Archive for the 'Better Health' Category

Baldness Facts & Hair Regrowth Treatments Available from Clinics

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

The normal pattern for hair loss in blokes is the receding hair line on the forehead that shows a w shape. The crown of your head will also start to become thinner and become finer. Hair loss in patches doesn?t tend to show in gents.

Hair grows in most people at 1.5 inch every 2 months, each and every hair follicle will last around 3 to six years and then falls out. Once your hair falls out a regenerated hair strand takes its place on your scalp. With hair loss in males once your gent’s hair drops out the hair does not come back.

Each strand of hair sits in a follicle in your scalp, over the course of time the strand in men will probably tighten and result in reduced hair on your head or no hair. The reason for genetic hair loss is still not known and might well be related to hormones or genetics. Although the follicle can get smaller they are still alive. Explore the latest hair loss techniques from Advanced Hair Studio, home to hair restoration.

Hair loss may cause loss of confidence in lads and luckily there are tremendous hair loss treatments available from your doctor that might often help reduce loss of hair and boost terrific hair growth. thinning hair treatments include minoxidil which is a marvellous lotion treatment used directly on the scalp, this genetic hair loss treatment is shown to reduce baldness and even produce new hair growth, now that is awesome. Once you stop this genetic hair loss treatment the hair loss will then start back up.

The Incredible Advanced Hair Studio

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

Hair Loss has forever been something that both men & women have to deal with. As many people know it can be exceedingly disturbing & distressing. It used to be the case that there was absolutely nothing at all that might be done about it, currently nonetheless with technology moving ahead more and futher each end every year there are heaps of different choices for you to look at.

Advanced Hair Studio is incredible. They specialise in Hair Loss & masses of diverse treatments any of many which will probably be able to help you. There are different types of treatments possible to many different people. You will be advised on what treatment is very best for clients after a consultation with one of there many consultants who have been expertly trained on everything. They will be able to give clients all the information and support you need throughout your programme time with them. Get expert assistance with Hair regrowth today.

There are many many different procedures each one designed for various types of many cases. Strand by Strand is the procedure that is low maintenance and builds up hair slowly and gradually. With the Strand by Strand technique it is possible to regain hair without surgery, pain or scaring this as customers can imagine is astonishingly appealing to many customers. Advanced Laser Therapy is another alternative that is offered to customers. Advanced Hair Studio pioneered & successfully conducted clinical trials on the combination of many the very latest laser beam technology, an FDA approved re-growth pharmaceutical, & a proven scalp & follicle treatment programme for hair loss. With this programme you can see a change in 3 months, which is astonishingly fast.

There is one more method & this one proves to be really popular & appropriate for oodles of many clients, this is because it is actually a treatment that you can do in the comfort of many your own home. This is a programme that combines the naturally occurring herb Sereonoa Repens & also a handheld laser device & antioxidant programme which helps to thicken, strengthen and repair your hair & scalp as well as promoting hair growth & reducing hair loss.

Humans Can’t Get Bird Flu from Humans: But that Could Change Soon

Monday, July 7th, 2008

Bird flu, or avian flu, is an influenza virus
strain that typically infects birds - including wild birds
like ducks and domestic birds like chickens.

There are many forms of bird flu, and most are relatively
harmless, producing mild symptoms or even no symptoms.
However, several strains of bird flu produce a highly
contagious disease that kills quickly and could lead to a
massive bird flu epidemic. These dangerous viruses are known
as “highly pathogenic avian influenza.”

One such bird flu virus is currently spreading among
chickens in Asian countries. In recent years it was
discovered that the bird flu virus can infect people who
have close contact with live birds.

The current strain cannot be passed from human to human, but
heath officials say it may mutate and become contagious in
our species. If that happens, according to David Nabarro of
the U.N. and World Health Organization, “an epidemic could
kill between 5 and 150 million people,” which would be a
much larger disaster than 2004’s Asian Tsunami and 2005’s
U.S. hurricanes combined.

Symptoms of bird flu (avian flu) in humans include:

Conjunctivitis
Cough
Fever
Muscle aches
Sore throat
(Severe cases) Breathing problem and pneumonia

How dangerous is bird flu?

Bird flu can be fatal.

There have been a number of small outbreaks of bird flu
since 1997, and people who get it appear to have a high
mortality rate.

*1997 Hong Kong - 18 people were infected and 6 people
died.

*There were two cases and one death in Hong Kong in 2003.

*As many as 10 deaths have been linked to an outbreak in a
number of Asian countries last year.

How can bird flu be treated?

Anyone with bird flu symptoms should see a health care
professional immediately. The bird flu virus currently
infecting birds in Asia that has caused human illness and
death appears to be resistant to Tamiflu, according to
officials at Queen Mary Hospital in Australia. Tamiflu is
the most common drug used to treat flu in humans.

