Sunday, October 31, 2010

by minicooper93402


Leukemia has two major types: acute and chronic. In what concerns acute leukemia, there are two forms: if leukemia involves lymphocytes, we are dealing with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, and if it involves myeloid cells, is called acute myelogenous leukemia. Depending on the particular cell that has become malignant, there can be many different types of acute lymphoblastic leukemia and acute myelogenous leukemia.It was seen that chronic leukemia affects primarily the myeloid cells in the bone marrow. This is called chronic myelogenous leukemia, and is found mostly in adults, but children and teenagers can develop it too.We must mention that there exists a disorder of the bone marrow known as myelodysplastic syndrome. Often called a pre-leukemia syndrome because patients with it have a significantly increased risk of developing leukemia, this syndrome is often associated with low blood cell counts and increased requirements for transfusions.
Allogeneic bone marrow stem cell transplantation is used to treat a variety of childhood leukemias or cancers and myelodysplastic syndrome that involve the cells within the bone marrow. In this transplant, there are used another person’s bone marrow cells to restore bone marrow after high dose chemotherapy and radiation therapy.As an advantage of an allogeneic transplant over an autologous transplant we can mention the “graft-versus-leukemia effect”. The donor’s healthy bone marrow kills residual leukemia cells, and in this way decreases the patient’s chance of relapse.As a disadvantage of an allogeneic bone marrow stem cell transplant we can mention the risk of graft-versus-host disease. This happens when the other person’s bone marrow attacks the recipient’s body. In this way, there appears a disease that affects the skin, liver and many other organs. In this case, therapy with immunosuppressive drugs is needed.

When a matched donor is available, there can be performed transplantation for high-risk leukemia patients in first remission. In very high-risk patients, like those with leukemia who fail to achieve first remission with chemotherapy, there can be done an unrelated donor transplant as soon as remission is achieved. As eligible we can mention infants with leukemia, children with high-risk lymphoblastic leukemia and children with acute myelogenous leukemia. Also, children with myelodysplastic syndrome are eligible for transplant as soon as the diagnosis is established.
Many children with acute leukemias whose leukemia has relapsed can have bone marrow stem cell transplantation. Transplantation can be from related donors like brothers, sisters, parents, and occasionally more distant relatives such as cousins and grandparents.Also, transplantation can be from matched unrelated donors, including umbilical cord blood.In what concerns children with chronic myelogenous leukemia who cannot be put into complete remission with drugs, they should undergo a transplant as early as possible in the course of the disease.
For more resources on different leukemia related issues like leukemia symptomsleukemia causes and many more visit http://www.leukemia-guide.com .
For more resources on different leukemia related issues like leukemia symptomsleukemia causes and many more visit http://www.leukemia-guide.com .

Posted on 12:40 PM by farooq

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by Prefeitura de Olinda


Malaria,Symptoms and Treatments
Many, if not all the anti-malaria drugs in the market today, have been abused, overused and or wrongly applied by different groups of people such that by creating a hostile environment for an otherwise easily curable ailment, anti-malarial drugs promote untreatable strains of malaria with certain mutations that allow the plasmodium parasite to survive.
In the midst and allure of this beautiful world we live in, it is important to understand that we are not alone. The world is inhabited by other creatures – animals, bacteria, viruses, microbes and several other kinds of life forms. Some of these we can see and recognize but many others are clearly not visible with the naked eye.
Malaria is always a serious disease and may be a deadly illness. If you become ill with a fever or flu-like illness either while traveling in a malaria-risk area or after you return home (for up to 1 year), you should seek immediate medical attention and should tell the physician your travel history.

