May 06


Doctors at UCSF are conducting a study to determine whether Chinese herbs can help treat hot flashes:

“Violetta Reiser, Patient: “At night, every few hours you wake up and you’re hot and you try to find a cold spot on the bed, cool off and then go back to sleep.”
But Violetta is not interested in estrogen, in part because hormone therapy may cause serious side effects.
Violetta: “It was in the news that it’s actually not good for you, that it might cause cancer.”
So Violetta is trying an experimental therapy, a beverage that’s a mixture of twenty-two Chinese herbs.
George Sawaya, M.D., UCSF Medical Center: “We are enrolling women at trial to see if they are interested in contributing to science, and in terms of figuring out the safety and efficacy of these herbs.”
Dr. George Sawaya of UCSF says a preliminary study found the treatment decreases hot flashes by thirty percent. A larger trial now underway pits the herbal mixture against a placebo. No one, not even the doctors, will know who gets the real thing. ”

There are quite a few hair loss treatment options today. Where hair growth is not possible, we have wigs and hair pieces. Then for more permanent hair replacement, we can go for hair transplant too.

May 02

Not many Central New York doctor’s offices have a massage room for patients. Not many champion group maternal-wellness programs, or paint empowering quotes on the walls, or embrace the use of herbs.

May 02

It’s a workout meant not only to get your body into shape, but your mind as well. Developed by fitness instructor Patricia Moreno, this is a combination of yoga, dance and martial arts, all powered by reciting positive affirmations.

May 02

Researchers from Georgetown University Medical Center’s Memory Disorders Program are directing the first U.S. study to determine whether huperzine A, derived from the Chinese club moss plant Huperzia serrata, improves cognitive function in people with Alzheimer’s disease (AD).

 
preload preload preload