Showing posts with label Common Problems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Common Problems. Show all posts

Friday, August 1, 2014

Common Problems of Health

Thyroid Problems


Signs and Symptoms
Thyroids:
1. Mild to severe pain in the front of the neck.
2. Pain during swallowing or when turning your head.
3. Fever.
Hyperthyroidism:
1. More rapid heart rate.
2. Rise in blood pressure, nervousness, and excessive perspiration.
3. Weight loss despite an increase in appetite.
4. Trembling hands.
5. Bulging, watery eyes.
6. More frequent bowel movements.
7. Lighter and less frequent menstrual periods.
8. Sometimes a goiter-swelling in the front of the neck.
Hypothyroidism:
1. Unexplained weight gain.
2. Lethargy, slower mental processes.
3. Increased sensitivity to cold, with tingling or numbness in hands.
4. Dry, thick, flaky skin and hair loss.
5. Constipation.
6. Heavier, longer menstrual periods.
7. Sometimes a goiter-swelling in the front of the neck.

When to call a doctor
1. If you have symptoms of thyroiditis.
2. If you feel increasingly cold, drowsy, and low on energy, and you gain weight. You could have an under active thyroid gland.
3. If you feel nervous, tremble (especially your hands), lose weight, and have a rapid pulse. You could have an overactive thyroid gland.

Sleep Disorder


Signs and Symptoms
Narcolepsy:
1. Falling asleep suddenly and uncontrollably in the daytime for periods of five minutes to over an hour.
2. Sudden loss of muscle control triggered by strong emotion or fatigue.
3. Vivid hallucinations when falling asleep or waking up.
4. Fatigue.
Insomnia:
1. Trouble falling asleep.
2. Early waking.
3. Daytime sleepiness.
4. Poor concentration.
Obstructive sleep apnea:
1. Loud bursts of snoring and snorting while sleeping on back.
2. Morning headaches.
3. Daytime sleepiness with difficulty concentrating.
4. Personality changes, such as unusual irritability in the daytime.

What to do now
Narcolepsy:
1. Try to have one or more daytime naps at regular times.
Insomnia:
2. Establish a soothing bedtime routine.
2. Do things that soothes you such as listen to soothing music, or read a book.
3. Drink warm milk.
4. Use your bed only for sleep or sex, not for working or watching TV.
Obstructive sleep apnea:
1. Take attempts to keep from sleeping on your back.

When to call a doctor
1. If you have symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea or narcolepsy, particularly if you are sleepy all the time.
2. If you have had insomnia for more than two weeks.

How to prevent it
1. If you can’t get to sleep, get up, drink a glass of milk, and read and relax for a while until your feel sleepy.
2. Rise each morning at the same time, no matter when you went to bed.
3. Avoid caffeinated drinks for at least five hours before bedtime.
E Don’t drink alcohol or smoke for at least three hours before bedtime.
4. Exercise regularly, but not within two hours of bedtime.
5. If you are overweight, take steps to lose weight.

Lyme Disease


Signs and Symptoms
1. A rash often with a pale center, that develops where a tick bite occurred two days to a months before. The rash may last two to four weeks or longer. (Some victims, however, don’t remember having a rash).
2. Headache, fever, chills, sore throat, fatigue, and aching muscles and joints.
3. After several weeks or months, paralysis of the face, stiff neck, irregular heartbeat, and fainting sensitivity to light.
4. Joint pain and swelling.

What to do now
1. If you find a tick on your skin, remove it immediately with tweezers: Grasp it as close to the skin as possible; pull gently and steadily to remove the entire tick. Avoid squeezing or twisting the tick’s body, since this may spread bacteria into your skin or blood.
2. Put the tick in rubbing alcohol to preserve it for analysis.
3. After removal, disinfect the bite with alcohol, wash your hands in soap and water.
4. Don’t use kerosene, petroleum jelly, or a lighted cigarette or match to dislodge a tick, all of these are ineffective techniques.

When to call a doctor
1. If you’ve been bitten by a tick, and you have symptoms of Lyme disease.
2. If your symptoms return after treatment.

