msgbartop
Fioricet, Tramadol, Butalbital apap caffeine, carisoprodol Pain Medicine Resources, Nutrition, Herbs, Food, and Online Drugs
msgbarbottom

Infertility and Some Cancers Linked to Chemicals in Water Supply

Ajay R (articlesubmit.net) asked:




The same researchers who recently made us

aware of the potential link between cell

phone use and low sperm count, acknowledge

that sperm counts and human fertility have

been steadily dropping for at least 30 years. At the same time, testicular cancer is now a major killer of young men while breast cancer is steadily rising to epidemic proportions.

What these maladies have in common is the widespread contamination of our nation’s water resources with malicious toxins such as DDT, PCBs, dioxins, herbicides, pesticides and other synthetic organic chemicals. Researchers have found that these chemical culprits create havoc with our bodies by acting like the body’s own estrogen hormone.

Some of the hormone imitators are even stronger than estrogen in action and create an excessive estrogenic stimulation in both men and women. For men, this can manifest as lowered sperm count, feminization, impotence, and prostate or testicular cancer. For women, there is increased risk of breast cancer and reproductive disorders, including menstrual irregularity.

Two of these toxins, the insecticide DDT, and PCBs, were banned in the 1970s in this country. Unfortunately, they are still hanging around because it takes many years for them to break down. Most of the other offenders are still being used at the rate of millions of pounds every day! Even if they stopped using them today, it would take a long time for the environment to heal.

Concern is becoming so great, in fact, that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has been studying the hormonal impact of thousands of chemical pollutants in our environment. In addition, the Centers for Disease Control and the National Institute of Health recognize at least 50 chemicals in the environment as having this estrogenic effect.

Despite this concern, it is shocking that many of these chemicals are not even required to be tested for in public water supplies. Those with private wells are even at greater risk. Those that have these chemicals in their water may not even be aware of their presence because you may not be able to see, smell or taste them.

To play it safe, it is wise to have your water tested yourself with an independent analysis of your own undertaking. What’s at stake is your and your family’s health, and possibly the future of the human race. Maybe eventually they’ll realize (or even care) what they are doing to the environment and our health, before the sperm counts drop to zero.



Buy tramadol Site

Tags: ,

Colorectal Cancer – Causes, Symptoms, Diagnosis and Treatments

Corwin Brown asked:




Colorectal cancer is a term used to describe cancers (lumps, growths, tumours) of the colon (the large intestine or bowel) and rectum. Together, they are one of the most common cancers in the world. Tumours can be described as benign or malignant. Benign tumours do not spread, but malignant tumours, such as in colorectal cancer, are made up of cells that can spread to and damage other parts of the body.

If cells keep dividing when new cells are not needed, a mass of tissue forms. This mass of extra tissue, called a growth or tumor, can be benign or malignant.

Benign tumors are not cancer. They can usually be removed and, in most cases, they do not come back. Most important, cells from benign tumors do not spread to other parts of the body. Benign tumors are rarely a threat to life.

Causes

Researchers do not know the cause of colorectal cancer. But they do know that certain risk factors make it more likely that a person will develop the condition. These risk factors include:

Family history. About 10 percent of all cases of colorectal cancer are thought to be hereditary. People whose family members have had the disorder are more likely to contract it themselves.

History of colorectal cancer. Some people contract colorectal cancer more than once. New cancers develop in areas other than those in which the cancer first appeared.

Symptoms

The symptoms of bowel cancer are very similar to common complaints such as piles or irritable bowel syndrome. Blood in your stool may be a sign of cancer, but it can also indicate other conditions. Bright red blood you notice on bathroom tissue may come from hemorrhoids or minor tears (fissures) in your anus, for example.

When symptoms are present, some of the most common symptoms are:

* Rectal bleeding

* Changes in bowel habits.

* Stomach cramps or abdominal pain.

Diagnosis

Screening Tests: Early diagnosis depends on routine screening. The stool can be tested for occult blood. To help ensure accurate test results, the person eats a high-fiber diet that is free of red meat for 3 days before providing a stool sample. Alternatively, a doctor can test stool obtained during a digital rectal examination, in which a gloved finger is inserted in the person’s rectum. If blood is detected, further testing is needed.

Treatment

Surgery – Surgery is an operation that involves removal of cancerous part of the colon. It acts as a primary treatment for colon cancer.

Biological therapy, also called immunotherapy, uses the body’s immune system, either directly or indirectly, to fight cancer. The immune system recognizes cancer cells in the body and works to eliminate them. Biological therapies are designed to repair, stimulate, or enhance the immune system’s natural anticancer function.

Chemotherapy – This treatment includes treatment with drugs that kills the cells, like cancer cells. This treatment is given to those with advanced cancers that have spread others parts of body, possibly outside colon.

Radiation therapy – Radiation therapy is a special kind of treatment, which uses radiation to destroy fast growing cancer cells.



Carisoprodol, Fioricet, Tramadol

Tags: ,

Page 2 of 5812345102030...Last »