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added 2007 Wed May 16 20:21:44 by capn_caveman
Could a graze on the head help cure baldness? Biologists had thought that once mammals lose their hair follicles, they are gone forever. Now George Cotsarelis at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia and his colleagues have shown that adult mice can regenerate follicles when their skin is wounded.
added 2007 Mon May 7 19:42:23 by DJRadiohead
April showers bring May flowers, and May flowers bring playlists to Confessions of a Fanboy including songs from The Cure, Dylan, Tom Petty, Liz Phair, and more.
added 2007 Fri Apr 27 17:52:21 by STONERS
Finnish scientists hope reindeer living in the Arctic Circle could help find a cure for a disfiguring tropical disease.
added 2007 Wed Apr 25 21:00:58 by Macas
Interesting blog.I'm was shocked that more than 4.5 million adults in the United States have this disease . This disease is most common in Scandinavia and other parts of northern Europe.Those people who have psoriasis try everything to rid of this ' skin problem ' but with just a little success.I found out here unique cure for this ....
added 2007 Wed Mar 21 7:00:00 by unknown user
They recommend that you you gargle with Cayenne Powder. Now before you think it?s crazy, go ahead and read the 135 people or so that have commented on the site about their amazing results. Believe me I was a little skeptical at first too and the thought of gargling with cayenne pepper powder makes you cringe, but honestly it is not that bad, not even near as bad as a common sore throat. You don?t really taste the cayenne at all and the only part that burns a little is when you spit it out the tip of your tongue burns a little bit and if you get it on your lips it will also burn a little, but nothing unbearable at all and nothing that won?t go away with a quick rinse of fresh water (note don?t gargle the fresh water as you want the cayenne to stay on your throat and work its magic.)
added 2007 Fri Mar 16 22:37:03 by TheNaughtyOne
At the only hospital in the capital of this tiny West African nation, a 3-year-old AIDS patient named Suleiman receives his daily dose of medication -- a murky brown concoction of seven herbs and spices served out of a bottle that once contained pancake syrup.
added 2007 Fri Feb 23 23:00:39 by okitech
Zambia's government announced Friday that widely publicized herbal drugs held to cure AIDS have been proved ineffective after clinical trials conducted on dozens of HIV patients.
added 2007 Wed Feb 21 17:58:44 by siddhu1983
From the pockets of his billowing white robe, Gambia's president pulled out a plastic container, closed his eyes in prayer and rubbed a green herbal paste into the ribcage of his patient.
added 2007 Mon Feb 12 1:27:33 by unknown user
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added 2007 Sat Feb 10 6:30:07 by randyzhang
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added 2007 Tue Jan 9 20:19:30 by Spadecaller
A man I once knew survived his tour of duty in Vietnam. In the privacy of a rented house trailer he drank alone until he finally had the "courage" to kill himself. I don't know if he saw combat. He never said. I only assumed he had because when he spoke, what he said had the finality of a trigger pull.
added 2007 Tue Jan 9 20:19:30 by Spadecaller
A man I once knew survived his tour of duty in Vietnam. In the privacy of a rented house trailer he drank alone until he finally had the "courage" to kill himself. I don't know if he saw combat. He never said. I only assumed he had because when he spoke, what he said had the finality of a trigger pull.
added 2007 Tue Jan 9 20:13:29 by gatitabonitasen
They found capsaicin, an ingredient of jalapeno peppers, triggers cancer cell death by attacking mitochondria - the cells' energy-generating boiler rooms. capsaicin belongs, the vanilloids, bind to proteins in the cancer cell mitochondria to trigger apoptosis, or cell death, without harming surrounding healthy cells
added 2006 Tue Dec 5 17:18:05 by unknown user
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added 2006 Tue Aug 22 19:16:46 by Ousama
A team of researchers from the University of Montreal and the Centre hospitalier de l'University de Montreal (CHUM) have announced an important breakthrough in fighting the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). For the first time, scientists have identified a defect in the immune response to HIV and found a way to correct the flaw.