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Myvic Electronic Cigarette - Clean, Safe, Anywhere.

November 7th, 2008

Myvic Electronic Cigarette. Clean Safe, Anywhere.

Ever thought how good would it be if there was a way to reduce the harm of cigarettes without giving up the habit of smoking? Here is the answer, Myvic Electronic Cigarette is a revolutionary new product which is drastically healthier than traditional smoking.

There are more than 4000 chemicals found in the ordinary cigarettes, of which at least 400 are harmful for the human body. They contain, tar, carbon monoxide, benzene, acetone, formaldehyde, arsenic and many others including nicotine. This chemicals contribute to lung cancer and many other diseases associated with cigarette smoking.

While using Myvic Electronic Cigarette you have to change nicotine refills, which range from high concentrate nicotine to zero nicotine content. The refill contains nicotine and propylene glycol. Nicotine is not believed to cause cancer, and compared to all the chemicals inhaled while smoking ordinary cigarettes it is relatively harmless.

This revolutionary device can be used anywhere where traditional smoking is forbidden: restaurants, clubs, pubs and even on the planes. 98% of the nicotine contained in the inhaled mist is absorbed by the organism, leaving only propylene glycol which is exhaled and is absolutely harmless to people around you, therefore there is no passive smoking. The ’smoke’ disappears within seconds after being exhaled, leaving no smoke what so ever inside the building.

Myvic Electronic Cigarette is also cheaper than ordinary cigarettes. It could save you £528 a year, or even more depending on individual smoking habits. The cigarette can be purchased at the price of £39, and a 5 pack of Myvic Refills is priced at £5. One Myvic Refill is equal to approx.

More information on the benefits of the Myvic Electronic Cigarette can be found on the official website at www.myvic.co.uk.

What’s in a name? What about cannabis?

October 4th, 2008

Debates about medical role of cannabis have long and sometimes not very clear history. Cannabis is routinely used for controlling nausea among patients on chemotherapy and for encouraging appetite among AIDS patients. So medical science has been able to strip away the “unwanted” psychoactive symptoms and use the cannabinoid components to target the specific diseases. It is now licensed for the control of neuropathic pain in adults suffering from cancer and multiple sclerosis. It works well because the human body naturally produces cannabinoids and has cannabinoid receptor cells in all parts. Science is now designing medications that focus on the parts of the body affected by disease and not the central nervous system. Thus, research is now aiming to produce more medications that maintain cannabinoid levels in the affected areas for pain relief and for the control of anxiety and depression. So, for example, when the body is injured cannabinoids are naturally released in the affected area and reduce pain. Unfortunately, the effect is very short-lived. The converse treatments are also working well for dealing with nicotine addiction and obesity. One of the problems with cannabis is that is tends to be addictive and it causes the “munchies”, i.e. it encourages users to eat more. So, medications like acomplia that block the cannabinoid receptors help to reduce addictive behavior and reduce appetite.
Acomplia is now a front line treatment for obesity in Europe, second in effectiveness only to the use of gastric bands or surgical bypasses. The July conference heard news that one constituent of cannabis, THVC, may offer a better way to reduce appetite than acomplia and, more importantly, may be effective to treat neurodegenerative disorders like Huntington’s disease, Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s. Why is more not heard about these advances? Possibly because of the prejudice that cannabis is a drug that should be banned. It is a shame society cannot see beyond a name to the good results science can produce. By coincidence, the French health authority Afssaps also released new statistics confirming the safety profile of acomplia research in relation to depression. People with no history of depression show no adverse symptoms. Others only show an increase in depression at the beginning of a course of treatment. This can easily be monitored and compensated for.

Is it a social conscience or self-interest that should motivate us to dispose of medications safely?

October 4th, 2008

It is interesting to surf around the internet. It raises the difficult question of how you should dispose of “pills” you no longer need or which have expired. There is always somebody thinking something interesting somewhere in the world. All you have to do is to find him or her. Take just one story from California as an example. Many offer a service to dispose of old and unwanted medications for you. Why go to so much effort when you have a dumpster just outside your door?

Do you ever wonder what happens after casual disposal? Your local waste management authority comes round to collect the refuse which is then dumped. There is little or no effort to sort the waste. Most authorities simply drive to the nearest landfill site and tip each load on to the growing mound of other rubbish. This pile then rots down as rain washes through it so, sooner or later, dissolved drugs end up in the watertable and potentially get recycled into your drinking water. The medications flushed go more directly into the water supply. So here is the worry. Perhaps you have no interest in the people downstream of you. I wonder what the people upstream think of you. But, back to Ambien. Ambien is, of course, a nonbenzodiazepine hypnotic.

