By Mac Albert, on July 31st, 2010%
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A Fitness Magazine Survey concerning 1, 000 brides shows 83% of them wanted to lose weight before their wedding, and most of them were willing to take extreme actions just to do the sudden shedding of weight, which is sometimes called brideorexia. Cardiologist Dr. Jennifer Morrow, who lost 75 pounds just for her own wedding, calls the action, “fear of the white dress”.
Some accounts also stated Bill Clinton even used the Cabbage Soup Diet to shed off 15 pounds for the wedding of her daughter Chelsea’s wedding, which is rumored to be happening this weekend. The former . . . → Read More: Sudden Weight Loss Among Bride-to-Be’s Can Be Risky
By Jan Paul, on July 31st, 2010%
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Sixteen years before, a fantastic couple called Harry and Louise bashed the Clinton health care plan so unforgettably in TV ads that they were attributed with serving to carry down health care reform.
Currently, Medicare has recruited actor Andy Griffith in trusts that he can do immediately the reverse: talk it up. “With the latest health care law, additional good things are approaching,” says the former TV star of “The Andy Griffith Show” and “Matlock.” “I think you’re going to like it.”
The ads of Harry and Louise, reared by the health-insurance industry, reflected the . . . → Read More: Andy Griffith Promotes the Washington’s Health Care Reform
By Helen, on July 31st, 2010%
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The Price is Right host Drew Carey, 52, was dieting and working out. Carey was making use of a “custom-made appetite suppressant managed by a Hollywood nutritionist.
However, Carey told us he has been going after a cardio program, “so there is nobody actually standing over me, I do work with someone who offer me counsel on what to do, how many minutes to run, what my heart rate be supposed to be and all that type of substance.”
Weight loss of Drew Carey has radically enhanced his health on many fronts. Beforehand, the actor . . . → Read More: Weight Loss of Drew Carey Caused Speculations of Diabetes Cure
By Darrel Dirk, on July 30th, 2010%
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Researcher reported that overweight volunteers who got Orexigen’s experimental drug Contrave, intended to lessen appetite, lost around 13 pounds (6 kg) over a year.
Individuals who obtained the drug said they experience less longing for sweet or starchy foods; experience satisfied and had less desire, the researchers said.
Their research, also recommended that worry side-effects from the medicine were gentle and went gone over time.
Nevertheless, one specialist believed additional studies are required before controller can presume the medicine is not dangerous.
The information from the company-supporter research has previously been opened to . . . → Read More: Orexigen Drug may Help Obese Patients to Lose Weight
By Charles, on July 30th, 2010%
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Obtaining calcium complements could raise the possibility of having a heart attack with 30 per cent, a research indicates the results.
However, experts in science believe they can answer in advanced “serum calcium levels” in the blood, which can guide to solidify arteries.
“Serum calcium levels have been absolutely connected with a bigger occurrence of (heart attack) in big observational studies,” the authors concluded in writing in the British Medical Journal.
They as well said the information that several people got calcium supplements meant they might be causing a large number of heart attacks, although for several taking the pills . . . → Read More: Calcium Pills may Increase Heart Attack Risk
By Athena, on July 30th, 2010%
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The U.S. FDA announced that patients taking care of with Cubicin, an intravenous antibiotic, sprint an augmented threat of rising eosinophilic pneumonia, a uncommon and potentially life-threatening situation.
Cubicin is the trade name for the generic medicine daptomycin. The medicine was first permitted in 2003 for taking care of severe skin infections and in 2006 to treat bloodstream infections and it was marketed by Massachusetts-based Cubist Pharmaceuticals.
The medicine label was customized to contain warning for an augmented threat of pulmonary eosinophilia, a situation marked by an enlarged deliberation of eosinophils in the blood in 2007.
. . . → Read More: Antibiotic Cubicin Linked to Eosinophilic Pneumonia
By Athena, on July 29th, 2010%
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Arguments against the landmark health care overhaul refused over the previous month, to 35 percent from 41 percent, according to the newest results of a tracking poll.
According to the poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation, fifty percent of the community detained a positive vision of the law, up to some extent from 48 percent a month past, while 14 percent spoken no opinion concerning the measure.
The endorsement level was the uppermost for the legislation because it was ratified in March, after a troublesome year-long debate. In April, the poll discovered 46 percent in favor and 40 percent opposed.
Although the . . . → Read More: Disagreement with the Health Care Overhaul Begins to Dilapidate
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