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Can Rheumatoid Arthritis Be Cured? Understanding Remission and Treatment
There is no cure for rheumatoid arthritis, but early, evidence-based treatment can control the disease, help many people achieve remission, and prevent joint damage, though ongoing medication is often needed. There are several factors to consider, including which medicines to use, how lifestyle changes support therapy, and when to seek medical care; see below for important details that could shape your next steps.
Can Stress Make You Impotent? Understanding "Mental ED" & Next Steps
Yes, stress can cause temporary impotence by disrupting hormones, blood flow, and the brain body arousal pathway, leading to mental ED that is common and often reversible with lifestyle changes, counseling, and sometimes short term medication. There are several factors to consider, including clues that point to stress versus a physical cause and red flags that change when to see a doctor. See the complete answer below for specific signs, step by step ways to break the cycle, and evidence based next steps that could impact your care plan.
Can Supplements Help Him? A Partner’s Guide to ED Vitamins & Next Steps
Some supplements can help in specific cases, especially when a deficiency is present, with the best evidence for vitamin D, L-arginine or L-citrulline, B vitamins, magnesium, zinc if low, and omega-3s, but they are not cures and can interact with medications. Because ED can signal deeper cardiovascular, metabolic, hormonal, or psychological issues, the most important next steps are identifying the cause, checking labs, making lifestyle changes, and consulting a clinician if symptoms persist or risks are present. There are several factors to consider, so see the complete guidance below.
Can the Wrong Running Shoes Cause Shin Splints?
Wearing new or ill-fitting running shoes that do not match your arch profile, cushioning needs or heel-to-toe drop can alter your gait and overload the shin muscles, triggering shin splints. Sudden changes in support or fit without a proper break-in period are a common culprit. Several other factors—like training errors, biomechanics and muscle imbalances—also matter, so see below for important details on prevention, self-care and when to seek professional care.
Can This Herb Fix Your Libido? What the Research Says & Next Steps
Early studies suggest ashwagandha may modestly improve female libido, arousal, lubrication, and sexual satisfaction, particularly when stress is a main driver, but it is not a universal solution. There are several factors to consider, including root causes, safety and medication interactions, who is most likely to benefit, and practical steps like product choice and a 6 to 8 week trial; see below for the complete answer and guidance on next steps and when to seek care.
Can This Herb Save Your Sex Drive? The Truth and Your Action Plan
Black cohosh may modestly ease hot flashes and can indirectly help libido through better sleep and mood, but it does not raise sex hormones, is not typically recommended for men, and benefits are mixed and may take 4 to 8 weeks. There are several factors to consider, including more effective options like HRT or vaginal estrogen, targeted support for low desire, and key safety cautions such as rare liver injury and when to avoid the herb. For the full action plan on root causes, alternatives, and when to see a clinician, see the complete details below.
Can Vaccines Affect Your Menstrual Cycle? What We Know
Vaccines including mRNA COVID-19 shots have been linked to small, short-term shifts in menstrual timing or flow. Most people report delays or advances of less than a week that resolve by their next cycle. See below for important details on potential mechanisms, how to track changes, and when to consult a healthcare provider.
Can You Actually Increase Girth? Medical Myths and Your Next Steps
No natural method permanently increases girth; most pills, supplements, jelqing, and pumps lack evidence or can cause harm, while weight loss and treating erectile dysfunction can improve visible thickness and sexual satisfaction. Temporary medical options like hyaluronic acid fillers or fat transfer can add some girth but come with cost, complications, and variable results, and many men are already within the normal 4.5 to 5 inch range; for key nuances, red flags, and step by step guidance that could change your next moves, see below.
Can You Breastfeed While You Have a Cold or Flu?
Yes, in most cases you can and should keep breastfeeding with a cold or the flu, since your milk does not spread these respiratory viruses and instead delivers antibodies that help protect your baby. There are several factors to consider, including simple precautions to reduce germ spread, which medicines are safe while nursing, and when to seek urgent care for you or your baby such as severe symptoms or any fever in a baby under 3 months; see the complete details below to guide your next steps.
Can You Check Your Tubes Yourself? The Reality and Next Steps
You cannot reliably check your fallopian tubes yourself; no home test or self exam can confirm a blockage, which must be assessed with medical imaging such as an HSG, saline ultrasound, or sometimes laparoscopy. There are several factors to consider that could change your next steps, from silent blockages and key risk factors to when to see a doctor for infertility or urgent ectopic pregnancy warning signs; see below for detailed guidance on evaluation, proven treatments, and what it means if only one tube is blocked.
Can You Continue Weightlifting if You Have a Hernia?
You may be able to continue, but only with medical clearance and significant modifications, since heavy lifting and breath-holding can worsen a hernia and raise the risk of serious complications. Small, reducible hernias with minimal symptoms may allow light, symptom-guided training, while severe pain, a hard non-reducible bulge, nausea, or vomiting means stop and seek urgent care; many lifters choose surgical repair to return safely. There are several factors to consider and next steps that could change your plan; see below for the complete details.
