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Milk Allergy Diet | Johns Hopkins Medicine
General guidelines for milk allergy. The key to an allergy-free diet is to stay away from foods or products containing the food to which you are allergic. The</b> ...
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Diabetes: What You Need to Know as You Age - Johns Hopkins Medicine
Diabetes increases women’s heart disease risk. Recently, Kalyani and her colleagues at Johns Hopkins studied how diabetes affects women’s risk of heart disease.</b> ...
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Diabetic Neuropathy | Johns Hopkins Medicine
Neuropathy is a complication of diabetes that can lead to problems throughout the body. Diabetes can affect nerves that control movement, sensation and other</b> ...
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Cold Sores | Johns Hopkins Medicine
Key points. <b>Cold sores</b> are small blisters around the mouth, caused by the herpes simplex virus. <b>Cold sores</b> can be spread by kissing or sharing eating</b> ...
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Frequently Asked Questions About Pacemakers and Implantable ...
Do cell phones interfere with pacemakers or ICDs? Cell phones available in the U.S. (less than 3 watts) do not appear to interfere with or damage pacemakers.
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Gallbladder Disease | Johns Hopkins Medicine
<b>Gallbladder disease</b> includes inflammation, infection, stones or blockage of the gallbladder. The gallbladder is a sac located under the liver. It stores and</b> ...
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Pericarditis | Johns Hopkins Medicine
<b>Pericarditis</b> is inflammation of the pericardium, the thin sac (membrane) that surrounds the heart. The pericardium holds the heart in place and helps it</b> ...
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Hip Replacement Recovery Q&A | Johns Hopkins Medicine
410-955-5000 Maryland. 855-695-4872 Outside of Maryland. +1-410-502-7683 International. A Johns Hopkins expert answers common questions about recovery and</b> ...
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Hypertension: What You Need to Know as You Age
Even if you do not have hypertension by age 55 to 65, your lifetime risk for developing it is a whopping 90 percent. “But doctors no longer consider hypertension</b> ...
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Shunt Procedure | Johns Hopkins Hydrocephalus and Cerebral Fluid Center
A shunt is a hollow tube surgically placed in the brain (or occasionally in the spine) to help drain cerebrospinal fluid and redirect it to another location in the</b> ...
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