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Justin O

Asthma - 1 views

  • For most kids, breathing is simple: They breathe in through their noses or mouths and the air goes into the windpipe. From there, it travels through the airways and into the lungs. But for kids with asthma, breathing can be a lot more difficult because their airways are very sensitive.
  • An asthma flare-up, which some people call an asthma attack or episode, happens when a person's airways get swollen and narrower and it becomes a lot harder for air to get in and out of the lungs. Sometimes the swollen airways produce extra mucus, which makes things pretty sticky, so it's easy to see why it's hard to breathe.
  • In between flare-ups, a kid's breathing can be totally normal or seem that way. But during a flare-up, it can feel like the person is breathing through a straw.
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  • A kid with asthma may wheeze (a whistling sound when he or she breathes), cough, and feel tightness in the chest.
  • Asthma is more common than you might think. As many as 6 million kids in the United States have it
  • Kids who have asthma should try to avoid things that can cause their airways to tighten. But some triggers — like cats, colds, and chalk dust — can't always be avoided. That's why kids who are sensitive to those things must manage their asthma by taking medication.
Dean O

Celiac Disease - 0 views

  • Some common symptoms of celiac disease are diarrhea, decreased appetite, stomachache and bloating, poor growth, and
  • weight loss.
  • Villi are usually described as microscopic, finger-like projections. Weird, huh? Fingers in your intestines! But don't forget that they're microscopic, meaning they are extremely small — so small you can't see them without a microscope. The villi are important because they absorb nutrients into the body.
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  • important part of the digestive system is the small intestine, which is lined with villi (say: vil-eye).
  • celiac (say: see-lee-ak)
  • someone with celiac disease, the body starts damaging and destroying the villi. Without villi, the body can't absorb vitamins
  • and nutrients from food.
  • Gluten
  • Many kids are diagnosed with it when they're between 6 months and 2 years old. It makes sense because, at this time kids are getting their first taste of gluten in foods. For some people, the problems occur gradually and the symptoms may be terrible one week and not as bad the next. Because of this, some people aren't diagnosed with celiac disease until they're older. The problem is chronic, which means that although symptoms may come and go, people who have celiac disease will always have it. Someone with celiac disease may feel tired and could be irritable. Some also have skin rashes and mouth sores. The problem is sometimes mistaken for other digestive problems called inflammatory bowel disease or lactose intolerance. And in some cases, a kid won't have any symptoms and then will all of a sudden start having problems during a time of stress, such as after an injury.
Jackie Frens

Go West Across America - 1 views

  •  
    This is a "choose-your-own-adventure" type story where you pretend to go on a trip with Lewis and Clark.
Jackie Frens

Sacagawea: I'm a Hero - 4 views

  •  
    Just right site with facts about this explorer's life.
Justin A

Diabetes facts | Type 1 diabetes | Type 2 diabetes | Preventing diabetes | diabetes sym... - 0 views

  • More than 2 million people have diabetes in the UK and it's estimated that at least another 500,000 have it, but don't know.
Dean O

Celiac disease in children - 0 views

    • Dean O
       
      The other sites say the same symptoms like kidshealth.org
  • Celiac disease is a condition that causes symptoms like diarrhea,
  • weight loss, and a lack of appetite
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