Satellites for Real-Life Poker Tournament

If you are aiming to become a professional poker player, you must never miss any chance to play in a poker tournament. You know that there is chance for you to join a real-life tournament right away if you win a satellite tournament which is offered and held by many online poker rooms.

Poker wikipedia is your source if you want to re-learn about online poker before you throw yourself into the real-life poker tournament. You can learn about poker from the basic by visiting Wikipedia.org.  If you don’t know how to enter a satellite tournament on the online poker rooms, then you should visit pokergamblingindex. This is an online guide which will direct you to the safest poker room around the virtual world. If you wish to play online poker with Titan Poker, you must visit the online guide without any doubt. And inside this poker room you will get full guarantee for your real-money poker gambling because it uses 128-bit SSL technology for all financial transaction. It also has various poker games such as Texas holdem, Razz, 7-card stud, and Omaha. Since this room is the sponsor of the European Championship of Online Poker, the chance of you win $2.5 million dollar will be bigger.

Visit Pokergamblingindex.com right away and don’t miss you chance to win the jackpot.

Relieve Pain, Accelerate Recovery and Promote Health Using Electronic Muscle Stimulators

The human body can be fragile at times. We all suffer from injuries some time or other during the course of our lives. Injuries can be caused by sickness or accidents. When it happens to us, we all know that the recovery process can be a painful and lengthy one.

Fortunately, modern day technology is readily available to help with the healing process. Gadgets such as the electronic muscle stimulator can help provide the stimulation that our muscles need without adding additional stress to other parts of our body.

For example, an athlete may have suffered an ankle sprain. Thus, he is unable to carry out his daily runs. However, a sprain is an injury to the joint, not the muscle. If the athlete does not continue his training, his muscles will start to grow weak from lack of stimulation. An electronic muscle stimulator can help compensate the lack of exercise by providing the necessary stimulation. Here is how an electronic muscle stimulator work.

The gadget has a few pads that can be attached to the areas that require stimulation. An electric pulse is then sent to the muscles to provide some stimulation. This process is similar to way muscles are stimulated when an individual is engaged in exercise. The level of stimulation can be varied.

Users of the gadget say that they feel a slight tingling sensation when the device is at work. If the sensation becomes uncomfortable, the user can always turn the power down.

This device is light weight, portable, and very popular among the medical community. Is is often used by professional therapists to help heal many muscle related problems. And because it is portable, it is ideal for home use. Users can carry out therapeutic sessions at home without having to travel to medical centers.

Usually, after using the device, users claim that they feel much better. The feeling is very similar to the feeling experienced after an exercise session. The muscles tend to be more relaxed. In addition, the device promotes blood circulation, which improves the overall health of its users.

The electronic muscle stimulator is especially useful for people who are less mobile. Those who are injured, or of find it difficult to move around due to old age, will find this device essential. Old people tend to have weak joints due to bone degeneration. The stimulator allows the muscles to get the exercise that it needs without causing additional stress to the joints.

When in perfect health, the device is also good for improving the general health of the body by promoting blood circulation and helping muscles to relax. Muscles tend to tighten when an individual is under stress. And stress can be caused by work related problems. When stimulated, the muscles loosen up, and tension is released. The individual will also be able to sleep better at night!

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History of Medicine

Herbalism

There is no actual record of when the use of plants for medicinal purposes first started, although the first generally accepted use of plants as healing agents were depicted in the cave paintings discovered in the Lascaux caves in France, which have been Radiocarbon dated to between 13,000 – 25,000 B.CE.

Over time and with trial and error, a small base of knowledge was acquired within early tribal communities. As this knowledge base expanded over the generations, tribal culture developed into specialized areas. These ‘specialized jobs’ became what are now known as healers or Shaman.

Egyptian Medicine

Medical information contained in the Edwin Smith Papyrus date as early as 3,000 B.C. The earliest surgery was performed in Egypt around 2,750 B.C.

Imhotep in the 3rd dynasty is credited as the founder of ancient Egyptian medicine and as the original author of the Edwin Smith Papyrus, detailing cures, ailment and anatomical observations.

The Edwin Smith Papyrus is regarded as a copy of several earlier works and was written circa 1,600 B.C as an ancient textbook on surgery and describes in exquisite detail in the examination, diagnosis, treatment and prognosis of numerous ailment.

Medical institutions are known to have established in ancient Egypt since as early as the 1st Dynasty. By the time of the 19th Dynasty their employees enjoyed such benefits as medical insurance, pensions, sick leave and worked eight hours per day.

The earliest known physician is also credited to ancient Egypt: Hesrye, ìChief of Dentists and Physicianì for King Djoser in the 27th century B.C. Also the earliest women physician, Peseshet, practiced in Ancient Egypt at the time of the 4th dynasty. Her title was ìLady Overseer of the Lady Physicians.

Indian Medicine

Ayurveda (the science of living), the Vedic system of medicine originating over 3,000 years ago, views health as harmony between body, mind and spirit.

Its two most famous text belong to the schools of Charaka and Sushruta. According to Charaka, health and disease are not predetermined and life may be prolonged by human effort. Sushruta defines the purpose of medicine to cure the diseases of the sick, protect the healthy and to prolong life.

Ayurveda speaks of eight branches: kayachikitsa (internal medicine), shalyachikitsa (surgery including anatomy), shalakyachikitsa (eye, ear, nose and throat diseases), kaumarabhritya (pediatrics), bhutavidya (phychiatry or demonology), agada tantra (toxicology), rasayana (science of rejuvenation) and vajikarana ( the science of fertility).

