View allAll Photos Tagged Bronchitis
Sandi's fingers.. um my tongue? Photo by: jess
One of the fun nights we had at Milestone not so long ago. I'm in the house for a while with bronchitis, as well as so much college work I could just about pluck my eyes out. We'll see.
My camera has an eyepiece that I see out of to take photos as well as I can press a button and see my shots from my LCD screen..... now the screen in my eyepiece is way too blurry to be able to use it to shoot from. I'm sad and cannot wait 5 weeks to send it out for repair, is there any quick solution to my problem? I'm guessing local camera shop but as I'm broke.... this is not really an option. I'm really sad! grrrr figures.
Several different variety of Crocus planted in and around the Southernhay gardens of Exeter, UK. ===General information=== Crocus is a plant that belongs to iris family. There are over 80 different species of crocus that originate from Southern Europe, Central Asia, China, Middle East and Africa. Crocus lives in alpine meadows, rocky mountainsides, scrublands and woodlands. Crocuses tolerate low temperature and cold climates. Beautiful flowers of crocus often protrude from the snow when these plants live on the high altitudes. People started cultivating crocus 500 years BC. This plant can be used as spice, medicine and as a dye. The majority of crocus species are abundant in the wild. Certain species are threatened by habitat loss. Crocus is small plant that can reach 8 to 12 inches in height. The colour of the flower depends on the species. Crocuses are usually yellow, white, mauve or lilac in colour. Crocus has single, cup-shaped flower that arises from a long tube. The flower is composed of six petals.The leaves of crocus are sword-like shape and have white central stripe. Crocus has corm which serves as underground storage system. Each year, at the beginning of the new growing season, a new corm develops on the top of the old corm. Flower has both male and female reproductive organs. Each flower has three red stigmas (female sex organs) and three yellow anthers (male sex organs). Saffron is a spice derived from dried female reproductive organs (red stigmas). These organs contain pigment called crocin which is yellow in colour and has musky taste. Saffron is often used in Mediterranean kitchen. Saffron is the most expensive spice in the world because one ounce of saffron requires 80,000 plants. All of the plants are harvested manually and around 90% of the world's saffron is produced in Iran. Saffron based pigment was used in the cave art 50,000 years ago. Saffron can be used in the manufacture of perfumes and in medicine. Some studies showed that saffron has antibacterial properties and possible anti-tumour effects. It can improve memory and it is often used to alleviate cough, bronchitis and stomach ache. Another application of saffron is in textile industry, where it is used for the dyeing of fabrics. Saffron has a curiously distinctive flavor, but fresh from the fall flower it smells sweet, of freshly cut hay, and feels like waxed thread Certain species of crocus, such as Crocus Autumnale are poisonous. Besides being dangerous (if consumed), this type of crocus shows the greatest tolerance toward low temperatures. Different species of crocus bloom in different parts of the year, but most species will show their beautiful flowers during the winter and spring. Crocuses can be pollinated by various types of insects, such as bees, moths and beetles. Crocus is perennial plant which means that parts of the plant above the ground die each year and new plant develops from the underground corm. Crocus can survive for more than two years. The Dutch Crocus, or Crocus vernus, sports the largest blooms of all the Crocuses, and is probably the most popular variety of this versatile plant The popular Autumn Crocus or Colchicum Autumnale is actually not a true Crocus and is a member of the Lily family. The two can be differentiated in that true Crocus has 3 stamens and Crocus Autumnale has 6. This is a highly poisonous plant, so don't confuse it with Crocus Sativa. Poisoning symptoms are similar to arsenic poisoning. ===Other common names=== Saffron crocus Autumn crocus ===Useful links=== ift.tt/2tfDJGo ift.tt/2FhpVQz ift.tt/2tharam ift.tt/2FlCgDi ===Scientific classification=== Kingdom: Plantae Clade: Angiosperms Clade: Monocots Order: Asparagales Family: Iridaceae Genus: Crocus
I chose to take this picture of cars stopping on a red light located on Ocean Pkwy and Kings Highway in Brooklyn because it is also a crowded area with a lot of cars. These cars cause air pollution which affects the atmosphere and people living nearby.
I am having a rough trot at the moment, still have laryngitis 13 weeks after the flu virus which resulted in bad bronchitis, now working for a colleague whose dad is very ill at another pharmacy I tripped over a box at work and broke my right hand. So of course I am right handed, the challenge is to now start using my left hand to do everything. Easy you say, not so, simple things we take for granted is a huge chore, like eating with a knife and fork, typing etc. Plus I can't take codeine for pain, so it is a painful experience.
So my patience will be tested, and my admiration for the non able bodied amongst us is strengthened.
