Pyramid Power
Author: Max Toth
The topic of controversy in Time Magazine, Esquire, and numerous other publications across the country, Pyramid Power has captured the imagination of millions all over the world who have used these mysterious energies in research and to create a better life style.
Pyramid Power, the secret energy harnessed by the ancients, preserves food stuffs, amplifies thought forms, and increases sexual vitality. Here is the latest fabulous and provocative information on pyramids around the world, instructions on building your own pyramid, and suggested experiments.
The #1 bestseller on pyramid energies offers fascinating information on pyramids around the world, and how you can make pyramid power work for you.
Visit Max Toth's web site at maxtoth.com
Table of Contents:
Acknowledgments
Foreword
Part 1: Beneath the Sands: The Archaeologist's Pyramid
1. A Falcon's-eye View of the Pyramid
2. The Pyramids of Peru
3. The Mayas Scale the Heights
4. The Ancient Egyptians: Pyramid Builders of the World
5. The Pyramids of Giza
6. From Foundation to Capstone: The How and Why of Pyramid Construction
Part 2: Treasure of the Past, Source for the Future: The Power of the Pyramid
7. Pyramid Power
8. The Struggle for the Pyramid Patent
9. Transform Yourself With Pyramid Energy
10. Pyramid Research
11. Model Pyramid Construction
12. Enjoying the Fruits of Pyramid Energy
13. Pyramids: Voyage into the Future
14. The Future is Now!
Bibliography
Index
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American Medical Association Guide to Preventing and Treating Heart Disease: Essential Information You and Your Family Need to Know about Having a Healthy Heart
Author: American Medical Association
More Than 3 Million American Medical Association Books Sold.
American's most trusted medical authority shows you how to prevent and treat heart disease.
When you or someone you love is diagnosed with cardiovascular disease, it's important to know the facts, which can help save a life. In the American Medical Association Guide to Preventing and Treating Heart Disease, you will learn everything you need to know about heart disease to ensure a long, full, and active life.
Authoritative and up to date, the American Medical Association Guide to Preventing and Treating Heart Disease explains the most common forms of heart and blood vessel disease and lays out practical strategies to get you on the road to better health. The book also provides up-to-date information on women and their unique heart disease risks and symptoms as well as information on hart6-healthy eating, including the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute's DASH diet.
Even if heart disease runs in your family, you can still lower your risk of developing it by following the simple guidelines found in this comprehensive resource. For every 3 pounds you lose, there is a corresponding drop of about 2mm Hg in your diastolic pressure, and by bringing down your blood pressure to healthy levels, your risk of stroke can be reduced by 35 to 50 percent. If you have already had a heart attack or a stroke, this book offers vital practical information on preventing another one.
Highlighting prevention, lifestyle changes, testing, and treatments, the American Medical Association Guide to Preventing and Treating Heart Disease provides you and your loved ones with theessential tools you need to reclaim a healthier life.
Janet M. Schneider Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information - Library Journal
Lipsky (regional dean, Univ. of Illinois Coll. of Medicine, Rockford) and Mendelson (medicine & pediatrics, Northwestern Feinberg Sch. of Medicine, Chicago) provide a brief description of the heart and the circulatory system as well as their relation to other body systems, e.g., the lungs, brain, and kidneys. They cover the common conditions of high blood pressure, heart attacks, valve problems, strokes, congestive heart failure, and arrhythmias, explaining each condition, its symptoms, and the existing surgical and medical therapies. They discuss diet and exercise management, recommend regular medical exams, and explain procedures for diagnostic testing for heart disease. The one chapter devoted to prevention covers risk factors such as heredity, weight, high cholesterol, and smoking. Special risks women face are only briefly addressed; alternative therapies and the newer biological therapies go unmentioned. The reading level is very high, the content somewhat clinical. Barry L. Zaret and Genell L. Subak-Sharpe's Heart Care for Lifeor Richard A. Stein's Outliving Heart Diseasewould be a better choice. [Timed to coincide with National Heart Month.—Ed.]
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