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A Complete Description of Our Work

  • OUR SERVICES :

  • ACNE-1

  • a skin condition characterized by red pimples on the skin, especially on the face, due to inflamed or infected sebaceous glands and prevalent chiefly among adolescents.

  • ACNE-2

  • a skin condition characterized by red pimples on the skin, especially on the face, due to inflamed or infected sebaceous glands and prevalent chiefly among adolescents. Specially in young girl worses during menses.

  •  ACUTE DIARRHEA

  • Acute Diarrhea. Most cases of acute, watery diarrhea are caused by viruses (viral gastroenteritis). The most common ones in children are rotavirus and in adults are norovirus (this is sometimes called “cruise ship diarrhea” due to well publicized epidemics). Bacteria are a common cause of traveler's diarrhea.

  • DYSENTRY

  • Dysentery is an intestinal infection that causes severe diarrhea with blood and mucus. The infection is also spread through contact with food or water that has been contaminated with fecal matter. Careful hand washing and proper sanitation can help prevent dysentery and keep it from spreading.

  • Agalactea

  • the inability of the mother to secrete enough milk to breastfeed a neonate  immediately after childbirth

  • Alcoholism

  • addiction to the consumption of alcoholic drink; alcohol dependency.

  • Amenorrhea

  • Amenorrhea refers to the absence of menstrual periods; it may be either primary (meaning a woman never developed menstrual periods) or secondary (absence of menstrual periods in a woman who was previously menstruating).

  • Genetic or inborn conditions are the most common causes of primary amenorrhea.

  • Angio-neurotic edema

  • Angioedema is an area of swelling of the lower layer of skin and tissue just under the mucous membranes or skin. The swelling may occur in the tongue, face,  larynx, arms and legs or abdomen. Often it is associated with hives, which are swelling within the upper skin.

  • Aphthae

  • a small, shallow, painful ulceration that usually affects the oral mucosa, but   not underlying bone. Aphthae occasionallymay affect other body tissues, including those of the GI tract and the external genitals. They do not appear  to be infectious, contagious, or sexually transmitted. 

  • Boils.

  • Boils and carbuncles are painful, pus-filled bumps that form under your skin when bacteria infect and inflame one or more of your hair follicles.

  • Carbuncles

  • Boils and carbuncles are painful, pus-filled bumps that form under your skin when bacteria infect and inflame one or more of your hair follicles.

  • Gallstone colic 

  • Biliary colic is a dull pain in the middle to upper right area of the abdomen. It occurs when a gallstone blocks the bile duct, the tube that normally drains bile from the gallbladder to the small intestine. The pain goes away if the stone passes into the small intestine and unblocks the duct.

  • haemangioma

  • Hemangioma is a benign tumor that occurs in the endothelial lining of the blood vessels. These tumors usually develop on the liver and on the skin of new born child after few weeks.

  • Heamaturia

  • Hematuria is the presence of red blood cells in the urine. Visible hematuria, also known as gross hematuria, is easily identified, as it causes red or brown discoloration of the urine. Microscopic hematuria is invisible to the naked eye and is often found by urinalysis or urine dipstick.

  • Haemorrhoids

  • Swollen  and twisted veins in the region of the anus  and lower rectum, often painful and bleeding  sometimes itchy and burning.

  • haemoplysis

  • The spitting of blood derived from the lungs or bronchial tubes as a result of  pulmonary or bronchial hemorrhage 

  • Halitosis

  • Halitosis is a common condition and is most often caused by a buildup of bacteria in the mouth because of gum disease, food, or plaquecausing bad breadth

  • Tachycardia

  • Badycardia

  • Hear beat less han 60 per minute

  • Heart beat is more than 100 per minute

  • Hypotention

  • Hypotension is low blood pressure, especially in the arteries of the systemic circulation.  A systolic blood pressure of less than 90 mm Hg or diastolic of less than 60 mm Hg is generally considered to be hypotension.

  • Bronchiectasis

  • Bronchiectasis describes damage to the walls of the bronchial tubes with loss of the smooth muscle and loss of elasticity of segments of the bronchi

  • Conjuntivitis

  • Inflammation or infection of the outer membrane of the eyeball and the inner eyelid.

