Four weeks âforeâ more flexibility The Golf Channel Fri, 24 Apr 2009 10:31 AM PDT When stretching my clients I like to work the body from the larger muscle groups and core to the smaller muscle groups, incorporating dynamic movements. | CAPE VERDE: Richer but still anaemic AlertNet Fri, 24 Apr 2009 10:26 AM PDT Source: IRIN Despite recent growth in personal wealth and the national economy, more than half of Cape Verde's under-five children still suffer from iron deficiency, which results from malnutrition and infectious diseases. A major cause of anaemia - a condition caused by a lack of oxygen to organs and body tissues â" iron deficiency can lead to foetal development problems, cognitive defects, ... | How a reporter became a fan of natural childbirth Delaware County Times Fri, 24 Apr 2009 10:07 AM PDT MIAMI â" I was in the bathroom just after midnight, wishing I'd skipped that extra piece of my husband's birthday cake. At nine months and a day, my pregnant body didn't have room for extra anything. | ConocoPhillips supports the arts Minden Press-Herald Fri, 24 Apr 2009 10:01 AM PDT ConocoPhillips continues its commitment to the community and to the arts by providing financial assistance to the local arts programs. ConocoPhillipsâ longstanding commitment to the arts reflects their understanding that nurture of the human spirit is as vital as nurture of the mind and body. | Style and Well-Being The Westerly Sun Fri, 24 Apr 2009 09:49 AM PDT Get ready to get pampered! Check out these local businesses that offer products and services to re-energize your mind and body. | Chip simulates metabolism of medicine in human body PhysOrg Fri, 24 Apr 2009 09:45 AM PDT (PhysOrg.com) -- A tiny electrochemical cell, developed by researchers of the MESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology, The Netherlands, is able to mimick the behaviour of medicine inside a human body. This chip is presented in the journal Lab on a Chip. | Magnetic vaccines track immunization process Johns Hopkins News-Letter Fri, 24 Apr 2009 09:02 AM PDT Scientists at the School of Medicine have developed a new method to track how efficiently vaccines are delivered to the body. Previously it was often unclear how a vaccine injection worked in the body and whether it was doing what it was intended to do. The Hopkins team has developed the first effective and noninvasive method to track the vaccine particles as they travel through your body to ... | New technique follows fates of stem cells Johns Hopkins News-Letter Fri, 24 Apr 2009 09:02 AM PDT A team of researchers from the School of Medicine has created a novel way to image stem cells for transplantation therapies. The inability to track stem cells after they have been implanted into the body has been a major stumbling block to advancing the medical use of the promising cells. | | |
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