But San Mateo County, California has placed collection boxes inside the entrance halls of eleven police departments. Anyone can walk in and leave their unwanted medications (including Ambien but excluding all illegal substances) and walk out - no questions asked. And is this a welcome service? Over the first fifteen months of the program, local citizens have deposited 1,800 pounds of medications (not all Ambien, of course). So there is clearly a demand for this kind of service. It is pure self-interest, of course. Who wants to get high from drinking tap water? Hmmm. Wait, that is not quite the right question. How many men want to take female hormones - I am sure breasts would be alright. And do we really want all those bacteria out there to get used to all those antibiotics in the water? If you don’t know the answers to these and other questions of social conscience, buy Ambien online and sleep on it.

I am never reassured by the prefix “non”. In fact, Ambien works in exactly the same way as a conventional benzodiazepine and is probably just as addictive. For this reason, Ambien is listed by the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) as a controlled substance in Schedule IV. You will be pleased and delighted to know that the US Government has your interests at heart. It always (maybe not always, but often) wants to protect you and the environment. State and Federal regulations limit the handling and disposal of controlled substances to DEA-authorised individuals and organisations. If there is no-one else immediately available to handle the disposal, the controlled substances should be collected by a law enforcement officer. So, if your local pharmacy has not registered with the DEA, their only way of disposing of your unwanted drugs is to call the cops. No wonder they looked so pleased when you asked.

Pesky ticks on the march

October 3rd, 2008

As if you hadn’t noticed, summer has arrived. What does it mean? This means that the time has come for many dideases to return. So let’s get the bad news out of the way first. The number of cases has been increasing dramatically and the infections are getting more virulent. Because more people are building their houses out in the countryside where there are deer and other animals that carry the ticks. Now add in climate change. It’s influencing tick feeding behavior. The result is a surge in the number of serious cases of infection.

The good news is that Doxycycline continues to be a steady performer. You pop the pills for two to four weeks, and the infection clears up. The Center for Disease Control has begun development of a slow release version of Doxycycline. This may be by injection or by patch for those who are needle-shy. The aim is to replace the tablets with a single therapy active over a two week period. Until this comes out of the lab, you’ll just have to pop the tablets, but life may soon improve. So this year, more people are getting the chance to see this antibiotic at work. But over the next two years, there likely to be a change.

It’s official. You can win gold at the Olympics with Cialis

October 3rd, 2008

The most interesting ideas are the use of Cialis and nitrous oxide gas. Yes, friends, inhaling laughing gas makes you go faster, jump higher, and so on. The point is that both operate as vascular dilators - they open up your blood vessels. Blood flows increase and bring more oxygen to those working muscles faster. The advantage of Cialis is that it stays in the body for longer - it’s not called the “weekend” pill for nothing. So the next time you see a runner coming down the street towards you covered in tattoos, popping pills and breathing from a gas canister, this is your next Olympian in training.

One of the world’s leading scientists in sports drugs, Dr Robin Parisotto, has gone on the record. It’s official news. Nowadays we have invented a lot of new applications to drugs World Anti-Doping agency can’t detect. We even can’t exclude the possibility that some athletes used these drugs on Olympic games. So what are these new techniques? Well, let’s start with the go-faster tattoos. I love these ideas. Researchers at the Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum - the cancer research center in Germany - have shown that tattooing is sixteen times more effective than injections in delivering a drug into the body. So, you get the same effect with one-sixteenth of the dose and that makes the dose so much harder to detect.

Killing is the only way to measure weight loss

September 25th, 2008

Behold all the girls on diet. The Japanese have just published a scientific report in Polar Biology - another of those must-read journals. So if you’re holidaying in the polar regions this Fall and see a Japanese researcher coming towards you with one of those big samurai swords, you may decide that you don’t want to be a part of the research. Where would you get pinchers big enough? Seems hard to have to kill them to find out whether their diets are working. How would you like it in a clinical trial? Except that he’s talking about Antarctic minke whales. OK, so when did you last see a minke whale on your bathroom weighing scales? He’s got a point. It’s hard to get a whale to stay still long enough to get an accurate reading. And then there are those caliper things, the “fat pinchers”. Take these Acomplia tablets for six months and then we’ll kill you to find out how much adipose fat you’ve lost. Can’t they just guess? Actually, when it comes to human clinical trials, they use advanced science like tape measures for waists. Acomplia has done well. Participants lose an average 10% of their body weight and an average 8 cm from their waists. Perhaps the minke whales are buying Acomplia online. Let’s not kill them to find out.

