scholarly journals MANAGEMENT OF HYPOTHYROIDISM THROUGH AYURVEDA: A CASE REPORT

2021 ◽  
Vol 09 (3) ◽  
pp. 647-649
Author(s):  
Nabaruna Bose

Ayurveda the science of life has a solution to almost all the health-related issues. Thyroid disorders are on the rise across the world. Ayurveda is an ancient Indian system of medicine which uses herbal and herbo-mineral medicines to treat diseases. Luxury lifestyle gives pleasure but due to modernization and impact of western culture, the dietary habits and lifestyle of individuals have changed a lot leading to various types of lifestyle disorders like hypertension, diabetes mellitus, thyroid disorders etc. Hypothyroidism refers to deficiency of thyroid hormone caused due to various reasons. Hypothyroidism is one the most common endocrine disorder seen in daily life. There is no direct correlation of hypothyroidism in the classics but according to Charaka Samhita it can be categorised in Anukta Vyadhi. Vata and Kapha Dosha are mainly involved in this Vyadhi. A 27-year-old female patient came to OPD of Government Ayurvedic College and Hospital, Guwahati presenting with complaints of weakness, hair fall, dry skin, constipation and irregular menstruation from the past 1 year. After 3 months of Ayurvedic treatment patient got relief in almost all the symptoms and the TSH level reduced from 17.99 IU/ml to 4.07 IU/ml.

2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (6) ◽  
pp. 139-147
Author(s):  
Marjona Akhmadovna Radjabova ◽  

Abstract. The following article discusses the role of onomastic components in phraseological units and their meaning as well as giving a classification of onomastic components in phraseological units based on the materials of different structural languages. Through examples the author proves that the presence of names in the ancient rich phraseological layer of non-fraternal English, Russian and Uzbek languages is related to the national and cultural values, customs, ancient history, folklore and daily life of the peoples who speak this language. Besides, in the process of study of onomastic components it is also determined that names, along with forming their national character, are a factor giving information about the past of a particular nation. Background. In the world linguistics there have been carried out a series of researches in the field of the study of phraseological units with onomastic components in comparative-typological aspect revaling their national and cultural peculiarities, analyzing and classifying their content structurally and semantically


Urban Health ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 102-111
Author(s):  
Renée Boynton-Jarrett

The urban environment is characterized by human-made spaces, by environments that are created to allow large numbers of people to coexist. These spaces literally shape where and how we play and work, representing an enormous opportunity for urban spaces to influence all aspects of our daily life—including our health. Although abundant urban areas have emerged over the past decades that disincentivize healthy living, innovation around the world is providing examples of approaches to urban design that generates healthy and safe places to play and work. This chapter provides a framework for thinking about the creation of urban spaces, about how the physical environment influences health, and how, to that end, we can create healthy physical environments to improve the health of urban populations.


A Child's Day ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 165-178
Author(s):  
Killian Mullan

This concluding chapter surveys the key findings and issues raised in the previous chapters. This study of a child's day provides the most extensive picture currently available in the UK, and elsewhere in the world, into how children's time use has changed over the past several decades. It identifies areas of expected change as well as other areas of surprising stability. It reveals how change and stability in children's time use blend together to comprise a child's day, uncovering also the multi-layered contexts of a child's day. Aspects of children's time use, and how this may have changed, will no doubt continue to surface in public debate in connection with their well-being. While welcoming this, it is necessary to always question and seek to understand how supposed changes actually fit within a child's day, the types of days where these changes are concentrated, among whom, and to seek out evidence on how such changes relate to other activities and the social contexts of daily life.


Author(s):  
Sakshi Gupta ◽  
Karan Veer

: An infectious disease enumerated in Wuhan, China in December 2019, and then exported in many countries across world called Coronavirus disease 2019. It is also named by COVID-19. COVID-19 is an ongoing pandemic 60.2 Million confirmed cases, which is a leading health concern for public across the world, where mainly middle and old age people are hospitalized and dead across the affected countries. Where more than 1.42 Million people have deceased and More than 41.5 Million people have been recovered. Almost all the countries are fighting against the transmission of the virus by restricting transportation and other daily life activities. Coronavirus outbreak causes many psychological disorders, such as, fear of infection and dying. On the other hand, COVID-19 results some positive consequences on environment due to restricted human activities. Environmental conditions including air quality, global warming, water quality, change of biodiversity and ecosystem and many more parameters are shows a significant improvement in meteorological graph. Overall environmental pollution is reduced and earth is healing itself.


