Tuesday, August 11, 2009

emotional, the wear-and-tear is rea

Life confronts everyone with stressful situations and stress causes wear-and-tear in the body.
Whether the stress is external or emotional, the wear-and-tear is real.
We may not be able to change the situation, but we can change our emotional response to it.
The body will restore itself if we will only allow it to do so, for it is built for hard usage.
source : www.hypothyroidism-treatment.com

6 comments:

  1. The adrenal glands, which lie just above the kidneys, produce a powerful hormone under conditions demanding physical action. We have long known that that area of the body was a source of physical energy and courage. One of Shakespeare's characters calls out for "strength in my kidneys." The familiar Adrenalin is the trade name for this adrenal hormone, and is used as a stimulant.

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  2. The pituitary is the master gland, the switchboard through which impulses are directed toward the other glands. For all its importance, it is a small gland, seated at the base of the brain in a protective bony cradle called the Turkish saddle.

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  3. It has three lobes. In the anterior lobe are tiny centers of specific hormones which go out to stimulate the other glands. The sex glands, the thyroid, the adrenals do not go into action unless the pituitary sends to each its specific activating hormone.

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  4. The word tropic, from the Greek word pertaining to turning, is used to describe these anterior pituitary hormones which turn toward or are directed at specific glands. In the late forties Hench and Kendall discovered ACTH and cortisone, hailed as a cure for arthritis and other diseases.

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  5. Hypothyroidism: Bags under the eyes - about the problems with the cardiovascular system, kidney failure, allergies or endocrine diseases.

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  6. Yeast Infection : In most cases, the physician finds the patient has no organic causes of poor health, and this gives him a vague diagnosis - chronic fatigue syndrome.

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