What to do about neuropathic pain?

September 15th, 2008

There has been a wealth of research into pain causes. Medics can describe in detail how the sensation is transmitted from its source to the brain so we become aware of the problem and can take action to treat it. Unfortunately, despite our better understanding of what it is, actually relieving the pain remains a challenge. All this time, the pain management choices for doctors focus on the various side effects of the medications, the interactions between medications, etc. If your pain becomes more severe due to a terminal condition, the issues of addiction and, to some extent, adverse side effects are less relevant. The humanitarian need is to make a person as comfortable as possible during his last years. But long-term neuropathic pain represents a completely different set of challenges.Neuropathic pain is not properly understood and, consequently, not routinely diagnosed. It is caused by a lesion or dysfunction to the peripheral or central nervous system, i.e. the nervous system itself is damaged. Consequently, the pain may be caused by the damage to the nervous system itself or the system may be sending out general distress symptoms or, in some cases, false pain messages. Physical injuries to the nervous system are very difficult to treat because nerve tissue does not easily regenerate. In other cases, researchers do not properly understand why an apparently undamaged system may malfunction. Because the system that transmits and controls pain sensations may be damaged or not working properly, people often react to treatment in a wide variety of unpredictable ways. For the same reason, many prove more vulnerable than usual to adverse side effects. But the consequences of not providing effective pain relief can be serious. During the slow build up of the drug, people can become discouraged and either want to switch to another drug thought better or discontinue use of the immediate drug. In clinical trials of the opioids, more than a quarter of participants withdrew because of the physical and psychological side effects. This is very bad because it usually takes between four and six weeks for doctors to be able to assess the effectiveness of the chosen opioid.

But ultram is an atypical opioid and its ability to relieve pain of all kinds makes it one of the first-response medications for the treatment of neuropathic pain. Doctors must, of course, take care to avoid adverse interactions with other medications, particularly the two classes of antidepressants: the Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs) and Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors (MOIs). However, ultram is generally preferred in cases of neuropathic pain because there are fewer problems of dependence so long as people use the medication as prescribed. In other words, the balance of advantages against disadvantages usually supports the use of ultram for the treatment of neuropathic pain.

How can therapy support pain management?

September 3rd, 2008

The  most common forms of pain pain affects the lower back. Yet it is often the case that there is no biological evidence of the cause of the pain. No apparent external injury. No x-ray or other scan image of internal injury. The most usual association is with changes in mood, variations in the levels of anxiety or stress, or social episodes which trigger the sensation of pain. In other words, the way you perceive pain cannot be divorced from you as a person and the collection of memories and experiences that define you as an individual. So if pain persists despite the standard medical treatments (including tramadol), it is time to expand the range of treatment to include therapy. The primary problem is that people quite naturally make their own condition worse. When they feel pain, they stop moving. They generally avoid doing the things most likely to cause the pain. More often than not, this means they rest. Unfortunately, when you rest, you lose muscle tone and tend to become stiff. This actually worsens the initial condition. Because you feel you cannot continue to function, you lose self-respect. Now confining yourself to bed, you lose your role as breadwinner or homemaker. This may impose financial hardship on the family or damage your relationship. As your mood darkens, depression can further amplify the symptoms. Physicians are trained to apply a “scientific” approach to patient care. They make a diagnosis and supply the treatment recommended. If the diagnosis is correct, the patient gets better. Psychiatrists and therapists do not deal with the world in such black-and-white terms. They take a more holistic view of the patient. If there is disability and distress, those symptoms should also be addressed. The intention is to improve the way in which anyone deals with the pain. It offers coping strategies, problem solving and giving people a way to resume activities and thus relieve frustration. The more people can be given back some control over their lives, the more likely it is that they will begin to think more positively about their situation. It is important to begin with physical therapy to improve mobility. Therapists will analyze activities and teach people how to get the same results by modifying their behavior. Add in relaxation training and stress management exercises, and you now begin to see a more complete route to recovery. This is a team effort with psychologists working alongside occupational therapists, physicians and nurses. Thus, if a physiotherapist gains some insight into the beliefs and fears a patient has about mobility, a program of reward and reinforcement can be established which teaches people about how their body works and why their fears are exaggerated. Noone can force you into anything. But if you are shown a better way, most will take it if given the right incentives. Not everyone does respond to therapy, resisting interference in the way “they” do things. It also relies on effective management of the team expected to deliver these results. So, it is easy for non-medical treatment to fail (which will often confirm the patient’s prejudices). But there are many who do respond well, moving away from reliance on drugs such as tramadol as they learn how to function within the limits set by their bodies (and minds). Unfortunately, this approach is expensive. A physician sees a patient for a few minutes, writes a prescription and moves on to the next patient. This is an “efficient” use of resources. The behavioral model requires more people. Conventional hospital and health service models find this an uneconomic use of scarce resources (often choosing not to research the effectiveness of this approach to treatment). Nevertheless, there is a growing and substantial body of research now attesting to the effectiveness of this form of approach. If you have chronic pain, you should consider it. Learn more about tramadol pain relief medication from www.tramadolbliss.com

