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"QUEEN’s CLINIC"

AIK PROB HAI DR JI

JAB MAIN KHANA KHA LOON TO MUJHAY US K BAAD BHOOK NAHI LAGTI KIUN ?


Posted on 2/23/2005 3:37:03 PM

aap apnay dimagh ka illaj karwain sab theek ho jaye ga

Posted on 2/25/2005 3:08:42 PM

Impetigo

Impetigo Photos

Impetigo (Pyoderma) is a superficial infection of the skin caused primarily by group A streptococci and occasionally by other streptococci or by Staphylococcus aureus.

This condition is seen most often in young children, tends to occur during the warmer months, and is more common in semitropical or tropical climates than in cooler regions. The infection occurs especially often among children living under conditions of poor hygiene.

Minor trauma, such as a scratch or an insect bite, may then serve to lodge bacteria into the skin and cause this infection. While the bacteria causing impetigo may have been caught from someone else with impetigo or boils, impetigo usually begins out of the blue without any apparent source of infection. Impetigo is best prevented, therefore, by attention to adequate hygiene.


Posted on 2/25/2005 3:26:35 PM

The usual sites of involvement are the face (particularly around the nose and mouth) and the legs, although lesions may occur at other locations.
Individual lesions begin as red papules, which turn quickly to vesicular and then pustular lesions that break down and coalesce to form characteristic honeycomb-like crusts. Lesions generally are not painful, and patients do not appear ill. Fever is not a feature of impetigo.

Bullous impetigo is a distinctive form of impetigo characterized by the presence of more extensive, bullous lesions that break down and leave thin paperlike crusts instead of the thick amber crusts of impetigo.



Posted on 2/25/2005 3:28:16 PM

Precautions:

Impetigo is contagious when there is crusting or oozing. While it's contagious, take the following precautions:
Patients should avoid close contact with other people.
Children should be kept home from school until the lesions crust over.
Use separate towels for the patient. The patient's towels, pillowcases, and sheets should be changed after the first day of treatment. His or her clothing should be changed and laundered daily for the first two days.
Usually the contagious period ends within two days after treatment starts.

Posted on 2/25/2005 3:29:10 PM

QUEEN VICTORIA:
aap apnay dimagh ka illaj karwain sab theek ho jaye ga



DImagh hai hi nahi to ilaj






Posted on 2/25/2005 5:32:48 PM

adii..
yeh sab ko pata hai

Posted on 3/3/2005 10:54:27 PM

waisay queeniV hein kahan

Posted on 3/3/2005 10:55:01 PM

kash_beauty:
adii..
yeh sab ko pata hai




SHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH

NAHI PAATA SABKO

Posted on 3/4/2005 12:39:45 PM

kash_beauty:
waisay queeniV hein kahan



PATA NAHI KAHAN GAIB HAIN

Posted on 3/4/2005 12:41:57 PM

pata hai sab ko

QV

Posted on 3/4/2005 8:54:42 PM

main aa gaye
kisi nay mujhay mis nahin kya
bewafa log

Posted on 3/5/2005 11:37:11 AM

hum nay kia na miss
issliye tou app ko pukara
app nay apna yahoo tou chk kia hota

Posted on 3/5/2005 1:59:43 PM

Hepatitis

Hepatitis is a type of Liver disease. Most commonly caused by viral infections which are of different types – Hepatitis A virus, B virus, Delta virus, C virus, Non-A, Non –B virus, Cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Bar virus, Herpes simplex virus, Yellow fever virus.

Hepatitis A virus

Is highly infectious. Spreads by faeco oral route. Poor sanitation aids in its spread. In occasional out breaks water, milk, and shellfish has been the source of spread. In this form a carrier state does not exist. The disease is usually mid as compared to Hepatitis B infection.

Hepatitis B virus

In this type of hepatitis the main source of infection is blood, and the spread my follow transfusion of infected blood or blood products or infection with contaminated needles. Tattooing and acupuncture can also spread this disease. Close personal contacts such as sexual intercourse and specially in the homosexuals is also an important cause of infection. It can be also spread to child from mother at or soon after birth.

Hepatitis B vaccines are available to protect against this infection. This vaccine is ineffective in those already infected with this disease. Vaccination against Hepatitis B forms part of compulsory vaccination of infants in the first year of life. Three doses are needed at 0, 1 and 6 months interval.

