-the phlegm ought to come up, especially if it is infected (yellow or green). Any remedy that helps bring up phlegm can be used, including exercise.
• Poor posture can make breathing less efficient, as may nervous tension. Be sure to learn to walk upright, shoulders back and with your back straight. Be careful about bad posture when seated too. Learn how to relax and how to breathe properly.
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HOW THE HANDS AND FEET AGE
April 9th, 2009 | Posted by admin | Category: General healthNo Comments
The effects the aging process has on your hands are usually a giveaway to your age. Other parts of the body that show maturity can easily be altered with a face-lift or tummy tuck, but the telltale signs of age are always right there in your hands, not only in appearance but in their capabilities. Hands that are nimble in youth eventually become hands that may be unable to perform even simple tasks. However, arthritis is not necessarily a part of growing older, and I’ve seen many aging artisans who can still use their hands with great precision and skill.
Typically, as the hand ages, the skin becomes thinner and the muscles on the back of the hand begin to lose some of their tone. The veins and bones become more prominent, and the area between the thumb and first finger is especially prone to losing muscle. On the whole, muscular strength in the hand may decrease, but the decrease is gradual enough that, for most of us, our hands can function effectively well into our 80s and 90s.
Like the hand, the nails are a part of the body that provides a clue to the general health of the rest of your body. Many times, the first signs of an underlying medical illness, such as cancer or cardiovascular disease, show up in the nails. For instance, the nails of lung cancer patients begin to spoon, while the nails of people who have vascular disease frequently thicken or turn blue underneath. Many women use nail polish and other adornments as a cosmetic and a form of expression. Unfortunately, nail polish can mask possible medical problems that are evident in the nails and even create new ones.
Starting in your 50s, the aging nail may start to become brittle and gray. Polishes and nail treatments made with alcohol and formaldehyde can cause the nails to dry out even more. And artificial nails and many layers of polish can lead to a fungal infection in the real nails.
Even though your nails become drier and more brittle, you can preserve them by keeping them clean and well groomed. I’ve also seen many cases where nails have become stronger with intake of gelatin and vitamins, especially the B vitamins.
Feet don’t normally show the signs of aging as hands do, since they spend most of their time covered up and protected from the elements and sun. As a result, many of us tend to take our feet for granted. Indeed, the foot is often the part of the body that is least examined in the course of a regular medical exam. As a result, many people suffer from foot problems that are never diagnosed, such as warts and corns. Foot care is especially important for diabetics, because their poor circulation leaves them more prone to infections that can develop into a serious skin infection called cellulitis. It is also important for elderly people, since proper foot care can help prevent falls.
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VAGINAL BLEEDING, PREMENOPAUSAL: TREATMENT
April 9th, 2009 | Posted by admin | Category: General healthNo Comments
If you are bleeding from the vagina, your gynecologist will perform a complete gynecological exam during which she will look for lesions or cancers of the gynecological tract. If your doctor suspects you have a cervical lesion, she will perform a culposcopy, a test that will allow her to view the cervix directly to check for lesions that might be cancerous. If you’re premenopausal and not currently on ERT and are experiencing vaginal bleeding, your gynecologist may recommend that you start taking estrogen and/or progesterone. This will usually stop the bleeding.
If a fibroid tumor is causing your bleeding, your gynecologist may recommend that only the tumor be removed, especially if you want to have children. However, in many cases, you may be advised to have a hysterectomy since a complicated surgical procedure is required to remove just the tumor. The hysterectomy can be total, in which both ovaries and the uterus are removed, or it can be partial in which one ovary is left in place. The latter is often done when the patient is premenopausal in order to conserve her natural hormone supply.
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BELCHING AFTER A MEAL
April 9th, 2009 | Posted by admin | Category: General healthNo Comments
Description and Possible Medical Problems
If you’ve spent any amount of time around kids, you’ve probably noticed that children, especially young boys, take great pleasure in learning how to belch and then showing others what they’ve accomplished. Though our society frowns on public belching, whether it comes from someone who’s 9 years old or 90, there are societies that consider a belch to be a sign of appreciation of a good meal.
Treatment
When belching occurs during and after eating with no other symptoms, it’s a totally harmless activity. If you belch a lot and it bothers you and the people around you, you may want to try to eat less food at one sitting. Some people also find that if they eat more slowly or try to keep their conversation to a minimum, their problem with belching will disappear.
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COUGH, NONPRODUCTIVE, PERSISTENT, UNRELATED TO PHYSICAL ACTIVITY: DESCRIPTION AND POSSIBLE MEDICAL PROBLEMS
April 9th, 2009 | Posted by admin | Category: General healthNo Comments
Sometimes you develop a hacking cough that wants to stay around for a while. You should first determine if it’s due to a new item that’s recently been introduced into your home. This could be a new piece of furniture, a different brand of floor wax, or a new pet. It’s not unusual for adults to develop a new sensitivity to a substance or chemical. In the presence of a new irritant, the only symptom will likely be a nonproductive, persistent cough.
If, however, you can’t trace your cough to a likely irritant, there are a number of other possibilities. If you’re under fifty, a nonproductive persistent cough can be caused by a scratchy throat or by an infection of the trachea; many times, this type of infection is caused by a virus. If this is the case, you might also have a low-grade fever, swollen glands, or a sinus infection. I have seen a chronic cough develop in people who tend to be very anxious; occasionally, they can develop a cough that can last for many months.
