Natural Hair Loss Treatment Part 3
Natural Hair Loss Treatment Part 3 – www.balancedhealthtoday.com www.balancedhealthtoday.com * Thyroid disease. Both an overactive and underactive thyroid can cause hair loss. The hair loss associated with thyroid disease can be reversed with proper treatment. * Inadequate protein in diet. Some vegetarians, people who go on crash diets that exclude protein, and those with severely abnormal eating habits, may develop protein malnutrition. When this happens, a person’s body will help to save protein by shifting growing hairs into the resting phase. Massive hair shedding can occur two to three months later. Hair can then be pulled out by the roots. This condition can be reversed by eating the proper amount of protein. * Medications. Prescription drugs can cause temporary hair shedding in a small percentage of people. Examples of such drugs are blood thinners, some drugs used to treat gout and arthritis, acne, or psoriasis, and some medications for heart problems. * Cancer treatment drugs. Most drugs used in chemotherapy will cause hair cells to stop dividing. Hair shafts become thin and break off as they exit the scalp. This can occur one to three weeks after beginning chemotherapy. The patient may lose all of his hair, but this will usually re-grow after treatment ends. Syria, Damascus Croatia, Zagreb Sale, Victoria Wichita Falls, Texas Greece, Athens Chesapeake, Virginia Holland, Amsterdam Kansas City, Kansas Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Dubai, UAE Hungary, Budapest www.balancedhealthtoday.com www …
CVS Caremark 3Q profit up 16 pct. as sales rise
Filed under: Drug Treatment Help Kansas City
Merlo said CVS saw significant jumps in the number of PBM clients requiring their members to get maintenance drugs via mail order, which saves those payers money, and more people enrolled in CVS "pharmacy adviser" plans that help patients with …
Read more on Kansas City Star
Unprecedented 'black mold' meningitis a challenge
Filed under: Drug Treatment Help Kansas City
The good news: Black mold is treatable with a drug named voriconazole, with far fewer side effects than the older treatment initially recommended when the outbreak began. Still, Kauffman cautioned doctors to carefully monitor patients because …
Read more on Kansas City Star