Peripheral Artery Disease: Facts you need to know
/Peripheral artery disease or PAD is a type of peripheral vascular disease (PVD) which refers to diseases of blood vessels outside the heart and brain.
Read MorePeripheral artery disease or PAD is a type of peripheral vascular disease (PVD) which refers to diseases of blood vessels outside the heart and brain.
Read MoreThe disorder of GAD can come on gradually with the risk being the highest between childhood and middle age.
Read MoreUp to 28 million people or about 5 percent of the U.S. population has Raynaud’s, named after a French physician Maurice Raynaud, who first recognized the condition in 1862.
Read MoreResuming exercise is an important part of strengthening your knee making it more likely to function well for many years to come.
Read MoreThere are three likely explanations as to what is causing abnormally high blood glucose levels in the morning:
Read MoreBelly bloat is usually not serious but it is capable of making you feel puffy and uncomfortable and sometimes impossible to zip up your skinny jeans.
Read MoreCold weather means many things – wearing winter coats, dealing with snow and ice, trying to stay warm, and risking the possibility of a heart attack.
Read MoreThe danger of blocked arteries is increased risk of a heart attack or a stroke.
Read MoreTo protect and preserve kidney health, here are 8 common habits you may be doing harming these two bean-shaped organs:
Read MoreA common but not always talked about condition up to 11 percent of women will experience is bladder prolapse.
Read MoreThis process helps regulate the level of glucose in the bloodstream, preventing it from reaching dangerously high levels (hyperglycemia).
Read MoreUnfortunately, our colon along with the rectum, are also susceptible to developing cancer.
Read MoreThink of HDL cholesterol sort of like a trash pickup service. It drives through the arteries picking up surplus cholesterol our body doesn’t need and dumping it into the liver.
Read MoreYou’ve been diagnosed with cancer – now what? There is much to think about and many questions to be answered.
Read MoreCertain factors we cannot change such as a family predisposed genetic component for developing dementia.
Read MoreMore than 25 million Americans have gallstones but only about 1-3% of the population will have symptoms over the course of a year.
Read MoreOne of the biggest fears if not the biggest fear of any cancer survivor is a secondary cancer developing.
Read MoreThe complications can range from cardiovascular disease, nerve damage (neuropathy), kidney damage (nephropathy), eye damage (retinopathy), gastroparesis, peripheral artery disease and complications related to the skin
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