Bedbug bite
June 3, 2009 at 6:24 pm | In Baby health | Leave a CommentWhat a Bedbug Is
A bedbug is a small (about the size of a pencil eraser), flat, reddish-brown bug that can be found in homes all over the world. It hides during the day and comes out during the night to look for blood. A bedbug has a special ingredient in its saliva (spit) that keeps blood from clotting while it’s eating.
What a Bedbug Bite Looks and Feels Like
If a person gets bitten by a bedbug, the bite will feel itchy. Bedbug bites look like little red bumps (similar to mosquito bites) and they can sometimes occur in a line on the body.
What You Should Do
If you think you’ve been bitten by a bedbug, wash the bites with soap and water. Put on some calamine lotion to help with the itching. An adult can find an anti-itch cream at the drugstore for you. Try not to scratch the bites too much because this can make them become infected.
What a Doctor Will Do
If you get an infection from scratching bedbug bites, a doctor will need to prescribe medication to clear up the infection.
How to Avoid Getting Bitten
The best way to avoid getting bitten by bedbugs is to keep your room uncluttered so bedbugs won’t have places to hide. Changing your sheets once a week and vacuuming the floor often are also important things to do. If you think you have bedbugs, ask an adult about the best way to get rid of the bugs.
source: kidshealth. org
Fruit Juice for Aging Skin:
January 14, 2009 at 5:16 am | In Latest Updates | Leave a CommentTags: acid, age, aging, beauty, beauty products, citric acid, creams, dosages, effective, facial, fade, fruit, higher, juice, lined, patient, product, reduce, sags, skin, treatment
Fruit Juice for Aging Skin:
Ever since Alpha Hydroxy Acids (AHA) have been found to reduce tiny facial lines and fade age spots on the skin, beauty products worldwide are including them in skin creams in the highest concentration the FDA will allow. AHA is made from the juices of citric acid fruits. Higher and more effective dosages are used by Dermatologists and other medical professionals for out-patient skin treatments. AHA reverses sun damage and imparts a more youthful glow to the skin but it cannot get rid of deep lines or sags.
Prostate Cancer: Prevention, Diagnosis and Treatment
January 14, 2009 at 5:11 am | In Latest Updates | Leave a CommentTags: age, aggressive, annual, around, beginning, blood, cancer, check, cryosurgery, diagnosis, digital, exam, food, ketchup, men, paste, Prevention, products, Prostate, radioactive, rectal, sauce, screening, seeds, studies, surgery, technique, test, tomato, treatment, tumors
Prostate Cancer: Prevention, Diagnosis and Treatment:
All men should have an annual digital rectal exam beginning around age 40. Another screening technique is a ‘prostate-specific antigen’ blood test which checks for a
special chemical associated with prostate cancer. The test costs about $35 and should be done annually. The newest treatment for prostate cancer and an alternative to surgery, cryosurgery or radiation beams is the implantation of tiny radioactive seeds into the prostate.
Lycopene, a nutrient contained in tomatoes and tomato products such as tomato sauce, tomato paste and ketchup, is an effective prostate cancer deterrent. Studies show that men who eat these foods have less risk of prostate cancer.
Also, studies show that lycopene fights cancer in men who already have the disease. Prostate tumors are smaller and less aggressive in men who are given lycopene.
Teeth Bleaching: Easier than You Think
January 14, 2009 at 5:07 am | In Latest Updates | Leave a CommentTags: about, bleaching, costs, during, Florida, four, make, medication, minutes, molds, patient, six, society, teeth, time, visit, weeks
Teeth Bleaching: Easier than You Think
Safe ways to whiten the teeth are now available in most dentists’ offices. We hear from Dr. Donald Carmona, DDS, past President of Florida Dental Society, that it usually requires just one initial visit to check teeth discoloration and make molds of the teeth and one follow-up visit in about four to six weeks. During that time, the patient applies the whitening paste to the plastic mold that fits around the teeth and keeps it in for 30 minutes each morning and each evening. It’s painless and easy. Yellowed teeth get better results than teeth stained by medication. Costs vary but range between $500 and $1500.
