theinfection.blogspot.com
INFECTIOUS DISEASE: Meningitis
http://theinfection.blogspot.com/2012/06/meningitis.html
Infectious diseases are responsible for a quarter of all human deaths. Human infectious diseases are caused by a wide variety of organisms. Infectious disease can be defined as any of the many diseases or illness caused by bacteria or viruses that can be transmitted from person to person, from animal to animal, or from organism to organism by directs or indirect contact. Friday, June 15, 2012. Attacks on the nervous system from bacteria and viruses can cause permanent central nervous system damage or dea...
theinfection.blogspot.com
INFECTIOUS DISEASE: Malaria in Ancient Greece and Rome
http://theinfection.blogspot.com/2009/03/malaria-in-ancient-greece-and-rome.html
Infectious diseases are responsible for a quarter of all human deaths. Human infectious diseases are caused by a wide variety of organisms. Infectious disease can be defined as any of the many diseases or illness caused by bacteria or viruses that can be transmitted from person to person, from animal to animal, or from organism to organism by directs or indirect contact. Wednesday, March 04, 2009. Malaria in Ancient Greece and Rome. Malaria in Ancient Greece and Rome. Three emperors, Hadrian, Vespasian a...
world-fruit.blogspot.com
World of Fruit: Lemon fruit (Citrus limon Linnaeus)
http://world-fruit.blogspot.com/2012/08/lemon-fruit-citrus-limon-linnaeus.html
Wednesday, August 8, 2012. Lemon fruit (Citrus limon Linnaeus). Lemon is an evergreen citrus tree native to Asia. The fruit is less knobbed at the extremities, is rather longer and more irregular and the skin is thinner than in the citron (citrus medica Linnaeus). The origin of lemon has been a mystery, although there exists some indication that it is a native of southeastern China, where it was known and cultivated before the Sung dynasty. Fruit pulp is an excellent source of vitamin. Commercially, lemo...
world-fruit.blogspot.com
World of Fruit: Tamarind fruit
http://world-fruit.blogspot.com/2012/06/tamarind-fruit.html
Monday, June 18, 2012. Botanically name Tamarindus indica L. It is a subtropical, multipurpose fruit tree. The name tamarind is derived from the Arabic tamar-u’l-Hind because of the resemble of the fruit pulp to dried dates. Mature fruits should have a brown shell, while immature pods have a green skin. The fruit is a pod containing a sticky brown to reddish-brown pulp which tastes both sweet and sour and contains the richest natural source of tartaric acid. English Guava in herbal medicine. This is a sh...
world-fruit.blogspot.com
World of Fruit: The cherimoya Fruit
http://world-fruit.blogspot.com/2013/12/the-cherimoya-fruit.html
Monday, December 2, 2013. The cherimoya (Annona cherimola) an aggregate fruit belong0gn to the Annonaceae family, is native to the subtropical region of South America. In most area, it is grown as a backyard tree or as part of a subsistence farming system as appropriate elevations. Universally regarded as a premium fruit, the cherimoya has been called the ‘pearl of the Andes’ and the ‘queen of subtropical fruits’. English Guava in herbal medicine. Different types of grapefruits. The grapefruit, one of th...
world-of-disease.blogspot.com
The disease: Symptoms of food allergies
http://world-of-disease.blogspot.com/2014/08/symptoms-of-food-allergies.html
Monday, August 18, 2014. Symptoms of food allergies. Symptoms of food allergies including:. Rhinitis – copious watery discharged from mucous membrane of nose. Asthma – pulmonary distress or breathing difficulty. Urticaria – hives. Eczema /atopic dermatitis –skin rash. Diarrhea – watery stools, usually with cramping. Angio-edema/edema – swelling, often widespread and severe especially when affecting the oral / laryngeal area. Symptoms of food allergies. Definition of renovascular hypertension. Coronary ar...
depress-unhappines.blogspot.com
DEPRESSION COUNSELING: Major depressive episode
http://depress-unhappines.blogspot.com/2015/07/major-depressive-episode.html
Depression commonly refers to a relatively transitory, negative mood experienced by human. The terms depression or depressed are used in both the ordinary, non-clinical sense and to refer specifically to pathology, especially when the mood of depression has reached a level of severity and/or duration that warrants a clinical diagnosis. Thursday, July 23, 2015. A major depressive episode is a period characterized by the symptoms of major depressive disorder. Note that for Major Depressive Disorder to be c...
ancientscholar.blogspot.com
ANCIENT SCHOLARS: Xenophon
http://ancientscholar.blogspot.com/2013/07/xenophon.html
Saturday, July 20, 2013. Xenophon, the son of Gryllus, and Athenian citizen was a native of the Attic demus Ercheia. Xenophon was born about 444 BC. He distinguished himself as a philosopher, a general and an historian. Xenophon came from and aristocratic family and was born a citizen of the cultural center of the Greek world. He left Greece after the Peloponnesian War to become one of 10,000 Greek mercenaries in the service of Cyrus the younger against his older brother King Artaxerses II of Persia.
worldhistory-middleeast.blogspot.com
History of Middle East: Predynastic Era of Egypt
http://worldhistory-middleeast.blogspot.com/2013/09/predynastic-era-of-egypt.html
History of Middle East. Tuesday, September 17, 2013. Predynastic Era of Egypt. The Predynastic Period of Egypt is traditionally the period between the Early Neolithic and the beginning of the Pharaonic monarchy beginning with King Narmer. The Predynastic people were presumably the ancestors of the Egyptians of historical times, thus a mixture of Hamitic, Semitic and Negroid. They made great strides in the development of agriculture, cultivating all sorts of grains, fruit and vegetables as well as flax.
worldhistory-middleeast.blogspot.com
History of Middle East: The religion of Sassanid
http://worldhistory-middleeast.blogspot.com/2015/08/the-religion-of-sassanid.html
History of Middle East. Saturday, August 08, 2015. The religion of Sassanid. The Sassanid Dynasty that ruled Iran from AD 224 to 651 replaced the Parthian Empire. The Sassanid saw themselves as successors of the Achaemenid after the Hellenistic and Parthian interlude and believed that it was their destiny to restore the greatness of Persian. Sassanid religious policies contributed to the flourishing of numerous religious reform movements, the most important were Manichean and Mazdakian religious doctrines.