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To: Valuepro who wrote (13707)7/16/2017 4:29:22 AM
From: Yorikke  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17072
 
Given your lyme problems I'd go up to 40K iu per day if your pth is high enough. Really. You have taken a big a hit and you don't realize how D3 can help you in this area. I might give you a hard time, but I've seen what D3 supplementation can do for people who have had bad hits to their immune system. At the very least go to 20K iu per day. I have dozens of friends who I've talked into that and almost everyone reports improvement in their day to day lives. (I helped a friend out of lyme infection many years ago. He finally went with antibiotics and just got through--but he was never the same.)

You need to be taking ten times as much D3 as you are taking now, and likely twenty. Get the blood tests, and learn the symptoms of toxicity.

Studies have shown that even at 40K per day people very very rarely suffer from any toxicity. My advice is to do the 40K (with olive oil) and K supplements, take a break every other weekend or so. ie it is ok to miss a few days. Remember that sun shine is good from about 10-2 and harmful in the later afternoon. Sun helps the body actually produce other hormones in addition to D3. But you only benefit by about 20 minutes per day. When you start, do less than 20 minutes fo sunshine exposure.

I'd also look at NAC, NAD+, pterostilbene, Niacin or Niacinamide, L-glutamine, which are great anti aging supplements, and very positive antioxidants.

You are killing yourself slowly with 2K per day --even 10, given your history. Push the limits. If you have any kind of pth rating you could do 100K a day for a couple of week without any problems. Remember the iu ratings are completely arbitrary. Panic about D3 is based on mid 20th century studies that were dosing at 1000K iu per day and more. None of those people died. They simply drank lots of water and stopped supplementation

good luck .



To: Valuepro who wrote (13707)7/28/2017 9:41:03 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Respond to of 17072
 



To: Valuepro who wrote (13707)7/31/2017 10:18:16 PM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17072
 
Man’s quest for bigger penis turns deadly
By Leah Bitsky

July 31, 2017 | 9:10pm | Updated

Modal Trigger
Shutterstock

This patient didn’t get the happy ending he was looking for.

A Swedish man was undergoing a phalloplasty, or penile elongation and girth enhancement procedure, when things went south, a study revealed.

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The 30-year-old, who had no prior medical history besides mild asthma, went into cardiac arrest towards the end of the surgery, the Journal of Forensic Sciences reports. Doctors tried to resurrect the patient while he was rushed to an emergency hospital but were unsuccessful and he died shortly after.

An autopsy revealed that while his heart was slightly enlarged, his health was otherwise normal and the cause of death was attributed to a pulmonary fat embolism.

The standard penile procedure is performed by taking fat cells from other parts of the body using liposuction and injecting them into the penis, according to the journal. In this patient’s case, fat was removed from his abdomen.

While penis enhancement surgery is quite common, researchers warned that there are always risks, referring specifically to several cases where patients have died from gluteal lipoinjection, where fat is transferred to a person’s buttock.

“This is the first described case where a seemingly simple and safe procedure of a penis enlargement by autologous fat transfer caused sudden death in a healthy young man,” the journal states. “Perhaps the risk of fat embolisation is higher when pretraumatized tissue is subjected to fat injection, like in this case, where a penis elongation by loosening of a penile ligament was performed before the fat injection.”

Approximately 8,400 penis enlargement surgeries are performed each year worldwide despite its risks, according to the International Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery.

A study conducted by condom brand SKYN reveals that the average penis size is 6.1 inches when erect.



To: Valuepro who wrote (13707)8/17/2017 10:32:07 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Respond to of 17072
 
Pubic Hair Grooming:
How Often People Hurt Themselves


Bruce Y. Lee ,

CONTRIBUTOR

Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.



How safe is the road ahead? (Photo: Shutterstock)

What could possibly go wrong when you use a sharp object or hot wax on your private areas? Apparently a lot, according to a survey just published in JAMA Dermatology.

Bragging about your sports injuries may seem cool at a party or on a date. Bragging about your pubic hair grooming injuries, not so much. However, a team of researchers from the University of California, San Francisco (Matthew D. Truesdale, MD, E. Charles Osterberg, MD, Thomas W. Gaither, Mohannad A. Awad, MD, Molly A. Elmer-DeWitt, MD, Isabel Allen, PhD, and Benjamin N. Breyer, MD, MAS) and the Washington University School of Medicine (Siobhan Sutcliffe, PhD) did what you naturally do when you want to find out more about pubic hair grooming injuries: send 14,?409 surveys to a nationally representative sample of 18 to 65 year olds in the United States. A little over half (52.5% or 7570 people) completed the questionnaire, with 55.5% being men and 44.5% being women.

