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Archive for November, 2010

Chronic Bad Breath In Dogs Masks Serious Symptoms Of Chronic Disease

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Dogs express prolonged illness and other health issues typically thru the state of their skin and coat, teeth and gums, and diet habits. The symptom of bad breath in dogs can be employed by owners as a convenient tool in spotting illnesses early. The difficulty is a vast majority of dogs receive no attention to the cleaning of their teeth and gums, this permits plaque and tarter buildup causing chronic halitosis in dogs. Bad breath in dogs or halitosis taints up to 90% of canines, and results from dogs experiencing varying degrees of periodontal illness. Because the unhealthy condition of a dog’s teeth and gums gives them constant bad breath, serious illnesses that present symptoms via a dog’s breath progress unnoticed by owners till other symptoms develop.

The early identifying of disease in dogs is crucial to the successfully treatment of many canine infirmities. The facility to efficiently manage a dog’s health care requires owners to be conscious of unhealthy changes in their body, a dog’s breath being one of the most vital changes to observe. After prevention early identifying of chronic sicknesses in dogs is important in providing them effective health care. Regardless of the fact many remedies available to humans are also available to dogs ; the severity of a dog’s condition may deem the treatment to costly or hard to perform on your dog. For that reason owners are starting to provide the correct oral cleanliness care for their dogs and bestowing them with fresh breath so they’re going to be in a position to notice certain diseases in time to efficiently treat them.

Written by lionjkt

November 30th, 2010 at 1:20 pm

Posted in Hygiene

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Go For Fat Loss Without Compromising With The Value of Nutrition

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Fat loss is an essential thing that you should keep in mind while you plan to lose weight. You may concentrate more on other features of your body. However, the first and foremost thing that you need to think about in that case is to burn up the excess fat in your body.

When you concentrate on fat loss, your muscles gets built up, you gain strength, energy, resistance, enthusiasm and many more. In short, your overall physique gets improved and you become active.

Fat loss needs some time and you cannot expect to get the results within few days. If you want to bring in permanent changes to your body by losing your fat, you have to work upon that.

You need to follow a proper diet even when you go for fat loss. The diet that you take should be capable of providing you sufficient nutrition that your body requires. Since you will have to exercise in order to lose fat, it should be supplemented with the intake of proper diet full of nutrition. Otherwise, you will not get sufficient energy to perform your exercises.

You should start your day with large meals full of nutrition and end your day with the lowest calorie meal.

The nutrition that enters your body should be capable of maintaining proper balance in the body. Try to avoid the intake of excess calorie and carbohydrate. This is because calorie and carbohydrate are responsible for the formation and storage of excess fats in the body.

Written by lionjkt

November 30th, 2010 at 1:08 pm

Posted in Nutrition

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Virginia Postrel: How to Reform Health Care Without Killing Innovation

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Former Reason magazine Editor in Chief Virginia Postrel has seen the strengths and the shortcomings of the American health care system both as a kidney donor and a breast cancer survivor. She argues that individuals should be free to sell their organs, and that encouraging organ markets may be the best way to save the lives of the more than 100000 Americans currently awaiting transplants. A 2009 article Postrel wrote for the Atlantic Monthly highlights her experience with the ultra-expensive wonder drug, Herceptin, and the perils of centrally controlling health care costs. Reason.tv’s Ted Balaker sat down with Postrel to discuss organ markets, wonder drugs, and how to reform health care without squashing innovation. Interview by Ted Balaker. Shot by Hawk Jensen and Paul Detrick. Edited by Paul Detrick. Music: “Something New” by Very Large Array (Magnatune Records). Approximately nine-and-a-half minutes. Go to reason.tv fordownloadable iPod, HD and audio versions of this and all our videos. To see Reason.tv’s health care play-list, go here. Postrel, the editor in chief of the blog Deep Glamour, talks to Reason.tv about politics, style, and voter expectations at http Subscribe to Reason.tv’s YouTube Channel and receive automatic notifications when new material goes live. And come back to Reason.tv March 15 through March 19 for the debut of Reason Saves Cleveland With Drew Carey: How to fix the “Mistake on The Lake” and other once-great American cities, an original six-part

Written by lionjkt

November 30th, 2010 at 1:08 pm

Final Fantasy VIII- Illness Illusion

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FF8 Illness Illusion by Gackt

Written by lionjkt

November 29th, 2010 at 1:19 pm

Posted in Illness

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How to Fix Health Care: Lasik Surgery For The Medical Debate

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Make no mistake about it. Health care reform is coming. But what’s the best way to fix our health care system, which is an inefficient, complicated mess of private actors, third-party payers, public subsidies, and innumerable state and federal regulations? Should we place our faith in the government or in the free market? ObamaCare supporters argue that the answer lies in more government—more subsidies, more regulations, a law mandating individuals buy health-insurance coverage and, of course, more taxes to pay for it all. The alternative is to base reforms on what works in the other five-sixths of the US economy, where choice and competition increase quality and drive down prices over time. Can a market-based health care system work? We can begin to answer this question by looking at Lasik, a medical procedure that’s not covered by health insurance. And has gotten better—and cheaper—over time. “How to Fix Health Care” proposes three simple reforms that will put us on a path to a health-care system that’s better, more affordable, and more accessible. And get this—these market-based reforms can be implemented without creating new government programs or raising taxes. Approximately 8.30 minutes. Produced by Paul Feine and Meredith Bragg. Hosted by Nick Gillespie. For downloadable versions of this and other videos, go to reason.tv

Written by lionjkt

November 29th, 2010 at 1:08 pm

Posted in Health care

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Congressman Ron Paul on Healthcare

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Having practiced medicine for over 30 years, Congressman Paul gives his perspective on the past and future of medicine in this country, and the effects of government and special interests on quality, costs and access.

Written by lionjkt

November 28th, 2010 at 1:06 pm

Posted in Health care

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