Tuesday, August 11, 2009

experience and from laboratory ex­periment

Hypothyroidism : Fatigue is one of the most frequent of these warnings from the un­conscious. Fatigue without apparent physical cause, fatigue which often exists in the absence of any exertion whatever, is an experience which almost all of us have shared. Which of us has not known a moment of weariness, inertia, indifference—and which of us has not jumped up full of energy, our weariness forgotten, at the summons of a telephone call, provided it is the call we were waiting for?
We are on familiar terms with fatigue. The patient in a doctor's office speaks for millions with the words, "I don't know why, but I'm tired all the time." A man giving his case history says, "I was working too hard. I was overtired." Of one who succumbs we say, "He died of overwork. He wore himself out."
Yet we know both from daily experience and from laboratory ex­periment that a man or woman of average physical development can carry on heroic exertions over long periods of time with little or no rest, and yet suffer no greater fatigue than a night's sleep will repair. We have only to think of rescue workers in flood or earthquake, carry­ing on around the clock, often with the added emotional strain of fear for themselves or anxiety for their families.

2 comments:

  1. Hypothyroidism: During pregnancy, most women have hair condition improves, the amount of hair grows approximately 10%, because their loss is significantly reduced. These changes are associated primarily with the emergence of the placenta, another body, generating favorable for hair growth hormones. But later, after 2-3 months after childbirth (or abortion), comes retribution - an intensive hair loss, because they lost their previous recharge. The situation is compounded by the fact that the woman in the postpartum period, not getting enough sleep, loses increased amounts of vitamins and minerals, often develop iron deficiency.

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  2. Yeast Infection : The influenza virus has the ability to rapidly multiply, so onset is usually sudden, after 12-48 hours of infection.

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