Sentences with phrase «much about your disease»

Waving a dismissive hand toward our daughter, who until this point had tried her darndest to win the doctor's attention with coy smiles and giggles, this gifted physician who knew so much about the disease abruptly replied, «We want to ensure you don't have another one of those!»
I wish I could answer your question, but I really don't feel qualified as I don't know very much about the disease.
Now we find ourselves understanding so much about this disease and there's still a lot more to learn, but it's night and day.
But while the word «lupus» (short for systemic lupus erythematosus, or SLE) has appeared in recent headlines, there's a good chance you still don't know too much about the disease.
I learned that the oncologists don't really know much about this disease.

Not exact matches

For example, we haven't spent as much thinking about how a healthy immune system engages with the neurologic system, but it clearly does have a role as we look at neurodegenerative diseases.
It also speaks a lot about this disease; there's still so much stigma and fear.
A lot of those Old Testament rules about cleanliness probably were chiefly to prevent disease, and smelliness and body odor are largely a matter of diet — since Jesus was not wildly wealthy, I'd assume his diet didn't include a lot of meat or protein — a source of much body odor.
According to Harnack, Jesus felt about evil and disease much as our mind - curers do.
When Jules E.D. Shepard learned in 1999 that she had celiac disease, the diagnosis didn't come with much guidance about the crucial challenge: how to avoid gluten in even the smallest amounts.
There is SO much more info now than there was decades ago about this disease.
I'm not crazy about the plastic of the device at all, but am healing from Lyme disease, SIBO, and much more and was told the 24 hour yogurt made this way was my safest option...
Much else could be written about health in the Asian Century, including the need to implement a sophisticated surveillance and control system for emerging infectious diseases.
I just watched as much of the video as I could before gagging on the bullshit, and then had a look at the «research» they link to that talks about how many trillions we will spend on non-communicable diseases in the next 16 years.
«There's just so much concern about spreading disease in the U.S. that you run a [legal] risk to encourage it as a doctor,» said Labbok.
Much recent attention has focused on Ebola, but few people know about an epidemic that cause more chaos and heartbreak than virtually any disease outbreak in modern history.
«But if you think about health, I argue that the health impacts of the chemical senses are much more important because they drive excess consumption of sugar, salt, fat, many other foods — the kinds of things that lead to the diseases of excess.»
«Much remains unknown about how our diet influences inflammation and, in turn, our risk of disease,» said Bao.
Despite much concern about diseases spreading through Haiti's earthquake - shattered areas, one epidemiologist explains that mental health issues will be more widespread
With so much still unknown about the disease, there is no first - line, standard of care and no successful therapies.
The existence of two mechanisms would make sense for what we know about biology: Salt is necessary for life, but too much salt can kill you, and not just in the sense that excess salt in the diet may be behind some cases of heart disease.
The nationally representative survey of more than 4,700 U.S. adults centered on public views about: gene editing that might give babies a lifetime with much reduced risk of serious disease, implantation of brain chips that potentially could give people a much improved ability to concentrate and process information, and transfusions of synthetic blood that might give people much greater speed, strength and stamina.
And when asked about the possibility of gene editing giving babies a much reduced risk of serious disease, some 49 % of adults say this would be less acceptable if it changed the genetic makeup of the whole population.
«Learning more about risk factors for the disease and early diagnosis are of vital importance as symptoms of kidney disease develop much later.»
«My hope has always been with the study that we would learn much more about how to get lots of people to live to older age in good health and markedly delay their disability and age of onset of diseases...,» Perls said.
After taking a close look at autopsiedhuman brains, scientists at the Buck Institute in Novato, California, foundthat those with Alzheimer's disease had about ten times as much cleavage inthe brain, a process that Dale Bredesen, Buck Institute founder andleader of the research group describes as «molecular scissors» cutting out the amyloid - beta protein.
The symptoms of an E. ewingii infection seem indistinguishable from E. chaffeensis, but much else about the disease is unknown.
