Write an article based on this "Tell your doctor about your symptoms. Get a pelvic exam. Request an ultrasound or MRI if the pelvic exam is not conclusive. Have a laparoscopy to confirm the diagnosis. Take non-steroidal anti-inflammatories for mild endometriosis. Try birth control or hormone therapy to reduce your pain. Consider surgical options if your condition does not improve."
article: If you're concerned that you might have endometriosis, talk to your primary care physician or gynecologist about it. They may be able to come up with some treatment options based on your symptoms.  If you've made symptom charts or otherwise kept track of your periods and the symptoms that accompany them, show your records to your doctor. That can help them get a better understanding of what you're experiencing. Take all symptoms seriously. Relatively mild symptoms don't necessarily equate to a mild case of endometriosis. The severity of your symptoms depends on where the uterine tissue is growing and how it affects the rest of your bodily functions. When you express concerns that you might have endometriosis, the first thing your doctor will probably do is conduct a pelvic exam. They will feel various areas in and around your pelvis for abnormalities, including cysts or scars, that may be evidence of endometriosis. If your problems have developed recently, your doctor may not be able to determine if you have endometriosis based on a pelvic exam alone. It's difficult to feel small amounts of uterine tissue growing outside the uterus unless they've caused a cyst to form. Ultrasounds and MRIs create images inside your body to see where your doctor can't. Using these detailed images, your doctor can identify cysts associated with endometriosis. They'll also be able to pinpoint the size and location of uterine tissue growing outside the uterus.  Based on these images, your doctor may recommend surgery to remove abnormal growths of tissue. They may also want to test these growths for the possibility of cancer. An MRI can accurately detect up to 95% of cases of endometriosis. A laparoscopy is minor surgery that can definitively diagnose endometriosis. Because there's no specific cure for endometriosis, this procedure may not be necessary unless your condition is advanced. During a laparoscopy, your surgeon will look for signs of endometriosis such as red, blue, whitish, or yellowish-brown discolorations and raised areas.  To have a laparoscopy, you'll typically be placed under general anesthesia. The surgeon inserts a slender instrument through an incision near your navel to look for signs of endometrial tissue throughout your reproductive organs. You may be a good candidate for a laparoscopy if you have persistent pelvic pain that doesn’t respond to medical treatments or if your symptoms are severe enough to interfere with your ability to function. This surgery can also treat some of the anatomical changes that sometimes come with endometriosis, such as lesions in the bladder. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatories (NSAIDs) are often the first form of treatment that doctors will recommend for mild cases of endometriosis. These medications may help control your pain and inflammation. Common over-the-counter NSAIDs include ibuprofen (Motrin, Advil) and naproxen (Aleve). Ask your doctor if NSAIDs are a good option for you.  You should not take NSAIDs if you are pregnant or planning to become pregnant. If NSAIDs aren’t enough to control your symptoms, your doctor may recommend taking them in combination with another type of treatment, such as hormone therapy. Hormonal contraception helps control the hormones responsible for growing your uterine tissue, and can also reduce your menstrual flow. Contraception can also ease the pain you experience with your periods each month.  Progestin therapy can stop menstruation entirely, thus eliminating the growth of uterine tissue and reducing or eliminating symptoms of endometriosis. Other therapy, including aromatase inhibitors that reduce the amount of estrogen in your body, may also be prescribed by your doctor to help relieve symptoms of endometriosis. If contraception doesn't relieve your symptoms, you can have surgery to remove the uterine tissue growing outside your uterus. Because this more conservative option preserves your uterus, it may help you if you're still planning on getting pregnant. If you only have the abnormal uterine tissue removed, your endometriosis may return. The only way to guarantee that you will never have any problems in the future with endometriosis is to have a full hysterectomy removing the uterus and ovaries. However, after this, you wouldn't be able to become pregnant.

Write an article based on this "Use the appropriate tool to loosen the lug nuts. Remove the lug nuts. Apply liquid thread loosen it if need be. Set the lug nuts aside someplace safe. Pull the wheel toward you. Use a rubber mallet to loosen stuck on wheels."
article: Before jacking the car up, use your wrench or tire iron to break the lug nuts loose.  Do not remove them completely, but turn them a quarter turn or so in the counter-clockwise direction each to make them loose enough to unscrew while the vehicle is in the air.  You can purchase tire irons from your local auto parts stores that usually have an end that fits all vehicles. You may also choose to simply use a deep socket of the appropriate size with a ratchet or breaker bar. Because the lug nuts are already loose from before you lifted the car, they should be fairly easy to unscrew the rest of the way.  Use a wrench if need be to turn the lug nuts counter-clockwise until they come off of the lug studs.  The wheel may shift as you remove the lug nuts, so watch your fingers for pinches. Remove the lug nuts across from one another in a star pattern, rather than each one in a row. If the lug nuts have rusted over, apply a generous amount of a thread loosener or rust remover to the nuts.  Allow it to sit for a few minutes, then attempt to loosen the lug nut again.  If the lug nut and stud break, you will need to have a new lug stud installed in order to repair the vehicle. Be sure to use the correct sized socket.  A socket that is slightly too large could round off the lug nut. A stripped or rounded lug nut will have to be cut off by a professional. Place the lug nuts in a safe place to be sure you don’t lose them.  If you lose a lug nut, you may be able to secure the wheel temporarily with the remaining nuts, but if you lose more than one, it will not be safe to drive the vehicle until they have been replaced.  You can purchase replacement lug nuts at your local auto parts store. Store the lug nuts in a small bowl or container so they can’t roll away as you work. Once the lug nuts have been removed, place your hands on either side of the tire.  Grip the back of the tire and pull it toward you to remove the wheel from the lug studs.  If the wheel has not been removed in a long time, it may require quite a bit of force to pull the wheel off.  Be careful, if the tire is damaged there may be metal wire sticking out of it that can cut you. Wear gloves to pull on a damaged tire. If the wheel is seized in place and won’t come off from you pulling on it, use a rubber mallet to bang it loose.  Strike the tire where the rim and tire meet all along the circumference of the wheel until it breaks loose.  Do not use a metal hammer to hit the rims or you may damage them. It may take a good deal of force to remove the wheel if it is rusted in place.

Write an article based on this "Deposit sample in the container. Dispose of your collection device. Refrigerate the sample. Return the samples to your doctor as soon as possible."
article:
Open up one of the containers that the doctor gave you. There should be a small shovel-like tool attached to the cap of the container. Use the shovel to scoop a small bit of stool into the container. Try to take some stool from each end and from the middle. The size of the sample will vary somewhat with the test. Sometimes your doctor will give you a container with a red line and liquid on the inside. You will want to put in enough stool to raise the liquid to the level of the red line. If not, aim for a sample approximately the size of a grape. Flip over the contents of the hat/plastic wrap into the toilet. Flush away the stool and deposit the hat/plastic wrap and any other garbage into a trash bag. Tie the trash bag in a knot, and put it somewhere that you cannot smell it. Whenever possible the sample should be returned immediately. If you are not doing so, it should be refrigerated. Put the container with the stool in a sealed bag and store in the fridge. Label it with your name, date, and time of collection. Consider an opaque bag so that no one can see your stool sample. Under no circumstances should you wait more than 24 hours before returning the sample to a doctor. The bacteria in your stool will grow and change. Usually your doctor will want the sample back within two hours to get an accurate result. Follow up with your doctor to get the results of your stool sample.