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Tuesday, 22 January 2013

Colon Cancer Treatment

Source(google.com.pk)
Colon Cancer Treatment Biography
What is Colon Cancer?

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Colon cancer may be of the adenocarcinoma type and usually arises from the epithelium (layer of cells) lining the inside of the large intestine. The colon is part of the large bowel. The large bowel starts at the lower end of the small bowel (the ileum), at the caecum. The appendix runs off the caecum. The start of the colon is the ascending colon, which becomes the transverse colon where it meets the liver (the hepatic flexure). The transverse colon goes across the upper abdomen until it is adjacent to the spleen (the splenic flexure), where it becomes the descending colon. At this point, the large bowel goes down the abdomen to the pelvis, where it becomes the sigmoid colon (named because it curves in an "S" shape, sigma being the Greek for "S"). The sigmoid colon terminates at the rectum, which acts as a storage pouch for faeces before they are evacuated through the anus.

Overall, the function of the colon (large bowel) is to absorb water from the stool. When the ilium deposits its contents into the caecum, they are extremely liquid. They gradually solidify as they progress around the large bowel.
Statistics on Colon Cancer
Colon cancer is common but occurs very rarely in young adults. It becomes more common with age. Females more than 50 years old are most at risk. Geographically, the tumour is found worldwide, but is most common in areas that have low fibre diets. Areas of the world with high fat consumption and low fibre consumption include Europe, the US and Australia.
Risk Factors for Colon Cancer
Hereditary: At particularly high risk are people with hereditary conditions such as familial adenomatous polyposis or hereditary non polyposis colorectal cancer. With these conditions, colon cancer can occur even in patients in their late teens and early twenties. Family History: First degree relatives of patients with colorectal cancer have an increased risk of colon cancer, particularly if the relative develops it at a young age. Colon Polyps: Certain types of polyps, notably villous adenomas have the potential to become malignant. Patients who have previously had a polyp in the large bowel should undergo regular colonoscopy (ask your doctor how often). Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Patients who suffer from ulcerative colitis have a ten-fold risk of colon cancer, and should undergo regular colonoscopy. Diet: A high fat, low fibre diet, especially if high in red meat, is linked to colon cancer. People who suffer from obesity are also at an increased risk.
Progression of Colon Cancer
The tumour spreads by invading the bowel wall. Once it crosses through the muscle layer within the bowel wall, it enters the lymphatic vessels, spreading to local and then regional lymph nodes. Sometimes it spreads via the blood stream to the liver, which is the most common area of metastasis from this tumour. Other human organs that may be affected by blood-borne spread are the lungs, less often the bones, and even less often the brain. If a lot of tumour cells get through the bowel wall, they tend to float around as a small amount of fluid within the abdomen and can seed the covering of the bowel (peritoneum). This type of cancer seeding produces small nodules throughout the abdomen that irritate tissues and cause the production of large amounts of ascites (fluid).
How is Colon Cancer Diagnosed?

General investigations of colon cancer may show anaemia or abnormal liver function tests. The blood albumin level may be low. If liver involvement is severe, the clotting profile will be abnormal with a raised INR (International Normalized Ratio).
Prognosis of Colon Cancer
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Early colon cancers have an extremely good prognosis. If they have not invaded through the muscle wall, the vast majority of colon cancers may be cured by surgery. Once the tumour has breached the muscular wall and gone to the regional lymph nodes, over 60% of patients will still survive for at least 5 years. If the tumour has spread to other organs, such as the liver or lung, the current 5 year survival rate is approximately 10%.
How is Colon Cancer Treated?
The treatment of choice for early colon cancer is surgery. For tumours that have not reached the muscular layer within the bowel wall, this will be curative in more than 90% of cases. Colon cancer surgery is usually carried out to remove the primary tumour for all cancers except those that have spread to distant organs. In some of these cases the primary tumour may be resected if the bowel looks as though it will become obstructed. Your surgeon, gastro-enterologist and oncologist can advise you. If the tumour has breached the bowel wall, and especially if it is has gone into the local lymph nodes, adjuvant chemotherapy will increase the chances of success. The same is true if it has spread to the regional lymph nodes. There is a clear consensus of opinion that tumours that have spread to regional lymph nodes should receive adjuvant chemotherapy. Tumours that have breached the muscularis mucosae but have not entered the regional lymph nodes may also benefit from adjuvant treatment. This decision is made on an individual basis in conjunction with your oncology specialist. If the colon cancer has spread to the liver, longer term palliation can still be achieved by surgery for the primary tumour to prevent bowel obstruction, followed by specific treatment for the metastases. If there is just a solitary liver metastases in one side of the liver, there is quite a strong argument for surgery to remove it in patients who are physically otherwise quite well. If the colon cancer has spread to bone and is causing pain, local radiotherapy can be very useful at controlling local symptoms. The standard adjuvant therapy for resected colon cancer is 5-FU and calcium folinate given for six months. Standard therapy for metastic colon cancer is irinotecan, 5-FU and leucovorin. Each of the agents in this regime is administered by IV injection weekly for 4 weeks every 6 weeks.
Virtual Medical Centre Video

