Prostate Cancer

Prostate cancer is a type of cancer that happens in the prostate — a small, walnut-shaped gland in men that produces the seminal fluid that nourish and transports sperm. Prostate cancer is one of the most common cancers men experience. Usually, prostate cancer grows slowly and is initially confined to the prostate gland, where it…

Post-Operative Scar Tissue

There are a lot of instances in the body where scar tissue will start to develop. After surgery, scar tissue will develop where the surgical incision is in the skin. If muscles and tendons were either cut or repaired, scar tissue will then develop there. After injuries such as a hamstring tear or rotator cuff…

Poisoning

Poisoning is injury or death due to swallowing, inhaling, touching or injecting different drugs, chemicals, venom’s or gases. A lot of substances — such as drugs and carbon monoxide — are poisonous only in higher concentrations or dosages. And others — such as cleaners — are dangerous only if ingested. Children are especially sensitive to…

Pneumonia

Pneumonia is an infection in one, or even both lungs. It can be caused by bacteria, viruses or fungi. Bacterial pneumonia is the most common type found in adults. Pneumonia is known to cause inflammation in the air sacs in your lungs, which are referred to as alveoli. The alveoli fill with fluid or pus,…

Phlegm

Mucus (or phlegm) is something everyone has, and some people wish they had a lot less of the stringy, gooey stuff. Sure, it can be a bit gross to blow globs of snot into one tissue after the other when you have a cold or sinus infection, but mucus actually serves a very important purpose.…

Peripheral Neuropathy

So, what is Peripheral Neuropathy? The name of the condition tells you a bit about what it is: Peripheral: Beyond (in this case, beyond both the brain and the spinal cord) Neuro-: Related to the nerves Pathy: Disease Peripheral neuropathy refers to the conditions that result when nerves that carry messages to and from the…

Peripheral Artery Disease / Peripheral Arterial Disease

Peripheral artery disease (also called peripheral arterial disease) is a common circulatory problem in which narrowed arteries lower blood flow to your limbs. When someone develops peripheral artery disease (PAD), your extremities — usually your legs — don’t receive enough blood flow to keep up with demand. This causes symptoms, most notably leg pain when…

Peptic Ulcer

Peptic ulcers are open sores that develop on the inside lining of your stomach and the upper portion of your small intestine. The most common symptom of a peptic ulcer include stomach pain. Peptic ulcers also include: Gastric Ulcers: This happens on the inside of the stomach Duodenal Ulcers: This happens on the inside of…

Pathological Disorders

Disease pathology encompasses the causes, processes and changes in body organs and tissues that happen with human illness. Doctors and biological scientists study pathological disease processes knowing that a clear understanding of what goes wrong and how it happens opens the door to brand new adventures of medical intervention and healing. A lot of the…