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White Patches On Tongue - Articles
White Patches of Powdery Mildew on Leaves.
by
TopVeg !.
Posted
Sun 07 Sep 2008 2:00am
White powdery patches appearing on older leaves and stems of courgettes, peas & beans are caused by a fungus called powdery mildew. It is appearing in gardens now, as the weather pattern has been favourable to powdery mildew.
Powdery mildew on courgettes is very common - it does not like wet weather, but multiplies in hot conditions. (more…)
broad
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Tongue Twisters for twisted tongues?
by
Tom Weidig
Posted
Sun 05 Nov 2006 12:00am
I am currently reading Stutter by Harvard Professor Shell. He claims that tongue twisters are all always impossible for people who stutter. Is this assertion true?
I can do tongue twisters when I concentrate: How about you?
Maybe, we could even use them to improve our speech control. The secret about tongue twisters is to switch between two
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What is that “white patch” on my teeth?
by
Just Ask Dentist.com
Posted
Sat 24 Jul 2010 8:52am
If you have ever looked close enough, some of you may find some “white patches” on your teeth. Interestingly, many of my patients start to notice it after some cosmetic dental treatment has begun, eg braces or tooth bonding.
The fact is, the “white patch” has always been there when the tooth erupted. It is commonly a case of increased awareness
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Your Tongue Is Important
by
Shilah C. Azib
Posted
Thu 18 Mar 2010 5:51am
it look white? If it looks white, then you have a problem. Now, take a spoon and scrape it down your tongue and look at the spoon. What do you see? Do you see white gunk and build...
Raise your hand if you take the time to brush your tongue when you brush your teeth? It is not hard to do, yet few people actually take the time to do so. When you
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Raynaud’s phenomenon affecting the tongue of a patient
by
Jan
Posted
Fri 11 Sep 2009 4:57pm
A case report by M. J. Bridges and C. A. Kelly
Raynaud’s disease of the tongue may occur in patients with connective tissue disease, or in patients without underlying disease. Symptoms include dysarthria, temporary paraesthesia, lingual ulceration, and tongue spasms, and diagnosis rests
on careful history taking and, ideally, confirmation
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