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Improvement in symptoms is an important measurement. Specific monitoring may be by measurement of serum CEA. If curative surgical resection has been achieved, repeated checks on a yearly basis by colonoscopy are advisable. Colon cancer imaging is normally carried out either by ultrasound or CT scanning to check for recurrence in the liver or lymph nodes. For metastatic disease, serum CEA can be very helpful in gauging response to treatment. Abnormal liver function tests can be monitored and imaging of any soft tissue metastases, such as in the liver or lung, can be performed. Symptoms that may require attention are fatigue from anaemia, visceral pain from liver metastases and, less commonly, somatic pain from bone metastases. If lung metastases are present there may be pleural effusions causing breathlessness. Effusions may require drainage.
Colon Cancer Treatment
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Colon Cancer Treatment
Colon Cancer Treatment
Colon Cancer Treatment

Cancer Treatment

Source(google.com.pk)
Cancer Treatment Biography
Unfortunately cancer is part of life and it is vital that the cancer treatment is of the highest level.

One of the side affects of chemotherapy is nausea and many people say that marijuana is great for an upset stomach.
The problem is that doctors are often have no option but to prescribe heavy medication, which often has undesirable side affects. The reason being is that it is still illegal for doctors in many places in the world to prescribe medical marijuana.

Should medical marijuana be used in cancer treatment? Please share your thoughts as it would be great to help cancer patients across the world. Hopefully law makers will read this post and decide to legalize medical marijuana for treating cancer.
Cancer Treatment
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Cancer Treatment

Saturday, 19 January 2013

Mens Healths

Source(google.com.pk)
Mens Healths Biography 
Mens healths are very neccessary Ask Matt Damon about his success and he'll reply by describing how someone helped him. This is how he thinks. In Damon's world, everyone is the sum of what they've learned, so credit is due to the teachers, not the students.
He carries this deference through even the most mundane of topics. Ask him about his fitness routine and he'll tell you the great things he learned from trainers. Left on his own, he says, he's just a guy who runs for an hour. "It's a dreadful hour," he says.
Quiz his colleagues and you hear a different story.
"Matt consistently outran his stunt double," says George Nolfi, the writer and director of Damon's latest, The Adjustment Bureau. And strength and conditioning trainer Matt Baiamonte admits this with no shame: "He killed me on the long-distance runs."
It's that humility that has made Damon one of the most sought-after and successful actors in Hollywood.
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Men S Health

Source(google.com.pk)
Men S Health Biography 
Thought I'd take a moment to share some of the new Men's Health work we've been doing since I have been given the reigns of this beast (this honkin' thing's circ is more than my last three mags combined...oye).

The work, as always, in progress.

The overall theme throughout the book was to simplify in terms of art, typography and color pallette. Men's Health's tagline is indeed "tons of useful stuff"...and to add tons of fonts, colors and pictures to that is a seizure waiting to happen...or at least a headache.

Here are a few of the recently updated features.

Bulletins:
This has long been the most popular section of the magazine. It is essentially a news section where each page has a theme: health, sex, weight loss, muscle, etc.

One of the first things we wanted to do was give this section a proper opener. Previously, the Bulletins pages had just emerged from the front of book pages like the editor's letter and TOC with no real announcement as a section. Each issue we wanted to take the most visually interesting tidbit of info and blow it out as a full page image to start things off. We really liked the "latest news" approach to the edit and wanted to explore the idea of a center-axis identity system to mimic a newspaper or newsletter on the opener and then carry that through to the follow pages.In terms of hierarchy of info on the follow pages, it seemed more important that the reader immediately knew what each page was about as opposed to knowing what section he is actually in, so you'll notice the section name is secondary.

As we all know, it's been argued that few people (beyond people in the biz) navigate a magazine in order from front to back, so if someone happened upon a bulletins page we wanted it to be able to stand by itself.

Image-wise we wanted to reduce the number of images but up the size and quality of what we were showing, giving more room for great concept imagery by Levi Brown and others. In terms of typography and design we wanted things to be a bit more fluid and organic and not as square and formatted. The earlier experiments were basically type jam sessions where several of us would assemble interesting headline and text treatments (the rule being to only use 2 typefaces). We would then meet, pick our favorites and start piecing these bits together to see what combos yielded the most interest, the goal being to create a varied type palette that each designer could use in constructing a page.
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Friday, 18 January 2013

Men Health

Source(google.com.pk)
Men Health Biography
Men's Health (MH), published by Rodale Inc. in Emmaus, Pennsylvania, United States, is the world’s largest men’s magazine brand, with 38 editions around the world. It is also the best-selling men's magazine on U.S. newsstands. It covers fitness, nutrition, sexuality, lifestyle and other aspects of men's life and health. The magazine's website, MensHealth.com, averages 60 million page views a month. Men's Health also publishes several branded books, DVDs, and special interest publications.

