Ease Control Positioning Headaches Admit it Youve had problems with the WebForm designer in Visual Studio.NET.But as Steve C. Orr explains, once you understand some key options and http://www.aspnetpro.com/NewsletterArticle/2005/04/asp200504so_l/asp200504so_l.a
Extractions: ControlFreak LANGUAGES: ASP.NET VERSIONS: Ease Control Positioning Headaches HTML Allows Great Flexibility for Page Design, but All the Options Can Be Overwhelming By Steve C. Orr Youve had problems with the WebForm designer in Visual Studio.NET. I know you have. Controls have refused to go where you drag them, or they show up in different places at run time than design time. Or maybe the designer has chosen to reformat HTML that youve carefully typed. In fact, I dont know a single developer who would claim the HTML designer included with Visual Studio.NET is the best one around but its not the worst one, either. Once you understand some key techniques, its possible to become quite efficient with it. If youre background is centered more in Windows development than Web development, youre likely more confused by the WebForm designer than most. The simplicity of the Windows Forms designer is appealing compared to all the complex options available in the WebForms design environment. However, once youve mastered the power that WebForms (and HTML) have to offer, youll be whining about why you cant design things so flexibly in Windows Forms applications. Happily, Microsoft has made great strides in improving both the WebForms and Windows Forms designers in the upcoming Visual Studio.NET 2005, but you dont need to wait until then to develop great applications. This article will help you get the most out of the current technology.
Ask The Doctor: The Neurology And Neurosurgery Forum At Med Help Ask doctors at The Cleveland Clinic a question about headaches and receive an answer free of charge. Forum offers medical advice about the latest treatment options and information on all aspects of the disease. http://www.medhelp.org/forums/Neuro/
Extractions: ***** Please read the following ***** The Cleveland Clinic Foundation and its Neurology Department does not guarantee monitoring or authentication of the information contained in forums and chat groups for accuracy, safety, or reliability. Except as may be specifically referenced in the Cleveland Clinic Foundation's Home Pages. The Cleveland Clinic Foundation makes no endorsements of any particular product or treatment, makes no representations and assumes no liability relative to any content, opinions, e-mail addresses, and/or computer viruses which may be transmitted relative to such forums and chat groups.
Job Accommodation Network CA, September 26 27, 2005! JAN Logo. WORK-SITE ACCOMMODATION IDEAS FORINDIVIDUALS WHO HAVE MIGRAINE headaches By Mayda LaRosse, MA Preface http://www.jan.wvu.edu/media/Migraine.html
Extractions: By Mayda LaRosse, M.A. Preface Introduction The Job Accommodation Network (JAN) is an information network and consulting resource to enable qualified workers with disabilities to be hired or retained. Businesses, rehabilitation professionals, and persons with disabilities can discuss their concerns and information needs with JAN's Human Factors Consultants and receive suggestions on solutions to accommodation problems. JAN offers comprehensive information on methods to accommodation problems. Included will be names, addresses and telephone numbers of appropriate resources. You can make personal contact for additional insights. Information can be by telephone, mail or e-mail, and is available at no cost to the caller. With the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), an increasing need to be knowledgeable about reasonable accommodations for people with sleep disorder has developed. Knowledge about reasonable accommodations can assist employers in hiring and retaining individuals.
