Would you Travel for Robotic Surgery?
/International patients seeking medical expertise and treatment in the United States is a growing part of the U.S. healthcare landscape.
Read MoreInternational patients seeking medical expertise and treatment in the United States is a growing part of the U.S. healthcare landscape.
Read MoreVirtual doctor apps are popping up all over the place, bridging the gap in patient care – but is this necessarily a good thing?
Read MoreThis new study, highlights the fact that using e-cigarettes is anything but risk-free.
Read MoreThere are a lot of home remedies, and myths that claim alcohol can cure your winter woes
Read MoreMany Americans are eating more calories than they burn mainly because food is more convenient than ever before.
Read MoreHeart conditions are some of the most common conditions that people suffer from in the United States. From heart disease to high blood pressure to strokes to heart attacks, millions of people suffer from these conditions every day.
Read MoreWhen we feel stress, our body behaves by reacting in the “fight or flight” response, releasing adrenal gland or stress hormones such as cortisol, adrenaline, and epinephrine.
Read MoreToo much sitting can also increase the risk of death from cardiovascular disease and cancer.
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Zika virus is a disease that is spread from person to person through the bite of an infected mosquito.
Read MoreFetal alcohol syndrome is a blanket term used to classify a spectrum of birth defects that result from a woman's use of alcohol during her pregnancy.
Read MoreWith a name like a Bond villain's and no known prevention nor treatment, it's no wonder the Zika virus has caught the attention of the tabloid press. But what is it really, and are we at risk?
Read More“Binge-watching” is the latest media consumption fad to be borne from the marriage of gadgets and entertainment.
Read MoreThe CDC confirmed cases of the virus in the United States for the first time in January
Read MoreIf you are going to search for medical advice on Google, double-check the sources' validity before acting on the advice.
Read More· Phobias, panic attacks and PTSD extremely common
o 29% of American adults suffer anxiety at some point in their lives
· What is fear?
o Fear is a chain reaction in the brain that starts with a stressful stimulus
§ Causes the release of chemicals that cause:
· racing heart
· fast breathing
· energized muscles
· also known as the fight-or-flight response
o Stimulus could be a spider, a knife at your throat, an auditorium full of people waiting for you to speak or the sudden, load noise
o The process of creating fear begins with a scary stimulus and ends with the fight-or-flight response.
· Fear and anxiety stems from emotional memory
o Emotional memory: associations you have between various stimuli and experiences and your emotional response to them.
o Because of emotional memory fear is learned
o Previously harmless situation can predict danger
· Current treatment for phobias
o Exposure therapy: repeated exposure to feared object or frightening memory in a safe setting
§ Done to create new safe memory in the brain alongside the bad memory
§ Fear is suppressed
§ If patient is re-traumatized or re-exposed to original experience, his old fear will return worse than before
§ Can be difficult to relive scarring memories
§ Limitations of exposure therapy
§ Only works for ~50% of PTSD cases
· New Research in Curing Fear
o New research from University of Amsterdam suggests that it may be possible to change and perhaps ERASE certain types of emotional memories
o Past research
§ Memories are uniquely vulnerable to alteration at two points
· when we first lay them down
· when we retrieve them
o Study published last month suggests emotional fear response in healthy people with arachnophobia, erased
o published in the journal Biological Psychiatry
§ compared three groups made up of 45 subjects in total
· One group was exposed to a tarantula in a glass jar for two minutes then given a beta-blocker (propranolol)
· One was exposed to the tarantula and given a placebo
· One was just given propranolol without being shown the spider, to rule out the possibility that propranolol by itself could decrease spider fear
§ subjects’ anxiety when they were shown the spider the first time, then again three months later, and finally after a year
o Results:
§ Those given propranolol alone and those who got the placebo had no improvement in their anxiety
§ Those exposed to the spider and given the drug were able to touch the tarantula within days and, by three months, many felt comfortable holding the spider with their bare hands
§ Their fear did not return even at the end of one year
o Mechanism:
§ Propranolol blocks the effects of norepinephrine in the brain
§ Chemical similar to adrenaline, enhances learning
· Blocking it disrupts the way a memory is put back in storage after it is retrieved — a process called reconsolidation
· By reactivating the fear, the fear memory was made susceptible to the influence of propranolol
An Oklahoma 2 year old died after ingesting button batteries, or lithium batteries. Died six days after swallowing one of the batteries, which are small, silver, and shaped like a button
Read MoreNew Year’s is quickly approaching
· This means New Year resolutions that are made and quickly abandoned
· Estimated that only 8% of Americans successfully achieve their New Year resolutions
· Make sure this year is different
Read MoreA new study finds obesity rates of many US states are actually higher than previously thought. The research is based on doctors’ measurements of peoples’ height and weight. Previous reports were based on people’s own report. The problem is not that people underestimate their weight, but they overestimate their height. Previous reports said most states have rates under 30%, and no states have a rate over 40%.
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