Malaria symptoms will occur at least 7 to 9 days after being bitten by an infected mosquito. Fever in the first week of travel in a malaria-risk area is unlikely to be malaria; however, any fever should be promptly evaluated.
Malaria presents the most significant threat to travelers to many tropical countries. Take anti-malaria tablets as instructed before, during and after travel. The disease is transmitted by the bite of infected mosquitoes and can prove fatal.
Symptoms
Malaria has an incubation of 10-21 days but may be longer. In humans, the malarial parasites (called sporozoites) after being released into the bloodstream from a mosquito bite, migrate to the liver where they mature and release another form, the malarial merozoites.
Worldwide, malaria affects between 300 and 500 million people each year. Malaria is a leading cause of death and disease worldwide, especially in developing countries. Other species of plasmodia infect reptiles, birds and other mammals.
Plasmodium falciparum, so called ‘malignant tertian fever’, or ‘black water fever,’ is the most common strain of malaria and is also the deadliest. This strain of malaria is a serious disease that is responsible for about 2-million deaths per year, predominantly in young children in sub Saharan Africa.
Malaria is a serious disease caused by a parasite. Infected mosquitoes spread it. Malaria is very common throughout the world. In the United States, the main risk is to persons traveling to tropical and subtropical countries where malaria is a problem.
What you will learn from here will help you understand fully why you should take responsibility for your own health if you want to be truly healthy and Be Malaria-Free For Life! First, take one – Healthcare practice: how it all began.
Treatments
Corticoid steroids are often prescribed in the treatment of lupus. Corticosteroided hormones such as prednisone, hydrocortisone, methylprednisolone and dexamethasone are usually prescribed in small doses to reduce inflammation. Due to the fact that these medications can produce serious side-effects, they are only prescribed in short-term treatments.
For patients confronted with severe forms of lupus, doctors usually prescribe immunosuppressive drugs such as azathioprine and cyclophosphamide.
Although at present there is no specific cure for lupus, the existing treatments can greatly ameliorate the symptoms of the disease and minimize the risk of complications.
Lupus often has an unpredictable pattern of progression, producing symptoms that come and go over time. Thus, most lupus treatments are aimed at prolonging the periods of remission and ameliorating the phases of relapse.
The tests are funded by the National Institutes of Health. The successes so far are showing some promising results, but nothing can be used as of yet to benefit mankind. The research has expected to one day block the illness, but for now we can only wait and hope.
Mosquitoes travel considerable distances, sometimes mare than a mile when the wind is favorable. This fact makes their destruction and the prevention of their breeding the responsibility of the whale community and not just that of a single household.

Posted on 12:39 PM by farooq

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by Jami Dwyer

Burn The Fat Feed the Muscle Review
Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle is a strong weight loss program designed by Tom Venuto. Tom has 19+ years experience as a lifetime-natural bodybuilder, personal trainer, nutritionist and success coach. He has created an easy to follow, step by step system that anyone can use to see amazing fat loss results.

