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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: sheds + shulman + some  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 2 of about 5 for sheds shulman some. (0.67 seconds) 
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Possible Appetite Suppressant Found in the Brain
HealthNews, CA -
This prompted Gerald Shulman, a molecular biologist at Yale University and his team to scour blood for compounds that shot up after a fatty meal. ...
Anti-fat pill could help keep the Weight Off ABC News
Chemical In Our Stomach Might Help Us Fight Obesity eFluxMedia
New Molecule Seems To Block Hunger And Weight Gain eFluxMedia
all 102 news articles »
4 Rules for Successful Short Selling
Trading Markets (press release), CA - Nov 25, 2008
I have four solid rules that shed some light on how to survive and thrive on the "dark side." Rule No. 1: Take a short position based on fundamentals as ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: doctor + 217 + web  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)

Drug Companies Duping Doctors
Evening Bulletin, PA - Jul 22, 2008
It is already a best-selling drug, the top-selling 100, with 217 million prescriptions filled in 2007 for $472 million. If doctors were prescribing wisely ...
Source: Google News

Automated on-line information service and directory, particularly for the world wide web -
RE Wesinger Jr, CD Coley - US Patent 6,324,538, 2001 - freepatentsonline.com
... A journal article from Dr. Dobb's entitled "Coding With ... all using the Web (or a
Web-like) graphical ... of the page appears a Navigational Aid 217 used throughout ...

[PDF] A Web-based multimedia medical humanities curriculum. -
C Wellbery, R Gooch - Fam Med, 2005 - stfm.org
... By navigating this Web-based modular curricu- lum ... Corresponding Author: Address
correspondence to Dr Wellbery, Georgetown University, 217 Kober-Cogan ...

[PDF] Index
N Physicians, ABC Web - alcohol - media.wiley.com
... 119 stress, 134 water retention, 135 Web site resources ... 208 community organizations,
208 cults, 217 family, 208 ... 12?13 discussing with your doctor, 59 emotional ...
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An insight into rheumatology resources available on the World Wide Web (http://www. ilar. org) -
R Armstrong, H Rasker, J Dequeker - Rheumatology, 1999 - Br Soc Rheumatology
... of Rheumatology and Psychology, PO Box 217, 7500 AE ... about rheumatology via the World
Wide Web (WWW). ... does not make for an ideal doctor?patient relationship ...

Internet consultation in medicine: studies of a text-based Ask the doctor service -
G Umefjord - diva-portal.org
... service at a Swedish public health web portal, Infomedica ... At the Ask the doctor service,
the communication has ... use of the service (38 217 enquiries), finding ...

[BOOK] Towards the semantic web -
J Davies, D Fensel, F Van Harmelen - 2003 - doi.wiley.com
... Dr John Davies British Telecommunications plc ... 217 13 Field Experimenting with Semantic
Web Tools in a Virtual Organization 219 Victor Iosif, Peter Mika, Rikard ...

-
A Plomer - US Patent 5,203,920, 1993 - Google Patents
... 405; 118/413 [58] FieldofSearch 118/206, 216, 217, 223, 118 ... nip between the rolls,
the web can be coated on ... doctor with circumferential grooves and respective ...

Making sense of risk information on the web Don't forget the basics -
S Woloshin, L Schwartz, A Ellner - BMJ, 2003 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... Web based risk ... much less than his chance of dying of anything in that time (217 in
1000 ... Mr Jones's doctor also points out the third problem: Jones has not been ...

Feasibility of a Web-Based Continuing Medical Education Program in Dermatology: The DermoFAD … -
L Naldi, R Manfrini, L Martin, C Deligant, P Dri - Dermatology, 2006 - content.karger.com
... McColl I: Dermatology education on the Web. ... Dermatology 2005;210:211-217. ... Brodell
RT, Wile MZ, Chren MM, Bickers DR: Learning and teaching in dermatology. ...

