Real Time - sulpha
News - sulpha
Something to sneeze at
14 May 2012, 11:12 pm
Sandie Blair barely remembers her first allergic reaction. The 50-year-old woman was at a Rotary Club function when she was stung by a bee.[...]
World - sulpha
Don’t Fry this Memorial Day - Occupational Health Safety
21 May 2012, 1:57 am
Many drugs increase sensitivity to sunlight and the risk of getting sunburn. Some common ones include thiazides, diuretics, tetracycline, doxycycline, sulfa antibiotics, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, such as ibuprofen. Workers at ...
Surviving history - theadvocate.com
19 May 2012, 11:57 pm
“The doctor said there was little he could do, but there was a lady whose child had died the day before, and she had this miracle drug called sulfa, and it may save the kid.” And it did. “I also think Elijah helped,” Roheim said. After their ...
COMING HOME: Solitaire - News Herald
19 May 2012, 2:38 pm
I remember it in capital letters as THE YEAR I WAS SICK. I began to run a low grade fever in March with no obvious ailment and no response to sulfa drugs or other attempted cures. They even checked for polio. I stayed in bed, saw the doctor ...
Something to sneeze at - Barrie Examiner
14 May 2012, 10:37 pm
Robert Ridge, president and CEO of Medicalert, says he has seen a large increase in the number of new allergic reactions in the past 20 years, including peanuts,
sulpha medications and penicillin. But there’s also been a sharp increase in food allergies ...
Sugar substitutes: acesulfame potassium - PennLive.com
10 May 2012, 10:56 pm
Many people, whether they are diabetic or just looking to reduce calories, want to eliminate refined white sugar from their diets. However, it can be confusing to sort out the truth about alternative sweeteners. This is the first in a series in ...
The Daily Floss #2—Bad Breath Begone! - Patch
10 May 2012, 6:59 pm
You see, when food or plaque remains on or between teeth it attracts bacteria that produce bad smelling chemicals called Volatile Sulfa Compounds. These compounds include hydrogen sulfide – the chemical that makes rotten eggs smell so awful.
Maurice Sendak - New York Times
8 May 2012, 11:48 pm
I’m a typical ’30s kid,’' he said in a 1988 Times interview. '‘We had every disease. There was no penicillin, there were no sulfa drugs, and you almost died of any number of what now are considered trivial diseases. I have a memory of my ...