December 10, 2010
I finally made it to the Dr. today! I've been sick for about 10 days and feeling just AWFUL! Turns out I have Bronchitis! Good thing I went and got some antibiotics.
This is what happens when you feel physically unwell, but mentally fine. I was recovering from bronchitis and still couldn't get up to do much, but I was bored, bored, BORED! (How much Judge Judy can one woman take?!?) I think they turned out really well, and super cute.
Rank:Private
Service No:39980
Cause of Death Bronchitis - Gas Poisoning
Date of Death:22/02/1919 - Age:39
North Staffordshire Regiment
Enlisted - 12/12/1914 - Stoke-on-Trent - 3rd Bn (15954)
Posted - 18/12/1914 - Devonport - 1st GB Notts/Derby (30271)
Transf - 23/10/1915 - 14th Bn Notts/Derby
Posted - 23/02/1916 - N/Staffs - Depot
Posted 17/05/1917 - N/Staffs 3rd Bn
Dis-embarked - 18/09/1917 - France
Posted - 20/09/1917 - 8th Bn
Posted - 23/09/1917 - 2/6th Bn
Posted - 04/10/1917 - 3rd Bn
Wounded - Nov 1917 - Gas Poisoning - Cambria
Hosp - 24/02/1918 - 18/04/1918 - Boscombe
Hosp - 18/04/18 - 06/06/1918 - Mily Con Woldingham
Home
Hosp - 29/06/1918 - 07/05/1915 - Ripon (GP again)
Hosp - 25/09/1918 - 01/02/1919 - Newcastle, Tyne - Bronchitis
Discharged - 01/02/1919
Grave Reference: 2233.
Awarded Silver War Badge (B106180)
BWM & VM
Previous Occupation Labourer Colliery - Carter
Additional Information:
Son of George and Mary Ann Oxford, of Walsall;
Husband of Betsy Oxford, of 11, North St., Stoke-on-Trent.
1 Queen's Street, Stoke, Stoke Upon Trent (1911)
seen as miyo wasn't getting any better we went and tried this. after having been welcomed by a man who looked more like a shepard than a doctor he very kindly took us to the very special room of the hospital.. and here he took miyo's wrists and checked the heart pulse very accurately for a few minutes, i was sat aside in silence and admiration
Sinds maandagochtend produceer ik in steeds frequentere intervallen een blafhoestend zeehondgeluid. Ik heb mijn ontkenningstechniek er op losgelaten, maar helaas: "Exacerbatie Astma", zei de huisarts, oftewel: mijn chronische bronchitis is weer eens acutig. Met een bak medicijnen hoop ik een fullblown acute bronchitis te voorkomen, mocht dat niet lukken dan heb ik de antibiotica al klaarliggen. Kunt u wat vibes sturen zodat het niet zover hoeft te komen? Superbedankt! :-)
Aroma Magic Essential Sandalwood Oil has a sweet, woody scent which evokes a meditative atmosphere. This oil can be used to treat chronic infections of the genito-urinary and pulmonary tract. Best oils for dry skin and acne. It helps treat bronchitis, chapped skin, depression, dry skin, laryngitis, leucorrhea, oily skin, scars, sensitive skin, stress, stretch marks.
Uses :
Bronchitis, chapped skin, depression, dry skin, laryngitis, leucorrhea, oily skin, scars, sensitive skin, stress, stretch marks.
I apologize for not responding earlier to those of You that have written me.
I started out fighting what I thought was bronchitis after I had a Flu shot in November. The coughing and congestion continued through December until the evening of the 22nd, when I suddenly had a high fever. I kept that until a Doctor was in (the Emperor's Birthday was the 23rd and Doctor's Offices were closed) on Friday. I was given a Flu test (stupid... I had received the Flu shot at the same office) and was told it came back negative--AND that in spite of the high fever, it must just be a common cold.
I then suffered just the same (while taking medicine) through the weekend until I was able to go to a Doctor in Kawasaki on the following Monday, who then told me that I must have Mycoplasma Pneumonia and should be hospitalized for at least a week. I had already missed watching my sons open their Christmas presents, as I could barely move from the bed and had slept nearly every living moment from the time I first got the high fever--so I really resisted, as I didn't want to spend New Year's alone in a hospital.
The Doctor then reluctantly gave me more powerful medicine (take for 3 days... then it stays in the body for 7?) and said if I got worse, I should hope that not only would a Hospital be open, but also that it would have a bed available. I didn't do much for my entire Winter break, as I spent it sleeping, sitting in a Doctor's Office and/or taking medicine. I only went out a couple of times to test if I was better (I wasn't in any of the cases) and I have only just returned home... because I have to return to work. I still don't feel 100%, but the medicine seems to have helped and I really hope that I don't have a 2nd, more difficult bout with whatever I actually had (and still feel like I might have, fighting to come back).
