Hot Flashes

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Hot Flashes

The mechanical design of the accessory shoe now common on most cameras dates back to 1913, when Oskar Barnack, the inventor of the Leica, devised it for attaching an accessory viewfinder. By 1940′s, with the addition of the central contact, the design became commonly used for attaching and triggering accessory flashes and known as the [...]

Hot Flashes

Side effects of nafarelin are mostly related to the low estrogen state. Side effects include hot flashes, vaginal dryness, headaches, mood changes, and decreased interest in sex. Some patients may experience acne, muscle pain, reduced breast size, and irritation of the tissue inside the nose. These side effects should disappear after stopping the medication. Category:GnRH [...]

Side effects of the GnRH agonists are signs and symptoms of hypoestrogenism, including hot flashes, headaches, and osteoporosis. In patients under long-term therapy, small amounts of estrogens could be given back (“add-back regimen”) to combat such side effects and to prevent bone wastage. Generally, long-term patients, both male and female, tend to undergo annual DEXA [...]

Hot Flashes

”Hwabyeong” or ”Hwabyung”, literally “anger illness” or “fire illness”, is a Korean culture-bound somatization disorder, a mental illness. It manifests as one or more of a wide range of physical symptoms, in response to emotional disturbance, such as stress from troublesome interpersonal relationships or life crises. It most often occurs in females in their menopausal [...]

Hot Flashes

3-Methoxy-4,5-methylenedioxyamphetamine (MMDA; 5-Methoxy-MDA) is a psychedelic and entactogen drug of the amphetamine class. It is an analogue of lophophine, MDA, and MDMA, and also bears resemblance to the essential oil myristicin found in nutmeg. MMDA was described by Alexander Shulgin in his book ”PiHKAL”. Shulgin lists the dosage range of MMDA as 100-250 mg. The [...]

Hot Flashes

According to the DSM-IV, during a LSA, fewer than 4 of the following symptoms would be experienced, in contrast to a full blown panic attack, which must include 4 or more symptoms. * dyspnea (shortness of breath) * heart palpitations * trembling * dizziness * chest pain * perspiration * hot flashes * headache * [...]

Hot Flashes

Before the 1970s, many cameras had an “accessory shoe” or “cold shoe”, intended to hold flashes that connected electronically via an outboard “PC cable” (not meaning a computer: the term goes back to the synchronization method of the “Prontor/Compur” shutters of the 1930s), or other accessories such as external light meters, special viewfinders, or rangefinders. [...]

Hot Flashes

Mechanical The use of the button-operated latch, besides facilitating a quick, one-handed flash attachment and detachment, also eliminates the possibility of the flash gradually working itself loose and shifting in the shoe, which on camera systems using the ISO 518 hot-shoe can lead to certain contacts being broken, contacts with the wrong pins being made, [...]

Hot Flashes

Water, while under pressure, is heated up to a high temperature (approx. 250-500 °C). As the hot water goes through the nozzle (usually a de Laval nozzle) and the pressure reduces, the water flashes to steam pressing on the nozzle, and leaving at high speed. By the recoil the rocket accelerates in the opposite direction [...]

Hot Flashes

Side effects for anti-estrogens are :anxiety, back, bone, breast, joint, or pelvic pain, constipation, cough, diarrhea, dizziness, flu-like symptoms, (e.g., muscle aches, tiredness), headache, hot flashes, loss of appetite, nausea, sore throat, stomach pain or upset, sweating, tingling or burning sensation, trouble sleeping, vaginal dryness, vomiting, weakness, weight gain. Adapted from the Wikipedia article NCAA [...]

The LumiQuest line of flash modifiers is designed to help photographers control the quality of light from hot shoe mounted flashes. LumiQuest accessories fold flat for storage and attach to the flash with Velcro fasteners. They modify the light in a variety of different ways depending on the model. By diffusing, bouncing, restricting or colorizing [...]

Hot Flashes

* Actiq (oral transmucosal fentanyl citrate), a Schedule II controlled substance, is used off-label to treat moderate to severe chronic, non-malignant pain even though it is FDA-approved solely for breakthrough pain in cancer patients. * Avastin has been currently been used for wet AMD, age-related macular degeneration. * Bevacizumab has been used against wet age-related [...]