Trials, triumphs in heart of Queens Queens Chronicle Sat, 02 Jan 2010 09:29 AM PST Itâs been a tough year. Thousands of Queensites, many counting themselves among the under and unemployed, are eagerly greeting the end of one of the most painful 12-month spans in recent memory â" hopeful that better days lie ahead. | Limbaugh: Tests show no ailments after chest pain The Gleaner Sat, 02 Jan 2010 09:15 AM PST HONOLULU (AP) â" Conservative talk radio show host Rush Limbaugh said Friday tests showed nothing was wrong with his heart after he was hospitalized with chest pains. | Sex drug scare for man in 70s The New Zealand Herald Sat, 02 Jan 2010 08:29 AM PST New Year celebrations proved too much for one man when a sex-enhancing drug gave him heart trouble, forcing him to be airlifted from Waiheke Island. | Heart illness sidelines Sevilla's Sergio Sanchez AP via Yahoo! Sports Sat, 02 Jan 2010 08:01 AM PST Sergio Sanchez has been told to rest after doctors found that the Sevilla defender was suffering from a heart illness. The 23-year-old has "a heart condition that requires him to stop all physical activity for the moment," the club said on its Web site. Sanchez had undergone a series of medical tests prior to the announcement. | "Nothing Wrong" With Limbaugh (Health Wise) Gothamist Sat, 02 Jan 2010 07:34 AM PST After being rushed to a Honolulu hospital for "chest pains" on Wednesday night, radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh said yesterday that doctors "found absolutely nothing wrong" with him. Apparently the doctors found no evidence of arterial or coronary diseaseâ"he urged people to take their heart or chest pain seriously, adding, " The treatment I received here was the best that the world has to ... | Limbaugh leaves hospital, praises health system New Haven Register Sat, 02 Jan 2010 06:30 AM PST Associated Press HONOLULU â" Conservative talk radio show host Rush Limbaugh said Friday that tests show nothing wrong with his heart after chest pains hospitalized him earlier this week. | Tips to reduce the sodium in your diet without losing the taste Today's News-Herald Sat, 02 Jan 2010 06:25 AM PST (ARA) - Heart failure, high blood pressure and many other common health conditions all have one thing in common - reducing the amount of sodium in your diet. But the problem is that salt is everywhere in foods, even if you personally don't add it to anything served. | | |
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