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Medicine - August 2006

[Selected]: All categories Science & Mathematics Medicine

Thanks for your detailed answer...tom science

2006-08-15 20:17:17 · 1 answers · asked by tom science 4

Mythology gives its own legible reasons for such disorders & in many cases,provides solutions which have become sucessful in eliminating them from the affected ones.Why not medicine?Are such things present even in animals?

2006-08-15 20:17:15 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous

Thanks for any type of answer,cause i just can't figure this one out.It's just grapefruit juice.What the heck???

2006-08-15 20:14:06 · 6 answers · asked by tom science 4

2006-08-15 19:35:41 · 3 answers · asked by Brian M 1

if there is all oxygen around?
can we still live?
(neglecting it can cause to burn) Is our blood able to absorb the oxygen in lungs when oxygen is the only component of air.
as it requires to absorb only oxygen.
if no then why and what will happen.
remember we put pure oxygen to the mouths of people in serious cases in the hospitals(i dont know what terminology we use for this)

2006-08-15 18:57:57 · 13 answers · asked by hash 1

kept under tongue or under arms for measuring temperature
i know they are kept in some places else as well.but what is the significance of under tongue and under arm.

2006-08-15 18:57:12 · 9 answers · asked by hash 1

There seems to be an increase in the number of addicts.

How does this happen?

2006-08-15 15:41:23 · 15 answers · asked by ★Greed★ 7

Okay, I have a report for my AP Biology class due, and I'm a little lost. The teachers wife is about 2 1/2 months pregnant with there 3rd child. She’s a healthy 28 year old and there wasn't a single complication throughout her other two pregnancies, nor were there any problems with there births. This time though, he says she’s experiencing extreme fatigue, increased irritability, loss of appetite, and when she doesn't eat the fatigue hits the hardest. He stressed that when he said fatigue he didn't just mean weakness, that it was extreme fatigue, and latter during the class he said the fatigue was the most important clue. He said there was something wrong, that he already knew what it was, and that our assignment was to find the answer, explain it, and defend it through an essay. Does anyone know what the cause could be? Any help it deeply appreciated!

2006-08-15 12:24:32 · 5 answers · asked by iwillremeberiwill 2

The Court said, "We need not resolve the difficult question of when life begins. When those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the development of man's knowledge, is not in a position to speculate as to the answer."

Given that 1/3 of a century has passed and the level of medical knowledge has increased many times over, should we take another look at Roe v. Wade?

2006-08-15 11:58:34 · 2 answers · asked by SPLATT 7

2006-08-15 11:40:24 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous

I am on a high fiber/protein diet..so thats the cause.I'm not just gross

2006-08-15 09:47:34 · 7 answers · asked by nowolfgang 2

Yesterday I ate a terrible diet, nothing but 1 sm. pkg. of M&M's in the afternoon, a large fresh fruit smoothie from Sonic Drive In spiked with Strawberry Schnapps for dinner and a frozen pizza right before bedtime. This morning I woke up and went about my business but didn't eat breakfast right away. My blood sugar was low. I could feel it because I was weak and my stomach hurt. I am not diabetic but I know what it feels like to have low blood sugar. My stomach got worse and I threw up but I had nothing in my stomich so it was not really throwing up. I felt better and ate breakfast and I was fine except a mild headache for the rest of the day. I am on my period so I know I am not pregnant.

I just went to the doctor and had a blood workup and pap smear. My cholestoral was high but I am not diabetic.

What could have been wrong with me this morning? Could it be toxic shock syndrome? I rather doubt this.

2006-08-15 08:09:55 · 14 answers · asked by icu812 3

I am an orphan with no support to do my advarnced education.I am the only one every body in the family depends on.

2006-08-15 07:09:20 · 5 answers · asked by Stray 1

What exactly is the temperature to "store at room temperature" for medicine?

2006-08-15 06:14:55 · 14 answers · asked by jercha 4

in forensic autopsy of a electrocuted man I find also food into the superior ayrways

2006-08-15 05:03:14 · 6 answers · asked by cris 1

2006-08-15 04:50:29 · 25 answers · asked by v 1

I have worked out that if you weigh 50 kilos this is equal to 66 bottles of wine...how quickly could this be drank. I mean if you have 5 bottles a day after 4 days presumably your liver would give up. So how quickly could you drink the 66 bottles of wine without liver failure. PS I have no intention of doing this...any Dr's out there!?

2006-08-15 04:11:24 · 7 answers · asked by quiffed 1

large liver

2006-08-15 03:54:39 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous

And why is it so significant when treating disease such as brain malignancies?

2006-08-15 03:15:08 · 9 answers · asked by whellad 2

2006-08-14 22:08:22 · 16 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-08-14 21:58:55 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous

And I Can See In The Ultra Violet Spectrum.

2006-08-14 21:45:52 · 10 answers · asked by savvy s 2

2006-08-14 21:18:45 · 7 answers · asked by angel_0242001 1

2006-08-14 20:21:15 · 17 answers · asked by Anonymous

There seems to be many in the medical community who think that serotonin regulation with SSRI's are the key to treating depression. However, many earlier drugs have proved effective in treating depression such as MAOs, tricyclics, lithium. I am not arguing here which is more effective and has the least side effects. The question is the key really serotonin regulation in the brain or is there another cause to depression? I feel drug companies push SSRI's and say it is a chemical imbalance, because they sell chemicals and only their chemicals work.

There has been a study published that agreed that SSRI's work for depression, but that study showed that SSRI's worked in the exact opposite way that the drug companies have argued. I.e., to me it is still an open question as to what depression in the brain truly is.

Some scientists now believe that depression is an auto-immune disease of the brain. SSRI's and other anti-depressant medication suppress the immune system.

2006-08-14 17:34:20 · 4 answers · asked by Michael D 1

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