There currently is no vaccine to protect humans against the
strain of bird flu virus that’s been detected in Asia.
However, research studies to test a bird flu vaccine to
protect humans began in April 2005.

Additional information and resources, including tips for
avoiding bird flu, can be found at
http://www.symptoms.name/birdflusymptoms.htm

George McKenzie is a freelance writer and CEO of Mastermind
Learning Systems http://www.mastermindlearning.com He’s a
former TV news anchor and radio talk show host.

The Coming Alzheimer’s Epidemic

Saturday, May 31st, 2008

Alzheimer’s disease is a disease that strikes terror into many of us, especially as we get older.

Alzheimer’s is a very serious brain disease that attacks the parts of the brain responsible for the creation of memory and for thinking.

As the disease progresses, more and more parts of the brain become affected. The patient loses the ability to live independently, and the sense of self and identity disappears. Eventually the patient dies.

Alzheimer’s is not the only disease that causes dementia, but it is probably the best known to the general public.

When Alzheimer’s strikes someone, we watch as the person afflicted slowly fades away in front of us, and eventually disappears to a place where they can’t be reached.

We may personally know people, who have been afflicted by Alzheimer’s disease. We may have visited a nursing home where many of the elderly residents sat staring blankly and unaware. We shuddered inwardly, thinking, “I hope that never happens to me.”

Part of the reason we fear this disease so much is because it is so mysterious. We don’t know what causes Alzheimer’s. We don’t know how to cure it. We don’t even have a surefire test to diagnose Alzheimer’s while the victim is still alive.

The incidence of Alzheimer’s disease tends to get higher as the population ages. In the age group 65-75, approximately four per cent of the population may be diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. In the age group of 85 years or older, about 50% of the population has Alzheimer’s disease.

Alzheimer’s disease is a growing problem all over the world because the population in most countries is growing older and older on average. In many countries, more and more people are surviving to the age where the incidence of the disease becomes more common.

At the present time, up to four million North Americans are believed to be affected by Alzheimer’s disease. In twenty years, that number may go up to ten million. India has the some of the lowest rates of Alzheimer’s in the world, but scientists don’t know why the rate of the disease in India is so low.

Alzheimer’s disease is named after Dr. Alois Alzheimer who studied and described this disease in Germany in the early years of the twentieth century. Dr. Alzheimer was the first to discover and analyze the massive destruction of brain cells in a middle-aged woman who had been stricken with dementia and eventually died from it.

When Dr. Alzheimer studied this woman’s brain after she died, he noticed that her brain was filled with microscopic plaques and tangles. These plaques and tangles had killed her brain cells.

The disease starts out with small lapses in the ability to make and retrieve short-term memories. With this comes a decline in the ability to reason and the ability to concentrate. The person affected may forget the names of familiar objects, or get lost in a familiar place. Personality changes may become apparent.

This decline in mental processing happens because of the destruction of brain cells that are needed to form and retrieve memories. At the same time, there is a progressive decline in the the brain’s supply of neurotransmitters required to carry messages from one brain cell to another.

In the initial stages, it is very hard to differentiate Alzheimer’s disease from other types of memory loss.

As the disease progresses, more and more brain cells die. Memory test scores may decline by 10 to 15% each year. Eventually, the patient will have difficulty performing the simplest actions required for daily living. The vocabulary dwindles to a few dozen words, then disappears altogether. Friends and family will not be recognized. The “self” fades away.

In the final stages, the patient will be completely unable to look after herself, unable to feed, walk or control the bladder and bowel. Death often occurs from pneumonia or infection.

Alzheimer’s may strike people in their twenties, but is very rare in that age group. It becomes increasingly common with advanced aging. As women tend to live longer than men by several years, they are more likely to live long enough to be afflicted with Alzheimer’s.

From the initial diagnosis to the time of death may be a period of seven to twenty years. The toll of the disease on the family and on society is very high.

Unless a cure is found soon, the costs of institutionalizing those millions who will fall victim to Alzheimer’s in the coming decades will consume many billions of dollars.

The toll on the families of those afflicted is very high. For the person who is afflicted with this disease, the loss of memory, of thinking ability, of the personal sense of self is the greatest tragedy of all.

What is the cause of Alzheimer’s disease? Is the cause genetic? Is it environmental? Is Alzheimer’s caused by a virus? Does Alzheimer’s have only one cause, or are there many contributing factors? Will a cure for Alzheimer’s be discovered?

These are questions that scientists are racing to answer.

This article was written by Royane Real, author of “How You Can Be Smarter - Use Your Brain to Learn Faster, Remember Better and Be More Creative” If you want to learn about how to look after your brain and get better performance out of it, download it today at http://www.royanereal.com