  • Constipation

  • Constipation is a condition of the digestive system where an individual has hard feces that are difficult to expel. In most cases, this occurs because the colon has absorbed too much water from the food that is in the colon

 

  • Diabetes melitus  1

  • Type 1 diabetes is a chronic illness characterized by the body's inability to produce insulin due to the autoimmune destruction of the beta cells in the pancreas.

 

  • Diabetes melitus  2

  • Diabetes mellitus type 2 (also known as type 2 diabetes) is a long-term metabolic disorder that is characterized by high blood sugar, insulin resistance, and relative lack of insulin.  Common symptoms include increased hunger and unexplained weight loss.  Symptoms may also include increased hunger, feeling tired, and sores that do not heal. Often symptoms come on slowly. Long-term complications from high blood sugar include heart disease, strokes, diabetic retinopathy  which can result in blindness, kidney failure and poor blood flow in the limbs which may lead to amputations. The sudden onset of hyperosmolar hyperglycemic state may occur; however, ketoacidosis is uncommon.

 

  • Eczema

  • Eczema is a common skin condition marked by itchy and inflamed patches of skin. It’s also known as atopic dermatitis. It is more common in babies and young children, and often occurs on the faces of infants. It also often appears inside the elbows and behind the knees of children, teenagers, and adults.

 

  • tenea cruris 

  • Tinea cruris, commonly referred to as jock itch, is a fungal infection in the groin area. It affects mostly adult men. It's caused by a type of fungus called dermatophytes. It grows in a circle on your skin and often looks like a ring.

 

  • Fissure in-ano 

  • An anal fissure (fissure-in-ano) is a small, oval shaped tear in skin that lines the opening of the anus.Fissures typically cause severe pain and bleeding with bowel movements. Fissures are quite common in the general population, but are often confused with other causes of pain and bleeding, such as hemorrhoids.

 

  • Fistula in-ano

  • Anal fistula (plural fistulae), or fistula-in-ano, is a chronic abnormal communication between the epithelialised surface of the anal canal and (usually) the perianal skin. An anal fistula can be described as a narrow tunnel with its internal opening in the anal canal and its external opening in the skin near theanus.

 

  • Hyper acidity 

  • Hyper acidity is also called Acid Dyspepsia, which is one of the most common problem.Hyperacidity is a medical condition in which the stomach secretes a lot of acids.

 

  • Flatlence

  • Commonly known as farting, passing wind, or having gas, flatulence is a medical term for releasing gas from the digestive system through the anus.  Second, as you digest food, digestive gases such as hydrogen, methane, and carbon dioxide collect. Either method can cause flatulence.

  • Gallstone

  • A gallstone is a stone formed within the gallbladder out of bile components. The term cholelithiasis may refer to the presence of gallstones or to the diseases caused by gallstones. Most people with gallstones (about 80%) never have symptoms.

  • Mygraine Hadache

  • MIgraine attacks will present as moderate-to-severe headaches on one side of the head that occur with other symptoms, such as nausea and vomiting. Migraine and non-migraine headaches are different and can indicate different causes. A headache of varying intensity, often accompanied by nausea and sensitivity to light and sound.

 

  • Hiccough

  • An involuntary spasm of the diaphragm and respiratory organs, with a sudden closure of the glottis and a characteristic gulping sound.

  • "then she got hiccups"

 

  • Hepatomegaly

  • Enlargement of liver  if it is mild swelling then no symptoms will be developed.

 

  • Hypertenstion

  • Normal blood pressure is 120/80 when it raise upto 150/90 and this continue then it is called Hypertension.

  • Tubal blocked

  • The most common cause of blocked fallopian tubes is pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). Other potential causes of blocked fallopian tubes include: Current or history of an STD infection, specifically chlamydia or gonorrhea. History of uterine infection caused by an abortion or miscarriage. History of genital tuberculosis or pulmonary tuberculsis

  • all other all type skin disease

  • all other mental disorders.
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