Saturday, November 9, 2013

On-line doctor - email from jksw.


 ON LINE DOCTOR.....!!!!! Very Informative and Useful

   





   
It is worth preserving & forwarding as well.....
This is one of the best mails I have ever received.

You can definitely spend your precious time going through the contents of this mail as it covers number of physical ailments affecting us. Moreover, it covers the health issues in detail and in systematical order.

My sincere thanks to the person/s whoever collected and collated this information because he/she/they did fantastic job.
 This site is very informative, which ever diseases you click-upon (I wish you dont have one),....     it gives you the video explanation !!!!Interactive Sites on Medical Information The tutorials listed below are interactive health education resources from the Patient Education Institute . Using animated graphics, each tutorial explains the procedure or condition in easy-to-read and understand language. You can also listen to the tutorial. 

JUST CLICK ON ANY AILMENT 

These tutorials require a special Flash plug-in, version 6 or above... If you do not have this in your PC, you will be prompted to obtain a free download of the software before you start the tutorial.


Diseases and Conditions
            Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm        Acne         AIDS         Allergies to Dust Mites         Alopecia        Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)         Angina         Anthrax        Arrhythmias         Arthritis         Asthma        Atrial Fibrillation         Avian Influenza         Back Pain - How to Prevent         Bell's Palsy         Brain Cancer         Breast Cancer        Burns         Cataracts         Cerebral Palsy         Cold Sores (Herpes)        Colon Cancer         Congestive Heart Failure         COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease)        Crohn's Disease         Cystic Fibrosis         Depression         Diabetes - Eye Complications        Diabetes - Foot Care         Diabetes - Introduction         Diabetes - Meal Planning         Diverticulosis        Endometriosis         Epstein Barr (Mononucleosis)         Erectile Dysfunction         Fibromyalgia         Flashes and Floaters         Fractures and Sprains         Ganglion Cysts         Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD)        Glaucoma         Gout         Hearing Loss         Heart Attack        Hepatitis B         Hepatitis C         Hypertension (High Blood Pressure)         Hypoglycemia         Incisional Hernia         Influenza        Inguinal Hernia         Irritable Bowel Syndrome         Kidney Failure        Kidney Stones         Leishmaniasis         Leukemia         Low Testosterone         Lung Cancer         Lupus         Lyme Disease        Macular Degeneration         Malaria         Melanoma         Meningitis        Menopause         Migraine Headache         Mitral Valve Prolapse        Multiple Myeloma         Multiple Sclerosis         Myasthenia Gravis        Osteoarthritis         Osteoporosis         Otitis Media         Ovarian Cancer         Ovarian Cysts         Pancreatitis         Parkinson's Disease        Pneumonia         Prostate Cancer - What is it?        Psoriasis         Retinal Tear and Detachment         Rheumatoid Arthritis         Rotator Cuff Injuries         Sarcoidosis         Scabies        Seizures and Epilepsy        Sexually Transmitted Diseases        Shingles         Skin Cancer        Sleep Disorders         Smallpox        Spinal Cord Injury        Temporomandibular Joint Disorders (TMJ)          Tennis Elbow        Tinnitus         Trigeminal Neuralgia        Tuberculosis         Ulcerative Colitis         Umbilical Hernia        Uterine Fibroids         Varicose Veins        Vasculitis         Warts        Tests and Diagnostic Procedures o    Amniocentesis o    Barium Enema o    Bone Densitometry o    Breast Lumps - Biopsy o    Bronchoscopy o    Colonoscopy o    Colposcopy o    Coronary Angiogram and Angioplasty o    CT Scan (CAT Scan) o    Cystoscopy - Female o    Cystoscopy - Male o    Echocardiogram o    Echocardiography Stress Test o    IVP (Intra Venous Pyelogram) o    Knee Arthroscopy o    Laparoscopy o    Mammogram o    MRI o    Myelogram o    Newborn Screening o    Pap Smear o    Shoulder Arthroscopy o    Sigmoidoscopy o    Ultrasound o    Upper GI Endoscopy o    Surgery and Treatment Procedures  Aorto-Bifemoral Bypass  Cardiac Rehabilitation  Carotid Endarterectomy  Carpal Tunnel Syndrome  Chemotherapy  Cholecystectomy - Open Laparoscopic (Gallbladder Removal Surgery)  Clinical Trials Colon Cancer Surgery  Colostomy  Coronary Artery Bypass Graft(CABG) C-Section  Dilation and Curettage (D & C)  General Anesthesia Heart Valve Replacement  Hemorrhoid Surgery  Hip Replacement Hip Replacement - Physical Therapy  Hysterectomy  Knee Replacement  LASIK  Massage Therapy  Neurosurgery - What is it? Open Heart Surgery - What to Expect?  Pacemakers Preparing for Surgery  Prostate Cancer - Radiation Therapy Shoulder Replacement  Sinus Surgery  Stroke Rehabilitation    