Science News Online Search Science News Online A look at the different uses for this mineral such as for high blood pressure, headaches and what foods to find this mineral in. http://www.sciencenews.org/Sn_arc98/8_29_98/food.htm
Extractions: To search the archive of online articles, type your search term(s) in the space below and click on the button marked Search. Please note that not all online articles are full text. If your search does not return the information you desire, try our tips for searching or contact Science News to request a search of our print archives. Search for: Order results by: Most Recent Most Relevant Show articles on this date: September 10, 2005 September 03, 2005 August 27, 2005 August 20, 2005 August 13, 2005 August 06, 2005 July 30, 2005 July 23, 2005 July 16, 2005 July 09, 2005 July 02, 2005 June 25, 2005 June 18, 2005 June 11, 2005 June 04, 2005 May 28, 2005 May 21, 2005 May 14, 2005 May 07, 2005 April 30, 2005 April 23, 2005 April 16, 2005 April 09, 2005 April 02, 2005 March 26, 2005 March 19, 2005 March 12, 2005 March 05, 2005 February 26, 2005 February 19, 2005 February 12, 2005
Extractions: John Edmeads, MD VOL 101 / NO 5 / MAY 1997 / POSTGRADUATE MEDICINE This page is best viewed with a browser that supports tables. This is the fourth of four articles on headaches Preview : As Will Rogers observed, getting old is not much fun, but it sure beats the alternative. Age does have some compensations, though. For one thing, the elderly have fewer headaches. Unfortunately, about a third of those that occur are secondary to systemic disease or primary intracranial lesions. Dr Edmeads describes the special problems of diagnosing and treating headaches in the elderly. He also discusses headache-generating diseases that are more common with age. T he overall decline in the number of headaches as a person ages was noted long ago. In the mid-1850s, Romberg (1) made the declaration that "hemicrania generally diminishes in advanced age, or entirely ceases; in females it often terminates at the period of decrepitude." (He was young when he wrote that, and his popularity among female patients can only be imagined.) Emerson stated it more elegantly in an essay published in 1870: "At fifty years, 'tis said, afflicted citizens lose their sick headaches." Epidemiologists concur with these assertions. In his survey of a community in Wales, Waters (2) found that 92% of women and 74% of men between ages 21 and 34 years had headaches; these figures dropped to 66% and 53% between ages 55 and 74, and to 55% and 22% after age 75. Other epidemiologic studies confirm that the prevalence of headache declines with age. (3) Whereas it is one of the most common symptoms in the young, headache is the 10th most common symptom in elderly women and the 14th most common in elderly men (4) .
Dr. Koop - Headache Resources and information on migraines headaches and summer headaches. http://www.drkoop.com/ency/article/003024.htm
Extractions: Inside DrKoop News Archive Animations Health Videos Health Tools ... Newsletters Injury Disease Nutrition Poison ... Treatment Definition: A headache is pain or discomfort in the head, scalp, or neck. Serious causes of headaches are extremely rare. Most people with headaches can feel much better by making lifestyle changes, learning ways to relax, and occasionally by taking medications. See also tension headache cluster headache classic migraine headache , and common migraine headache Common Causes: Tension headaches are due to tight, contracted muscles in your shoulders, neck, scalp, and jaw. They are often related to stress, depression, or anxiety. Overworking, not getting enough sleep, missing meals, and using alcohol or street drugs can make you more susceptible to them. Headaches can be triggered by chocolate, cheese, and monosodium glutamate (MSG). People who drink caffeine can have headaches when they don't get their usual daily amount. Other common causes include: Holding your head in one position for a long time, like at a computer, microscope, or typewriter
Extractions: Paul K. Winner, DO VOL 101 / NO 5 / MAY 1997 / POSTGRADUATE MEDICINE This page is best viewed with a browser that supports tables. This is the third of four articles on headaches Preview : When a child has headaches, parents usually seek medical attention to get reassurance that the cause is not a brain tumor or other serious problem. Many parents don't realize that it is not uncommon for migraine headaches to begin during childhood. Other parents may realize that migraines are part of their family history but don't know about frightening variants, such as benign torticollis. Dr Winner describes childhood presentations of migraine and other headaches and discusses atypical findings that require further assessment. He also summarizes methods that are useful in checking and preventing headache attacks. U ncommon primary headache syndromes as well as secondary headache disorders in children can be quite anxiety-provoking, not only for patients and parents but also for practitioners, who must decide what degree of evaluation is needed and what treatment is appropriate. Thorough history taking, physical examination and, when appropriate, diagnostic testing usually allow physicians to distinguish primary headaches from headaches secondary to another problem. However, evaluation of children, especially those under age 10, requires special knowledge and techniques. Input from parents is crucial in obtaining an accurate headache history. Important determinations in history taking are whether the child experiences more than one type of headache and what level of disability the headaches cause. At present, there is no easily used scale to measure disability from headaches in children. The severity can be estimated, though, from answers to specific questions (eg, Can the child tolerate watching television or listening to music when he or she has a headache? Is participation in after-school activities limited by headaches? Is academic performance affected by headaches? How much school has the child missed because of headaches?).