The survey found bushels and bushels of pubic hair groomers. Over three-quarters (76.1%) said that they had groomed their pubic hair (66.5% of men and 85.3% of women). It also found that injuries were rather common. Slightly over a quarter (25.6%) of those who had groomed had injured themselves in the act. More women (868 or 27.1%) than men (562 or 23.7%) had suffered injuries. Cuts (61.2%) were the most common type of injury, followed by burns (23.0%) and then rashes (12.2%).

Nearly two thirds (66.5%) said "oops I did it again" and had injured themselves more than once. Close to a third (32.2%) had hurt themselves five or more times. However, the vast majority of injuries didn't seem to require medical attention with 3.4% necessitating antibiotics for infections and 2.5% needing surgery. However, more severe injuries were more likely when the person was lying on his or her back or others were grooming the person's pubic hair.

The JAMA Dermatology article also included "heat maps" showing what percentage of the injuries occurred where on the body. Note that these are not the "safe to open up at work" type of heat maps. For men, the scrotum (67.2%) was the most frequent target, followed by the penis (34.8%), and the pubis (28.9%). For women, the pubis (51.3%) came in first. Next was the inner thigh (44.9%) then the vagina (42.5%), and then the perineum (13.2%).

The study also found that men who considered themselves hairier or removed all of their pubic hair over 11 times were more likely to have injured themselves. Women who removed all of their pubic hair more than once were more likely to injure themselves. However, women who waxed were less likely to have frequent injuries.

Of course, the best way to avoid pubic hair grooming injuries is to not groom your pubic hair. As I detailed previously for Forbes, there is no scientific evidence that grooming pubic hair is more hygienic or has health benefits. In fact, removing pubic hair can cause small abrasions and cuts that serve as a gateway for secually transmitted diseases. But if you must, then take the following precautions:

Look: This isn't "Pin the Tail On the Donkey." Keep your eyes on what you are doing.Focus and don't multi-task: Grooming, talking on the phone, surfing the Internet, and cooking dinner all at once may seem like it can save time but...Clean up before you clean up: Oil, dirt, and whatever objects may be hiding in your pubic hair can make the razor or clippers slip.Use and maintain the right instruments: Using tools that are too dull (e.g. butter knife), too sharp (e.g., machete), too large (e.g., sword), or just not appropriate (e.g., basically everything mentioned previously) raises your risk of injury.Proceed gradually: Trying to get rid of all your pubic hair at once can be pushing a lawn mower throw a corn field. Instead, first carefully trim your hair to a shorter more manageable length first.Don't go against the grain: Grooming may make you feel like a rebel but you really should be shaving in the direction of hair growth not against it.Use moderation: Take it easy. It's your pubic hair and not mold. Get off your back: This is not the time to be lazy. Position your body properly so that you can see, are not unbalanced, and are not reaching too far.Be careful of who you let near you genitals: This is probably a good general rule, but also applies specifically to whomever you get to groom your public hair.While the majority of grooming injuries may be minor, grooming is not without its risks. If you do want to groom, make sure you groom yourself to be a safe and proper groomer.

Comment on this story

forbes.com



To: Valuepro who wrote (13707)8/21/2017 4:48:38 PM
From: Pogeu Mahone1 Recommendation

Recommended By
toccodolce

  Respond to of 17072
 
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conservativedailypost.com.

15 Muslims Forced To Get Rabies Shots As Police Order Their 'Pleasure Donkey' Be Killed.

Posted by Georgette Walrath | Aug 17, 2017 | Liberal Corruption, ...



To: Valuepro who wrote (13707)8/30/2017 10:47:37 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Respond to of 17072
 
Woman banks $60K selling her dirty underwear online
By Natalie Keegan, The Sun

August 29, 2017 | 2:10pm

Modal Trigger
Caters News Agency

ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED BY:

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A woman has revealed how she’s made over $60,000 selling her used knickers, hair and toenail clippings to men she nicknames her “pay pigs.”

Yasmin Night (not her real name) 24, even sells sanitary napkins on the fetish market and her “pay pigs” also pay for her groceries, car and luxury holidays.

Night, from London, who used to work as a cleaner, was $7,700 in debt when she turned to the online fetish market in 2016.

Now, she encourages cash-strapped females to follow in her footsteps.

The young woman peddles her pants to men in exchange for payment of her groceries, household bills, designer clothing — and even luxury holidays with her boyfriend.

Night, who goes by alias #kandikaine, has now written a book called “House Of Hosiery,” which lifts the lid on her double life., including her claim that she has serviced high-profile celebrity clients.