This type of cough can also occur in people who are taking the class of medications known as ACE inhibitors, such as Capoten, Accupril, or Zestril, for high blood pressure or heart failure.
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LIVER OR AGE SPOTS
April 9th, 2009 | Posted by admin | Category: General healthNo Comments
Description and Possible Medical Problems
You may think of your grandmother when you hear the term “liver spots,” and you may be alarmed when you begin to see these flat, reddish-brown patches on the backs of your hands and other parts of your body that have been exposed to the sun. Don’t worry … it happens to the best of us!
Liver or age spots, also known as senile lentigines, begin to appear after the age of 50 and are a normal sign of aging.
Some people decide to treat their liver spots by bleaching them or by using cover-up creams to hide them. Others choose to have them removed with cryotherapy, in which the spot is frozen with liquid nitrogen, then removed.
Many people choose to leave liver spots alone, because they don’t grow larger or darker with time. After all, they do serve as a badge of all the experiences you’ve had in your life.
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EARLY WARNING OF HEART FAILURE
April 2nd, 2009 | Posted by admin | Category: General healthNo Comments
Depending on the type of heart trouble, some of the earliest signs of failure in need of treatment include swelling of the ankles (medically known as edema) and shortness of breath during mild exercise, such as climbing stairs. This latter sign is evidence that the heart is not pumping well enough to empty blood out of the lungs, causing the condition medically known as pulmonary congestion.
However, according to Primary Cardiology Clinics (2#1:19), a certain type of coughing is yet another sign that, if heeded, gives even earlier warning. Also due to pulmonary congestion, this sign is almost like a smoker’s “hacking” cough. Its really distinctive feature is that it comes on when one is in bed or sitting down but stops almost instantly when one stands up.
In heart failure patients, this sign may precede breathless-ness by hours or days but should always be reported to a physician right away. When pulmonary congestion is more severe, of course, the cough is not relieved by standing and may be replaced by breathlessness which is not relieved by rest. Even though this early sign is not new, we feel that knowing about it is important and could save many lives.
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ORAL POLIO VACCINE
April 2nd, 2009 | Posted by admin | Category: General healthNo Comments
Since it is made with modified but still “live” virus, oral polio vaccine (OPV) sometimes actually causes paralytic polio, the very illness it is supposed to prevent. Injectable polio vaccine (IPV), which is made with killed virus, cannot do this. In Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (31:22), the U.S. Public Health Service warns that OPV occasionally endangers not only those who are vaccinated with it but also, for a month afterwards, certain persons living in close contact with them. Anyone with deficient immunity is at risk, and this involves, among others, all cancer or leukemia patients, persons treated with radiation, or anyone taking cortisone-like steroid drugs, whether for arthritis, asthma, or any other ailment.
Since, even though rare, polio paralysis can cripple or kill, the Swedish government has now banned OPV. For the same reason, many American physicians prefer EPV, but, surprisingly, OPV continues to be the most widely used vaccine for polio in the U.S.A.
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A NEW BOOST FOR CANCER IMMUNOTHERAPY
April 2nd, 2009 | Posted by admin | Category: General healthNo Comments
The National Cancer Institute has launched a large scale (200 patients) test of an immune hormone called thymosin that could make non-surgical cancer therapy more successful. Cancer specialists are investigating thymosin’s possible role in immunotherapy, the process of stimulating the body’s own defenses against the disease.
Many authorities believe that cancer cells gain a foothold when our immune system becomes less efficient in seeking them out and destroying them. Unfortunately, this immune function is largely under the control of the thymus glands, two soft, pinkish gray lobes found in the upper chest that gradually disappear as we age.
The body employs chemical messengers like thymosin to alert various components of the immune system to their roles. According to a report in Science 81 (2:73), when thymosin levels are artificially increased, the immune system reacts by fighting cancer cells with greater vigor.
One study of 55 patients with a particularly difficult-to-treat cancer, small cell cancer of the lung, was summarized. Among 21 patients who received the highest doses of the drug, six were alive and free of disease after two years. Average survival time in this group increased from 240 to 450 days. While no firm conclusion can be reached from such a small study, larger studies now in progress should demonstrate whether a deficient immune defense system against cancer can always be corrected by thymosin, and for how long the effect lasts.
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EARLY WARNING OF RETINAL DETACHMENT
April 2nd, 2009 | Posted by admin | Category: General healthNo Comments
By knowing about the first signs of retinal detachment, we greatly improve our chances of getting early enough treatment to prevent blindness. The most important signs include the sudden appearance of “floaters” (small shadowy shapes like flies or spider webs constantly dangling in our field of vision no matter where we look) and spontaneous flickers or flashes of light (like fireflies or sheet lightning) which are most noticeable in the evening and in the morning before daylight. As more and more retina becomes detached, a growing curtain of darkness seems to surround the things one looks at and which one can still see clearly.
Tragically, because the center of the retina is usually the last part to become detached, the ability to read and watch TV, etc., is preserved intact until the last moment before total blindness occurs. This misleads people into believing that their symptoms are not serious. According to Geriatrics (365#4:87), retinal detachment is most likely to occur in people with myopia (nearsightedness), high blood pressure, or diabetes.
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