Hemoroide

Le Guide qui a change ma vie

Il avait été l'année puisque la majeure attaque de panique qui s'est passé, mais que la peur
d'avoir un autre créé une phobie des médecins . Je comprends ses sentiments parce que j'ai
un ami qui a une excellente couverture de l'assurance médicale, mais ne jamais voir un médecin,
sauf si elle est grave .


Ils ont aussi une phobie des hôpitaux et des médecins . Ils m'ont dit une fois qu'ils ne veulent
pas faire des tests sanguins ou d'obtenir des bilans de santé parce qu'ils ne veulent pas savoir
si elles ont une maladie comme le cancer. Ils pensent que s'ils ne savent pas qu'ils ont un
problème de santé alors il n'existe pas. Évitement conduit toujours à des problèmes de santé .
Debbie évitait d'avoir son hemoroide externe enlevé.

Hemoroide : Le Guide qui a change ma vie

Monday, October 21, 2013

Tumor Awareness May Bring Laser Imaging Forward

By Robbie Sutter


Tumor awareness stands as a strong idea and one that deserves the utmost support. Growths in the brain stand as some of the most complex; it's no wonder why surgery has varying degrees of successful. More and more stories have been released on the matter, talking about how therapies have developed in order to help patients. It seems like another one has come to the surface, though, with laser imaging proving to be a potential method to take up and go on to become utilized in many procedures.

According to a written piece on physicsworld.com, it appears as though a new imaging technique will come into effect in order to tell different parts of tissue in the brain apart. A brain with a tumor will have both a healthy type as well as a cancerous type. Being able to take a picture of this organ will be able to show which parts are which, meaning that surgical methods could potentially have better rates of success. When it comes to surgery, results are everything, especially on a wider basis.

You have to keep in mind that, beforehand, the only way to distinguish growths and healthy issue was through surgery alone. First of all, magnetic-resonance imaging is done in order to plan out the operation in question and detect where exactly the growth may be. The surgeon has to be able to determine which tissue is tumorous but how can this be done? The article said that such tissue has a different texture as well as color but such variations are slight and the human eye may not be able to pick up on them.

I think that this imaging system will be able to produce greater results for the sake of tumor awareness. According to the details, laser imaging will be able to picture the brain, as it will be depicted with cancerous tissue being blue and healthy tissue being green. You have to keep in plan that surgeons plan their procedures out beforehand. I think that organizations such as Voices against Brain Cancer can see how much better the therapies crafted and set in place are as a result of this.

It seems like laser imaging has far more importance now than ever before, especially when technology has grown so much. Researchers are better able to determine cancerous tissue as opposed to healthy tissue, which means that it's easier to pinpoint what has to be extracted. Surgery should be done with confidence and I think that this is one of the steps in the right direction. It's just a matter of putting such steps into effect so that they will be made all the more effective.




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