Launched in 1987 as a health oriented service magazine by founding editor Mark Bricklin, Men’s Health has evolved into a lifestyle magazine for men, covering areas such as health, fitness, nutrition, relationships, travel, technology, fashion and finance. The circulation grew to more than 1.5 million in less than two years and spawned over 20 foreign editions. The magazine does not run ads for tobacco or liquor companies, they also do not run ads for supplements and herbal remedies which competing magazines do and have been criticized for adding to medical misinformation. The magazine does not run ads for tobacco or liquor companies, they also do not run ads for supplements and herbal remedies which competing magazines do and have been criticized for adding to medical misinformation.

David Zinczenko has been the editor-in-chief of Men’s Health since 2000. Jack Essig is the publisher. During this period, the magazine’s circulation has grown 30 percent, and ad pages have grown 80 percent, from 700 pages to 1150. n 2000 they had 21 international editions. In 2001 they were consistently selling 400,000 copies at newsstands and overall circulation was 1.6 million. In 2001 the magazine started the annual list of cities with the healthiest men based on twenty "live-long parameters, including death rates (both homicide and disease); illness rates (high blood pressure, heart disease, stroke, etc.); body-mass index; fitness training; even environmental factors like number of parks, golf courses, etc.". In 2003 the circulation was 1.7 million. In 2006 the circulation was up to nearly 1.8 million.

Men's Health magazine has been criticized for its relentless focusing on developing the perfect body, which can increase men's anxieties about their bodies. This can make men more prone to developing eating disorders and compulsive over-exercising. The New York Times stated, "Since its debut in the late 1980’s, the magazine has surpassed traditional men’s books like Esquire and GQ by following the formula of best-selling women’s magazines  by catering to men’s anxieties about their bodies and sexual performance." Columbia Journalism Review stated the magazine "deals overwhelmingly with self-care and, in fact, exaggerates the possibilities for autonomous personal transformation", Zinczenko responded they are "overcoming the resistance of the 86-percent male audience to health as a subject" and redefining health as "inclusive of everything that could improve a man's life. Great sex. Great food. Endorphin-boosting exercise. Looking and feeling your best. We turned health into a concept every guy would want to embrace, starting with the healthy guy on the cover".

In 2004, Zinczenko began putting celebrities and athletes on the cover, such as David Beckham, Mark Wahlberg, Jason Statham, Gerard Butler, LeBron James, Josh Duhamel, Dwayne Wade, and with their shirts on a big departure from the cover look of the 1990s. In 2004 parent company filed suit against Men's Fitness for its redesign which makes it "a copycat version--one that is obviously intended to confuse consumers." In May 2006, the magazine published a limited edition color cover of Josh Holloway. In the first half of 2006 newsstand sales for Men's Health rose from 492,000 to 544,000 during a price increase from $3.95 to $4.50. In 2006 the magazine and the Rodale's other properties made extensive efforts to increase online content including adding video to each section, getting every major section editors to blog and adding an online ad sales director.

In fall 2007, Men’s Health launched the FitSchools initiative to combat childhood obesity. The magazine sends health, fitness, and nutrition experts to selected schools each year to remake the physical education programs and school lunch offerings. Gettys Middle School, in Easley, South Carolina, was the first FitSchool. In spring 2008, the magazine launched The FitSchools Foundation, a nonprofit organization with the mission to help end childhood obesity and get America’s kids interested in healthy, active living. The popular column, "Eat This, Not That!" (ETNT), has become a book series with versions for children and a free iPhones application. EatThis.MensHealth.com was the most highly trafficked section of MensHealth.com in 2009 with 1 million unique visitors and 15 million page views a month.

The January/February "2008 The Year of You" edition became the all-time single-copy sales issue in the magazine's history with 750,650 copies. In 2008 Steve Madden was named vice president and editorial director for Rodale International, where he will oversee all editorial content at Rodale's international titles, including the foreign editions of Men's Health. Also, in 2008, they partnered with Google to make back issues available. In July 2008, they became the first to "create the first fully interactive advertising magazine in America", users snap a picture of an ad and it will send a short code to SnapTell, where "an immediate promotional bounce-back will be sent to their device." For its 20th Anniversary issue in November 2008, Men's Health featured an interview and photo shoot with future President-elect Barack Obama. In 2010, Obama was again featured in reference to the health-care debates of the time and his proposed health plans.

In 2009, Men's Health published the Belly Off! Diet book, based on the popular weight-loss testimonial column in the magazine. In August 2009, the magazine's iPhone application team launched the "Women's Health Workouts" application for its sister publication Women's Health, and in September 2009, the column "Ask Jimmy the Bartender" was turned into an iPhone and iPad application. In 2010, Men's Health became one of the first consumer magazines to enter the iPad market. The magazine's first application, "Men's Health Workouts," has maintained a position at or near the "Top 10" in the Health & Fitness category since its debut.
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