2011 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 275-282 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Bin Wong

Both within and beyond China, contemporary reflections on the end of two millennia of imperial rule in China frequently focus upon the failure of the new republic to form a strong state and an effective parliamentary form of representative government. For many the agenda for political change in China today is traced back to unfulfilled opportunities in the past. This presentation suggests another set of perspectives that asks what political challenges were met in order to create a state ruling almost all the territory of the former empire, a transition unusual if not unique in the world history of empires, and how the manner in which those challenges were met influences the kinds of problems and possibilities China faces a century after the end of the last dynasty.


2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (55) ◽  
pp. 7
Author(s):  
Irmina Rostek

The first two issues of the Education Horizons, published in 2021, reflect on how the epi‑ demiological situation in Poland and in the world contributed to significant transformations in the area of education, care and upbringing. However, the range of influence of the new context of functioning is much greater – it has left its mark on almost all spheres of our lives. Persistent beliefs, emotions and behaviours have changed and are still being changed. The way of perceiving and experiencing everyday challenges posed by dy‑ namically changing circumstances has also been changing, as well.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nadjla Fellahi

The beginning of globalization according to Karl Marx’s anticipation when the Bourgeoisie class were expending their products to reach the whole globe starting from the mid of the 19th century, other scholars assume that globalization can be seen as a thread run through all the past humanities starting from our ancestors and their migration across the world which makes no fixed beginning nor an expected end of it. Globalization changed the relations between producers and consumers, also it broken various links between labor with family, daily life, as well as national attachments. The objective of this article is to discuss the progress of the globalization in the field of architecture, its signs, and its processes. The article also demonstrates how the aspect of localities has been affected by the global forces which will be done through two case studies: Algiers and Istanbul. The results expose that Globalization approach can be defined from various perspectives, but what common in these viewpoints is the "Mobility" of thoughts, objects, people, and ideas between regions, nations, and continents. The stereotype aspect of global cities which characterized by tall-sized buildings, the new materials, the sophisticated facades, new technologies etc., has impacted on the priorities of people and authorities of various countries like Algeria, and Turkey.


Significance While Lebanon is experiencing what the World Bank dubbed “the worst economic crisis in more than a century”, civil war-torn Syria has been hit by one of the most severe droughts of the past decade. An estimated 77% of Lebanese households do not have enough food, and almost all Syrians suffer from reduced availability. Impacts Neighbouring countries such as Jordan and Turkey will be the first affected by any new migration wave. The EU may also see more migration from the Levant as a result of food insecurity. The return of Syrian refugees from Lebanon could increase pressure on the humanitarian aid sector in Syria. Israel may more tightly secure its Lebanese and Syrian borders for fear of spillover from rising tensions.


Author(s):  
Alexandra George

‘Intellectual property’ (or ‘IP’) is an umbrella term that is used as shorthand to describe a variety of diverse doctrines that create legally-enforceable monopolies over the use of or access to ideas, information and knowledge. As the Internet is essentially a structure through which such material can be presented, organised, transmitted and disseminated, IP is a key area of law that is used to regulate activity on the Internet. The pervasive significance of this becomes clear when one considers that much of the hardware that forms the framework of computer networks that comprise the Internet, and almost all of the data carried through these networks and linked via the World Wide Web, are—or have been in the past—subject to regulation by IP laws.


Author(s):  
Cas Mudde ◽  
Cristóbal Rovira Kaltwasser

Today, populism affects almost all continents. While all populists share a common discourse, populism is an extremely heterogeneous political phenomenon. Individual populist actors can be left or right, conservative or progressive, religious or secular. Almost all populist actors combine populism with one or more other “host” ideologies. “Populism around the world” provides a concise overview of the main populist actors of the past 150 years. It focuses on North America, Latin America, and Europe in describing the characteristics and host ideology, and the specific interpretation of “the people” and “the elite” of the populists in these regions before looking at some recent populist actors outside these traditional areas.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document