Can You Do Cardio with a Sinus Infection?
Yes, sometimes you can do cardio with a sinus infection, but it depends on your symptoms; light activity can be okay if everything is above the neck, you have no fever, and you feel up to it, but skip workouts if you have fever, chest symptoms, severe fatigue, or worsening pain. There are several factors to consider. See below for how hard to go, safer exercise choices, hydration tips, when to stop, and the warning signs that mean you should rest or contact a clinician.
Can You Do HIIT with a Headache? Identifying Triggers
There are several factors to consider; see below to understand more. It may be okay if the pain is mild and likely tension related, you are well hydrated and fueled, and it improves with a gradual warm up. Avoid HIIT if symptoms are moderate to severe, migraine-like, worsen with movement, or include nausea, vision changes, dizziness, or a sudden thunderclap, since HIIT can aggravate headaches via blood pressure spikes, dehydration, heat, muscle tension, or low blood sugar; full prevention tips and when to seek care are outlined below.
Can You Drink Alcohol on Antibiotics? Facts vs. Myths
There are several factors to consider: small amounts may be okay with some antibiotics like amoxicillin, but alcohol must be avoided with metronidazole, tinidazole, certain cephalosporins, linezolid, and isoniazid, and drinking can worsen side effects and slow recovery. For the safest choice, avoid alcohol until you finish treatment and wait 48 to 72 hours after metronidazole or tinidazole; crucial details on specific drugs, how alcohol affects healing, red flag symptoms that need urgent care, and when to talk to a doctor are explained below.
Can You Drive After Having Your Eyes Dilated?
Yes, some people can drive after dilation, but it depends on your comfort and vision; many have glare, light sensitivity, and blurred vision for 4 to 6 hours, sometimes up to 24, so arranging a ride and waiting until vision feels clear and stable is often safest. There are several factors to consider, including brightness, whether one or both eyes were dilated, your baseline vision, and time of day; sunglasses help, avoid night or high-speed driving, and seek urgent care for severe eye pain, headache, nausea, or vision that worsens or persists beyond 24 hours. See complete details below.
Can You Exercise Around a Pulled Muscle? Safe Strategies
Yes, you can stay active with a pulled muscle by resting the injured area for 48 to 72 hours, avoiding any motion that causes sharp pain, and exercising unaffected muscle groups. As symptoms improve, reintroduce low impact cardio, gentle range of motion, and light isometrics, progressing load gradually while using pain during activity and the next day as your guide. There are several factors to consider that could change your next steps, including when not to exercise, warning signs that need medical attention, and a phased return plan with timelines, so see the complete guidance below.
Can You Exercise with a Chest Cold? The Neck Check
There are several factors to consider: using the neck check, light exercise may be fine when symptoms are only above the neck and you are fever free, but if you have chest congestion, a deep or frequent cough, shortness of breath, significant fatigue, or a fever, rest instead. Important details below include when to delay workouts due to heart risks like rare myocarditis, how to return gradually after improvement, and red flags such as chest pain or worsening breathing, plus special guidance if you have asthma, heart disease, or are training for an event.
Can You Exercise with a Low-Grade Fever? (100.4 Rule)
Use the 100.4°F rule: if your temperature is 100.4°F or higher, do not exercise; if it is below 100.4°F and symptoms are mild, only consider light movement and stop if you feel worse, otherwise rest. There are several factors to consider. See below for key risks like dehydration and heart strain, when to wait at least 24 hours fever free without medicine before resuming, special cautions for flu or COVID, kids and chronic conditions, and red flag symptoms that mean you should seek care.
Can You Exercise with Chest Congestion? A Doctor's Checklist
There are several factors to consider. Light movement can be safe if you have no fever, breathing is comfortable at rest, cough is mild, and you can speak in full sentences, but skip workouts with chest congestion when symptoms are below the neck or serious, such as shortness of breath, wheezing, chest pain, fever, body aches, or thick green or bloody mucus. See the complete checklist below for safe options, when to rest, how to scale intensity, special guidance for asthma or COPD, timing for return after illness, and red flags that warrant medical care, including when bronchitis or pneumonia changes the plan.
Can You Fix a Tight Foreskin? Exercises, Creams, and Your Next Steps
Yes, many tight foreskins can be improved without surgery using gentle daily stretching plus a short course of prescription steroid cream, together with good hygiene, typically over 4 to 8 weeks; see details below. There are several factors to consider, including signs of infection, scarring, diabetes, lack of improvement after 6 to 8 weeks, trouble urinating, or a stuck-back foreskin that needs urgent care, which can change your next steps, so review the complete guidance below.
Can You Fix Diabetic ED in Your 60s? A Blood Sugar & Performance Plan
Yes, improvement or partial reversal of diabetic ED is often possible in your 60s with tight blood sugar control and better circulation, plus attention to hormones, weight, daily walking and resistance training, sleep, nerve protection, and anxiety; ED medications can work better alongside these steps. There are several factors to consider, including realistic timelines, individualized A1C and blood pressure targets, when to evaluate heart disease or sleep apnea, and medication safety, so see the complete plan and decision points below to choose the right next steps with your clinician.