Cheek Implants
January 14, 2009 at 4:51 am | In Latest Updates | Leave a CommentTags: bacteria, body, cheek, complication, houses, implants, infection, look, millenium, patients, plastic, post, potential, procedure, side, surgeons, surgical, youthful
Cheek Implants
Dubbed the “face lift of the 90’s,” cheek implants have caught on and undoubtedly are here to stay right on through the new millennium. Said to restore the youthful lift to the face, the procedure is a favorite of patients but not necessarily of plastic surgeons. Because the surgeon goes in through the mouth in order to place the implants properly, the risk of infection is higher. The mouth houses more bacteria than almost any other part of the body. Another potential complication is post-surgical movement of the implants causing a lop-sided look.
Laser Surgery for Distance Vision
January 14, 2009 at 4:46 am | In Latest Updates | Leave a CommentTags: change, cornea, distance, high tech, hundred, infection, laser, laser surgery, micro, pregnant, surfery, tech, treatment, two, ultra, vision, women
Laser Surgery for Distance Vision
Laser surgery to correct nearsightedness is the latest high tech eye surgery. It has evolved into Lasik, an incisional surgery in the cornea done by a micro-keratone cutter that lifts up an ultra-thin flap of cornea. The laser is then applied to the intact eye beneath the lifted corneal flap. Nearsighted people are treated with Lasik as an office procedure that takes about 10 minutes. Recovery of vision is instantaneous. Possible side effects: two out of a hundred patients may develop minor complications such as inflammation or infection. This procedure replaces the old laser treatment applied to the front surface of the cornea, a sometimes-painful procedure requiring more time to recuperate. The cost for Lasik, the most advanced surgery to correct distance vision, ranges from $1,500 to $4,000. Insurance does not cover it. Due to hormonal changes lasik is not recommended for pregnant women or women who are planning to get pregnant.
Acrodysostosis
December 24, 2008 at 8:19 pm | In babies | Leave a CommentTags: abnormal, Acrodysostosis, babies, bone, bones, common, condition, degree, development, examination, facial, fashion, features, feet, gene, hand, jaw, learning, mental, mother, mouth, nose, older, parents, problem, responsible, routine, typical, ultrasound
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Acrodysostosis
This rare inherited condition affects the development of bones.
What causes it?
The gene responsible for acrodysostosis has not yet been identified and the condition may result from different genetic problems rather than one specific condition.
It appears to be inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion, and seems to be more common among older parents.
What are the symptoms?
People with acrodysostosis have certain bones that mature rapidly, before they’ve had enough time to grow fully. The bones most often affected are those of the nose and jaw, and the long tubular bones of the hands and feet.
This abnormal bone development results in a collection of characteristic features, including a typical facial appearance (short nose, open mouth and prominent jaw), small hands and feet.
Those with acrodysostosis often have some degree of mental retardation and learning difficulties.
What’s the treatment?
There’s no cure for acrodysostosis but appropriate support, especially for learning disabilities, is important.
Antenatal diagnosis may be made by ultrasound examination of the bones in babies whose mother has the condition, but routine screening isn’t done.
Achondroplasia
December 24, 2008 at 7:19 pm | In babies | Leave a CommentTags: A, Achondroplasia, arms, babies, baby, birth, child, development, gene, head, legs, pain, parent, percent, problem, result, surgery, Symptoms, treatment
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Achondroplasia
Achondroplasia is a disorder that causes abnormal formation of the bones, as a result of abnormal growth and development of cartilage.
What are the symptoms?
Achondroplasia is apparent at birth. A child with the condition has a relatively normal torso but short arms and legs, a larger head and prominent forehead.
What causes it?
Achondroplasia is caused by an abnormality in a gene located on chromosome 4, called fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR3).
Sometimes the child inherits achondroplasia from a parent who has the condition, but in about 80 per cent of cases the problem results from a new mutation of a gene.
Who’s affected?
About one in 20,000 children has achondroplasia. It affects all races. When inherited, it’s an autosomal dominant condition.
What’s the treatment?
There’s no cure for achondroplasia. Occasionally, surgery is carried out to increase height, but this can be complicated and painful.
Antenatal testing for the condition is available.
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