Mellie seems to be feeling a bit better after several days of antibiotics for her bronchitis. She DEFINITELY does not like cherry flavored medication! We should have the results of the biopsy in the next day or so.
Boo at the Zoo (part 2)
10/25/08
I have several similiar shots but couldn't decide which one to post
After two weeks of fighting a cold and bronchitis I got out and spent a couple of hours at the zoo – would like to have seen some of the afternoon enrichments (gibbons and tigers) but wasn’t up to it
My day began where last night ended...the ER. I was released with some pills, prescriptions and more info on COPD & bronchitis. The rest of the family is by my side!
Coltsfoot - (Tussilago Farfara) - Wawayanda State Park, New Jersey
The Coltsfoot flower is actually a composite flower made up of many smaller flowers that specialize to form the "flower" we see in this image. The outer array is made up of many thin ray flowers, while the center is a cluster of tiny 5 petal flowers. The Coltsfoot is named for the shape of the leaves (not out yet), and is one of the very first flowers to bloom in the Spring.
The Coltsfoot is mainly known as a perennial herb, and the leaves, flowers, and occasionally the root are used medicinally to treat asthma, bronchitis, dry hacking coughs, laryngitis, throat hoarseness, lung cancer symptoms, mouth and throat irritations, sore throat, and wheezing. However, it is not advisable to use it as a medicinal herb since it contains unsafe amounts of pyrrolizidine alkaloids which have been scientifically proven to cause liver cancer in rats.
DJ NIteshiver streamed an impromptu set (Tuesday 11:30-15:00 SLt) at the Midnight Cabaret, and called it "Global Rhythms". Genzina rose from her Bronchitis bed to host and lead the dances!
Genzina retired to bed, Gil took the dance HUD
L->R Hannah, Bavid, Gil
Deacon, Pagan
While still afflicted from bronchitis i remain at home, spending my time around the house and shooting on walls...
My House
Nov. 06
“Here bring your wounded hearts, here tell your anguish; Earth has no sorrow that Heaven cannot heal” ~~~ Thomas More
Treatment for acute bronchitis is typically symptomatich. As viruses cause most cases of acute bronchitis, antibiotics should not be used unless microscopic examination of gram-stained sputum reveals large numbers of bacteria.
I missed a photography outing with my camera club because I haven't been able to sleep with my bronchitis.... Later in the day I went to the spot I was suppose to be at 7:30 in the morning and got some wonderful shots of my girl! Can't let a darn cough stop me!!
IMG_9196dreamscape
Yesterday in the evening he started to cough .. at night it was very bad, I wake up all the time to look at him, he breathed very heavily sometimes.. today at morning I called Pau our vet and he came immediatly.. so.. Charly got a bronchitis, poor guy !! Now he takes antibiotics and keeps in house, far away from cold.. =) he already feels much better at the moment!!! he eats and drinks again !! And plays of course..
I am recouping from bronchitis and besides taking medication the past week haven't done much more than read.
I really enjoyed this book.
Boo at the Zoo (part 2)
10/25/08
After two weeks of fighting a cold and bronchitis I got out and spent a couple of hours at the zoo – would like to have seen some of the afternoon enrichments (gibbons and tigers) but wasn’t up to it
Enjoying the nice weather for once....too bad I am getting sick. Why can't we have this weather on Tuesdays when I play golf?
Found this cool walkway downtown... I love old urban stuff like this.
Okay, so I have been down and out with bronchitis and a sinus infection. So these next few shots are going to be old shots that I had taken but decided to go ahead a retouch them up. I'm way behind... :o(
I know I haven't been much of a flickr friend lately and I'm soooo sorry! Starting home schooling again, catching bronchitis and taking weekend jaunts here and there have taken their toll :( I promise to visit your threads VERY soon!!!!!! ♥
Lacee & Clay blogged
is snow on our roof top, all 2" of it.
where I live... in Toronto, this is the first "big" snowfall of the season for us here... pretty late in the year, on December 30th, 2011
2 more days of the calendar year and ADAD.2011! Yippee!
Hope everyone is having a good holiday season.
heading offline to get some rest, I've got a nasty cough, cold, bronchitis that I'm still trying to shake since boxing day.
A British Mirror Series postcard ("Holds the Mirror up to Nature").
The card was posted using a halfpenny stamp on Tuesday the 16th. April 1907. It was sent to:
Miss Carter,
School Street,
Winfrith,
Dorset.