Health Report - 8/18/1997: Exercise Headaches You can get it from jogging playing tennis or pumping iron at the gym Youre atgreater risk if you box scuba dive or play footy or soccer It can even happen http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/8.30/helthrpt/stories/s233.htm
Extractions: Robyn St Clare: I wouldn't get the headache straight away. I'd usually work out in the morning and then the headache would come on early afternoon and get gradually worse towards the evening. They started to happen a few weeks after I'd started doing the exercises. I noticed a bit of muscle tension in my shoulders and then I'd start getting a kind of dull ache and it would get worse and worse and more intense. Usually on one side of my head behind my eye and further behind on my head, behind that eye. Dan Gaffney: You needn't run like Cathy Freeman or swim like Kieren Perkins to get an exercise head. Robyn St Clare is an active 30 year old who decided to tone up at the local gym. She learned how to properly use the equipment from a fitness trainer and she was conscious of warming up and warming down whenever she worked out.
Extractions: Electroacuscope, electromyopulse, pain stops here, reduce pain, improve range of motion, accelerate healing, pain research, Robert O. Becker Electroacuscope, electromyopulse, pain stops here, reduce pain, improve range of motion, accelerate healing, pain research, Robert O. Becker, acuscope, myopulse, pain, pain relief, health, Advanced Biomedical Technologies, heal, spa, non-invasive /* You may give each page an identifying name, server, and channel on the next lines. */var pageName = "";/**** DO NOT ALTER ANYTHING BELOW THIS LINE! ****/var code = ' '; document.write(' '); document.write('>');
Extractions: @import url(/news/stylesheets/news2.css); ABC Home Radio Television News ... Help/Site Map Programs RADIO AM Back. Briefing Business Report Corresp. Report Go Asia Pacific NewsRadio PM Sunday Profile World Today TV 7.30 Report Asia Pacific Focus Aust. Story Bus. Breakfast Foreign Corresp. Four Corners Inside Business Insiders Landline Lateline Stateline Print Email Last Update: Friday, July 29, 2005. 10:34am (AEST) Acupuncture is an effective treatment for patients suffering from tension headaches, German researchers say. The ancient Chinese therapy that involves inserting very fine needles into the skin at specific sites on the body cut the rates of headaches by nearly half in a study of 270 people. "A significant proportion of patients with tension-type headaches benefited from acupuncture," Dr Wolfgang Weidenhammer, from the Centre for Complementary Medicine Research at Technische Universitat in Munich, said. "Acupuncture was well tolerated and improvements lasted several months after completion of treatment," he said. Dr Weidenhammer and his team compared traditional Chinese acupuncture, minimal acupuncture in which the needles are inserted superficially in the skin and no treatment.
Headache Migraine Help about headaches, do and donât for migraine, migraines and women and children. http://www.manageyourheadache.com/
Headaches Information and articles about a variety of treatments for mental illness, coveringeverything from psychotherapy to herbal remedies. http://www.mental-health-matters.com/articles/article.php?artID=433
Welcome To Traction Systems Chiropractic and Orthopedic products for home care and office use to treat headaches, spine pain, extremity pain. http://www.tractionsystems.net
Extractions: Cervical Aids Posture and Body Support For over 20 years Traction Systems has been dedicated to providing effective and inexpensive posture correction products for your use and for your patients to use at home. Use our products in your office, and then sell your patients the same products to use at home. Our low prices make our products affordable to both your and your patients, while providing an additional revenue stream for your practice. We do not sell directly to the public. We feel that it is vital for patients to be under the care of a health care professional in order to use these products. If you are interested in these products for your personal use, please have your doctor, chiropractor, acupuncturist, osteopath, or physiotherapist contact us.
