Archive for the ‘Men’s Health-Erectile Dysfunction’ Category

REDUCING CHOLESTEROL: FACTS ABOUT CANOLA OIL

April 23rd, 2009

Canola was originally developed from the rape seed. It was modified by selective breeding because rapeseed oil was too high in a toxic fatty acid called erucic acid. Canadian plant breeders came up with a variety of rapeseed that is much lower in erucic acid, yet high in beneficial monounsaturated fat and omega 3 fat. Only olive oil contains more monounsaturated fat than canola oil. Canola oil also contains approximately ten percent of the omega 3 fat alpha-linolenic acid. The new modified canola oil was originally called LEAR oil; this stands for Low Erucic Acid Rapeseed. Both “LEAR” and “rape” don’t have pleasant connotations, so a cleaver marketing guru came up with the name canola in 1978, alluding to Canadian oil.

Canola oil is now widely available as a cooking oil, in margarines, and is present in a great number of processed foods. Olive oil is a much healthier choice, but it is too expensive for the food industry to use in processed foods. Also, the fact that olive oil goes cloudy in cold temperatures makes it unappealing to the eye when used in some foods.

The majority of canola oil on the market is heavily processed. It goes through a process of refining, bleaching and degumming. This exposes the oil to oxygen, light, high temperatures and chemical solvents. Canola oil is fairly high in omega 3 fats, and these are most sensitive to processing, and likely to become damaged and form trans fatty acids. Therefore, canola oil can be higher in trans fats than other liquid vegetable oils. You are better off getting omega 3 fats from whole foods like fish, walnuts, flaxseeds and pumpkin seeds; all of which are also rich in antioxidants. Another problem with canola oil is that a great deal of it is genetically modified. There are several new varieties, such as Roundup Ready Canola, which is more tolerant to some herbicides and insecticides. Genetically modified canola has been approved for use in Australia. If you do use vegetable oil in cooking, it is best to stick to extra virgin olive oil or virgin coconut fat.

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BEFORE THE POSTNATAL EXAMINATION – INTRODUCTION

April 7th, 2009

Nowadays it is accepted for couples to resume intercourse once the lochia has diminished and the perineum has healed. Therefore, from the contraceptive point of view, the postnatal visit at six weeks may be too late. Most studies have shown that between a third and a half of women will have had intercourse before the postnatal visit (Frolich et al., 1990). The earliest potential fertile ovulation has been shown to take place around the end of the fourth week, although considerably later in fully lactating women (Guillebaud, 1988).

Clearly, contraception is needed to prevent an unplanned pregnancy occurring from the fourth week onwards, and for women who have been unable to accept advice on the postnatal ward, or who are unable or unmotivated to visit their GP or family planning clinic, other provision needs to be available. The opportunity for discussion with the district mdiwife up to the tenth day, and later with the health visitor, can be of great value. By this time, and in the privacy of her own home, she may be better able to make decisions for herself. She is sufficiently removed from the event to allow ‘debriefing’. Although defined literally as the giving of a report, debriefing has also been described as the process by which a person is allowed to relive an experience with someone else in order to make sense of it. If a woman is allowed to relive her experience of childbirth with another person she may be able to put into words feelings about the experience that she had not consciously realized that she had. If these feelings can be shared and understood she may be able to relinquish them.

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THE MALE FACTOR – CONCLUSION

April 7th, 2009

It was a brief encounter but things improved dramatically over the next few weeks while investigations were taking place. They were able to make love whenever they chose, and he usually ejaculated, only having occasional difficulty around the time of ovulation. In fact, she became pregnant within a couple of months and said she was sure it was one of the natural times. Mr T. did not want, or need, treatment or outside help with his problem. He had been able to ejaculate again within the security of their relationship when Miss A. was able to share her knowledge and understanding of the pressures she had been imposing on him.

The existence of absolute sterility is rare and therefore the door of hope is left open for the majority of couples. Such hope can at times become unbearable: ‘If only someone would say there was no hope, we could begin to adjust.’ Perhaps doctors need to help these, and others, to look at their fears of the closed door so that it can be included more often in their range of choices.