Winfrith Newburgh, commonly called just Winfrith, is a village about 8 miles (13 km) west of Wareham, and 10 miles (16 km) east of the county town of Dorchester.
The message on the divided back of the card was as follows:
"Tuesday.
Please dear get me a pot
of Indian Balm when Mr.
Wright comes.
I've had toothache terribly
& have a swollen face.
I can't go outdoors until
it's better. It's a cold I think.
Hope you are well & your
dear m. is getting stronger.
I shall come and see you
as soon as I can.
Much love from
P."
Indian Balm
Indian Balm was made in Barnstaple, and was on sale there until 1973.
The Balm, which included oils of cajuput, chaulmooga, origanum and terebinth, unguent of althea, castor oil and camphor, proved to be remarkably successful.
It was claimed that the balm helped with all inflammations, both internal and external, inflamed eyes and gums, eczema, piles, rheumatism and bronchitis.
But the list doesn't end there - it was also said to help with neuralgia, colds, chilblains, burns, scalds, sprains, cuts, and cancerous sores. What a product!
August Eigruber
So what else happened on the day that the card was posted?
Well, the 16th. April 1907 marked the unfortunate birth of August Eigruber.
August Eigruber was an Austrian-born Nazi Gauleiter and Reichsstatthalter of Reichsgau Oberdonau (Upper Danube) and Landeshauptmann of Upper Austria.
He was convicted of war crimes at Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp and hanged.
-- August Eigruber - The Early Years
Born in Steyr, Austria, after finishing middle school Eigruber underwent training in geodesy and fine mechanics at the Austrian Federal Teaching Institution for Iron- and Steelworking.
Thereafter, he was active in his profession.
In November 1922 he joined the National Socialist Worker Youth of Austria, whose leader he became in 1925.
In April 1928, he joined the Nazi Party, whose Steyr-Land district leadership he took up in October 1930. For his activities in the NSDAP, which was banned in Austria, Eigruber was sentenced to several months in prison.
From May 1935, Eigruber was the Gau Director (Gaugeschäftsführer) for the banned Party in the Upper Austria Gau, and he took over complete leadership of the Gau as of 1936.
-- August Eigruber's Career in the Nazi State
After the Anschluss, Eigruber was appointed Landeshauptmann of Upper Austria on the 14th. March 1938. On the 10th. April he was elected as a member of the German Reichstag, representing Austria.
On the 22nd. May 1938 Adolf Hitler appointed him Gauleiter of Reichsgau Oberdonau. Eigruber thus united under his control the highest party and governmental offices in his jurisdiction.
On the 1st. June 1938, Eigruber joined the SA, with the rank of SA-Brigadeführer. On the 25th. July, he also joined the SS as a Standartenführer.
Eigruber rose to the rank of SS-Brigadeführer in January 1939, and to SS-Gruppenführer in November 1940. On 1 April 1940, he was installed as Reichsstatthalter (Reich Governor) of Oberdonau.
In July 1940, the Donau-Zeitung announced that August Eigruber would travel to Passau by ship. There, he was ceremonially welcomed at City Hall, and attended the latest play by Hans Baumann.
In February 1945, 500 Soviet POWs escaped from Mauthausen. In response, SS soldiers, Sturmabteilung detachments, and Volkssturm men, who were acting on Eigruber's orders, hunted the POWs down in the Mühlviertler Hasenjagd.
Nearly all of them were murdered. As for those who were captured, a witness said they heard Eigruber telling commandant Franz Ziereis that:
"All these pigs will have
to be finished."
Toward the end of the war, as U.S. forces approached Eigruber's capital at Linz, he proclaimed the city to be a "fortress" to be defended to the bitter end.
In April 1945, shortly before the arrival of U.S. forces, he ordered the mass execution of 42 resistance fighters. However, shortly after the beginning of the offensive on the 5th. May 1945, Eigruber fled and proclaimed Linz an open city.
He managed to hide out using forged identification papers until the 11th. August 1945, but was arrested by US Army Counterintelligence, in Sankt Pankraz.
-- August Eigruber's Conviction and Execution
At the Mauthausen-Gusen camp trials, held under the jurisdiction of the Dachau International Military Tribunal, Eigruber was sentenced on the 13th. May 1946 to death by hanging for his responsibility for crimes at Mauthausen concentration camp, where tens of thousands of prisoners died.
The sentence was carried out in the prison yard at Landsberg Prison on the 28th. May 1947. Eigruber's last words were:
"Lord, take care of Germany.
Lord, take care of my family.
Lord, take care of my children.
I regard it as an honor to be
hanged by the most brutal of
victors.
