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Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Almonds and Health

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Almonds – Great for Health

Almonds are simply digestible food. They are a good basis of protein, essential fatty acids, fiber, and minerals, such as magnesium, zinc, potassium, and copper.
almonds

Origin of Almonds

They are also amongst the best whole food sources of vitamin E in the form of D-alpha. Almonds are in fact the fruits of deciduous (meaning that the leaves fall off each year) trees originally found in Asia and North Africa.
Almonds are enormously rich in proteins so they are superlative for hair and skin. They are plentiful in phosphorus, which is good for bones and teeth. They are higher in calcium than all other nuts. They are also higher in fiber than any supplementary nut.
They are one of the healthy snacks and are the nearly all widely-used nut for confectionery items like cakes, toppings, candy bars, etc. Almonds are a great foundation of monounsaturated fat, which lowers “bad” LDL cholesterol and raises “good” HDL cholesterol.


Benefits of Almonds

Almonds are even lesser in saturated fat than olive oil, and one study in California originate them more effective in reducing cholesterol. If you believe almonds are just for satisfying your mid-afternoon munchies, you’re in for a disclosure. If you’re pregnant, or thinking regarding it, almonds are a great source of the folic acid you require.
I think you will become familiar with the Almonds Health Benefits.

Top 10 Incurable Diseases

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Modern medicine has done much to erradicate and cure disease, but it has failed in some areas. Of those areas, at least one disease that cannot be cured is suffered by many people in the world every year – the common cold. This is a list of the top ten incurable diseases. As always, click the images for a larger view. NOTE: There are no graphic images in this post.
10. EbolaWikipedia
Ebola
Ebola is a virus of the family Filoviridae that is responsible for a severe and often fatal viral hemorrhagic fever; outbreaks in primates such as gorillas and chimpanzees as well as humans have been recorded. The disease is characterized by extreme fever, rash, and profuse hemorrhaging. In humans, fatality rates range from 50 to 90 percent.
The virus takes its name from the Ebola River in the northern Congo basin of central Africa, where it first emerged in 1976. Outbreaks that year in Zaire (now Congo [Kinshasa]) and The Sudan resulted in hundreds of deaths, as did another outbreak in Zaire in 1995. Ebola is closely related to the Marburg virus, which was discovered in 1967, and the two are the only members of the Filoviridae that cause epidemic human disease. A third related agent, called Ebola Reston, caused an epidemic in laboratory monkeys in Reston, Virginia, but apparently is not fatal to humans.
9. PolioWikipedia
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Polio is known in full as poliomyelitis – also called infantile paralysis. It is an acute viral infectious disease of the nervous system that usually begins with general symptoms such as fever, headache, nausea, fatigue, and muscle pains and spasms and is sometimes followed by a more serious and permanent paralysis of muscles in one or more limbs, the throat, or the chest. More than half of all cases of polio occur in children under the age of five. The paralysis so commonly associated with the disease actually affects fewer than 1 percent of persons infected by the poliovirus.
Between 5 and 10 percent of infected persons display only the general symptoms outlined above, and more than 90 percent show no signs of illness at all. For those infected by the poliovirus, there is no cure, and in the mid-20th century hundreds of thousands of children were struck by the disease every year. Since the 1960s, thanks to widespread use of polio vaccines, polio has been eliminated from most of the world, and it is now endemic only in several countries of Africa and South Asia. Approximately 1,000–2,000 children are still paralyzed by polio each year, most of them in India.
8. Lupus ErythematosusWikipedia
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Also often referred to simply as lupus, this is an autoimmune disorder that causes chronic inflammation in various parts of the body. Three main types of lupus are recognized—discoid, systemic, and drug-induced.
Discoid lupus affects only the skin and does not usually involve internal organs. The term discoid refers to a rash of distinct reddened patches covered with grayish brown scales that may appear on the face, neck, and scalp. In about 10 percent of people with discoid lupus, the disease will evolve into the more severe systemic form of the disorder.
Systemic lupus erythematosus is the most common form of the disease. It may affect virtually any organ or structure of the body, especially the skin, kidneys, joints, heart, gastrointestinal tract, brain, and serous membranes (membranous linings of organs, joints, and cavities of the body.) While systemic lupus can affect any area of the body, most people experience symptoms in only a few organs. The skin rash, if present, resembles that of discoid lupus. In general, no two people will have identical symptoms. The course of the disease is also variable and is marked by periods when the disease is active and by other periods when symptoms are not evident (remission).
7. InfluenzaWikipedia
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Influenza, also known as the flu, or grippe, is an acute viral infection of the upper or lower respiratory tract that is marked by fever, chills, and a generalized feeling of weakness and pain in the muscles, together with varying degrees of soreness in the head and abdomen.
Influenza is caused by any of several strains of orthomyxoviruses, categorized as types A, B, and C. The three major types generally produce similar symptoms but are completely unrelated antigenically, so that infection with one type confers no immunity against the others. The A viruses cause the great influenza epidemics, and the B viruses cause smaller localized outbreaks; the C viruses are not important causes of disease in humans. Between pandemics, the viruses undergo constant, rapid evolution (a process called antigenic drift) in response to the pressures of human population immunity. Periodically, they undergo major evolutionary change by acquiring a new genome segment from another influenza virus (antigenic shift), effectively becoming a new subtype to which none, or very few, of the population is immune.
6. Creutzfeldt-Jakob DiseaseWikipedia
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Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is a rare fatal degenerative disease of the central nervous system. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease occurs throughout the world at an incidence of one person in a million; however, among certain populations, such as Libyan Jews, rates are somewhat higher. The disease commonly occurs in adults between the ages of 40 and 70, although some young adults have been stricken with the disease. Both men and women are affected equally. The onset of the disease is usually characterized by vague psychiatric or behavioral changes, which are followed within weeks or months by a progressive dementia that is often accompanied by abnormal vision and involuntary movements. There is no known cure for the disease, which is usually fatal within a year of the onset of symptoms.
The disease was first described in the 1920s by the German neurologists Hans Gerhard Creutzfeldt and Alfons Maria Jakob. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is similar to other neurodegenerative diseases such as kuru, a human disorder, and scrapie, which occurs in sheep and goats. All three diseases are types of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, so called because of the characteristic spongelike pattern of neuronal destruction that leaves brain tissue filled with holes.

College girls-mix pictures Part 1

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                                    CLICK ON THE IMAGE TO ENLARGE 

                                           SEE ALSO PART 2

                                                        SEE ALSO PART 3  











College life is much different from school life. Normally in college  life you feel much lighter in respect of your duties or you academic  structure. As in school life there are certain limitations like in  your dress layout you have to be very careful, pay much attention at  your studies and more but in college there are some relaxation in above areas and much more















(All images and pics are taken from various public sources, this blog does not host any images nor it has a copyright on these images)


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World's Most Expensive Cities 2011


No. 1: Tokyo
No. 2: Oslo




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Monday, June 27, 2011

Eye ospe papers 4

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THIS POST CONTAIN PAST UHS PAPERS(UNIVERSITY OF HEALTH SCIENCES) IN THE FORM OF SLIDES







Eye ospe papers 5

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THIS POST CONTAIN PAST UHS PAPERS(UNIVERSITY OF HEALTH SCIENCES) IN THE FORM OF SLIDES











Eye ospe papers 3

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THIS POST CONTAIN PAST UHS PAPERS(UNIVERSITY OF HEALTH SCIENCES) IN THE FORM OF SLIDES








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