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FACTORS IN UNPLANNED PREGNANCY – GUILT OR LACK OF PREPARATION FOR SEXUALITY (INSTANCE)

April 7th, 2009

Mrs H. is a 38-year-old divorcee with a 12-year-old daughter. For the 10 years since her divorce she had worked full-time as a beautician and cared for her daughter, who suffered from asthma. During that time

she had no sexual partner, but then she met a man at a party, was surprised at the intensity of her feelings and ended up pregnant. As she got up on the examination couch she apologised for her unshaved legs saying that she waxed everybody else’s legs but never had time to do her own. She was also very concerned that the doctor might find her genitals dirty or smelly. This woman had set aside her own needs in order to look after her daughter. She seemed to feel her own sexuality was something dirty and to be avoided. The fact that her brief time of pleasure had led to an abortion had added to her feelings of self-disgust.

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CARE OF THE YOUNGER PATIENT – HOW THEY COME (TERMINATION OF PREGNANCY)

April 7th, 2009

A smaller number of patients attend after a termination of pregnancy. Some of these have already discussed contraception or indeed have started taking the Pill immediately after their termination. Others have delayed thinking about their needs for a variable length of time. Among these, as also among young mothers, there may be many problems, expressed overtly or covertly. A common finding is that during their recovery, from either a termination or childbirth, they have felt themselves unable or powerless to choose.

An 16-year-old girl, Miss R., with a six-week-old baby came asking for the injection. She looked dull and resigned. The doctor felt hopeless and wondered why this method had been chosen. As the girl talked, the doctor sensed that she had been thought to be irresponsible by those who had looked after her during and after the pregnancy, and therefore only the injectable contraceptive, medroxyprogesterone, had been discussed postnatally. Given time, she chose the COC and left, looking quite bright, and saying ‘nobody explained it properly before’.

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THE FEELING BEHIND THE SYMPTOM – HIDE COMPLICATED AND AMBIVALENT

April 7th, 2009

Other symptoms that may hide complicated and ambivalent feelings include overt sexual complaints such as loss of libido. If the patient is taking the oral contraceptive pill the complaint can present a complex problem. While it is possible that the Pill reduces libido, changing the type of Pill or indeed the method of contraception does not often solve the difficulty. The complaint may be due to several factors. The Pill is sometimes regarded as too safe in preventing pregnancy, so that the element of danger and risk-taking is missing. The woman may feel controlled by the Pill, her natural hormones being supplanted. She may believe that if it was not for the Pill she could refuse sex. Unacknowledged problems in the relationship such as anger and resentment that cannot be expressed openly can lead to avoidance of sex, and the Pill can then be blamed making the problem a medical one for doctors to solve.

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CONTRACEPTION, PLANNING A FAMILY AND INFERTILITY: OTHER HORMONAL METHODS- MORNING-AFTER PILL, MALE PILL AND ANTI-PROGESTERONES

March 27th, 2009

Morning-after Pill-If, as a result of unprotected intercourse or a condom bursting around the time of ovulation, fertilisation may have occurred, two pills (Eugynon 50 or Ovran) can be taken within 72 hours, but preferably 48 hours, of exposure followed by two more 12 hours later. Pregnancy is now unlikely to occur.

However, a pregnancy test must be carried out 3—4 weeks later and a barrier method of contraception should be used in the meantime. There is a risk, however theoretical, that if the woman is pregnant and continues, the foetus may be damaged by the pills. Your GP or any clinic can provide the service. (Some clinics remain open even over the Christmas holiday for this purpose). Alternatively an IUD can be fitted and has the same effect.

Male pill-Hormones as well as other substances such as gossypol, discovered by the Chinese, and D-propranolol, a drug normally used to reduce blood pressure, have been tried in Pills for men. Since a man makes 100,000 sperms per minute, compared with a woman’s one egg a month, it is a tall order and all formulations have problems in practice. Whatever is possible technically though, one survey of over a thousand women found that two-thirds would not trust a man who said he was taking a male Pill.