Long live Germany!"
Eigruber was 40 years of age when he died, leaving a wife and five children.
Damiana is a relatively small shrub that produces small, aromatic flowers. It blossoms in early to late summer and is followed by fruits that taste similar to figs. The shrub is said to have an strong spice like odor somewhat like chamomile, due to an oil present in the plant. Damiana or Turnera Diffusa is native to Mexico and the Southwestern United States and is a major remedy and aphrodisiac in Mexican medical folklore.
Damiana has been used for the treatment of impotence, sterility, menopause, diabetes, kidney disease, bladder infections, asthma, bronchitis, chronic fatigue and anxiety.
It's popularity as a sex herb and aphrodisiac is huge and growing.
The Damiana plant may be named after Saint Damian, the patron saint of pharmacists.
In Indian medicine, damina is used primarily in the treatment of Asthma. This use is reflected in the Mayan name "asthma broom," for the plant sweeps away the illness.
"Shirt Remover."
as i was suffering from bronchitis during this part of the trip, i made sure to have a glass. it was pretty sweet and cinnamon-y.
Being in the mid-stages of Bronchitis but needing something photographic to do, I decided to go through my huge pile-up of phonograph records and take pictures of the covers that stood out for me as interesting in some way. These albums haven't been played (my turntable hasn't work for 10 years) for ages and many of these don't look very good any more.
These are not necessarily my favorites from the past; I just liked the covers. I will probably lay out 2 or 3 a day until I get well.
Acute Bronchitis may be indicated by an expectorating cough, shortness of breath (dyspnea), and wheezing. On occasion, chest pains, fever, and fatigue or malaise may also occur.
Go to Page with image in the Internet Archive
Title: University of Maryland Theses 1855 (b)
Publisher:
Sponsor: LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation
Contributor: University of Maryland, Baltimore Digital Archive
Date: 1855
Language: eng
This volume contains the following manuscripts described as either an Inaugural Dissertation or an Inaugural Essay presented to the University of Maryland for the Degree of "Doctor of Medicine" or "Doctor of Physic" : Delirium Tremens / by Thompson, Rezin R. ; Compression of the Brain / by Smith, Reuben ; Coryza / by Bishop, Elijah Tracy ; Oblique Inguinal Hernia / by Hendrix, Henry A. ; Paracentesis Thoracis / by Lynch, Jethro ; Cholera Infantum / by Lloyd, Francis M. ; Physiology of Digestion / by Smith, James ; Clinical Report of Cases / by Outten, Cincinnatus ; Hydrocele / by Buckley, Jesse James ; Scarlatina / by Hering, Edwin Augustus ; Mortification / by Johnson, Andrew J. ; Twenty-one Surgical Clinics / by Greentree, Hiram ; Intermittent Fever / by Briscoe, Henry ; Typhoid Fever / by Tull, J. Emory ; Talipes / by Thompson, John C. ; Intermittent Fever / by Covey, Edward N. ; Bilious Remittent Fever / by Boarman, William J. ; Acute Bronchitis / by Stanforth, Richard ; Miasm and Its Effects As Manifested on the Inhabitants of the “Northern Neck” of Virginia / by Taylor, John B. ; Pneumonia / by Jameson, Benjamin A. ; Strabismus / by Brewer, Charles ; Epilepsy / by Hunter, John H.
If you have questions concerning reproductions, please contact the Contributing Library.
Note: The colors, contrast and appearance of these illustrations are unlikely to be true to life. They are derived from scanned images that have been enhanced for machine interpretation and have been altered from their originals.
Read/Download from the Internet Archive
George F. Read Jan 11, 1844 aged 24 yrs 6 mos; Chronic Bronchitis...Consumption..after a nearly 2 year illness.
Compton Chamberlayne Cemetery, Wiltshire.
Name: Alexander George Pairman
Nationality: Australian
Enlisted: 16/07/1915
Rank: Lance Corporal
Service No: 4900
Date of Death: 26/11/1916
Age: 31
Regiment/Service: Australian Infantry, A.I.F., 59th Bn.
Grave Reference: 226B
Inscription reads: Nay, not dead but passed to higher service still.
Born at Kyneton, Victoria. Son of Alexander and Isabella Pairman of 6 Cambridge Street, Box Hill, Victoria. Occupation butter maker. Cause of death was bronchitis.
It took a long time to get the cage in place so the men could get into the building. This building is being demolished. May 30, 2013, Christchurch New Zealand.
I had to go to the doctor this morning as my Temperature was so high and I do have Bronchitis and bad asthma so have to go onto medication.
All Info on Christchurch Earthquakes; en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_Christchurch_earthquake