“I was working as a cleaner, but I was tired of the way I was being treated,” she said. “It was literally making me ill, I was in dire straits financially, and I was sick and tired of it. I had heard about ‘selling worn underwear online’ years before and one day I thought I would give it a go to scrape some money together until I found more work.”

Modal Trigger

13

Caters News Agency

“The requests for items included knickers, socks, bras, but I’ve sold sanitary napkins, urine, hair, foot shavings, bikinis and even toenails. You name it, I’ve sold it.”

“I have sold to a few well-known individuals, but for obvious reasons, I cannot name them and they wanted more than just my knickers!”

Since she began selling items online, Night has banked a total of $64,000 selling pants for as much as $96 per pair.

And after delving deeper into the sordid world, she found the market included much more than just what was sitting in her laundry basket.

For the last two years, she has made the bulk of her income from one “pay pig” man who supports her lifestyle — and even that of her partner — because he receives sexual gratification from being exploited.

Modal TriggerNight also sells sanitary napkins and Q-tips on the fetish market.Caters News AgencyBut Night insists the man isn’t risking financial strain because she does not pressure him into giving her more than he could afford.

She said: “My ‘paypig’ has paid for my grocery shopping and more than $6,400 of household items and furniture, clothes and shoes.

“He’s even looking at getting me a car. Anything I want, he foots the bill. He even paid for a holiday for me and my boyfriend at a luxury villa with our own chauffeur and dinners at high-end restaurants.”

“He adores it when I drain his wallet for my own financial gain. I know he works in IT but he never disclosed how much he earns. I wouldn’t poke to find out, either.”

“He just enjoys being controlled financially. If he didn’t enjoy it he wouldn’t do it.”

“Nothing is pressured and we both have a mutual understanding of the boundaries.”

When it comes to selling her pants, Night is meant to wear each pair of knickers for up to a week in order to fulfill the fantasies of her buyers.

But there are some tricks of the trade, including improvising with a “knicker solution” that replicates the effects of being well-worn if she is pressed for time.

Modal TriggerIn addition to paying off her bills, Night uses the money to buy herself clothes, shoes and accessories.Caters News AgencyAnd she said some of her clients include high profile household names – but she won’t name them for fear of losing their business.

Despite only telling “very close friends” about what she does, Night has called on other women looking to boost their income to follow suit.

Night said: “Only my close friends know because I can trust them not to say anything to anyone. I don’t want attention for doing what I do.”

“People who don’t understand would be against it. I’m a very quiet person who has no drama, I don’t want to air my dirty laundry out to dry, forgive the pun.”

“I encourage women to start doing this for a living. Whether just for extra cash or full time, it’s easy money and you never know they may find a pay pig like I did!”



To: Valuepro who wrote (13707)8/31/2017 10:46:31 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17072
 
Here's How Oral Sex Can Give You Cancer

The number of oral sex-related throat cancers are rising—here's why

BY ALISA HRUSTICAugust 31, 2017



You know the benefits of oral sex: It builds intimacy, helps her orgasm, and feels fantastic. In fact, we doubt any of the 85 percent of adults who have had oral sex at least once with their partner would argue that it’s notpretty damn awesome.

But that doesn’t mean oral sex is risk-free. In fact, it’s one of the most common ways to spread sexually transmitted diseases, like chlamydia, gonorrhea, herpes, and human papillomavirus (HPV), according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

And depending on the strain you’re infected with, HPV can raise your risk of cancer—specifically of your oropharynx, or the middle part of your throat.

In fact, the number of people diagnosed with HPV-linked throat cancer is growing: Researchers found the presence of HPV in 21 percent of patients with oropharyngeal cancer before 1990. After 2000, 65 percent of sampled patients showed HPV, according to a meta-analysis published in Chemical Research in Toxicology.

“We’re just seeing the tip of the iceberg of this problem, and it’s really a public health crisis,” explains Ted Teknos, M.D., chairman for the Department of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery at Ohio State University’s Wexner Medical Center. He says that cases of HPV-related throat cancers have risen 300 percent from the 1980s to the 2000s.

“We’re just seeing the effects now, but it’s going to be much more common in the coming years and decades,” he adds.

Here’s everything you need to know about how oral sex can raise your risk for throat cancer—and exactly what you can do to protect yourself from it.

Related: 10 Top Cancer Experts Reveal What They Do to Avoid the Deadly Disease

What Is Throat Cancer?Throat cancer, officially known as oropharyngeal cancer, is more than twice as common in men than women, according to the American Cancer Society. It specifically affects your tonsils and the base, or the very back, of your tongue, says Dr. Teknos.