Extra Headaches Of Securing XML | CNET News.com Extra headaches of securing XML XML and Web services applications are becomingwidely used, creating a fresh target for malicious attacks. http://news.com.com/Extra headaches of securing XML/2100-7345_3-5180510.html
Extractions: TrackBack Print E-mail TalkBack Creating a popular new computing approach always seems to bring with it a familiar catch-22: security issues. And Web services is no exception. Extensible Markup Language and XML-based protocols are rapidly becoming a common way for businesses to format and exchange corporate information. But even as those Web services technologies are becoming widespread, companies are not fully aware of the associated security vulnerabilitiesnor that most are not addressed by mainstream network protection systems, according to analysts. News.context
Family Healthsite Discover the different types of headaches from tension to migraine, and learn how to prevent them. Provides the latest news on these disorders along with a quiz to gauge your understanding of them. http://www.healthatoz.com/healthatoz/Atoz/dc/caz/neur/hach/hach_gen_ovw.jsp
Migraine - Headache Resource Center - HealingWell.com Comprehensive site with medical news, information and articles, links, messageboards, books, and more on headaches and migraines. http://www.healingwell.com/migraines/
Extractions: Select A Topic: AIDS - HIV Allergies Anxiety/Panic Disorders Arthritis Breast Cancer Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Cystic Fibrosis Depression Diabetes Epilepsy Fibromyalgia GERD (Acid Reflux) Headaches Heartburn Hepatitis Irritable Bowel Syndrome Lupus Lyme Disease Migraines Multiple Sclerosis Prostate Cancer
Extractions: Languages Spanish Portuguese German Italian Danish Japanese Korean Arabic Time, Inc. Time.com People Fortune EW Public approval ratings for PM Mori have dipped below 10 percent TOKYO, Japan Japanese Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori's return from the U.S. takes place amid speculation about his replacement and more bad news regarding the economy. Mori, who made a brief stop in Hawaii following a summit in Washington with U.S. President George W. Bush, agreed to presidential elections within his own party that could pave the way for his departure as early as next month. But confusion persists over when he will actually exit the political stage as well as over who will take his place. The new chief of the dominant Liberal Democratic Party would become prime minister since the party dominates the three-way ruling camp. Mori's position was further undermined by the release of February year-on-year trade figures showing the country's trade surplus depressed by more than 25 percent. IN-DEPTH MESSAGE BOARD Japan: Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori Overall exports grew 1.5 percent during the month, while imports rose much faster at 12.2 percent.
HealthBoards - Headaches Threads in Board headaches, Board Tools Neurologist are experts on headaches ?gte98a. 0730-2005 0102 AM by gte98a Go to last post http://www.healthboards.com/boards/forumdisplay.php?f=62
Brooklyn College Personal Counseling headaches are one of the most universal of man s ailments. Vulnerability toheadaches varies from person to person depending not only on genetic makeup http://pc.brooklyn.cuny.edu/HEADACHE.HTM
Extractions: About Headaches Headaches are one of the most universal of man's ailments. They can be a chronic, long-standing problem. More than 45 million Americans suffer from the excruciating pain of headaches. Headaches are common concerns among college students. They are biological realities. However, psychological stress from tests, deadlines and school-work conflicts and the like contribute to many types of headaches. Vulnerability to headaches varies from person to person depending not only on genetic make-up but also on a person's ability to cope with the many and varied life stressors, demands and commitments. Two of the major types of headaches are outlined below, and, while cures are rare, headaches can be controlled. Muscle Contraction Headache The pain of a muscle contraction headache is caused by the pulling of muscles in the neck and base of the head. The sustained contraction of skeletal muscles is usually part of a person's reaction to life stress. These are also called tension headaches and are characterized by a dull, throbbing pain felt on both sides of the head surrounding the scalp and occasionally affecting the shoulders as well as the neck.