• Breaking News

    Thursday, April 6, 2017

    Man Bahadur In Morong

    भिडियो हेर्न तलको बक्स भित्र किल्क गर्नुहोस

    During tea breaks or when people gather together to eat, the word ‘gastic’ often comes up in conversation. In our daily interactions with patients too, the word makes an appearance pretty regularly.There is no epidemiological data collated by the state about its prevalence, but ask any retail drug store and they will invariably report that some of the most sought after over-the-counter purchases are drugs for gastritis. Thus one can conclude that this ‘gastric’ is a very common phenomena, at least in Nepal. ‘Gastric’ is the word for stomach in Latin. When people use the term, they are undoubtedly referring to the mangled version of ‘gastritis’, which medically means the inflammation of the stomach. The disease is also
    described as peptic ulcer or acid peptic disease (PUD/ APD), which is the erosion or inflammation of the inner lining of gut due to excess acid and enzyme pepsin secretions.For doctors it can get tiresome when people use the term gastric to denote a wide variety of conditions — many of these conditions are entirely unlike one another. Indigestion, loss of appetite, frequent or infrequent need to defecate, abdominal pain/ burning sensation, nausea, vomiting, excessive chest pain, foreign-body sensations, excess gas (burping/ flatulence), acidity and ulcer are some of the common meanings that people have come to associate with the term.

    भिडियो हेर्न तलको बक्स भित्र क्लिक गर्नुहोस

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