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Monday, August 18, 2008

Diabetes

What is diabetes
Diabetes is a disease in which the body does not produce enough insulin, a hormone needed to convert the sugars and starches that we eat into energy needed for daily life. The cause of the disease is a mystery, but genetics and environment seem to play major roles. There are two kinds of Diabetes, Diabetes Insipidus and the more common Diabetes Mellitus.


Type 1 diabetes is caused by an autoimmune disorder-a problem with the body's immune system. In a healthy body, specialized cells (called beta cells) in the pancreas make insulin. Insulin is a hormone that allows the body to use energy from food. In type 1 diabetes, the immune system mistakes beta cells for invaders and attacks them. When enough beta cells are destroyed, symptoms of diabetes appear.
In
the beta cells still produce insulin. However, either the cells do not respond properly to the insulin or the insulin produced naturally is not enough to meet the needs of the body.
So insulin is usually still present in a person with type 2 diabetes, but it does not work as well as it should. Some people with type 2 can keep it under control by losing weight, changing their diet, and increasing their exercise. Others take one or more medications, including insulin.





A diabetes myth - diabetes is not caused by eating too much sugar. This myth probably began when people with diabetes were absolutely forbidden from consuming sugar. Researchers no longer believe this.


Your child can still have all of her favorite sweets as long as they are scheduled in her eating plan.

High Blood Pressure






What is High Blood Pressure?
Blood pressure is the force of blood flow inside your blood vessels. When you have your blood pressure checked, remember to ask what it is. You'll get two numbers, such as 120 / 80. You'll hear them say it as “one-twenty over eighty.” Both numbers are important.

The first number is the pressure as your heart beats and pushes blood through the blood vessels. This is the systolic (sis-STALL-ick) pressure. The second number is the pressure when the blood vessels relax between heartbeats. It's called the diastolic (DYE-ah-STALL-ick) pressure

You should always have an idea of what your blood pressure is, just as you know your height and weight.
Here's where the numbers fall:

Healthy blood pressure: below 120/80
Early high blood pressure: numbers between 120/80 and 140/90
High blood pressure: 140/90 or higher

When your blood moves through your vessels with too much force, you have high blood pressure, or hypertension. Your heart has to work harder when blood pressure is high, and your risk for heart disease and diabetes goes up. High blood pressure is a problem that won’t go away without treatment and changes to your diet and lifestyle.

How will I know if I have high blood pressure?

High blood pressure is a silent problem -- you won't know you have it unless your health care provider checks your blood pressure. Have your blood pressure checked at each regular health care visit, or at least once every 2 years (people without diabetes or other risk factors for heart disease). If you have diabetes, you should get your blood pressure checked at every office visit, or at least two to four times a year

Asthma








What is Asthma

Asthma is an inflammatory disorder of the airways, which causes attacks of wheezing, shortness of breath, chest tightness, and coughing.

Alternative Names
Bronchial asthma; Exercise-induced asthma

Causes, incidence, and risk factors

Asthma is caused by inflammation in the airways. When an asthma attack occurs, the muscles surrounding the airways become tight and the lining of the air passages swell. This reduces the amount of air that can pass by, and can lead to wheezing sounds.

Most people with asthma have wheezing attacks separated by symptom-free periods. Some patients have long-term shortness of breath with episodes of increased shortness of breath. Still, in others, a cough may be the main symptom. Asthma attacks can last minutes to days and can become dangerous if the airflow becomes severely restricted.

In sensitive individuals, asthma symptoms can be triggered by breathing in allergy-causing substances (called allergens or triggers). Triggers include pet dander, dust mites, cockroach allergens, molds, or pollens. Asthma symptoms can also be triggered by respiratory infections, exercise, cold air, tobacco smoke and other pollutants, stress, food, or drug allergies. Aspirin and other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medications (NSAIDS) provoke asthma in some patients.

Approximately 20.5 million Americans currently have asthma. Many people with asthma have an individual or family history of allergies, such as hay fever (allergic rhinitis) or eczema. Others have no history of allergies.