Details of Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle:
Burn The Fat Feed the Muscle Review
- You’ll get a 337 page ebook in digital PDF format for instant download
- You’ll also get several quality bonuses including a special “super bonus”
- You’ll pay a one time fee of .95 for the ebook and the bonuses
- You’ll get an 8 week unconditional 100% money back guarantee
The Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle ebook is broken into 17 different chapters. These individual sections cover a wide variety of topics from goal stetting and motivation to proper nutrition and exercises for fat loss.
A Diet Plan or a Fitness Program?
Burn The Fat Feed the Muscle Review
Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle is more of a fitness program than a diet plan. Yes, one of this guide book’s goals is helping you get rid of weight. But Tom Venuto also stresses health, fitness, personal growth, and self improvement. Burn the Fat, Feed the Muscle isn’t just about burning off calories, or losing a few extra pounds. It’s about educating you, changing your point of view when it comes to food and losing weight, and giving you the tools you need to stay healthy, fit and trim for a lifetime.
What Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle Will Teach You?
Burn The Fat Feed the Muscle Review
One of the most valuable lessons Burn the Fat, Feed the Muscle will show you is about body types. We all have different body types, and not every diet or weight loss program will work for everyone. This ebook will teach you what will work best for your particular body type.
Also, since Burn the Fat, Feed the Muscle was written by a bodybuilder, it’s no surprise a large portion of the book focuses on exercise. This program will teach you the importance of cardiovascular exercise and weight training.
If you want to learn losing weight the safe, healthy, natural way, and maintaining that ideal weight for years to come, Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle might just be the perfect weight loss system for you.
Who is Tom Venuto?
Burn The Fat Feed the Muscle Review
Tom Venuto is a bodybuilder, personal trainer, nutritionist, motivation coach, fitness model, health club manager and freelance writer. He has written over 170 articles and has been featured in different magazines like: Muscular Development, Olympian’s News (in Italian), Ironman Magazine, Natural Bodybuilding, Muscle-Zine, Men’s Exercise and Exercise for Men. His articles about weight loss, bodybuilding and exercise are featured regularly on many websites worldwide.
Does Burn The Fat Feed The Muscle Really Work?
Burn The Fat Feed the Muscle Review
Yes, Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle works great, and not only that, but it will give you tips that you can use the rest of your life to remain healthy, fit and energetic. Not just another ebook, this one will teach you how you can get rid of fat permanently, without the use of drugs or conventional diets that typically leave you gaining more weight over time than you lose with the program.
Have you ever used a crash diet just to lose a few pounds. Then you know how hard it is to keep the weight off. Your metabolism needs to use food to keep your metabolism revved to burn fat, and Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle will tell you which foods are the best, and which you should avoid to burn fat fast.
So, Is Burn The Fat Feed The Muscle A Scam?
Burn The Fat Feed the Muscle Review
I purchased the guide ebook as I was intruged that I could burn fat but at the same time build muscle. I was pretty skeptical at first and thought the guide was of course going to be a scam however I decided to give it a try and followed the information which included diet plans and workouts.
Strangely enough the information actually worked! I was shedding body fat and putting on solid mass pretty fast, I managed to go from my 10% body fat all the way to 3% in a short span of time.
So, in short terms venuto’s burn the fat is NOT A SCAM!
Pros and Cons of Burn The Fat Feed The Muscle
Burn The Fat Feed the Muscle Review
The Good point:
- The ebook is easy to read and understand
- Does not use supplements
- Helps you to lose weight and improving your overall health
- You will learn a great deal about nutrition – learn to improve the way you eat
- Encourages you to exercise – you will learn the most effective workouts
- Gives you plenty of information about everything you need to know when losing fat
- Offers you five useful bonuses
- Comes with 8-weeks money back guarantee
The Bad point:
- There might be too much information for the average user
- Not for people who don’t have much time for exercising
- Does not offer a quick solution for weight loss
The Conclusion…
Burn The Fat Feed the Muscle Review
If you are not looking for a quick solution to weight loss, but instead know that you have to work hard to achieve your goal, and want detailed information about getting fit, Burn The Fat Feed The Muscle weight loss system is perfect for you. Although, it perhaps may not work for everyone (people who don’t have the will/time to exercise), the e-book gives solid information, sometimes even too much, about losing fat and living a healthy lifestyle.
So, if you can set goals and stay disciplined long enough to reach them Tom Venuto Burn The Fat Feed The Muscle will definitely work for you. But, should you still not be satisfied just ask for a refund, because you have the 60 day money back guarantee.


  • Machine washable
  • Imported
  • 100% cotton
Burn baby, burn. Rasta colored smoke. Element logo on upper shoulder. Element logo patch on sleeve.


Posted on 12:37 PM by farooq

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Breast Pumps Lack Tax-Sheltered Status in Health Law
New rules for health spending will not allow payments for breast pumps, despite a goal to support preventive care.
Read more on New York Times

Posted on 12:33 PM by farooq

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In the winter of 1990, teachers at the Slater Elementary School in Fresno, California, began to worry about the high rate of cancer among the staff. First-grade teacher Patricia Berryman recalls, “We originally started to worry when we began to realize that an abnormal amount of cancer cases had been on one side of the school.

Then we saw the EPA report on electromagnetic fields and cancer and we realized that that was the side of the campus near the high-voltage lines. We had some leukemia and brain cancer, just like in the studies. We also had some children with leukemia. Well, we started to research everything we could find.” Berryman herself was particularly concerned because, “I’ve spent sixteen years teaching near those power lines.”

The teachers began to gather information about cancer cases within the school. “We couldn’t trace the whole student body, but we were able to trace the teachers. We went back through all the old yearbooks, made lists of everyone who taught here since the school opened in 1972. We had previous teachers call up and tell us of more cases. Then we made a map and presented it to the parents, to show them where the teachers had been working. Well, their mouths hung open.”

Berryman and her group discovered nine cases of cancer in a group of fifty-seven teachers, aides, and lunchroom staff who had worked in two pods (A and B) on the southwest side of the school. That side of the building lies only 110 feet away from a set of two high-voltage power lines-one a 230-kilovolt (kv) line, the other a 115-kv line. One teacher who had worked on that side of the campus for fifteen years had died of brain cancer in 1990, another of melanoma. They also found four cases of children with cancer, but, since the state didn’t keep any records of the disease in that area until 1987, it’s been difficult to trace the children. There were no cases of cancer in teachers who worked in the two pods on the other side of the campus, further from the lines.