Throat cancer is different from oral cancer, which occurs in your lips, gums, tongue, linings of your cheek, or the roof or floor of your mouth. Throat cancer and oral cancer share some common causes—think smoking or chewing tobacco—but HPV is not one of them. Certain HPV strains are linked to throat cancer, not to oral cancer, he explains.

Related: 5 Man-Killing Cancers You Might Not Spot Until It’s Too Late

How Is Oral Sex Linked to Throat Cancer?About 70 percent of oropharyngeal cancers are caused by HPV, says the National Cancer Institute. So what’s going on?

HPV is a shockingly common STD. Between 2013 and 2014, 45 percent of men aged 18 to 59 carried some form of HPV, according to the most recent CDC data. It's so common that if you’re sexually active, you'll probably contract it at some point in your life.

But that definitely doesn’t mean everyone who does will go on to develop the cancer. That’s because in the vast majority of the cases, your body will fight it off, clearing it from your system within 1 to 2 years.

There are more than 40 types of HPV that can infect you, though. And some strains are more serious than others. Doctors call them “high risk” strains, and researchers found that of the men who tested positive for genital HPV, 25 percent carried at least one of them. The type most commonly linked to throat cancer is called HPV 16.

Research shows that nearly 7 percent of Americans have oral HPV, but only 1 percent carries that cancer-causing type, according to the CDC.

If you’re unlucky enough to harbor a cancer-causing strain, proteins that are coded by the virus can attack your cells and cause them to grow out of control. At the same time, it messes with cell suicide—a scary-sounding process that’s actually completely normal, and stops cells from multiplying unchecked if there’s a problem there, explains Dr. Teknos. As a result, cancerous cells can begin to increase rapidly, causing the formation of the HPV-positive tumor.

Why Is HPV-Related Throat Cancer Increasing?It wasn’t until recently that doctors and researchers made the link between HPV and throat cancer. Decades ago, the vast majority of throat cancers were caused by smoking—and the cancers were notoriously difficult to treat.

But from the early ‘80s to ‘90s, hospitals started seeing patients who had never smoked developing cancer in their tonsils, and their cancers were a lot easier to cure than the smokers’ cancer were.

“That’s when people knew something was different,” says Dr. Teknos.

Zeroing in on the sexual revolution of the 60s, they landed on HPV as the likely culprit. The STD can be passed by giving and receiving oral sex, and even by open mouth kissing alone. If your throat is infected with it, and you go down on your partner, you can transmit it to him or her, and vice versa.

Once it’s in your throat, it can lay dormant for decades—that’s why doctors are just now seeing an uptick in oral sex-related cancer diagnoses.

What Are Throat Cancer Symptoms?Scary thing is, HPV-linked throat cancer is virtually symptomless at its early stages.

The telltale sign, which usually appears only when it's progressed to a more advanced stage? A painless lump in your neck. “It’s usually right where you get swollen glands from tonsillitis, the upper part of the neck right next to your voice box region,” explains Dr. Teknos.

Most guys will feel it while they’re shaving and mistake it for an infection—and if you rock a beard, you might not even notice it at all.

Other symptoms include trouble swallowing, subtle changes to your voice, and a mild sore throat that can persist and became more painful over time, but these are typically more pronounced in people with smoking-related throat cancer.

Related: Does Shaving Your Pubic Hair Really Increase Your Risk For STIs?

How Can Your Protect Yourself From HPV-Related Throat Cancer?Most people catch HPV during their sexually robust college years, explains Dr. Teknos. In fact, about 10 percent of students on campuses have cancer-causing HPV in their mouths at any given time, he says.

Again, that doesn’t mean all those people will go on to get the cancer: In most cases, your body will clear the infection within two years (During that time, though, you’d still be able to pass it on to your partners).

The best way to dodge it is to play the preventive game. Get the HPV vaccine to protect yourself from the cancer-causing strains. If you’re 26 or younger, insurance will cover the vaccine. If you didn’t get it when you were a kid, you can still get the vaccine as an adult if you meet certain criteria, per the CDC’s recommendations. (Here’s exactly how you can prevent HPV.)

“There’s only about 1 percent of cancers that have been identified due to strains that may or may not be included in the vaccine, so it’s 99 percent preventable with vaccination—but the key is, you need to vaccinate yourself before you’re exposed,” says Dr. Teknos.

If you’re well over the vaccine age limit and don’t meet the other criteria, you can help keep yourself safe by limiting your number of sexual partners. Research shows your risk skyrockets once you’re sexually involved with six or more people, explains Dr. Teknos. Utilizing condoms and dental dams correctly can also lower your risk. (We love these Lelo Hex condoms from the Men’s Health store, since they’re ultra thin and pre-lubricated.)

