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Showing posts with label Mouth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mouth. Show all posts

Thursday, August 21, 2008

What is Ingrown Toenails?

If you wore braces as a kid, you may recall feeling as though you suddenly sprouted more teeth than would fit in your mouth. Sometimes, a similar thing can happen with toenails: The growth pattern may change for some reason and the nail may grow wider than before. The result can be a persistent problem with ingrown toenails.

Here's the good news: Treating ingrown toenails is easy and relatively painless. Now for the bad news: A simple nail infection, if not treated properly, can swiftly lead to further complications. When a sharp edge of a toenail grows into the skin folds at its edge, it results in pain and discomfort, especially if the wound gets infected. This article will offer some great home remedies for treating and preventing ingrown toenails, but first we need to add a few precautions.
If you have diabetes or any other condition that affects circulation, don't even think of trying to treat a nail infection yourself. In people with poor circulation, any foot wound or infection takes longer to heal. If not properly treated, an injury could worsen quickly and cause other complications; at worst, it could result in amputation. Reduced circulation also affects the foot's sensitivity to pain, which can delay detection of a minor injury. To complicate matters even more, people with diabetes often have nerve damage in the feet that further limits their ability to sense the pain caused by a worsening wound. So leave your foot doctoring -- and even your nail cutting, unless you have your doctor's okay -- to a trained health-care professional. But be sure to clean, dry, and examine your feet every day, and call the doctor at the first sign of a nail or foot problem.

If you do need to seek medical attention, a podiatrist can solve the problem with minor surgery that permanently narrows the nail. After applying a local anesthetic, the doctor removes part of the nail's side border, as well as some of the cells that line the base of the toenail (this area is known as the matrix). Removing these cells at the root of the nail eliminates the corner of the nail that burrows into the skin.

People without nerve or circulatory problems, however, can usually take care of an ingrown toenail themselves, if they follow the home remedies from experts.

Sunday, December 9, 2007

Common Causes of Mouth ulcers



Mouth ulcers


A mouth ulcer is a painful sore in the mouth. It appears on the tongue, the lips, and the gums or inside the cheeks. The first sign of the sore may be a tingling, burning sensation inside the mouth. They can occur either singly or in clusters. They are usually white or yellow in color, surrounded by red halos. Usually they heal within 7 to 10 days.

Common Causes of Mouth ulcers

1. Abrasions, cuts or bites to mouth or tongue
2. Lack of sleep (or poor sleep)
3. Sweets
4. Stress
5. Digestive disorder (intestinal)
6. Pineapple
7. Toothpaste with SLS
8. Orange juice
9. Bacteria
10. Burns or scalds to mouth
11. Generally run down
12. Tomatoes
13. Fizzy drinks
14. Fatty foods
15. Lack of Vitamin B
16. Sleeping with mouth open
17. Chocolate
18. Salad Cream
19. Hormonal cycle
20. Detergent (left on plates/cutlery etc)
21. Chewing gum
22. Zinc deficiency
23. Aluminium
24. After a cold
25. Onions
26. Peanuts
27. Red wine
28. Prelude to another illness
29. Eggs
30. Pollution/fumes
31. Citric acid
32. Giving up smoking
33. anti-inflammatory drugs
34. Acidic foods
35. Glandular fever
36. Genetic pre-disposition
37. Iron deficiency
38. Folic Acid deficiency
39. Herpes simplex
40. Drop In Immune System
41. Vitamin C deficiency
42. Wheat, rye or barley
43. Having a Brace or Dental treatment
44. sodium valproate
45. Throat infection that moved to mouth
46. Diaretics (Caffiene, Alcohol, Heat!)
47. Cohn’s Disease
48. Oral Sex
49. Bananas
50. Kiwi fruit
51. Spicy Foods (Curries)
52. Reaction to Antibiotics
53. marmite
54. Manual teeth brushing
55. Dirty fingers in mouth Smoking
56. Smoking

57. Intolerance to foods with yeast in
58. Nuts or seeds
59. Lack of Health (vitamin deficiency)
60. Yeast infection Candida
61. Sodium Benzoate (soft/fizzy drinks)
62. Coke - not just any fizzy drink
63. White wine
64. soy sauce
65. During a cold or flu
66. SALT
67. Chronic fatigue syndrome / ME
68. Biscuits and bread etc