Drop Down MenusCSS Drop Down MenuPure CSS Dropdown Menu
Showing posts with label Preventive care and cure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Preventive care and cure. Show all posts

Sunday, February 8, 2015

CEREBRAL PALSY - symptoms-treatment-medicines- signs, preventive care and cure

CEREBRAL PALSY

Cerebral palsy (CP) ranks as the most common cause of crippling of children in the United States. Almost one quarter of a million persons are afflicted. Too often people associate the abnormalities of movement and muscular control, which are the outstanding features of CP, with mental retardation and lifelong dependency on others. But the majority of CP victims is not mentally retarded and is capable, with special training, of becoming self-sufficient. Cerebral palsy is not an inherited disorder, or a contagious one, or a progressive one.

 Cerebral refers to the brain, and palsy to muscularweakness. So the name implies that it is a condition of muscular weakness or disability resulting from brain dam- age. The brain damage may occur before, during, or shortly after birth for many different reasons. (Brain damage in adulthood leading to disability is not considered CP.)

The nature and extent of disability will, of course, depend on the amount of brain damage. There are three ways in which the muscles may be affected: in the spastic variety of CP, muscles are stiff and tight, and weakness is profound; in the athetoid form, muscles contract without apparent reason, leading to uncontrolled grimaces and limb movements; in the ataxic form, talking and other movements are poorly coordinated. 

Along with these difficulties there may be hearing and sight impairment, speech disturbance, poor ability to learn, convulsions, emotional problems, and sometimes, unfortunately, mental retardation. Despite these handicaps, however, modern training methods offer more hope than ever before for even the most severe form of CPO Primary prevention of CP begins with good antenatal (prenatal) care.

German measles and other infections early in pregnancy may damage the brain of the developing child. Vaccination against German measles- before a girl reaches childbearing age or, in the case of an adult woman, when there is little likelihood of immediate pregnancy-is an important preventive measure. Other infections during pregnancy are often hard to detect, and the physician cannot al- ways predict whether or not they will harm the baby. 

The preventive approach is limited to recommending adequate protection against diseases for which vaccines are available and avoiding unnecessary exposure to others. Another known, and now preventable, cause of potential brain damage to children is Rh incompatibility.

Detecting this blood problem is now part of routine antenatalcare. The use of special techniques-such as intra- uterine blood transfusion for the fetus and delivery by cesarean section if necessary before severe damage occurs can prevent brain and other organ harm. A recent development promises to eliminate the hazard of Rh incompatibility. 

It is well known that the first child does not suffer harmful effects from Rh incompatibility; the succeeding children are at risk. This is because it takes time for the mother to become sensitized to the Rh factor.


A new medication, called Rhogram, when given to the mother within 48 hours after birth of the first child, prevents development of sensitization to the Rh factor and eliminates risk for succeeding children. To prevent sensitization from ever developing, the medication must be given after each subsequent pregnancy. 

Premature infants are more likely than others to be afflicted with CPo Among factors in the mother which predispose toward premature birth are cigarette smoking, infection of the kidney and bladder, and a history of having borne previous premature infants. 

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Emphysema symptoms and preventive care and cure

At present, advice for primary prevention is limited to the admonition: "If you don't smoke, don't start, and if you do, stop as soon as possible." Detection of emphysema and chronic bronchitis is complicated by the insidious nature of these diseases. 

They may take a long time to produce symptoms, and by the time they do, much damage has been done. There are certain clues, however, that make the physician suspicious that a patient may be showing early signs of chronic bronchitis or emphysema. One is a history of chronic "cigarette cough," usually worse in the morning on arising and frequently productive of sputum. Another is a history of frequent respiratoryinfections which are severe and take long to resolve. 

There are other possible clues: on physical examination, the physician may detect some wheezing after forced expiration or may find an increase in chest diameter ("barrel chest"). Not everyone with such symptoms and signs necessarily has emphysema or chronic bronchitis, but the physician may suspect that this is the likely diagnosis if there is no past history of asthma, other lung or heart disease, and if there is a smoking history of ten or more years' duration.

 By making use of certain simple lung function tests (spirography), the physician can confirm the diagnosis. While chest x-rays may not reveal emphysema until the disease is well along, the routine yearly or semiannual physical checkup is the time for detection of symptoms and signs that indicate that emphysema may be present -and with early detection, appropriate measures can be taken to pre- vent worsening. All too often it is severe shortness of breath or severe respiratoryinfection that brings the emphysema patient to the doctor for the first time-at a point when much damage may already have been done.


 Are chronic bronchitis and emphysema different diseases? When lung tissue is examined under the micro- scope, a distinction can be made. But during life, the distinction is hazy be- cause the two problems so often co- exist. For this reason, they are frequently described together under the name of "chronic obstructive lung disease" (COLD) or "chronic obstructive pulmonary emphysema" (COPE). 

The word "obstructive," which appears in both names, refers to the changes that occur in the air passages (the bronchi and bronchioles) which conduct air to the lung areas where oxygen is ex- changed for carbon dioxide. The bronchi and bronchioles serve as a first line of defense against infection. They have special cells that destroy invading organisms