natquen
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46 ExcellentAbout natquen
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Hatchet man
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As someone currently undergoing chemotherapy, about 80% (if not more) of the patients I see at chemo (including myself) still have their hair. Not all chemo drugs cause hair loss, and even if they do, for some cancers (not leukaemia or lymphoma, I believe) you can opt to wear an ice cap during treatment if maintaining your locks is important to you. The chemo = bald image is outdated. Also, you can be normally mobile/feel fine even with widely metastatic cancer.
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She revealed she had breast cancer in 2014, and also has bipolar. https://i.imgur.com/kOtAJiT.jpg
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Both potential symptoms of an eating disorder.
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I don't think Madonna can handle not being that culturally relevant anymore. Her last smash hit (which was a duet with Justin Timberlake, no less) was nearly 15 years ago. There would be 20 year-olds alive now who aren't familiar with her music, or only know of her as someone who was big in the 80s. It must be tough for someone with her ego.
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Reports now that John's had part of his jaw removed. Yikes.
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ABC are reporting it's 'mouth' cancer, without specifying where exactly. That can be lip, tongue, floor of mouth, cheek, palate, salivary gland, tonsil, or perhaps even jaw. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-08-24/john-farnham-cancer-surgery-tumour-removed-from-mouth/101365740 Given the 12 hour op, I am guessing that there was a reconstruction (muscle or bone graft from elsewhere) as part of the procedure.
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My mother said she heard on the radio Tuesday morning that it was 'throat' (which could mean larynx, pharynx, tonsil or oesophagus) cancer, but I can't find any reference to that online, so wonder if she misheard or they announced inaccurate/unverified information. I could be wrong, but I wouldn't imagine a 'throat' operation would take 12 hours, unless it was something very major.
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Australian singer John Farnham undergoes surgery for an as yet undisclosed type of cancer today, aged 73. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-08-23/john-farnham-admitted-to-hospital-for-cancer-treatment/14029044
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New Zealand-born, Australian-based, singer Margaret Urlich has died aged 57 from cancer: https://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/music/300668179/kiwi-singer-margaret-urlich-57-dies-after-battle-with-cancer
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80s/90s singer Margaret Urlich has died aged 57 from cancer: https://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/music/300668179/kiwi-singer-margaret-urlich-57-dies-after-battle-with-cancer
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Probably belongs in the NZ thread, but she was based in Australia since the late 80s. Margaret Urlich has died after a 2.5 year illness with cancer, aged 57. She sang the female vocal part on Daryl Braithwaite's 'The Horses' (though did not appear in the music video, with her lines instead lip synced by a model), and had solo hits with 'Escaping', 'Number One (Remember When We Danced All Night)', 'Boy In the Moon' and 'Gonna Make You Mine' in the early-mid 90s. https://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/music/300668179/kiwi-singer-margaret-urlich-57-dies-after-battle-with-cancer
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If it's a polyp (which tend to occur on just one vocal fold), they are completely benign... though detrimental to the voice, which is not great for a singer.
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Aphasia is not a form of dementia, although dementia patients also have difficulty with verbal communication (leading to none in the final stages). Dementia affects the semantic (meaning/vocabulary) aspects of language, with the syntactic (sentence structure and word grammar) elements of language being relatively spared. In contrast, aphasia usually affects both the semantic and syntactic elements of language. Aphasia can range from a near-total inability to use or understand spoken and written language (global aphasia), which is devastating, to being able to speak fluently but having occasional difficulty with finding the right word (anomic aphasia) at the more mild end. You can also have fluent aphasia where the person can speak in full sentences without struggle, and their speech sounds normal (if you ignore what they are saying), but what they say does not make sense, and their comprehension and ability to monitor their own speech is poor. In general, aphasia will be worst in the early post-stroke period and then either gradually or dramatically improve. In contrast, dementia only gets worse. From viewing that interview, Chris Ellison has a non-fluent aphasia, and appears to struggle significantly with stringing words together and getting his words out (he probably also has a related condition, apraxia of speech).
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He looks like the kind of person he was singing about in 'Another Day In Paradise' there.
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No. The point you were making is that we have to question the value of COVID vaccines because not all of the scientists agree. If you are only swayed by all scientists agreeing on something, that would leave very little for you to actually believe in.