There’s not much you can do to minimize your risk once you’ve been diagnosed with HPV. Think of it this way: People who smoke a lot and drink heavily are at a 40 times higher risk of developing throat cancer malignancies than people who don’t.

That risk is 55 times higher for someone with HPV, says Dr. Teknos.

But if you do get the cancer from your HPV infection, there’s more than a 90 percent chance that you’ll successfully be cured of it, he says. Like with all cancers, earlier detection can improve your changes of survival, so if you notice any of the symptoms listed above—especially if you’ve been diagnosed with HPV—loop in your doctor as soon as possible.



To: Valuepro who wrote (13707)9/1/2017 11:31:12 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 17072
 
A Poll Asked Men To Identify The Vagina, Half Of Them Were Unable To Do So.This is really bad for your gynecological health.
08/31/2017 11:00 EDT | Updated 1 hour ago


Chloe TejadaLifestyle Editor, HuffPost Canada





Men and women have been having sex together for, well, quite a long time. But even though it's 2017, it seems like many dudes still don't even know where the vagina is.

According to a recent survey by a gynecological cancer charity, half of the men polled were unable to identify the vagina, reports the Independent.





The Eve Appeal asked 2,000 Brits, half of whom were men, to point out the location of the vagina on a diagram, but 50 per cent of the men were unable to find it.

KINWUN VIA GETTY IMAGESHere's a helpful diagram.

The survey results were released to coincide with the start of Gynaecological Cancer Awareness Month in the U.K., which falls in September, but the poll's authors say their findings are a concern in that, for many men, women's bodies are "still a taboo subject, shrouded in mystery."

As a result of the findings, the charity says there needs to be better awareness of gynecological issues among men, as 17 per cent of the men polled "know nothing about gynecological health issues and don't feel that they need to know, as it is a female issue." Half of the men surveyed also admitted that they wouldn't feel comfortable talking about these issues with a female partner.

PAUL VIANT VIA GETTY IMAGES

Last year, however, The Eve Appeal found that 44 per cent of women couldn't locate the vagina on a diagram, showing that gynecological awareness was also needed for ladies. The charity also found that 19 per cent of women wouldn't go to the doctor if they had abnormal vaginal bleeding, even though this is a symptom of all five gynecological cancers, reports the Independent.

"These survey results show shockingly low levels of awareness of the symptoms of gynaecological cancer among both men and women," noted Athena Lamnisos, The Eve Appeal's chief executive.

These survey results show shockingly low levels of awareness of the symptoms of gynaecological cancer among both men and women."We know from the many calls that we receive at The Eve Appeal from men, that they can play a vital role in identifying the symptoms of gynaecological cancer, prompting their partners to visit the GP. Early diagnosis really is key and can save lives.

"This is not about having better sex. It's about men helping women to look after their health. Gynae awareness and taboo busting are all of our responsibility, men and women alike."

This is not about having better sex. It's about men helping women to look after their health. According to Statistics Canada, there were 82,885 new cases of cancer in Canadian women in 2010 — 12 per cent of which involved reproductive system cancers — and the most common types of female reproductive system cancers were of the uterus, ovary, and cervix.

Out of these reproductive system cancers, ovarian cancer was the deadliest, causing 9.5 deaths per 100,000 women in 2010, whereas cervical cancer was more likely to affect younger women than uterine or ovarian cancer.

ERICSPHOTOGRAPHY

Signs and symptoms of ovarian cancer include, but are not limited to, abnormal vaginal bleeding; a lump that can be felt in the pelvic or abdominal area; a need to urinate often; constipation; fatigue; bloating; and painful intercourse, reports the Canadian Cancer Society.

Symptoms of gynecological cancer can include irregular bleeding; vaginal discharge that smells; pain during intercourse; changes to the appearance of the skin on the vulva; changes in bowel or urinary habits that last longer than a month; and increased urination.

Out of these reproductive system cancers, ovarian cancer was the deadliest, causing 9.5 deaths per 100,000 women in 2010."Women should never be embarrassed to see a healthcare practitioner if they have concerns about their gynaecological health," said professor Janice Rymer, vice president of education at the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists.

"It is vital to seek help if women experience any unusual vaginal bleeding, change in bowel or urinary habits, pain or discomfort during sex, or unpleasant smelling vaginal discharge. It may be nothing serious, but it's best to get it checked out."

http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2017/08/31/men-cant-find-vagina_a_23192171/