Month: October 2019

Muscles hurt – I won’t go to the gym. Runny nose – especially stay at home.

Unfortunately, our brain can come up with a hundred reasons for not doing something when you don’t want to. And training in the gym refers to what our brain does not particularly like. Much nicer to go to the movies, isn’t it? 🙂 And when there is at least the slightest reason not to go to […]

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Morning exercises in the simulator.

Before, I always practiced in the mornings, and it happened that I got up at 7 o’clock on the alarm clock to be in the gym at 8 o’clock. Naturally, I was reluctant to study, I was sleepy, sometimes I did not even have time to have breakfast. And these workouts were useless. My advice to you – […]

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A 2-time visit to the gym per week with a duration of about 2 hours.

10 years I was engaged in such a scheme. Muscles did not grow. I read somewhere about this scheme and I liked it. Some pitching friends advised me to go more often than 2 times a week, but it didn’t work out (studies, work, etc. interfered). And in general, I’m so stubborn in life and if I drive something […]

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Historical Amebiasis Data

The causative agent of the disease was discovered by F. A. Leshem in 1875 when examining the feces of a patient with bloody diarrhea and named him Amoeba coll . F. A. Lesch considered Amoeba coli to be the causative agent of a special type of dysentery. He also infected four dogs with feces of this patient, one of which got an acute […]

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Epidemiology of Amebiasis

The source of infection is sick amoebiasis and cystocarriers , which are capable of long-term (years) excreting amoeba cysts with feces into the environment. Cystonosia and convalescents after intestinal amoebiasis can produce about 500 million cysts per day. Carriers of cysts remain about 10% of people who have had acute amoebiasis. Patients with acute amoebiasis, which secrete mainly vegetative forms of the pathogen, are not epidemiologically dangerous.The […]

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Pathogenesis and pathomorphology of amoebiasis

Infection occurs when the amoeba cysts with food or water enter the digestive canal. Cysts easily overcome the acid barrier of the stomach, in the small intestine, their membrane is dissolved by enzymes and four amoeba metacysts come out from each cyst , from which vegetative forms of amoeba form through transverse division. The latter intensively multiply in the upper part […]

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Amebiasis Clinic

. According to the recommendations of the WHO Expert Committee (1970), three clinical forms of amoebiasis are distinguished: intestinal, extraintestinal, and cutaneous. Undisputed is the need for details of the above classification.Intestinal amoebiasis (80%)1. Acute amoebiasis: a) amoebic colitis, b) amoebic dysentery. 2. Chronic amoebiasis: a) amoebic colitis, b) amoebic dysentery. 3. Intestinal complications of amoebiasis: a) perforation with peritonitis, b) intestinal ameboma , c) amoebic appendicitis. Extraintestinal amoebiasis (2%). 1. […]

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Complications of Amebiasis

There are intestinal and extraintestinal complications of amoebiasis. Among intestinal complications, pericolitis , perforation of the intestinal wall with peritonitis, intestinal bleeding, amoeboma , narrowing (stricture) of the intestine, acute specific appendicitis, exfoliating colitis (rarely) are of greatest importance .A serious, but rare complication of amoebiasis is perforated purulent peritonitis, which can be ovarian or widespread.Intestinal bleeding as a complication is observed in any […]

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