Graphene - email from Kamalini Kanapathippillai

We all think of ourselves as being well informed & some think they are experts in everything too. Here is wealth of fantastic information  that I had never heard of. Did you?
 It is a given fact that technology helps the world advance. As humans it's in our nature to investigate, innovate and solve problems. This curiosity means we make things, create things and develop new technologies. You can look back thousands of years for basic examples of technology pushing civilization forward.
Most people don't understand the rapid change technology has on their life... or the speed at which change occurs.
For example, the following are the five 'Great Ages' of human progress and their approximate duration:
  • Stone Age — 3.4 million years
  • Bronze Age — 2,500 years
  • Iron Age — 500 years
  • Industrial Revolution — 80 years
  • Information Revolution — 20 years
You'll notice the length of each 'age' diminishes as technology improves. The computer industry calls this trend 'Moore's Law'. It dictates that computer processing power doubles every 18 months.
200 times stronger than steel...
150,000 times thinner than a human hair...
More flexible than a sheet of paper
You may have heard about Graphene. If you haven't, it's a newly discovered, very special refined form of graphite. It's a one-atom-thick sheet of densely packed carbon atoms arranged in a honeycomb lattice.
Take a look:
Put simply, it's a sheet of carbon atoms 150,000 times thinner than a human hair. Under a powerful microscope, it looks like chicken wire. But what's so special about it?
Everything
For starters, it's 200 times stronger than structural steel; it's so strong you could suspend an elephant from a single strand of Graphene, and the strand would not break.
It's extremely lightweight. Soon, everything from bicycles and boats to airplanes and cars could be made out of graphene composites. And when they are, their energy efficiency and durability could skyrocket.
But, that's just the beginning of what this new 'smart material' can do. Not only is it the strongest material researchers have ever tested, it's also one of the best conductors man has ever found. IBM has already created a graphene-based processor capable of executing 100 billion cycles per second. Researchers believe that in the future, a graphene credit card could store as much information as today's computers.
This one material alone could prove more
revolutionary than — and soon
REPLACE — plastic, Kevlar and the silicon chip
In fact, it's such a breakthrough that the first two scientists to successfully produce single-atom-thick crystals of graphene were awarded the 2010 Nobel Prize in Physics.
In just two years, over 200 companies from a wide array of industries have researched the magical potential of graphene:
  • Scientists in the US and China are already using tiny graphene-based probes to target and identify tumors in live mice. They hope similar graphene-based particles could shuttle cancer drugs to tumors, or even kill tumor cells directly.
  • Engineers at Northwest University, Seattle, found that specially crafted graphene electrodes could allow a lithium-ion battery, like those found in your smartphone or Toyota Prius, to charge 10 times faster and hold 10 times more power.
  • And in 2011, chemists at Rice University, Houston, created graphene-based thin films, unlocking the secret to incredibly flexible, super-durable touch screens and solar cells that can wrap around just about anything.
Kiss goodbye to shattered screens
Samsung has already said its flexible displays should enter full-scale production later this year, and it expects to have a dozen more graphene based products on the market within the next five.
IBM, Nokia and Apple are hot on their heels too.
Touch screens, processor chips, casings, and batteries (in everything from PCs and HD TVs to tablets), mobile phones and hybrids could all be made with graphene.
It could change entire industries, economies, and our lives.
Imagine HD TVs as thin as wallpaper, Smart phones so skinny and flexible you can roll them up and put them behind your ear, and so durable you can beat them with a hammer!
Imagine if you could eliminate breast cancer or prostate tumors with a simple injection or by swallowing a graphene-charged pill.
Imagine if your house were strong enough to withstand a bush fire, and your windows processed enough solar energy to heat your home in winter and cool it in the summer. Or if your car were 6 times lighter and 20 times stronger.
The effects would be staggering!
Fuel-efficiency would shoot through the roof.
People would live longer, healthier lives.
Cars and airplanes would be lighter, faster and safer than ever before.
And electronics of every type would be launched into an era of unprecedented growth and evolution.
This is just a taste of the cutting-edge innovations coming in the Molecular Age, innovations that will reshape the future in the months and years ahead, and it's starting now.
You're looking at a simultaneous eruption of
new-age technologies that will alter our lives
on a scale not seen for 100 years
All this technological change and innovation will transform the world.
  • 'Nano batteries' will charge your mobile in seconds, and even power whole cities.
  • 'Smartphones' will carry the computing power of IBM's Watson Supercomputer.
  • A new era of computing mobility — none of the solid rectangular things we carry now but flexible, wearable devices.
  • Handheld 'breathalyzers' will diagnose disease in seconds.
  • Bionic limbs with human fluidity and dexterity, but the strength of Superman.
Spacecraft with the capacity to take us beyond our solar system into places and worlds never explored.
The Smallest Revolution
in History
Down at the molecular level there's a lot of friction. Particles can stick together really easily. This means new and complicated structures can be formed.
Today scientists are experimenting with different conditions to see what sorts of new molecular structures they can create.
The results are astonishing. Some look like thin wires...

