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| Fibromyalgia-Fitness.com Releases a New Book Promoting Exercises for Fibromyalgia Wed, 25 Jan 2012 02:04:17 -0800 Can certain exercises for fibromyalgia relieve your chronic pain? Can a healthy diet soothe your fibromyalgia trigger points? The answer to both of these questions is YES! Fitness expert and author, Eric Suarez, offers healthy alternatives to this painful syndrome.New York, New York (PRWEB) January 25, 2012 Fibromyalgia affects over 5 million women in the United States alone; another 7-10 ...
| | | The Doctors: Fibromyalgia is a widespread, chronic condition Mon, 16 Jan 2012 12:51:29 -0800 There's no known cause, no blood test or X-ray to diagnose it, no magic pill to cure it -- so maybe it's no surprise that fibromyalgia is a disorder that's often misunderstood and sometimes unrecognized. Yet it’ Copyright 2012 Vail Daily. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Vail Daily The Doctors: Fibromyalgia is a widespread, chronic ...
| | | New Research Provides New Strategies for Those Living with Fibromyalgia Sun, 22 Jan 2012 23:26:12 -0800 Dr. Scott Stoney's, New Research shows that medicine isn’t the only answer for the chronic pain experienced by those suffering from fibromyalgia. In fact, for optimal rehabilitation outcomes in a fibromyalgia patient, the treatment should be tailored to the individual patient by addressing exercise, diet and psychological aspects as well as drugs. ...
| | | Mark C. Russell, Ph.D., ABPP: Underestimating the True Prevalence of War Stress Injury in the Military Sun, 05 Feb 2012 08:36:09 -0800 Media and official reports on prevalence rates of military war stress injury have focused almost exclusively on escalating rates of well-known war stress injuries such as PTSD, depression, generalized anxiety, substance abuse, and traumatic brain injury (TBI). However, the true impact from war trauma cannot be reduced to a handful of psychiatric diagnoses, as some may want.
| | | Exercise may boost mood for some chronically ill Thu, 26 Jan 2012 10:37:51 -0800 NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Working out regularly may brighten the mood of people with chronic health problems like cancer, heart disease and back pain, according to the first sweeping look at previous research. But it's no miracle cure: On average, six people would need to hit the gym or go for a jog for one person to see a mood improvement. "It's a nice piece of evidence and I'm pleased ...
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