Before graduation, the student was to pass a test. But the physician was to continue to learn through texts, direct observation (pratyaksha) and through inference (anumana).

In 2001, archeologists studying the remains of two men from Mehgarh, Pakistan, made the discovery that the people of Indus Valley Civilization, even from the early Harappan periods (circa 3,300 B.C), had knowledge of medicine and dentistry.

The physical anthropologist who carried out the examinitions, Professor Andrea Cucina from the University of Missouri-Columbia, made the discovery when he was cleaning the teeth from one of the men.

Chinese Medicine

Chinese also developed a large body of traditional medicine. Much of the philosophy of traditional Chinese medicine derived from empirical observations of disease and illness by Taoist physicians and reflects the classical Chinese belief that individual human experiences express causative principles effective in the environment at all scales.

During the golden age of his reign from 2,696 to 2,598 B.C, as a result of a dialogue with his minister, Ch’I Pai, the Yellow Emperor is supposed by Chinese tradition to have composed his Neijing Suwen or Basic Questions of Internal Medicine.

During the Han dynasty, Chang Chung-Ching, who was mayor of Chang-sha near the end of the second century A.D, wrote a Treatise on Typhoid Fever, which contains the earliest known reference to Neijing Suwen.

The Chin dynasty practitioner and advocate of acupuncture and moxibustion, Huang-fu Mi (215-282 A.D), also quotes the Yellow Emperor in his Chia I Ching, 265 A.D.

During the Tang dynasty, Wang Ping claimed to have located a copy of the originals of the Neijing Suwen, which he expanded and edited substancially.

Early European Medicine

Astrology played a very important part in early Western medicine; most university-educated physicians were trained in at least the basics of astrology to use in their practice. As societies developed in Europe and Asia, belief systems were replaced with a different natural system.

The Greeks, from Hyppocrates, developed a humoral medicine system where treatment was to restore the balance of humours within the body. Ancient Medicine is a treatise on medicine, written roughly 400 B.C by Hyppocrates.

Medieval medicine was an evolving mixture of the scientific and the spiritual. In the early middle ages, following the fall off the Roman Empire, standard medical knowledge was based chiefly upon surviving Greek and Roman texts, preserved in monasteries and elsewhere.

Islamic Medicine

The Islamic World rose to primacy in medical science with such thinkers as Ibn Sina (Avicenna), Ibn Nafis and Rhazes. The first generation of Persian superb physicians were trained at the Academy of Gundishapur, where the teaching hospital was the first invented.

The Comprehensive Book of Medicine (Large Comprehensive, Hawi or “al-Hawi” or “The Continence”) was written by the Iranian chemist Rhazes (known also as Razi), the “Large Comprehensive” was the most sought after of all his compositions.

The “Kitab fi al-jadari wa-al-hasbah” by Rhazes, with its introduction on measles and smallpox was also very influential in Europe.

The Mutazilite philosopher and doctor Ibn Sina was another influential figure. His The Canon of Medicine, sometimes considered the most famous book in the history of medicine, remained a standard text in Europe up until its Age of Enlightenment and the renewal of the Islamic tradition of scientific medicine.

Ibn Nafis described human blood circulation. This discovery would be rediscovered or perhaps merely demonstrated, by William Harvey in 1628, who generally receives the credit in Western history.

Modern Medicine

Medicine was revolutionized in the 18th century and beyond by advances in chemistry and laboratory techniques and equipment, old ideas of infectious disease epidemiology were replaced with bacteriology.

Ignaz Semmelweis in 1847 dramatically reduced the death rate of new mothers from childbed fever by the simple experiment of requiring physicians to wash their hands before attending to women in childbirth.

His discovery predated the germ theory of disease. However, his discoveries were not appreciated by his contemporaries and came into use only with discoveries of British surgeon Joseph Lister, who in 1865 proved the principles of antiseptic.

His work is based on the very important discoveries made by French biologist Louis Pasteur who was able to link some microorganisms with disease.

This brought a revolution in medicine. He also devised one of the most important methods in preventive medicine, when in 1880 he produced the vaccine against rabies.

Pasteur also invented the process of pasteurization to help prevent the spread of disease through milk and other foods, whom it’s named after.

Also Pasteur was an individual worker, an unlike his contemporary Robert Koch, regardless, Pasteur was a man who thought laterally and his vaccination for Rabies, was indeed a milestone, but no one still understood in the 1880s the mechanisms for such immunity.

The role of womankind was increasingly founded by the likes of Elizabeth Blackwell, Elizabeth Garret, Florence Nightingale, etc. They showed a previously a male dominated profession, the elemental role of nursing in lessening the aggravation of patient mortality, resulting from lack of hygiene and nutrition. Nightingale, set up the St Thomas hospital, post-Crimea, in 1852.

Robert Koch is considered one of the founders of bacteriology. He is famous for the discovery of the tubercle bacillus (1883) and for his development of Koch’s postulates.

It was not until the 20th century that there was a true breakthrough in medicine, with great advances in pharmacology and surgery. For the great war spurred the usage of Rontgen’s X-ray and the electrocardiograph, for the monitoring of internal bodily problems.

However, this was overshadowed by the remarkable mass production of penicillium antibiotic, which was a result of government and public pressure. The antibiotic prevented the deaths of thousands during the conquest of Vichy France in 1944. The 20th century witnessed a shift from a master-apprentice paradigm of teaching of clinical medicine to a more “democratic” system of medical schools.

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