«Previous studies have shown a link between caffeine and a lower risk of developing Parkinson's disease, but we haven't known much about how caffeine metabolizes within the people with the disease,» said study author Shinji Saiki, MD, PhD, of Juntendo University School of Medicine in Tokyo, Japan.
However, around that time my Mum was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, and I became very interested in learning more about this disease and ways to treat it.In January 2002 I decided, after much thought, that I should change direction and study neuroscience, as the best thing I could do for MS patients is to work on a cure.
«The plant - pathology community has a responsibility to allow data to be used to combat diseases that are happening now, and not worry too much about whether they may or may not get a Nature paper out of it,» says Talbot.
«Obesity may soon cause as much preventable disease and death as cigarette smoking,» says former surgeon general David Satcher, and statistics back him up: About 300,000 deaths a year are associated with excess body fat (as opposed to roughly 400,000 from cigarette smoking).
The finding could reveal much about how cells control gene activity, and also illuminate cancer, multiple sclerosis, and other diseases spurred by faulty gene expression.
According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 23,000 Americans die from 17 antibiotic - resistant infections each year (although it's difficult to parse out how much is due to vancomycin resistance).
Smoking just one cigarette a day has a much higher risk of developing coronary heart disease and stroke than expected — about half the risk of smoking 20 per day — concludes a review of the evidence published by The BMJ today.
The stiffness or elasticity of a cell can reveal much about whether the cell is healthy or diseased.
There's growing concern among researchers that public wariness about the newborn screening program will create a backlash — with parents declining to screen their kids (who may end up much sicker because their disease wasn't caught early), and with the spots no longer made available for valuable pediatrics research, such as tracing the origins of childhood leukemia.
Already he and others are harnessing this information — much of which is already publicly available — to learn about genetic influences on disease.
Frits Mooi, a molecular microbiologist at the Centre for Infectious Disease Control in the Netherlands, has a controversial theory about the acellular version: The pertussis bacteria may have adapted to it, much like bacteria become resistant to antibiotics.
We don't yet know enough about the genetic roots of disease to help these early adopters learn much from their genomes.
Professor Samani concluded: «While we know about many lifestyle factors such as smoking that affect risk of coronary heart disease, our findings underscore the fact that the causes of this common disease are very complex and other things that we understand much more poorly have a significant impact.
Much uncertainty exists about the cause and treatment of persistent symptoms after a previous episode of Lyme disease.
«Not much is known about the way a grapevine supports the growth of the powdery mildew disease, but the frogs help us provide a reasonable hypothesis for what is going on and why Cabernet Sauvingon could be susceptible,» Gassmann said.
«Secondary bacterial infections cause much of the sickness and about 25 percent of all deaths during the flu season, and 50 to 95 percent of deaths during pandemics of influenza,» says Jonathan McCullers, an infectious disease specialist at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital and co-author of a study that suggests a new way of treating such conditions.
«There is still so much we don't know about snake fungal disease,» Allender said.
The genome data not only can help us know much more about the adaption mechanisms underlying minke whale, but also provides invaluable resource for marine mammal's future studies such as diseases control and prevention, species conservation, and protection.»
Concerns about mosaicism and off - target effects after the published work by the Chinese teams led some to conclude that CRISPR wasn't safe as a strategy for preventing a disease in a baby, much less adding some «enhancement.»
As this mutation occurs in a substantial group of ALS and FTD patients, it is important to extract as much knowledge about this mutation and the disease process as possible.»
The researchers stress that the results should be treated with caution at this stage, not least because much about Parkinson's Disease remains obscure.
Why has Huntington's disease been mentioned in so many press releases about this technology, and how much can we hope to gain from this new advance?
«In this study, we have a narrow focus on diabetes only,» wrote Tolstrup, «but since alcohol is related to more than 50 different diseases and conditions — reflecting that alcohol affects virtually every organ system of the body — any recommendations about how to drink and how much to drink should not be inferred from this study or any study investigating associations between alcohol and a single outcome.»
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