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MEMATİ

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    Tunisia

Everything posted by MEMATİ

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  2. @Mr.Daniel ♔♔♔ Someone who helps everyone whom I'm cute I say these words from my heart I wish you happiness and success in life ❤️
  3. For Zombie Ak-47 (XM1014 Just when i have Ulimited clip)
  4. Nick: WassimName Of Server: ThunderZM.CsBlackDevil.Com [Zombie Plague 6.2] Picture Of Score: @HappyBoy @JaEgArN @[MC]Ronin[MC]
  5. Happy Birthday Bro ❤️
  6. Nico Rosberg s’est fait arrêter par la police française ce mois-ci alors qu’il se rendait sur le circuit Paul-Ricard, dans le Var, pour y tester la McLaren Senna. Dans la dernière vidéo mise en ligne sur sa chaîne YouTube, Rosberg se rend au domicile de Mika Häkkinen, double champion du monde de F1, pour lui emprunter sa McLaren Senna, une supercar limitée à 500 exemplaires et vendue au prix de 930 000 euros, excusez du peu. Rosberg prend ensuite la direction du circuit Paul-Ricard, qui a accueilli le retour du Grand Prix de France au calendrier de la Formule 1 l’an dernier, mais son trajet ne va pas se passer comme il l’avait prévu. Le champion du monde 2016 de Formule 1 s’est en effet fait arrêter par la police française. La suite est à découvrir dans la vidéo ci-dessous (à partir de 4:40)…
  7. The theory of evolution is one of the best-known scientific theories around. Try to make it through a day without using or hearing the word "evolution" and you'll see just how widespread this theory is. Evolution is fascinating because it attempts to answer one of the most basic human questions: Where did life, and human beings, come from? The theory of evolution proposes that life and humans arose through a natural process. A very large number of people do not believe this, which is something In this article, we will explore the theory of evolution and how it works. We will also examine several important areas that show holes in the current theory -- places where scientific research will be working in the coming years in order to complete the theory. The holes are considered by many to be proof that the theory of evolution should be overthrown. As a result, quite a bit of controversy has surrounded evolution ever since it was first proposed. Let's start off by taking a look at the basic principles of the theory of evolution, look at some examples and then examine the holes.
  8. For some women with endometriosis, the pain doesn’t stop after surgical and hormonal treatments. It can persist, triggered by muscle spasms that ripple through the pelvic floor. Now, a small study suggests that Botox, best known for smoothing wrinkles, could quell those spasms and relieve that pain. Thirteen women diagnosed with the disorder, in which tissue similar to what lines the uterus grows elsewhere in the body, had the botulinum toxin injected into their pelvic floor, which supports the pelvic organs. The shots targeted areas of muscle spasm that were sites of pain. The women, ages 21 to 51, had been in pain for at least two years. All reported a reduction in pain four to eight weeks after treatment. Eleven of the 13 rated their post-Botox pain as mild or completely gone, researchers reported online July 8 in Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine. Relief lasted from five to 11 months in seven of the 11 women followed for up to a year post injection. Women in the study “had benefit beyond relief of pain. Some were able to resume having sex without pain. Some were able to function better,” says Barbara Karp, a neurologist at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) in Bethesda, Md. Eight of the 13 women had experienced moderate to very severe disability, according to a questionnaire designed to measure how the pain interferes with day-to-day activities such as walking, standing, sleeping, personal care and sex life. Six of these women’s scores indicated their disability had lessened after the injection. Endometriosis affects an estimated 5 to 10 percent of reproductive-age women, or 176 million worldwide. Compounding the pain and infertility that accompanies the disorder is the lack of awareness of the condition; past studies have found that women face treatment delays and skepticism that they have a medical issue at all. Standard treatments include hormone therapies and the surgical removal of tissue lesions located outside of the uterus. But there is no cure. Women who continue to have pain might be reassessed for surgery, change their hormone therapy, try physical therapy or take pain medications like opioids, says gynecologist Pamela Stratton, also at NINDS. The participants in the study had had surgery and hormone treatments, but their pain persisted. All of the women also had pelvic floor muscle spasms. Botulinum toxin is produced by the microbe that causes the food poisoning illness botulism. As Botox, it paralyzes certain muscles or blocks nerves. The toxin has been used to smooth wrinkles and to calm overactive muscles in neck spasms and bladder conditions (SN: 4/5/08, p. 213). Karp had experience using botulinum toxin to treat neurological disorders involving overactive muscles. So she, Stratton and their colleagues suspected Botox injections might also diminish the pelvic floor spasms and associated pain. The results suggest that Botox may be “a promising tool” to treat these spasms, says obstetrician and gynecologist Andrea Rapkin of UCLA’s David Geffen School of Medicine, who was not involved in the study. But she notes the treatment is expensive, and the study size was very small. Larger studies that compare the treatment to a placebo will be necessary to evaluate how safe and effective the botulinum toxin treatment is for this disorder. Whatever the outcome of those trials, the study “brings to light the fact that there are many aspects to endometriosis pain that have to be evaluated,” Rapkin says, not just that caused by tissue lesions.
  9. 67430773_2409585742653526_74832062466406

    @HappyBoy @JaEgArN @[MC]Ronin[MC] @Nıco @Mr.Love 

    ahahahahahahahahha @HappyBoy Hunting in a bird Or Internet is cut off on you ???