Symptoms

Wheezing
Usually begins suddenly
Comes in episodes
May be worse at night or in early morning
Gets worse with cold aira, exercise, and heartburn (reflux)
May go away on its own
Is relieved by bronchodilators (drugs that open the airways)
Cough with or without sputum (phlegm) production
Shortness of breath that gets worse with exercise or activity
Intercostal retractions (pulling of the skin between the ribs when breathing)
Emergency symptoms:

Extreme difficulty breathing
Bluish color to the lips and face
Severe anxiety due to shortness of breath
Rapid pulse
Sweating
Decreased level of alertness, such as severe drowsiness or confusion, during an asthma attack
Additional symptoms that may be associated with this disease:

Nasal flaring
Chest pain
Tightness in the chest
Abnormal breathing pattern --breathing out takes more than twice as long as breathing in
Breathing temporarily stops


Signs and Tests

Allergy testing may be helpful in identifying allergens in patients with persistent asthma. Common allergens include pet dander, dust mites, cockroach allergens, molds, and pollens. Common respiratory irritants include tobacco smoke, pollution, and fumes from burning wood or gas.

The doctor will use a stethoscope to listen to the lungs. Asthma-related sounds may be heard. However, lung sounds are usually normal between asthma episodes.

Tests may include:

Lung function tests
Peak flow measurements
Chest x-ray
Blood tests, including eosinophil count (a type of white blood cell)
Arterial blood gas


Treatment

Treatment is aimed at avoiding known allergens and respiratory irritants and controlling symptoms and airway inflammation through medication.

There are two basic kinds of medication for the treatment of asthma:

1 Long-term control medications are used on a regular basis to prevent attacks, not for treatment during an attack. Types include:

2 Inhaled steroids (such as Azmacort, Vanceril, AeroBid, Flovent) prevent inflammation
Leukotriene inhibitors (such as Singulair and Accolate)
Anti-IgE therapy (Xolair), a medicine given by injection to patients with more severe asthma
Long-acting bronchodilators (such as Serevent) help open airways
Cromolyn sodium (Intal) or nedocromil sodium
Aminophylline or theophylline (not used as frequently as in the past)
Sometimes a combination of steroids and bronchodilators are used, using either separate inhalers or a single inhaler (such as Advair Diskus).

Quick relief, or rescue, medications are used to relieve symptoms during an attack. These include:

Short-acting bronchodilators (inhalers), such as Proventil, Ventolin, Xopenex, and others.
Corticosteroids, such as prednisone or methylprednisolone) given by mouth or into a vein
Persons with mild asthma (infrequent attacks) may use quick relief medication as needed. Those with persistent asthma should take control medications on a regular basis to prevent symptoms. A severe asthma attack requires a medical evaluation and may require a hospital stay, oxygen, and intravenous medications.

A peak flow meter, a simple device to measure lung volume, can be used at home to help you "see an attack coming" and take the appropriate action, sometimes even before any symptoms appear. If you are not monitoring asthma on a regular basis, an attack can take you by surprise.

Peak flow measurements can help show when medication is needed, or other action needs to be taken. Peak flow values of 50-80% of an individual’s personal best results indicate a moderate asthma attack, while values below 50% indicate a severe attack.

Baldness


What is Baldness?





Baldness is a problem that both men and women alike dread.There is nothing you can really do to stop from happening.Each day you loss upto fifty hairs.They are replaced with new ones, but in balding people the hair stops coming back.Baldness is also known as alopecia.Alopecia is much more common in men than women.
Causes.





Approximately fourty percent of all men have hair loss.Hair loss can result from many things,such as genetic factors,aging drugs,diet,local skin condition and diseases that effect the body generally. Hair loss can result from many things, such as genetic factors, aging, drugs, diet, local skin conditions and diseases that effect the body generally.


The most common type of hair loss that affects men is male pattern baldness or MPB. This really depends on the male hormones called androgens within the hair follicle which are at high levels after puberty.

Hair loss can begin at any age, even in the middle teen years. If you have hair loss this early in life you may go completely bald later in life. Some people only loose some hair and have a bald spot in the back of their head and others have a receeding hairline. You can also have hair loss if you have a severe illness with a high fever. This is called toxic baldness or toxic alopecia. Taking excessive doses of some drugs like thallium, vitamin A and retinoids can also cause hair loss. ...