Packham Avenue Dental in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
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Understanding and Managing Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes: Symptoms, Risk Factors, and Treatment Plans
Understand the complexities of diabetes, a chronic disease affecting millions globally due to insufficient insulin production or usage. Learn about Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes, their symptoms, treatments, and risk factors. Discover prevention strategies like maintaining a healthy lifestyle and regular screenings for early detection. Explore ongoing research for better treatment options and learn how to live successfully with this condition through careful planning and commitment.
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Can stopping Zyrtec or Xyzal after allergy season cause severe itching?
The FDA says rare but severe itching has been reported after stopping long-term daily cetirizine or levocetirizine, the drugs sold as Zyrtec, Xyzal, and many generics. Here is how to recognize the pattern, what it is not, and when to ask for medical help.
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Early Signs of Dementia: How to Recognize Memory Loss from Normal Aging
This article helps you tell the difference between normal age‑related forgetfulness and early signs of dementia. It contrasts common, mild lapses—like occasionally misplacing items or needing more time to learn new information—with red flags such as repeating the same questions, getting lost in familiar places, difficulty managing finances or medications, word-finding problems that disrupt daily life, and changes in judgment, mood, or personality. You’ll find practical tips to track symptoms, start a supportive conversation, and know when to speak with a clinician, plus what to expect during a memory evaluation and which reversible causes should be checked. It also explains why early recognition matters—opening doors to treatment, safety planning, caregiver support, and community resources—and offers simple steps that may support brain health. Designed for patients and caregivers, it delivers clear, compassionate, and reliable guidance.
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What Is Sepsis? Symptoms, Causes, and Why It’s a Medical Emergency
This article explains sepsis as the body’s extreme, life-threatening response to infection and why rapid treatment is critical. It outlines early warning signs—such as fever or low temperature, chills, rapid heart rate or breathing, confusion, extreme pain, and clammy or discolored skin—along with common sources of infection (lungs, urinary tract, abdomen, skin) and who is most at risk, including older adults, infants, and people with chronic conditions or weakened immunity. Readers will learn how sepsis is diagnosed and treated in the hospital and practical steps to reduce risk, like staying up to date on vaccines, caring for wounds, and acting quickly when infections don’t improve. Above all, it stresses that suspected sepsis is a medical emergency and to seek urgent care immediately.