How to prevent it
1. Wear light-colored clothing when you’re in grassy or wooded areas to make ticks easier to spot. Wear shoes (not sandals), long pants, and long-sleeved shirts. Tuck your pants into your socks. Spray an insect repellent containing DEET on clothing. Use sparingly on skin.
2. Cheek your skin, hair, and clothing for ticks after an outing.
3. Make sure that your pet is free of tick.
4. Clear away bush near your home that might attract ticks.
5. Stack woods away from the house, because woodpiles attract mice and the ticks.

Lupus


Signs and Symptoms
1. Rashes shaped like butterflies across the nose and cheeks.
2. Aching, swollen joints.
3. Numbness in the fingers and toes.
4. Swollen abdomen and swollen ankles (sometimes).
5. Chest pain when breathing deeply.
6. Fever over 100 degrees.
7. Persistent fatigue.
8. Sores in the nose, mouth, or throat.
9. Unusual bleeding or bruising.
10. Dark urine.
11. Sensitivity to sunlight that results in a rash after time spent in the sun.
12. Mental or personality changes, including depression.

What to do now
1. Get lots of rest if you’re feeling tired. Take naps when you’re having a flare-up.
2. Put warm compresses on achy joints.
3. For discomfort, take aspirin or ibuprofen (after meals to avoid stomach upset).
4. Protect your hands from cold or irritation by wearing gloves.
5. Avoid the sun during the middle of the day. Thirty minutes before leaving home each day, apply a sunscreen with an SPE of at least 15. Sun exposure alone cause a flare-up in some people.
6. Eat healthfully-stick to a diet that’s low in fat and salt, high in complex carbohydrates and calcium.
7. Avoid alcohol, tobacco, and caffeine.
8. When the disease is in lessening in its severity and you feel well, start a regular exercise program. Swimming is one good way for people with lupus to keep their muscles in shape.

When to call a doctor
If your are experiencing the symptoms of kidney disease:
1. frequent urination; nausea and vomiting; pain in your chest and bones; swollen ankles; shortness of breath; itching, bruising, or bleeding; mental confusion; loss of consciousness.
Call for advice and an appointment:
1. If you have symptoms of lupus.
2. If you have been diagnosed with lupus and your symptoms get worse or change.

Infections


Signs and Symptoms
General signs and symptoms:
1. Fever higher than 100 degrees (oral thermometer reading).
2. Chills and sweating.
3. Headache.
4. Fatigue.
5. Muscle aches or soreness.
6. Swollen lymph nodes.
Respiratory infection:
1. Coughing and sneezing.
2. Sinus or chest pain.
3. Sore throat, congestion, and excess mucus.
4. Watery eyes.
Infection of the mouth, ears, or eyes:
1. Localized pain or irritation.
2. Swelling, tenderness, unusual redness.
Joint infection:
1. Tenderness, pain and redness or inflammation in the joints, often in only one part of the body.
Intestinal infection:
1. Nausea and vomiting.
2. Abdominal cramps or gas pains.
3. Diarrhea.
4. Dehydration.
5. Bladder infection.
6. Painful, burning, and frequent urination.
7. Bloody urine.

What to do now
1. Rest, drink lots of water, and eat healthfully.
2. If you are younger than 65 and in good health, let a low fever (oral thermometer reading – below 104 degrees in adults, 102 in children, and 100.4 in infants under three months) run its course. Low fever is usually not dangerous and may actually speed recovery from the infection.
3. Give your body a chance to recover.
4. Avoid alcohol and smoking.

When to call a doctor
1. If your temperature rises to 104 or higher, or goes over 101 with joint pain; if a child’s body temperature rises to 102 or higher; or an infant’s to 100.4 or higher.
2. If you develop symptoms of severe infection, such as problems speaking, seeing, swallowing, or breathing, or if you have difficulty moving.
3. If your skin has been bruised by a human or animal bite.
4. If you have symptoms such as diarrhea, vomiting, or a sore throat, that persist or worsen after one or two days.

