Fit Body Boot Camp to go pink again with 'Boot Camp for Breast Cancer' Pennington Post Thu, 03 Mar 2011 06:28 AM PST Chris Amaro of Pennington Fit Body Boot Camp will launch March 2011âs âGO Pink, Again! Boot Camp for Breast Cancerâ Fundraiser which will work to raise $200 to The YWCA Princeton Breast Cancer Resource Center to support women and families affected by breast cancer. | Fighting shingles pain The Buffalo News Thu, 03 Mar 2011 06:16 AM PST Itâs an odd name for a nasty condition: shingles. It has nothing to do with roofing. The Latin name, cingulum, meaning âbelt,â became âshinglesâ in early English. The Latin name is a reference to the strips of rash on one side of the body. | Vinluan: Why maintain an ideal weight Sun Star Thu, 03 Mar 2011 06:07 AM PST HOW DO you measure up? As a starting point toward body conditioning, the first step nearly is always to step on a weighing scale or through a doctorâs advice. read more | Ruled by the Body: How Physical Illness Affects the Brain (preview) Scientific American Thu, 03 Mar 2011 06:02 AM PST When I first met Tina, a woman in her late 20s, she had been seeing mental health professionals for virtually her entire life. âOne day Iâm energetic and creative,â she told me during one of our therapy sessions, âthe next I am aimless, or I cry and feel worthless.â Tina had been diagnosed with depression, borderline personality disorder and even schizophrenia. Doctors prescribed antidepressants ... | Penn research identifies potential mechanisms for future anti-obesity drugs EurekAlert! Thu, 03 Mar 2011 06:00 AM PST ( University of Pennsylvania ) An interdisciplinary group of researchers at the University of Pennsylvania has, for the first time, identified the neurological and cellular signaling mechanisms that contribute to satiety -- the sensation of feeling full -- and the subsequent body-weight loss produced by drugs used to treat Type 2 diabetes. More comprehensive knowledge of these mechanisms could ... | Fundraiser goes on, in memory of Ricky Holditch St. Catharines Standard Thu, 03 Mar 2011 05:21 AM PST Ricky Holditch knew his last hospital visit was going to be different. The pain was more severe than he had felt before, he confided to his dad. His legs were beet red and it was like his body was on fire.[...] | Researchers Predict Age Of T Cells To Improve Cancer Treatment Medical News Today Thu, 03 Mar 2011 05:19 AM PST Manipulation of cells by a new microfluidic device may help clinicians improve a promising cancer therapy that harnesses the body's own immune cells to fight such diseases as metastatic melanoma, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia and neuroblastoma. The therapy, known as adoptive T cell transfer, has shown encouraging results in clinical trials. This treatment involves removing ... | | |
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