According to the California Department of Health Services, the “conditions” among the school staff that have been diagnosed between 1982 and 1991 include nine invasive cancers (two cases of breast cancer, two cases of uterine cancer, two cases of ovarian cancer, one brain cancer, and two melanomas); one case of skin cancer; one nonmalignant brain tumor; two cases of cervical dysplasia; two cases of pre-cancer of the uterus; three cases of benign breast tumors or cysts; one case of keratosis; one case of sarcoidosis, and a number of basal cell carcinomas. Among the students who attended those pods, the state found three cancer cases and four possible cancer cases, as well as two nonmalignant tumors and one cervical dysplasia.

Besides worrying about cancer, some of the teachers were also concerned that the electromagnetic fields had bad effects on the children’s learning and behavior. “For years, we had noticed the behavior of the children in those classrooms. They couldn’t pay attention, they fidgeted, they just couldn’t keep their feet on the floor. We kept a journal while we were still there and knew we were going to be moving to the trailers. In those days, we really thought first graders simply could not sit still. It all changed when we moved away from those lines.”

When word of the problem started to get around in the spring of 1991, many teachers refused to work in the classrooms near the power lines. Fourteen teachers requested transfers to other schools. There was even talk of a teachers’ strike. But, still, nobody seemed to be listening to the teachers-until the parents became involved. Patricia Berryman explains, “1 remember a parent came up to me one day and asked, What can we do to help? The parents picketed and invited all the news media to attend. After that we got immediate action. “

More than a hundred parents and children picketed Slater in May 1991. They carried placards that read “SAVE THE CHILDREN” and “PRECAUTIONARY MEASURES MAKE COMMON SENSE.” The demonstration kicked off a school wide boycott that had been organized by parents like Lynn Stetson, who is currently the president of the PTA and one of the co-chair people of an ongoing EMF task force at Slater. The parents demanded that classrooms and a portion of the playground near the power lines be closed.

The Fresno Unified School District responded to their demands immediately by closing the ten classrooms, placing the children in ten portable trailers on the other side of the campus at a monthly cost of 5 per trailer, and closing off an area of the playground that was nearest the power lines.

A May 17 memo to the superintendent from Fresno Unified School District Chief Financial Officer Cathi Vogel recommended the changes, stating, “Although evidence is inconclusive regarding the potential hazards of power lines, the concerns of Slater staff, students, and parents are impacting the instructional program and must be addressed immediately.”

Donald Beauregard, Fresno area administrator for the FUSD, said, “We told everyone it was a temporary thing. We had to do something. We had teachers who were refusing to teach in those classrooms. This was about human health, teachers, and kids. There was a tremendous amount of fear and, as you realize, fear can interfere a lot with the overall educational process. Something that bothers me is, right now, we still have schools around the county that are being built right near transmission lines.”

Beauregard serves on the EMF subcommittee with Berryman, teacher Sandra Craft, and Lynn Stetson. The committee meets regularly to grapple with the overall issue of whether or not there is a danger from the power lines and, if so, what to do about it. Stetson refers to the committee as “our little group,” adding that she always feels they are the “underdogs” at public meetings.

Berryman concurs. “It’s terrible. There are only three of us and Mr. Beauregard. On the other side of the table PG&E [Pacific Gas and Electric] has all these engineers who keep telling us there’s nothing to worry about from the power lines. Then the state health department keeps telling us there’s no funds to do a study of our school.

The state brought in epidemiologists from the county health department. The first was a or Stall worth and he just got up and told us we were all wrong; there was nothing to it. Well, after that one meeting, we never saw him again. They told us his report got lost in the computer. Now we have a woman named Betty Carmona. She tells us she doesn’t know much more about this than we do ourselves, but she seems sympathetic.”

Or. Raymond P. Neutra, chief of the epidemiological studies section of the California Department of Health Services, hedges a lot when he discusses this and other EMF public health scenarios around the state. Despite the fact that or Neutra is directly involved in two major California studies of childhood cancer and EMF exposure, and is privy to all the latest information on the subject, he argues that studies haven’t really proven there is any connection between electromagnetic fields and cancer.

He also disputes whether or not there really was a high incidence of cancer at Slater, saying that nine cases were a “little higher than the expected four cases” for the entire teaching staff, although the incidences had only occurred among the fifty-seven teachers who had worked in two pods of the building. He also said his cancer surveillance unit was determining whether those teachers really worked in the classrooms they said they did and that his department didn’t have the funds to do a study of the children to track cancer cases.

Posted on 12:32 PM by farooq

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