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How To Deal With Constipation

... per week, you are considered constipated. When you're constipation, your stools are hard, dry, small and difficult to eliminate. It ...

Story - editor - 09/02/2010 - 03:30 - 0 comments

Childhood constipation often lingers into adulthood

Stubborn cases of chronic constipation in childhood may become an adulthood problem for a significant ...

Story - editor - 06/17/2010 - 17:30 - 0 comments

Managing IBS

... bloating, cramps, excess gas, changes in bowel habits, constipation, and diarrhea. IBS generally begins after a stressful life event ... membranes, tachycardia, physchiatric retention, and constipation. The Amoxicillin must prepare underutilized to yieldabstain ...

Story - editor - 09/02/2010 - 03:30 - 8 comments

Health Tip: Eat Lots of Fiber

... News) -- Eating a high-fiber diet can help control constipation and maintain a healthy body weight. ...

Story - editor - 08/10/2010 - 13:30 - 0 comments

Search Results

Does it matter what time you have a heart stent?

People who have procedures to unclog their heart's arteries in the morning may do better than those who have them in the afternoon, according to a new study.

Sensitive test spots newest HIV infections

Standard HIV tests can't identify people very recently infected with the virus, but a more sensitive test can, new research shows.

U.N. body tackles stigma of AIDS in the workplace

The first international standard to tackle discrimination against HIV/AIDS sufferers in the workplace won overwhelming approval from the International Labor Organization (ILO) on Thursday.

Do smokers use more prescription painkillers?

Smokers may use more prescription opioid painkillers than non-smokers, according to a study from Norway.

UK watchdog says teach sex to kids from age five

Sex education should be taught to children from the age of five to give them the skills and confidence to delay sexual intimacy until they are ready, a British health watchdog said on Thursday.

Pandemic virus enters pigs in HK, swaps genes: study

The H1N1 swine flu virus has been spreading quietly in pigs in Hong Kong and swapping genes with other viruses, and researchers said the findings support calls for tighter disease surveillance in pigs before new bugs can emerge and infect people.

Cleared forests lead to rise in malaria in Brazil

Clearing forests in the Amazon helps mosquitoes thrive and can send malaria rates soaring, U.S. researchers reported on Wednesday.

Low, high manganese levels may affect the infant brain

Babies with either relatively high or relatively low levels of manganese in their blood may be slower to hit certain developmental milestones in their first year than other infants, a new study suggests.

Kidneys transplanted between HIV-infected patients

South African surgeons have transplanted kidneys between donors and patients who were both infected with the AIDS virus — a medical first that has some U.S. doctors buzzing about whether it could be tried here.

US Red Cross fined 16 million dollars over blood safety

The US Food and Drug Administration said Thursday it is fining the American Red Cross 16 million dollars for not complying with regulations on the collection and manufacture of blood products.