VISUALIZATION AND CONSTRUCTION OF REALTIME WEB CENTRIC INTELLIGENT HEALTH CARE DIAGNOSTIC SYSTEM …
PMB Devamalar, VT Bai, N Murali, SK Srivatsa - ieeexplore.ieee.org
... a set of classes like patients, hospitals, kiosk, doctors, and their ... September
25-27, Germany,pp.2002-217 [4]. Tsumoto, S.(2003) , ?Web based medical ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Is Laser Eye Surgery Right for You?

More and more people are trashing their glasses and turning to laser eye surgery for a new view on things. But is laser eye surgery right for everyone? How do you know if you’re a good candidate?

Below, ophthalmologist Dr. Julius Shulman sheds some light on the topic. Q: Dr. Shulman, tell us what kind of vision problems can be treated with these new techniques?
Most vision problems can be treated, such as myopia, which is nearsightedness, hyperopia, farsightedness, and astigmatism. The laser companies first went after myopia because that’s the most prevalent, then astigmatism, and now we can treat hyperopia, so the whole gamut of vision problems is covered.

Q: What is astigmatism?
Astigmatism is when light does not fall to a point; It’s a refractive error which results in everything being blurred, near and far, as opposed to farsighted or nearsighted. So astigmatism is combination of the two.

 

Q: What are some alternatives to laser treatment?
Well, the obvious alternative is glasses. Contact lenses now can correct almost all refractive errors: myopia, and even astigmatism. Bifocal soft contact lenses and gas permeable lenses are available. And most people probably will have tried contact lenses and certainly glasses before they come to laser eye surgery.

Q: What are some of the negatives of using either glasses or contacts to treat a vision problem?
Glasses are fine up to a point. After you become extremely nearsighted or farsighted, many people feel handicapped. They go to sleep, they wake up, and they may not be able to find their glasses. They may have sports or hobbies or occupations where glasses are not feasible. It’s difficult to scuba dive with glasses. Contact lenses have their own disadvantages. Some people are not very tolerant of contact lenses, and cannot wear them for a full day. People lose them or break them. Contact lenses can cause their own health problems in the eye, such as infection which is rare but it can occur. Irritation and dryness can also occur. So, each modality has good and bad aspects.

Q: Could you describe the surgical options?
Surgical options nowadays are basically laser vision correction. Years ago there was an option called radial keratotomy where very fine slits were made in the cornea to change the shape. It, in effect, improved vision but it also weakened the cornea. Laser eye surgery is safe and it’s effective. It’s a procedure, and a procedure can always have problems, but it’s one of the most successful procedures we now perform.

Q: In what percentage of people does it work?
Given the whole spectrum of people with all different prescriptions, about 95 percent of people would be able to pass a driver’s vision test without glasses after having the procedure.

Q: Are there some people in whom it shouldn’t be used?
Yes. You have to be very careful in evaluating patients to make sure that they qualify for laser surgery. One of the things to evaluate is the pupil size in the dark. If your pupils get too big in the dark, with light coming in-especially when you’re driving at night-light can hit the edge of the laser zone and cause a lot of glare as it goes into the pupil. Some people have a thin cornea, and so some types of laser surgery are not good because the laser does remove a small portion of the cornea in the front of the eye. That’s how it works. You have to have enough left over for the health of the eye. Some people have weaknesses or scar tissue in the cornea and surgery may not be advisable.

Q: So not everybody can just walk in and get this surgery.
No. It has to be carefully evaluated. Young people whose eyes are still changing should not have surgery done because you don’t want to have this done twice if you can help it. You have to wait until your eyes have stopped changing.

Q: Does vision have to be "bad enough" to a certain extent to get this procedure done?
It’s generally for people who would have to wear their glasses or contact lenses all the time in order to see. For someone who is very, very slightly nearsighted, it doesn’t really pay to do the procedure. It doesn’t mean that you have to be severely nearsighted to have this done. People have this done at all different spectrums. But at least the risk/benefit ratio that we talk about should be in effect.

 
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