Facts and speculations about weight gain.

August 29th, 2008

There is one explanation for all the pounds you gain. You do eat! It’s simple, isn’t it? If you get just enough calories for basic things like breathing, you have to burn fat to get the energy to walk around. Eat more calories than you need given your basal activity level, and your body puts on fat. Your body is actually protecting you against the next famine when you will have nothing to eat and need your fat to survive until the next sandwich comes along.

Now turn to many of the forum sites where people discuss their experience with zoloft. The general spirit of these posts is, “I weighed 120lb until I took zoloft. Now I am…”

All this histories don’t tell you the main thing. Their authors were eating too good, and living too bad. . . and a side effect of zoloft. It is a natural association to make. You start taking a medication and immediately you put on five pounds with no obvious change in your diet or level of physical activity. So, let us start off by accepting that some people react to medications by putting on weight. Why? The medication may increase or decrease the basal metabolic rate. If this happens, your weight may fluctuate even though you do not change your caloric intake. In some people, the medication can cause hormonal changes and increase appetite. Increased levels of serotonin are also associated with hunger pangs which encourage you to eat more.

Now we are into the business of balancing the advantages and disadvantages of the particular medication. Let us say that zoloft has made a dramatic improvement in your emotional life. For the first time in months (or years), you do not feel (so) sad. So. When your weight is about 120 pounds, what prise you want to pay to decrase it? Or will you get depressed again because your body has become less attractive? As a gentle warning, if your regular doctor asks you whether you want to try a different medication, zoloft causes less weight gain than the tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) and monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs).

You’d better start exercising. These are most likely to stabilise your weight. Only if you do change your diet and exercise to no effect, should you talk with your doctor. If self-help has failed, see what the professional recommends.

back pain again

August 28th, 2008

Back pain is particularly common and one of the most often cited reasons for a visit to the doctor. Unfortunately, the causes can be difficult to identify and even more difficult to treat. The pain can be a symptom of a simple muscular strain, or it may indicate a more serious underlying problem of injury to the spine or a disease. The primary reason for consulting the doctor is that the pain can significantly limit mobility. Until your back is injured, you do not realise how often you twist and bend. Even sitting down, you are in motion, automatically changing position to maintain circulation, avoid stiffness in the joints, and so on. But when back pain strikes, it does not matter what you are doing. You can be sitting quietly doing nothing or driving, attempting to walk or doing some housework. Even lying down can be painful. Ultram has consistently been found an effective treatment for lower back pain. Because it slows the transmission of pain signals within the central nervous systems, you will find you can sit for longer, drive or ride in a car without suffering additional pain and look after and play with your children. In short, ultram helps you lead a more normal life again. How to treat arthritis Arthritis is a group of conditions that affect the joints and it most commonly affects people aged more than 55 years. The damage may be due to a general degeneration in the joints or from some accident or injury that does not quickly heal. One of the first-responses used to be the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs , but there are some worrying side effects including the risks of stomach and small bowel ulcers, kidney and liver damage and, if used over time, a slight risk of strokes and heart attacks. This creates real problems for chronic conditions like osteoarthritis and explains why ultram has now overtaken the as the first-response medication for long-term pain relief. Ultram relieves mild to severe pain by acting on the central nervous system to slow down the transmission of pain signals. It has none of the side effects associated with NSAIDs and is not addictive. In 2007, a meta research study into the safety and effectiveness of ultram in the treatment of osteoarthritis analyzed the data from eleven clinical trials involving more than 2,000 participants. It concluded that, as against the placebo, there were real reductions in pain and a general improvement in the quality of life. But, because arthritis usually affects older people, lower doses must be used. There are also problems of adverse interactions if people are also taking selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and other antidepressants. Always ask your doctor for advice before taking any new prescription medication.





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