Anti-progesterones-These substances block the body’s progesterones. One such product, RU 486 (mifepristone), is undergoing trials. It can be given by mouth, vaginally, or by injection. If given in the second half of the cycle or early in pregnancy it usually results in menstruation occurring. In this respect it is similar to an IUD.

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INTERCOURSE: MOVEMENT

March 27th, 2009

A common notion in Victorian times was that ‘ladies do not move’. This may well be true but only women can have intercourse. However, a man with difficulties in controlling the time of ejaculation can find that passionate movements by his woman destroy his control. On the other hand an older man or a man with a tendency to slow ejaculation or a loss of erection may benefit from his partner’s movements. A woman can move most freely in positions in which her body is free. These include positions such as the rear-entry, woman-on-top, and left-lateral. Women like to move in all kinds of ways during intercourse and movements include thrusting and rotating the pelvis so that the penis is swept around the interior of the vagina. The best way to imagine this is to think of the base of a felt-tip pen inserted into the vagina. The woman then draws circles with the tip. A woman can also contract her pelvic muscles. If this is done as the penis moves inwards and if they are released as it moves outwards, it greatly enhances the sensation for both partners.

A little practice during masturbation or during intercourse pays real dividends. A variation of this is for the penis to remain motionless in the vagina and for the woman, by repeatedly contracting and relaxing her pelvic muscles, to bring her partner, and herself, to orgasm.

In positions in which the man mainly controls the movement, he usually wants to move at a speed which corresponds to the one he uses when masturbating. Some like short, rapid movements and others slow, long ones. Women have their preferences too and a communicating couple will tell each other what they want. Quick, teasing movements at the vaginal opening without full penetration and even total withdrawal from and re-penetration of the vagina, for example, can, at the early stages of intercourse, bring some women to orgasm.

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PERIODS (MENSTRUATION)

March 27th, 2009

From puberty until the menopause women have a period each month if an embryo has not implanted. There are many reasons for periods not appearing in normal women, the commonest of which by far is pregnancy, but others include an emotional shock, physical or mental

ill-health, a change of time zones, a woman’s fear that she might be pregnant and all kinds of stress.

Periods can vary greatly in their duration and in the heaviness of the blood loss. Normal periods can last for anything from two to eight days and the amount of blood loss is usually between five and six tablespoons. It seems a lot more because blood spreads over surfaces easily. If you ever have bleeding between your periods, see your doctor.

One of the earliest practical considerations is sanitary protection. Sanitary towels or tampons have to be used to absorb the menstrual blood. Sanitary towels are pads of highly absorbent material — often paper. Today’s slimmer pads are unobstrusive even under tight clothes and many come with a waterproof backing film to prevent leaking.

Tampons are more convenient and comfortable for many girls and women. These are small plugs of absorbent material about the size of a finger that are inserted into the vagina where they expand and absorb the menstrual flow. If a girl is a virgin she may find it difficult to push the tampon into her vagina at first but most hymens already have a large enough hole to make it fairly easy. On first inserting a tampon the girl may actually break or stretch the hymen and this can cause some soreness for a day or two. It may be helpful to use a mirror at first. For the first few times a tampon is used it can help to smear its tip with KY jelly or something similar. Follow the instructions on the packet as these vary according to the type of tampon you are using. The most helpful thing of all when putting a tampon in the first few times is to relax. It cannot get lost inside. It is relatively easy though to forget that it is there, especially when the period ends and there is no leakage. All tampons have a string attacked to their base which, when pulled, brings them out of the vagina. Tampons very rarely get stuck but if they do don’t worry. Just ask your mother to help you or go to your doctor.

Whether a tampon or a sanitary towel is used it should be changed several times a day and more often if the flow is heavy. Lots of girls and women put a stick-on ‘pant-liner’ inside their pants to mop up the inevitable occasional leak.