Hepatitis B Vaccination

Hepatitis B infected individuals carry this infection throughout life. Some are just carriers without having any symptoms of any illness. Some may have acute illness and some develop chronic liver diseases. These persons are at a much high risk of developing Liver cancer in later life.


Posted on 3/7/2005 1:10:41 PM

Delta virus

The delta virus is an RNA containing partial virus which has no independent existence. It requires the hepatitis B virus for replication and has the same source and mode of spread. It causes progressive chronic hepatitis and eventually cirrhosis.

Non-A, Non-B, C and E viruses

Non-A, Non-B and C hepatitis is caused by several viruses. The mode of transmission in humans is similar to those of hepatitis B virus. In developed countries Non-A and Non-B & C hepatitis is now cause of 90 % of the post transfusion hepatitis. It can also be spread by other blood products.

Hepatitis E virus is an enterically transmitted virus that occurs primarily in India, Asia, Africa, and Central America. This agent, has epidemiologic features resembling those of hepatitis A. The virus has been detected in stool, bile, and liver from infected patients as well as from experimentally infected nonhuman primates. Studies in humans and experimental animals have shown that HEV is excreted in the stool during the late incubation period.

The commonly recognized cases occur after contamination of water supplies such as after monsoon flooding. An epidemiologic feature that distinguishes HEV from other enteric agents is the rarity of secondary person-to-person spread from infected persons to their close contacts. In outbreaks of waterborne hepatitis E in India and Asia, the case-fatality rate is 1 to 2 percent and up to 10 to 20 percent in pregnant women. The most feared complication of viral hepatitis is fulminant hepatitis (massive hepatic necrosis).



Posted on 3/7/2005 1:11:49 PM

abbi tuk hepatitis ka ilaaz koyoo nahiii mila?

Posted on 3/7/2005 1:15:25 PM

vaccination hai na

Posted on 3/7/2005 2:14:26 PM

kash_beauty:
pata hai sab ko

QV


KIA PATA HAI ..QUEENY KO AANAY DO ..BATATA HOON

Posted on 3/8/2005 10:26:05 AM

QUEEN VICTORIA:
main aa gaye
kisi nay mujhay mis nahin kya
bewafa log



HUM NAY KIA NA .... MEANZ NAAA

Posted on 3/8/2005 10:28:21 AM

tum sau umeed bhi yahi thi mujhay

Posted on 3/9/2005 11:40:24 AM

AB HUM NAY KIA KIYA HAI ...

Posted on 3/9/2005 2:13:47 PM

AAJ CLINIC KI CHUTTI HAI

Posted on 3/9/2005 2:14:43 PM

JB KA RAJA:
KIA PATA HAI ..QUEENY KO AANAY DO ..BATATA HOON


wohi pata hai jo app ko samjh nahin aaye ga

queeni ko batayein!
shoq say batayein

woh bhi hamara he saath dein gi

Posted on 3/10/2005 2:11:56 PM

NAHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

Ayeee NAhi hooooooo sakdaaaaaaaaaa

Hun main kia karan gaaaaaaaaaaaaaa

Ayee Changi gal nahi..


Posted on 3/10/2005 5:40:47 PM

app k saath yehi hona chahiye

Posted on 3/10/2005 5:44:56 PM

HMMM WO KIUN JI

Posted on 3/11/2005 9:26:39 AM

kya gapain laga rahay ho aap log farigh baith k ..................
adi tum nay meray aanay say pehlay abhi tak clinic ki safai nahin ki

Posted on 3/11/2005 11:47:09 AM

QUEEN VICTORIA:
kya gapain laga rahay ho aap log farigh baith k ..................
adi tum nay meray aanay say pehlay abhi tak clinic ki safai nahin ki


QUEENY JI WO

MASI HUM SAY GAPAIN LAGA RAHI THI ..

HUM TO CHUP CHAP BETH KAR US KI BONGIAN DEKH RAHAY HAIN ....

SAFAI HUM KIUN KARAIN ..MASI KARAY GI ...

HUm TO ...........................

SOIN GAI

Posted on 3/11/2005 12:14:50 PM

LO HUN MAIN KOI JOOOTH BOLIA ..

Posted on 3/11/2005 12:17:09 PM

sach bhi kabhi nahin bola

Posted on 3/11/2005 8:14:54 PM