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Lung Transplant
When shown a lung transplant?
Lung transplantation (TP) is a therapeutic option for patients with respiratory failure from any cause, in the absence of alternative treatments and no evidence of contraindications.
The TP was developed with a thoracic surgeon, Dr Cooper, who won the first successful lung transplant in unilateral idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis patients in Toronto in 1983. Three ...
Menopause – hormone replacement therapy (HRT)
Good reasons to be treated with hormone replacement
There are many reasons to be treated with hormone replacement. It is imperative that there is an acceptance by the patient that you will use and individualization of therapy.
All these factors can help achieve a clear improvement in the quality of life there are also various studies that indicate that people treated with hormones can live between...
What is the difference between cold and influenza (flu)?
You can’t always, at least not at first, but there are basic differences. For example, the effects of a cold are generally restricted to the respiratory system, while influenza affects the entire body. And unlike a cold’s gradual attack, the appearance of influenza is immediate: sudden fever at least 38 °C, tiredness, sore throat, chills, aches – and possibly a barking cough, sore eyes and hot,...
Treatment of acute bronchitis and chronic bronchitis
Acute bronchitis, which often follows as bad cold, is an inflammation of the lining of the tubes (bronchi) that branch into the lungs. This lining, covered with tiny hairs (cilia) and lubricated by mucous secretions, cleans the air you inhale. When infected, the bronchi become clogged with mucus, making it difficult to breath and often causing a cough. You may also develop a fever. Viruses are the...
Why you need to quit smoking?
why you need to quit smoking
Although quitting may be difficult, it is not impossible. Thousands of Australians have given up smoking as a result of the Quit. For Life Project, and tobacco consumption in Australia has dropped by 20 percent in the past ten years. The 1981 census taken in New Zealand revealed that 424,000 New Zealanders had recently given up and the Department of Health calculates that...
What is asthma?
What is asthma?
Asthma is a chronic, noncontiguous condition that affects the respiratory tubes in the lungs, particularly the bronchioles, the fine subdivisions of the bronchial tubes. Essentially, asthma involves an over-reaction by the lining of the bronchioles to either a substance (possibly an allergen causing an allergic reaction) or to an excessively stimulating situation, involving stress...

