Tolerance
Tolerance - most related articles:
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Glucose intolerance in pregnancy may lead to heart disease - 3.8
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Swearing can increase pain tolerance - 3.5
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Diabetes increases risk of dementia and Alzheimer's disease - 3.1
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Glucose challenge test for diabetes screening - 3
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Pedometers help people lose weight - 2.6
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Cardiorespiratory fitness lowers heart disease risk - 2.3
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Snoring pregnant at higher risk for gestational diabetes - 2.1
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Food allergy cases increased by 18% in last 10 years - 2
Tolerance articles
Sugary cola drinks increase gestational diabetes riskResearchers have found that drinking more than 5 servings of sugar sweetened cola a week prior to pregnancy appears to significantly elevate the risk of developing diabetes during pregnancy.
Glucose intolerance in pregnancy may lead to heart diseaseWomen who have gestational glucose intolerance (a condition less severe than gestational diabetes) exhibit multiple cardiovascular risk factors as early as three months after birth.
Swearing can increase pain toleranceResearchers from Keele University's School of Psychology have determined that swearing can have a 'pain-lessening effect,' according to new study published in NeuroReport, published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
Glucose challenge test for diabetes screeningGlucose challenge test commonly used to help identify women with diabetes during pregnancy may be an accurate, convenient and inexpensive way to screen the general population for unrecognized diabetes and prediabetes.
Diabetes drug exenatide helped nondiabetic obese individualsIn combination with diet and exercise, the diabetes drug exenatide helped nondiabetic, obese individuals lose over three times more weight than those receiving a placebo, or dummy treatment, for 6 months.
Gestational diabetes women may have type 2 diabetes laterGestational diabetes happens in more than three per cent of pregnancies in Ontario. Usually the condition resolves itself after delivery, but many studies have shown that these women are at a very high risk for developing "regular" type 2 diabetes later in life.
Job stress may cause strokeJapanese men in high-stress jobs appear to have an increased risk of stroke compared with those in less demanding positions, according to a report in the January 12 issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
Diabetes drugs double fractures risk in womenLong term use of a popular class of oral diabetic drugs doubles the risk of fractures in women with type 2 diabetes, revealed by researchers at the Wake Forest University School of Medicine and the University of East Anglia.
8 Tolerance articles listed above.
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