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submitted by bobosea 11 days, 10 hours ago

uk-power-battery.co.uk — Select sanyo xacti dmx-c4(d) battery charger replacements sell at factory pricing. We warrant that the sanyo xacti dmx-c4(d) charger sold in our website, are full one year warranty and 30 days moeny back. read more...

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submitted by bobosea 11 days, 10 hours ago

uk-power-battery.co.uk — Select sanyo db-l30 battery charger replacements sell at factory pricing. We warrant that the sanyo db-l30 charger sold in our website, are full one year warranty and 30 days moeny back. read more...

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submitted by zya zya 2 years, 2 months ago

news.yahoo.com — NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - In a study of elderly nursing home patients, those who took medications for dementia called cholinesterase inhibitors and medications for incontinence called anticholinergics at the same time had a 50 percent faster decline in function than those who were being treated only for dementia. Over a year's time, the decline would represent a resident going from requiring only limited assistance in an activity to being completely dependent, or from requiring only supervision to requiring extensive assistance in an activity," study chief Dr. Kaycee M. Sink, of Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina said in a university-issued statement. These two drug classes "cancel each other out should not be used in combination," Sink added in comments to Reuters Health. The researchers report the finding in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. Sink and colleagues studied data on more than 3,500 elderly nursing home residents who were taking cholinesterase inhibitors, drugs that increase levels of acetylcholine, a chemical that enhances communication between nerve cells in the brain. Examples of cholinesterase inhibitors include donepezil (Aricept), galantamine (Razadyne), rivastigmine (Exelon), and tacrine (Cognex). About 10 percent of the residents were also taking either oxybutynin (Ditropan) or tolterodine (Detrol), the two most often prescribed drugs for urinary incontinence. These drugs are known as anticholinergics and are designed to block acetylcholine. According to the researchers, the combination of drugs affected older adults who started out with higher levels of function in routine activities of daily living such as dressing, personal hygiene, going to the bathroom, getting out of bed, eating and being able to get around the nursing home. Specifically, they found that, in people who initially were most capable of performing routine activities of daily living and were not taking the bladder drug, functioning declined by an average of 1.08 points per quarter, while in those who were taking both types of drugs, the decline in functioning was 1.62 points per quarter -- a significant 50 percent greater decrease. In patients who started out with lower functional ability, there was no excess decline attributable to dual therapy. There also were no between-group differences overall in cognitive function in patients taking or not taking both types of drugs. Sink thinks it is "important for physi read more...

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submitted by babulin675 babulin675 1 year, 9 months ago

news.yahoo.com — It's a delicate and daring experiment: Could doctors switch a leg nerve to make it operate the bladder instead? Families of a few U.S. children whose spina bifida robs them of the bladder control that most people take for granted dared to try the procedure — and early results suggest the surgery indeed may help, in at least some patients. With the technique, pioneered in China, the kids are supposed to scratch or pinch their thigh to signal the bladder to empty every few hours. But surprisingly, some youngsters instead are starting to feel those need-to-go sensations that their birth defect had always prevented. read more...

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submitted by stef718 stef718 1 year, 8 months ago

news.yahoo.com — Recent studies showing that gastric bypass surgery extends the lives of obese patients is forcing surgeons to make tough decisions about who should go under the knife and who shouldn't. Internists, cardiologists and endocrinologists, more than ever, are referring patients who traditionally haven't been candidates for the weight-loss surgery, also called bariatric surgery. "I am being asked to operate on 78-year-olds with co-morbidities of heart disease and diabetes," said Dr. Edward H. Phillips, executive vice chairman of the Department of Surgery and a surgeon at the Center for Weight Loss at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. Phillips questions whether these patients will benefit, or if the damage has already been done. read more...

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submitted by bobosea 4 months, 8 days ago

powerlinebattery.com — canon bp-511 charger for canon bp-511, the canon bp-511 charger is hign quality electron product and order canon bp-511 charger save 50% off read more...

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submitted by rfurdzik rfurdzik 2 years, 3 months ago

webmd.com — Urinary Incontinence Diet & Medication: How they Affect Incontinence Symptoms What you eat and drink, as well as the medications you take, may all have an effect on incontinence symptoms. Use these two charts to learn more about the potential effects of food, drink, and medication on incontinence. read more...

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submitted by matpao 2 years, 2 months ago

nlm.nih.gov — NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - In a study of elderly nursing home patients, those who took medications for dementia called cholinesterase inhibitors and medications for incontinence called anticholinergics at the same time had a 50 percent faster decline in function than those who were being treated only for dementia. "Over a year's time, the decline would represent a resident going from requiring only limited assistance in an activity to being completely dependent, or from requiring only supervision to requiring extensive assistance in an activity," study chief Dr. Kaycee M. Sink, of Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina said in a university-issued statement. These two drug classes "cancel each other out should not be used in combination," Sink added in comments to Reuters Health. The researchers report the finding in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. read more...

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