Many girls and women wonder about sex and their periods, but even though many cultures have a taboo on sex with menstruating women there is no reason to avoid intercourse. Of course, some women or their partners use periods to avoid having sex for a quarter or more of the month. An orgasm can help to reduce some of the symptoms of premenstrual tension and the cramping pains some women have in the first couple of days of their period. Research has proved that many women are most interested in sex around the time of a period and actually during it, and again at around ovulation (in the middle of the month), so clearly there is no reason to believe that nature meant sex to be a no-go area because of a period.

Although there is an ancient Jewish notion that menstruating women are unclean, no medical evidence has ever been found to support this, though some doctors persist in talking about menstrual ‘toxps’, the existence of which has never been proved. In spite of the advertising world’s suggestions, and many women’s suspicions, that menstruating women smell and that men are likely to find them unattractive, this is not true if reasonable rules of hygiene are observed.

Having periods affects women in many different ways. Some are completely unchanged physically and mentally and others are tired, grumpy, irritable, have a lot of lower abdominal pain and back pain, and feel bloated. Considerable research shows that women are more likely to be ill, to be admitted to hospital, to have acute medical and psychiatric illnesses, to crash the car, to hit their children, to be off work, and a host of other things, around the onset of their period. Men (including male doctors) for years thought that these problems were in the mind but research has now proved that the signs and symptoms are indeed very real. Explaining all these premenstrual troubles to children can be a problem and should be done in a way that does not make them think of menstruation as an illness. Girls raised to think in this way often end up with intolerable premenstrual symptoms themselves because they expect to be ill when they have a period.

Obviously having periods can be messy and some women consider them a misery and call periods ‘the curse’. Today’s Western woman will have 400—500 periods in a lifetime, but her ancient ancestors would only have had about thirty cycles, partly because of a later onset of periods and an earlier menopause and partly because most of the others would have been suppressed by having many pregnancies and breastfeeding on a prolonged basis.

Endometriosis is worth a mention here because it is found by chance during laparoscopic examination in up to 5 per cent of women whereas the condition is said to be present in up to half of subfertile ones. Endometrial cells (cells that normally form the lining of the uterus — the endometrium) are found outside the uterus in this condition, especially in the ovaries, bowels and behind the vagina. Such cells escape from the open, outer ends of the fallopian tubes during mensturation and are usually mopped up by the body’s defences. Defects in these defences possibly prevent the cells being scavenged and so endometriosis results. Women between 30 and 45 are most vulnerable and whilst many have no symptoms others suffer from heavy periods, abdominal and back pains, painful periods, and painful intercourse. Surgery, or a male-type hormone called Danazol, which induces a temporary false menopause, can be used to relieve the condition. Any blockage of the cervix which may encourage menstrual blood to flow along the tubes must also be cleared.

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WHAT TO DO WHEN MARRIAGE GOES WRONG: TALK IT OVER BETWEEN YOURSELVES AND TALK TO A CLOSE, TRUSTED FRIEND

March 27th, 2009

Probably about two out of three marriages have serious problems at some time although, as we have seen, only half of these will end in divorce. So what can someone who is worried about his or her marriage do?

Talk it over between yourselves-Read this far you will already have learned enough to have answered some of your main problems (we hope!) and throughout the rest of the articles you will find answers to many others, which you will be able to discuss with your partner. Ignorance of the facts is only one area of trouble, albeit an important one. Feelings are the biggest problem when things go wrong and often one cannot share one’s feelings about someone else with them. At this point a third party becomes almost essential.

Talk to a close, trusted friend-Don’t go around sharing your marital and relationship problems with just anybody or you will receive so much conflicting and unprofessional advice that you will be even more confused. Also, it may feel embarrassing for you and your partner when things improve. Seek out a trustworthy friend and talk things over rationally and confidentially. Bear in mind that a friend will tend to take your side because he or she likes you and will not want to offend you. A true friend will tell you the bad news along with the good, but such discussion can put intolerable stress on the friendship and may even kill it completely. Because there are so many problems with all this, lots of people do not confide their marital problems to friends or family but go straight to professionals.

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