Rhinophyma: Cosmetic Issue


Rhinophyma

Rhinophyma (an advanced type of rosacea) is characterized by an enlarged, bulbous, and red nose resulting from enlargement of the oil-producing glands beneath the surface of the skin on the nose. Depending on the severity of rhinophyma, doctors may begin treatment with topical or oral rosacea treatment.



What Is Rhinophyma?
To understand what rhinophyma is, it's important to first have a basic understanding of rosacea. Rosacea is a chronic disease that affects the skin. The disease is characterized by redness, pimples, and, in advanced stages, thickened skin. When rosacea reaches this advanced stage, rhinophyma may develop. The most common characteristic of rhinophyma is an enlarged, bulbous, and red nose. Rhinophyma is associated with the sebaceous (oil-producing) glands beneath the surface of the skin on the nose. The condition is more common in men than women.


Symptoms of Rhinophyma
Rhinophyma is characterized by an enlarged, bulbous, and red nose resulting from the enlargement of the sebaceous (oil-producing) glands beneath the surface of the skin on the nose.


What Causes Rhinophyma?
Doctors do not know the exact cause of rhinophyma.


Diagnosing Rhinophyma
Dermatologists usually diagnose rhinophyma by its appearance and associated symptoms because there are no tests that can diagnose this disease. However, on rare occasions, skin biopsies can pinpoint rhinophyma. Doctors will usually diagnose a patient with rhinophyma if the patient has rhinophyma symptoms and a family history of rhinophyma.


Current Treatment of Rhinophyma
Depending on the severity of the rhinophyma, doctors may begin treatment with topical or oral rosacea medications. Rhinophyma that does not respond to medications may be treated with:

Electrosurgery
Laser treatment
Dermabrasion
Resculpturing

ALOPECIA: HAIR LOSS causes


Hair loss






loss of hair is called alopecia.

Facts:
Hair loss usually develops gradually and may be patchy or diffuse (all over).

Roughly 100 hairs are lost from your head every day.

The average scalp contains about 100,000 hairs.
Each individual hair survives for an average of 4-1/2 years, during which time it grows about half an inch a month. Usually in its 5th year, the hair falls out and is replaced within 6 months by a new one.

Genetic baldness is caused by the body's failure to produce new hairs and not by excessive hair loss.
Both men and women tend to lose hair thickness and amount as they age. Inherited or "pattern baldness" affects many more men than women. About 25% of men begin to bald by the time they are 30 years old, and about two-thirds are either bald or have a balding pattern by age 60.


male pattern baldness involves a receding hairline and thinning around the crown with eventual bald spots. Ultimately, you may have only a horseshoe ring of hair around the sides. In addition to genes, male-pattern baldness seems to require the presence of the male hormone testosterone . Men who do not produce testosterone (because of genetic abnormalities or castration) do not develop this pattern of baldness.

Some women also develop a particular pattern of hair loss due to genetics, age, and male hormones that tend to increase in women after menopause. The pattern is different from that of men. Female pattern baldness involves a thinning throughout the scalp while the frontal hairline generally remains intact.

Common Causes:
Baldness is not usually caused by a disease, but is related to aging, heredity, and testosterone. In addition to the common male and female patterns from a combination of these factors, other possible causes of hair loss, especially if in an unusual pattern, include:
Alopecia areata -- bald patches that develop on the scalp, beard, and, possibly, eyebrows. Eyelashes may fall out as well.
Autoimmune conditions such as lupus
Burns
Certain infectious diseases such as syphilis
Chemotherapy
Emotional or physical stress
Excessive shampooing and blow-drying
Fever
Hormonal changes -- for example, thyroid disease , childbirth, or use of birth control pills
Nervous habits such as continual hair pulling or scalp rubbing
Radiation therapy
Tinea capitis (ringworm of the scalp)
Tumor of the ovary or adrenal glands

The Largest Physics experiment : Hoax of Doomsday ??







  1. When u attack the most difficult and fundamental questions [in science] you get a wide range of innovations, from MRI scanners to Facebook


"f you destroy particle physics and astronomy you will not produce more scientists working on carbon capture, you will just produce fewer scientists. "
Professor David L Wark



"The most powerful physics experiment ever built, the Large Hadron Collider will re-create the conditions just after the Big Bang in an attempt to answer fundamental questions of science and the universe itself. "



For More http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7567926.stm





10 September,



News of Suicide by a Girl in India:



The Fear of Doomsday, Hoax made by Indian Cheap News Channels Like AAjtak, has lead to suicide of a Girl in Bhopal.



Since last 7-8 days the channels have been making a hoax of a doomsday resulting from this experiment, creating fear in the minds of the viewers. even my friends got scared... like these were the last few days to live...



Is it right to make such kinda publicites just to increase TPR of TV channels.?



Please leave you valuable coments>>>>



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