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  • Heart and Cardio-vascular
    Heart and Cardio-vascular

    Hypertension, High Blood Pressure, High Cholesterol, Heart Failure, Heart Disease, Cardiac Arrest, Heart Attack, Obesity, Arrhythmia, Pulmonary Hypertension and more

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    Is your child destined for obesity?
    Signs to watch for and how to prevent it. By family practitioner and paediatrician Dr Gita Mathai  What is childhood obesity? Children older than two years and less than 19 years need to have their BMI (Body Mass Index) calculated when they visit their physician either for immunisation or during annual check-ups. BMI is calculated by dividing weight in kilograms by the height in meter squared. You can also measure BMI at home. The values for height can be entered in the website below. It…
  • Mardy Fish helping to destigmatize mental illness with return to tennis
    The former world No 7 is giving a new face and voice to the millions who struggle with anxiety disorders. The toughest battles of Mardy Fish’s tennis career have been at far closer range: inside himself. Fish, 33, spent time as the highest-ranked American man during a career which took him as high as No7 in the ATP rankings in 2011. He worked tirelessly on his fitness during his late-career rise, transforming his diet and body to become lighter and more agile. But his career resurgence derailed…
  • Statin therapy may increase the risk of Diabetes by 46% - Understand the risk and review dosage and lifestyle
    Statin therapy appears to increase the risk for type 2 diabetes by 46%, even after adjustment for confounding factors, a large new population-based study concludes. The majority of people in this new study were taking atorvastatin and simvastatin, and the risk for diabetes was dose-dependent for these two agents, the researchers found. Nevertheless, senior author Markku Laakso, MD, from the University of Eastern Finland and Kuopio University Hospital, told Medscape Medical News: "Even if…
  • Medical conditions did not deter these Singaporean students from pursuing academic success
    MARCH 3, 2015 19-year-old Darren Lou has known for years what he wants to do with his life.  Not only does he plan to be a doctor, he knows exactly which field he hopes to specialise in: Endocrinology, the study of the human body’s endocrine system, which deals with hormones and how it affects metabolism and growth, among other things. Diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes three years ago, Darren hopes to help other patients like himself. Dealt a second blow a year later when a pre-enlistment…
  • Significant drop in chronic disease drug R&D funding
    By Julien Salaberry Feb 24, 2015 The Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) has released a lengthy white paper on the past decade of VC funding for the biotech sector. Its headline finding is that venture funding for biotech R&D fell by 21% between the five-year period before the financial crisis (2004-2008) and the subsequent five years (2009-2013).  More interesting, however, is where the big funding cuts are occurring. Namely, in areas of the largest medical need. For…
  • Lack of exercise 'twice as deadly' as obesity
    Just 20 minutes of brisk walking a day may be all it takes to lessen a sedentary person's risk of early death, says a new study. The researchers also found the risk of early death due to lack of exercise is double that posed by obesity and does not necessarily depend on being obese or overweight. Prof. Ekelund says the study delivers a simple message: "just a small amount of physical activity each day could have substantial health benefits for people who are physically inactive." However,…
  • Gong Xi Gong Xi...
    Enjoy the Lunar New Year festivities without compromising your health. By Nutritionist Kohila Govindaraju. It’s that time of the year again, the most significant few days in the Chinese calendar – the Lunar New Year. It’s a time to get together with friends and family and eat, drink and be merry... in a health-conscious way.  First up, the Reunion Dinner on New Year’s Eve, when families gather around a sumptuous meal. A part of the meal is Lo Hei, when everyone gathers…
  • Smoking is not bad, its even worse - new study
    However bad you thought smoking was, its much worse. A new study adds 5 more diseases to the existing 21 diseases and 60,000 more deaths to the existing toll of half million deaths attributed to tobacco in United States alone. Death rates of smokers are 2-3 times higher than those who have never smoked and they die a decade earlier than smokers. Stopping smoking helps reduce risk over time. In addition to existing hazards of lung cancer, artery disease, heart attacks, chronic lung disease…
  • Image shows a woman looking at a strip of medicines
    Are Birth Control Pills Safe?
    Dr Shital Raval answers all that you want to know about oral contraceptives, how they work, when you should use them, side effects, do they increase the risk of cancer? What are Oral Contraceptives? Oral contraceptives are hormonal preparations that may contain progesterone or combination of oestrogen and progestin. The combination drug prevents pregnancy by inhibiting the release of the hormones - luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) from the pituitary…
  • Eat blueberries and strawberries three times per week
    A significant study links berry consumption with improved heart health. You can’t get the same benefit from a pill or supplement. The finding comes from a new study led by Dr. Eric Rimm, associate professor at the Harvard School of Public Health and Harvard Medical School. “The sooner people start the type of diet that includes a higher intake of blueberries and strawberries, the better,” Dr. Rimm says. “The people with heart benefits had three or more servings of a half a cup of…
Question from one of our members: How to maintain weight after bariatric gastric bypass surgery..I hv reduced 40 kg with d help of surgery..now excess skin is problem..skin flaps looks is acute problem now
There are people in communities without access to health facilities. Can someone with undetected hypertension have a "normal" life i.e. no sign of any illness, or is cardiovascular event a certainty?
My friend has had bypass surgery and to lose weight, he is following a high-protein, no-carbs diet. He has lost a lot of weight but is this bad for his heart in the longterm? 
Is it safe to have a CT angiography in which a dye is injected in to the veins? Can it cause an allergic reaction? Should I get this done only in a hospital with a doctor on standby?
If you think you are having a heart attack, does it help to take an aspirin while waiting for the ambulance? I have heard that you should keep sorbitrate tablets at home and if you have chest pains, it helps to put one under the tongue. Is that true…
A question from one of my members: My mother just found out that her triglyceride levels are more than 500. What should she do?
The Delhi High Court has asked the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) to create regulations to curb sale of junk food in and near schools and implement them within three months. The draft guidelines, which were submitted to the…
I read the news that DASH diet is best US diet. What is it ?
Fish is known to have immense benefits for people with Heart Diseases!(see link below) Are the vegetarians willing to consume Fish-oil supplements for the same benefits?  http://www.heart.org/HEARTORG/GettingHealthy/NutritionCenter/HealthyDie…

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