How to prevent it
1. Eat healthy foods, drink plenty of fluids.
2. Exercise regularly.
3. Get enough sleep.
4. Don’t smoke or use drugs.
5. Don’t drink alcohol. If however, you must, don’t take more than 250 ml alcohol in any particular day if you’re man. But if you’re a woman you shouldn’t take more than 125 ml. Don’t drink more than three times a week.
6. Wash your hands frequently, and avoid putting your fingers in your mouth or rubbing your eyes.
E Be sure that meat is cooked is cooked fully and that food is prepared in a clean place. Do not share silverware.
7. Keep your immune system in good working order.
8. Take steps to reduce stress in your life; stress weakens the immune system. Try meditation, yoga, or deep breathing.
9. Get a flu shot yearly.
10. Ask your doctor about immunization against pneumonia.
11. Have your children vaccinated against childhood diseases.
12. Menstruating women should change tampons at least every six hours to avoid incubating harmful bacteria.
13. Keep an eye out for changes in your body-from inflammation around nicks and cuts to a runny nose or genital discharge. Attend to symptoms promptly.
14. Practice safe sex: A sexual relationship with only one person you know to be uninfected is safest. If you have sex with more than one person, use latex condoms, even during oral sex, and never reuse a condom.
15. Don’t have unprotected sex with anyone whose sexual history you don’t know or who isn’t willing to be tested for HIV.
16. Avoid anal sex; it increases your risk because of the chance of bleeding.
17. Hugging, kissing (any part of the body), message, and touching are safe activities.

Hepatitis


Signs and Symptoms
Some forms of hepatitis produce no symptoms. But in other forms of hepatitis, symptoms that occur in the beginning are flu like:
1. Fever.
2. Nausea and vomiting.
3. Loss of appetite.
4. Abdominal pain.
5. Fatigue.
Other symptoms:
1. Dark urine.
2. Pale, clay-colored stools.
3. Jaundice- yellow eyes and skin.

What to do now
1. Don’t drink alcohol, if you have symptoms of hepatitis. It increases the risk of liver damage.
2. Stay home and get lots of rest. You don’t have to lie in bed, but you should lie down if you feel tired.
3. Drink at least ten glasses of water a day.

When to call a doctor
1. If you have two or more of the first symptoms listed or any of the less common symptoms, especially if you have been exposed to someone with hepatitis.
2. If you are recovering from hepatitis and you start to have symptoms again.

How to prevent it
1. Get vaccinated for hepatitis a if you are going to a foreign country where it’s wide spread.
2. Drink boilded water when traveling abroad. Don’t eat unpeeled or uncooked fruits and vegetables.
3. Wash your hands often with soap.
4. Practice safe sex: A sexual relationship with only one person you know to be uninfected is safest. If you have sex with more than one person, use latex condoms, even during oral sex, and never reuse a condom.
5. Don’t have unprotected sex with anyone whose sexual history you don’t know or who isn’t willing to be tested for HIV.
6. Avoid anal sex; it increases your risk because of the chance of bleeding.
7. Hugging, kissing (any part of the body), message, and touching are safe activities.
8. Don’t drink alcohol. If however, you must don’t take more than 250 ml alcohol in any particular day if you’re man. But if you’re a woman you shouldn’t take more than 125 ml. Don’t drink more than three times a week.
9. Don’t use intravenous drugs.
10. When you like to have piercing, or tattooing, or acupuncture be sure that sterilized needles are used.
11.People infected with A or E hepatitis, shouldn’t touch other’s food or prepare it. Their bedding should be washed regularly.

Diabetes


Signs and Symptoms
1. Frequent urination-sometimes almost hourly.
2. Unexplained weight loss.
3. Increased and excessive thirst.
4. Blurred vision.
5. Persistent fatigue.
6. In women, frequent yeast and bladder infections, sometimes missed menses.

What to do now
1. Take advice from a doctor specialized in Diabetes, if you know or suspect that you have diabetes.
2. Follow your doctor’s advice about diet, exercise, and monitoring your blood sugar levels.