    1. _Happy boy

      _Happy boy

      wow i know this me ?  

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  11. ❤️❤️ 

  12. If you're ever stuck at a party with nothing to talk about, you might mention that you're having your wisdom teeth taken out. The very mention of these teeth can start a war of words, as people duke it out to prove that their oral surgery was indeed the worst experience ever. The details of this rite of passage are ingrained in each person's mind, so you'll hear lots of gory information -- how one girl's face swelled as big as a watermelon, how another girl battled dry sockets, how one fellow had to miss Christmas dinner because the only thing he could eat was Jell-O. Debates will rage about the virtues of going under or staying awake during the surgery, and battle-scarred soldiers will compare how many teeth they had pulled. You can sit back and congratulate yourself for livening up this party. Wisdom teeth are more formally known to dentists as third molars, while informally, they're known to oral surgeons as cash cows and to those of us who've had them removed, a source of surgical misery. These teeth were named for the time at which they make their appearance at the very back of the mouth, which is usually between the ages of 17 and 25, when a young person might be pursuing wisdom with higher education [source: Cooper]. The third molars have the nasty habit of becoming impacted, or coming in at a funny angle or in an unexpected location. This poor positioning can cause pain and infection, and even if the teeth happen to come in correctly, there could still be trouble ahead. The third molars are difficult to clean, so they could rot and infect nearby teeth; they may also crowd adjacent teeth, undoing years of straight alignments created by braces. For these reasons, dentists usually recommend removing wisdom teeth in young adults, before the teeth have the chance to attach to the jaw and complicate extraction. Though you may miss a few days of school or work for the surgery, you probably won't miss your wisdom teeth once they're gone, because we don't use them anymore. But if we don't need them, why do these teeth come in at all? Is it possible they may eventually disappear?
  13. In some of the world’s least-developed countries, spacing births two years apart, instead of one, can nearly halve infant mortality rates, a study finds. But in more developed nations, increasing the interval between successive childbirths makes little difference to infant deaths, researchers report July 3 in Demography. “At low levels of development, birth spacing is really important for infant survival,” says demographer Joe Molitoris of Lund University in Sweden. “But as development progresses, the relative importance of spacing gets weaker and weaker until it basically becomes zero.” Women’s access to better nutrition and medical care likely compensate for short birth intervals, Molitoris and his colleagues say. Short birth intervals have been linked to poor health outcomes for moms and infants for decades, though the exact causes aren’t clear. Research has shown that the mothers’ bodies can struggle to recover and provide nutrients to children. In addition, siblings that are close in age may compete for the same resources, crucially breast milk, and are exposed to similar diseases. But the new study adds to a growing body of evidence suggesting that the current World Health Organization guidelines that women in all countries space babies three to five years apart are both more conservative than needed and not one-size-fits-all. For instance, some studies out of wealthier countries, such as Sweden, Canada and Australia, show no link between infant health and birth spacing, while research out of poor countries shows the reverse. Molitoris and his team combed through intermittent surveys given to 1.15 million mothers in 77 low- and middle- income countries from 1985 to 2016 to create a more complete picture. For moms ages 15 to 49, the researchers zeroed in on their children’s birth dates and survival among all younger siblings born within 10 years of an older sibling. All told, the women birthed 4.56 million children, about 370,000 of which died before age 1. Eighty-three percent of those deaths occurred among babies born within three years of an older sibling, the team found. Babies born in the shortest birth intervals to uneducated mothers living in countries with high infant mortality — at least 100 babies dying for every 1,000 births — were in the greatest danger. (The researchers used infant mortality rate as a proxy for a country’s level of development.) In those circumstances, babies born within one year of an older sibling had around a 22 percent chance of dying before age 1. That chance dropped to about 13 percent when the birth interval increased to two years, Molitoris says. But, like the earlier research showed, the link between infant mortality and birth spacing began to disappear as infant mortality rates dropped. Specifically, spacing births at least three years apart ceased to matter when a country’s infant mortality rate fell to about 50 or less infant deaths per 1,000 births, the researchers found. The study “has the value of being comprehensive, maybe the best sum-up we’re going to get on this issue,” says demographer John Casterline of Ohio State University in Columbus. But, he says, it obscures the progress that has been made in recent years. Thanks to WHO campaigns and other interventions, birth intervals have been increasing worldwide, Casterline says. “I think it’s great science,” Casterline says, but “they missed the big story” by looking at data back to the 1980s instead of zooming in on the past 10 to 15 years. Shrinking birth intervals do remain a cause for concern in some parts of the world, though. In a 2018 study in the Journal of Biosocial Science, researchers looked at surveys given to mothers from 2000 to 2016 to understand fertility trends. That study attributed rising fertility (which is linked to shorter birth intervals) across Central Africa to overall declines in postpartum abstinence rates and breastfeeding duration. Continuing to breastfeed after giving birth can suppresses fertility, particularly in the early months. In those areas, Molitoris says, campaigns to encourage exclusive breastfeeding during a baby’s first few months could eliminate at least the shortest and most dangerous birth intervals. Avoiding pregnancy during just those months could save a lot of lives, he says.
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WHO WE ARE?

CsBlackDevil Community [www.csblackdevil.com], a virtual world from May 1, 2012, which continues to grow in the gaming world. CSBD has over 70k members in continuous expansion, coming from different parts of the world.

 

 

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