Can You Fly with an Ear Infection? Risks and Safety Tips
It can be safe to fly with a mild ear infection, but rapid cabin pressure changes often cause significant pain and, rarely, complications; postpone travel if you have severe ear pain, high fever, marked dizziness or vomiting, or a recent eardrum rupture. If you must fly, speak with a clinician and use precautions such as a nasal decongestant before takeoff and landing, OTC pain relievers if safe, frequent swallowing or gentle Valsalva, and pressure-regulating earplugs; children are at higher risk. There are several factors to consider, and important details to guide your next steps are outlined below.
Can You Fly with an Open Wound? Infection Risks
Yes, you can often fly with an open wound if it is clean, properly covered, and not infected, but there are several risks to weigh, including contamination from surfaces, swelling with cabin pressure, reduced mobility, and limited access to care mid flight. Delay travel and speak with a clinician if there are signs of infection, active bleeding, deep or unstable wounds, or recent major surgery, and use precautions like secure dressings, hand hygiene, and movement during the flight if cleared; see below for key timelines, high risk conditions, and step by step travel prep that could change your next steps.
Can You Get Pregnant with Endometriosis? Your Conception Roadmap
Yes, many people with endometriosis can and do get pregnant, but success depends on disease severity, age, ovarian reserve, and other factors, and 30 to 50 percent may experience infertility that can mean it takes longer or needs treatment. There are several factors to consider, including when to seek evaluation, which tests or surgeries may help, and fertility options like ovulation induction, IUI, or IVF which often has the highest success in moderate to severe cases and for those over 30. See below for the complete roadmap, age based timelines, and lifestyle steps that could change your next steps.
Can You Go Swimming if You Have Stitches? (Freshwater vs Pool)
Most doctors recommend avoiding swimming until stitches are removed and the wound is fully closed; freshwater like lakes and rivers carries the highest infection risk, pools are not sterile and can irritate healing skin, and hot tubs pose the greatest risk, while showering is usually safe after 24 to 48 hours. Timelines often range from about 7 to 14 days for minor stitches to 2 to 4 weeks or more after surgery, but your exact clearance depends on the wound, its location, and your overall health. There are several factors to consider that could change your next steps; see below for specifics by water type, how to reduce risk, what counts as an exception, and when to call a doctor.
Can You Go Swimming with a Yeast Infection?
Yes, you can usually swim with a yeast infection, and you are unlikely to spread it in pools or the ocean; the main concern is irritation or delayed recovery from moisture and tight swimwear, and hot tubs are best avoided. There are several factors to consider, including how severe your symptoms are, changing out of wet suits promptly, and applying vaginal treatments after swimming; see the full details below to guide next steps and when to skip swimming or talk to a clinician.
Can You Go Swimming with an Earache? Prevention Tips
Swimming with an earache is usually not recommended, especially with swimmer’s ear, a middle ear infection, or a ruptured eardrum; mild pressure without infection may be okay with caution, but there are several factors to consider, so see below for more. Key prevention tips include keeping ears dry, using well-fitting earplugs, and avoiding contaminated water, and important return-to-swim timing and red flags like fever, drainage, or hearing loss are covered below to guide your next steps.
Can You Go to Work with Shingles? Knowing the Risk
There are several factors to consider. You can sometimes work with shingles if the rash is fully covered, you feel well enough, and you do not work with high-risk groups; otherwise you should stay home until blisters crust over. Important details like your job type, where the rash is, how severe your symptoms are, eye involvement, and timing of antiviral treatment can change your next steps. For precautions, how long you are contagious, and when to seek urgent care, see the complete answer below.
Can You Improve Ovarian Reserve? Medical Truth and Your Action Plan
You cannot restore ovarian reserve or regenerate lost eggs, and AMH reflects quantity not quality, but you can support egg quality, hormone balance, and ovarian environment to protect what you have. There are several factors to consider and AMH can fluctuate, so one low result does not rule out pregnancy; see below for the full, evidence-based picture. See below for a practical plan that covers quitting smoking, reaching a healthy weight, checking and correcting vitamin D, considering CoQ10 with doctor guidance, managing stress, reducing toxins, treating underlying conditions, getting the right tests, and when to see a specialist or be evaluated for primary ovarian insufficiency.
Can You Legally Drive While Wearing an Eye Patch?
In many places you can legally drive with an eye patch if your uncovered eye still meets your local vision standards, but safety and legality depend on several factors like reduced depth perception and peripheral vision. There are several factors to consider, including meeting minimum acuity and visual field rules such as 20/40 vision in one eye and adequate horizontal field, getting doctor clearance and time to adapt, possible license limits, and liability or commercial driver requirements; see below for key details, safety tips, and red flags that may mean you should not drive and should seek medical care.
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