When to call a doctor
1. If you feel weak and nauseous, excessively thirsty, are urinating very frequently, rapid breathing, and have abdominal pain.
2. If you experience extreme thirst, lethargy, weakness and mental confusion; you may have dangerously high blood sugar levels that could lead to coma.
3. If a person known to have diabetes loses consciousness.
4. If you have noticeable sweet smelling breath along with the symptoms listed above, you may have ketoacidosis-a life-threatening condition.
Call for an immediate appointment:
1. If you or your child develop symptoms of diabetes.
2. If you have diabetes and you get flu; flu and some other illness can make your blood sugar levels go out of control.

How to prevent it
1. There is no way prevent Type I diabetes.
To prevent Type II diabetes:
1. Keep your weight within the healthy range for your age, height and structure.
2. Exercise regularly. It is very crucial in preventing diabetes or managing it once it occurs.
3. If you are over 40, and overweight, or have a family history of diabetes, check up for diabetes every one to three years.

Chronic Fatigue


Signs and Symptoms
1. Fatigue that is not a result of exertion and that interferes with daily activities.
2. Fatigue not relieved by rest, and continues for six months or longer.
3. More than 24 hours of weakness and fatigue after moderate exercise. Sometimes fatigue occurs one or two days later.
4. Low fever (up to 101 degrees) or chills.
5. Headaches that feel different.
6. Sore throat.
7. Painful lymph nodes.
8. Pains that spread to various joints without causing swelling or redness.
9. Temporary problems with vision and sensitivity to light.
10. Difficulty thinking or concentrating, confusion, absentmindedness, irritability.
11. Difficulty sleeping.

What to do now
1. Take painkillers such as ibuprofen, for headaches and muscle aches.
2. Stay physically active, but not to the point of becoming exhaustion.

How to prevent it
1. There is no known way to prevent chronic fatigue syndrome.


When to call a doctor
1. If you have persistent fatigue and other symptoms of CFS.

Anemia

Anemia

Signs and Symptoms

General symptoms:
1. Weakness and fatigue.
2. Pale skin; paleness of gums, nail beds, and eyelid linings.
3. Shortness of breath.
4. Headaches, dizziness, and fainting.
5. Difficulty concentrating.
Vitamin B 12 deficiency anemia:
1. The symptoms mentioned above and:
2. Sore mouth and tongue.
3. Tingling in hands and feet.
4. Problems with walking and balance.
5. Memory loss and confusion.
Iron deficiency anemia:
1. The symptoms mentioned above and:
1. Fragile nails.
2. Black or bloody stools indicating intestinal bleeding.
Folic acid deficiency anemia:
1. The symptoms mentioned above and:
2. Sore mouth and tongue.
3. Swollen abdomen.
4. Loss of appetite, nausea and diarrhea.

What to do now
1. If you suspect you have anemia, talk to your doctor. Don’t take iron supplements without asking your doctor first. Too much iron can cause symptoms similar to anemia and may worsen your condition.

When to call a doctor
If you have been taking iron supplements and you have these symptoms:
1. Fever, vomiting.
2. Lethargy and/or seizures.
3. Bloody diarrhea.
4. If these symptoms appear you my have iron overload, which can be fatal.
Call for advice and an appointment:
1. If you have symptoms of anemia.
2. If you are being treated for a nutritional anemia and don’t get better in two weeks.

How to prevent it
To have enough vitamin B 12:
1. Include meat, chicken, fish, and/or dairy products in your diet.
To have enough iron folic Acid:
1. Eat plenty of citrus fruits (oranges, grape fruit), green vegetables and dried beans. Eat liver, eggs, and milk.
2. If you drink alcoholic beverages, you shouldn’t take more than 250 ml alcohol in any particular day, but if you’re a woman you shouldn’t take more than 125 ml. But to keep your health good never drink more than three times a week. Alcohol can interfere with the absorb or iron.
3. If you’re pregnant or nursing, or if you have very heavy periods, discuss your diet with your doctor.
To get enough iron:
1. Don’t drink coffee or tea with meals. They contain a substance that makes it hard for your body to absorb iron.
2. Eat plenty of iron-rich foods, including potatoes, raisins, dried beans, oatmeal, and molasses. Eat meat, liver, and shellfish.