- Falling in love can produce very intense cognitive and effective changes
- Love modifies certain brain's chemicals, such as hormones and neurotransmitters
- CogniFit expert distinguishes 4 consequences that love has on our brain
With nearly three decades as a doctor, as well as a nationally syndicated radio show host and internationally acclaimed health expert, Dr. Evelyn Higgins releases her groundbreaking book. After studying both Eastern and Western philosophies and seeing our wellness and longevity worsening, she asks, "is our decline in health physical, emotional, intellectual or spiritual?" In her down-to earth style, the reader begins to view health as more than simply the absence of disease.
Read Press ReleaseRebecca Glaser, MD and Constantine Dimitrakakis, MD, PhD set the record straight about testosterone therapy in women. Their groundbreaking article--based on scientific medical evidence-challenges the status quo and refutes 10 common myths about tes
Read Press ReleaseJuly 9, 2012 - Boston, MA: Living with headaches, joint pain, memory loss and hot flashes --it's no wonder you're irritable. Thinking a trip to the doctor is your golden ticket to a happily balanced hormonal life, think again.
Read Press ReleaseChances are either you or someone that you know has trouble sleeping. Is this just a natural process of growing old, or could it be a symptom of an over-committed, over-stressed culture? Could it be your hormones?
Read Press ReleaseThe 2010 Healthcare Conference presents a new, cutting edge business model enabling physicians to facilitate the transformation of healthcare by improving patient and physician outcomes.
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