Bicycle Seat Design Can Directly Affect A Man's Sexual Function Long suspected by the 5 million recreational bike riders and sexual medicine experts, bicycle seat design-shorter noseless seats versus the standard protruding nose extended seat-can directly affect a man's sexual function, based on the nation's first prospective study of healthy policemen riding bikes on the job. The study is published in the current issue of the Journal of Sexual Medicine. Dr.
Source: www.medicalnewstoday.comImproving Detection And Treatment At Heart Failure Congress 2009 Heart failure is by far the most prevalent chronic cardiac condition. Around 30 million people in Europe have heart failure and its incidence is still increasing: more cases are being identified, more people are living to an old age, and more are surviving a heart attack but with damage to the heart muscle.
Source: www.medicalnewstoday.comUnique New Parkinson's Resource, Life With A Battery-Operated Brain, Offers Step-by-Step Patient Guide to Deep Brain Stimulation Beyond answering the "whys" that arise in considering Deep Brain Stimulation Surgery, Hunt Christensen offers her unique perspective in this comprehensive book. LIFE WITH A BATTERY-OPERATED BRAIN is designed to be a highly readable guide for people with Parkinson's disease (PD), exploring the benefits of this particular surgery on many motor symptoms of the disease. (PRWeb Apr 15, 2009)
Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2009/04/prweb2311144.htm
Source: www.prweb.comChildren with Type 1 Diabetes are at Much Greater Risk Than Adults for Celiac Disease, Which is Now Much Easier to Diagnose First at-home screening test for celiac disease is now available in Canada from 2G Pharma Inc. (PRWeb Apr 15, 2009)
Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2009/04/prweb2318504.htm
Source: www.prweb.comNew Hope For Stressed-Out People: A Neuroscience-based Method to Switch the Brain from Stress toward Joy Announced by Institute for Health Solutions Stressed-out people are told to exercise, meditate or eat right, but stress causes the brain to resist all of those things. A novel, proven approach to stress developed by a University of California, San Francisco researcher provides simple tools that switch the brain from stress to joy. In that brain state people feel like exercising, meditating and eating right. National meeting of researchers and clinicians on the method will be held on April 23, 2009 and sponsored by the Institute for Health Solutions; complimentary public access to web-based learning of the tools begins April 14, 2009. (PRWeb Apr 14, 2009)
Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/stress/brain/prweb2319314.htm
Source: www.prweb.com
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