Tips For Keeping Your Eyes Healthy On Vacation

From purchasing new luggage and a pair of comfortable walking shoes to finding a neighbor or friend to water your houseplants, there are many chores that must be accomplished before enjoying a vacation. However, while packing and confirming your hotel reservations, there is another aspect of vacationing that most overlook, but should be remembered: your eye health. Here are a few simple tips to help ensure your eyes do not suffer while you and your family enjoy a much needed vacation: Read More 

Can A Child Have Three Parents? A New IVF Procedure Makes It Possible

Are you having trouble conceiving a baby naturally and considering in vitro fertilization (IVF)? It has helped make many many eager couples like you into happy parents. IVF traditionally involves taking the egg of one woman and mixing it with the sperm of one man in a petri dish to create an embryo that is implanted into the woman's uterus. The hope is that the embryo attaches to the uterus and grows into a healthy baby. Read More 

Are You A Good Candidate For Laser Cataract Surgery?

If you've recently been informed by your ophthalmologist that you've developed cataracts -- a condition that clouds and fuzzes the ordinarily clear lens that helps you process images -- you may be wondering about your surgical removal options. In the past, cataract surgery was a fairly invasive process that involved cutting the surface of your eye, peeling back the lens, removing the clouded portion, and replacing it with an artificial lens. Read More 

8 Helpful Tips For Preventing A Heart Attack

Approximately 720,000 people in the United States have a heart every year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A heart attack can happen when one of your coronary arteries gets blocked from buildup such as cholesterol. Some of the common symptoms of a heart attack include shortness of breath, dizziness, pain in chest and heartburn. A heart attack is very scary to think about, but you can lower your risk of having one. Read More 

The Next Marathon: How To Start Training After Knee Surgery

Many runners put off going to an orthopedist because they are secretly afraid that they might have to take a break from running or, even worse, stop running altogether. Most instances of runner's knee can be treated with rest, ice, compression, and elevation along with physical therapy and special braces. For those of you who have to undergo surgery to restore the cartilage in your knee or fix an alignment of your patella, there will be a recovery period when you cannot run and your doctor may suggest permanent changes to your exercise schedule, but most runners can start running again within six months of surgery. Read More