Some look like pancakes...
Others look like flowers...
All these different molecular structures have different properties.
And soon they'll change the way we live:
from solar panels you can spray onto your roof, to computers and batteries so small they are invisible, from mobile phones that you can stretch, twist and even imbed into your clothing, they'll make stronger houses, tougher cars, and even make us healthier.
Medical researchers are already looking at using nano-particles to deliver drugs or hunt down cancerous tumors.
Just imagine 'nano medicines' patrolling your body, hunting down diseases and zapping problems as soon as they arise.
To your good health.

Centenary celebrations of the Anatomy Block, Francis Road, Colombo.

Click on the web-link below:-

http://comsaa.blogspot.com/2013/11/centenary-celebration-anatomy.html#links

Friday, November 8, 2013

Bread as bait - email forwarded by jksw

Video labelled - Voel-wat-viswang - Superb piece of action captured by video-camera by a cameraman who has shown the intelligence of birds. We acknowledge his expertise.

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Today's logic - email from jksw

Today's logic




Today's logic
The kid doesn't seem to believe the lady.
Hey kid, this is today’s logic.

A teacher - email from jksw

On behalf of all our wonderful teachers. Each had something to impart, and did too.
jksw 



 


A good/sensible reply from a Teacher?



From A School Principal's speech at a graduation..

He said "The Doctor wants his child to become a doctor.........
the Engineer wants his child to become an engineer......
The Businessman wants his ward to become CEO.....
BUT a teacher also wants his child to become one of them, as well..!!!!

Nobody wants to become a teacher BY CHOICE" ....Very sad but that's the truth.....!!!

The dinner guests were sitting around the table discussing life.
One man, a CEO, decided to explain the problem with education. He argued,
"What's a kid going to learn from someone who decided his best option in life was to become a teacher?"


To stress his point he said to another guest;
"You're a teacher, Bonnie. Be honest. What do you make?"

Teacher Bonnie, who had a reputation for honesty and frankness replied,
"You want to know what I make?
(She paused for a second, then began...)


"Well, I 
make kids work harder than they ever thought they could.

make a C+ feel like the Congressional Medal of Honor winner.

make kids sit through 40 minutes of class time when their parents can't
make them sit for 5 min. without an I- Pod, Game Cube or movie rental.

You want to know what I 
make?
(She paused again and looked at each and every person at the table)

make kids wonder.

make them question.

make them apologize and mean it.

make them have respect and take responsibility for their actions.

teach them how to write and then I make them write.
Keyboarding isn't everything.

make them read, read, read.

make them show all their work in math.
They use their God given brain, not the man-made calculator.

make my students from other countries learn everything they need
to know about English while preserving their unique cultural identity.

make my classroom a place where all my students feel safe.

Finally, I 
make them understand that if they use the gifts they
were given, work hard, and follow their hearts, they can succeed in life

( Bonnie paused one last time and then continued.)

Then, when people try to judge me by what I 
make, with me knowing money is n't everything, I can hold my head up high and pay no attention because they are ignorant. You want to know what I make.

I
 MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN ALL YOUR LIVES, EDUCATING KIDS AND PREPARING THEM TO BECOME CEO's, AND DOCTORS AND ENGINEERS..........

What do you 
make Mr. CEO?

His jaw dropped; he went silent.

THIS IS WORTH SENDING TO EVERY PERSON YOU KNOW. Even all personal teachers like mother, father, brother, sister, coach and spiritual leader/teacher
  

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

How we looked after post war 2009 - email from jksw

How we looked after post war 2009
Inbox
x

philavi
5 Nov (2 days ago)
to me

  Time to recall. Lest we forget.
Attached picture. How we looked after people post war 2009.

Advising the keen lady doctor in charge.
L>R Myself, lady doctor,  limb fitting manager Karunasena and Mr Benjamin in
charge of Mobile camp.

Note the lack of hustle and bustle even in these early days post war.
Thatched roof. Beds. Wheelchair. The patients.

Jksweerasekera
Orthopedic Surgeon.