With these kinds of questions that you have, you have got to approach
your daughters treating doctor, as he is the only one that has the info about her exact medical condition and about her hormones situation.
Not exact matches
In preparing to teach a course, I looked through a folder of accumulated notes and realized that I first taught the course to an adult class consisting of three women: Jennifer, a widow of about 60 years of age with an eighth - grade schooling, whose primary occupations were keeping a brood of chickens and a goat and watching the soaps on television; Penny, 55, an army wife who
treated her retired military husband and her teenage son and
daughter as items of furniture in her antiseptic house, dusting them off and placing them in positions that would show them off to her best advantage, and then getting upset when they didn't stay where she put them — she was, as you can imagine, in a perpetual state of upset; and Brenda, married, mother of two teenage sons, a timid, shy, introverted hypochondriac who read her frequently updated diagnoses and prescriptions from about a dozen
doctors as horoscopes — the scriptures by which she lived.
If you think your
daughter may have symptoms of a problem with her reproductive system or if you have questions about her growth and development, talk to your
doctor — many problems with the female reproductive system can be
treated.
The mother stopped
treating her
daughter by the time she was 18 months old, but when
doctors examined the child five months later, they saw no sign of HIV.
Increased levels of estrogen might cause some sorts of cancer including breast cancer, that's why it is better to avoid taking maca root in your
daughter condition, but again every decision that you make, make only after consulting your
treating doctor.
I hav a
daughter who is 6 months pregnant and has been troubled with vaginal thrush from the start,
doctors do nt know how to
treat other than cream now a steroid cream... They sais it could be just hormonal and might subside after pregnancy.
For seven days, the Birch family is on lockdown, cut off from the rest of the world and without reliable Wi - Fi, as their
doctor daughter's return from
treating an epidemic abroad requires a week of quarantine.