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Your Health Questions
Answered by Professionals

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Common Questions

Q

Why Your Teeth Ache When You First Put Your Retainer In

A new or adjusted retainer exerts gentle, constant pressure on your teeth to hold them in position, which can make the nerves in your tooth roots more sensitive, rub against your gums, and tire your jaw muscles—leading to a mild ache that usually eases within one to two weeks. For a fuller understanding of typical symptoms, timelines, relief strategies, and when to seek professional care, see the complete details below as there are several important factors to consider.

Q

Why Your Teeth Feel More Sensitive After a Scaling and Root Planing

Deep cleaning (scaling and root planing) removes hardened plaque and smooths root surfaces, often exposing dentin and causing minor gum trauma that heightens nerve sensitivity to temperature and pressure. This sensitivity usually peaks within 24–48 hours and improves over one to two weeks with simple home care. There are several factors to consider, so see below for more details on causes, management strategies, and when to seek professional help.

Q

Why Your Throat Hurts in the Morning After Snoring

Snoring can leave your throat sore in the morning because mouth breathing dries and irritates throat tissues, and repetitive vibrations cause tiny injuries that lead to inflammation. Underlying issues like nasal congestion, acid reflux, or sleep apnea can further aggravate the scratchy, painful feeling. See below to explore several important factors, detailed causes, and practical steps for relief and proper evaluation.

Q

Why Your Urine Turns Bright Yellow After Taking B-Vitamins

Taking B-vitamins often makes your urine neon yellow because excess water-soluble vitamins—especially fluorescent riboflavin (B2)—are flushed out, and this change is almost always harmless, showing your body is eliminating what it doesn’t need. There are several factors to consider. See below for important details on supplement dosing, hydration tips, other causes of color change, and when to consult a healthcare professional.

Q

Will the Numbness Around My Surgical Scar Ever Go Away?

Numbness around a surgical scar is a normal part of healing and most people see gradual improvement over weeks to months, with continued gains up to a year in many cases. Factors such as age, underlying health conditions, nutrition, and simple self-care techniques like gentle massage and sensory re-education can all influence the speed and extent of nerve recovery. There are several factors to consider and steps you can take; see details below to understand your individual timeline and when to follow up with your healthcare provider.

Q

Wisdom Tooth Recovery: Is Swelling Normal on Day 3?

Swelling that peaks around day 3 after wisdom tooth removal is a normal part of healing as inflammation reaches its highest point. You can manage it with ice packs for the first 48–72 hours, then switch to warm compresses, along with prescribed pain medication, gentle oral hygiene, and a soft diet. There are several factors, including warning signs and next steps for home care; see important details below.

Q

Withdrawal Bleeding: What to Expect When Stopping the Pill

Stopping the pill often leads to withdrawal bleeding as the sudden drop in synthetic hormones causes the uterine lining to shed. This bleed may be irregular in timing, flow, and symptoms compared to your usual cycle. There are many factors to consider, including timelines, warning signs, and management strategies, so see below for complete details.

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Withdrawal Symptoms: How Long Does Caffeine Dizziness Last?

Dizziness from caffeine withdrawal usually starts 12 to 24 hours after your last dose, peaks around day two, and most people feel markedly better by day three with full resolution in up to two weeks. Severity and duration vary based on factors like daily caffeine intake, speed of quitting, hydration and sleep, and approaches such as gradual tapering, staying hydrated and pacing rest can help manage symptoms. See below for complete details on timelines, contributing factors and practical tips to guide your next steps.

Q

Working Out While TTC: What’s Safe and Your 10-Step Fitness Roadmap

It is generally safe to work out while trying to conceive; moderate, consistent movement supports hormonal balance, ovulation, weight, stress, and sperm quality, but overtraining or under-eating can interrupt cycles. See the 10-step fitness roadmap below for ideal weekly amounts, which workouts to choose or limit, how to adjust during the two-week wait, warning signs that warrant medical input, and tips for men, as these details can influence the right next steps in your healthcare journey.

Q

Workplace Advocacy: How to Discuss Your Sleep Health Professionally

To discuss your sleep health at work professionally, focus on performance and solutions, share only necessary medical details, and request practical adjustments like flexible start times or predictable shifts while showing commitment to treatment and better sleep habits. There are several factors to consider. See below to understand more, including when to raise the issue, your rights to reasonable accommodations, warning signs that need urgent medical care, and a free sleep-deprivation symptom check that can guide your next steps with your employer or clinician.

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Worried About Eliquis? Why Your Blood Thins and Medically Approved Next Steps

Eliquis helps prevent dangerous blood clots by blocking Factor Xa in conditions like AFib, DVT, and PE; its benefits usually outweigh the main risk of bleeding, so never stop it suddenly and seek urgent care for heavy bleeding, stroke symptoms, chest pain, or sudden shortness of breath. There are several factors to consider. See below for complete, medically approved next steps on dosing and missed doses, drug and supplement interactions such as NSAIDs, practical bleeding precautions, how long you may need it, and alternatives, any of which could change your best course.

Q

Worried About Hydroxychloroquine? The Reality and Medically Approved Next Steps

Hydroxychloroquine is an FDA-approved, long-used treatment for lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, and some skin conditions, generally safe when weight-based dosing and eye monitoring are followed, with rare risks like retinal toxicity and heart rhythm problems; it is not recommended for COVID-19 and you should not stop it suddenly without medical advice. There are several factors to consider for your next steps, including dose review, confirmed eye exams, and checking personal risk factors and new symptoms; see the complete guidance below for details on urgent warning signs, who should be cautious, and how to work with your doctor.

Q

Worried? Why Your Penis Is Changing & Medically Approved Next Steps

Penis changes are common, often treatable, and sometimes warning signs that need prompt care, since shifts in size, shape, firmness, sensitivity, color, or ejaculation can be normal with age and blood flow, yet sudden pain, new curvature or lump, marked shrinkage, sores, blood, fever, or an erection over 4 hours can indicate ED, Peyronie’s, infection or STI, cardiovascular disease, or rarely cancer. Medically approved next steps include heart healthy lifestyle changes, reviewing medications and mental health, using an ED symptom check, scheduling a routine visit for persistent issues, and seeking emergency care for red flags like priapism or acute injury. There are several factors to consider; see the complete guidance below for what is likely normal versus concerning, when to go to urgent care versus routine follow up, and evidence based treatments.

Q

Yeast Infection After 40: Expert Relief & Your Essential Next Steps

Yeast infections are common and treatable after 40, but hormone shifts, antibiotics, blood sugar changes, and immune factors can raise risk and can mimic BV, STIs, or vaginal atrophy; there are several factors to consider, and key distinctions are explained below. Relief often comes from OTC azole creams or a single-dose fluconazole, yet first-time, severe, persistent, recurrent, or postmenopausal symptoms should be medically confirmed and may need longer therapy or evaluation for diabetes or vaginal dryness; for red flags, prevention tips, and your exact next steps, see the complete answer below.

Q

Yellow Poop: Understanding How Pregnancy Hormones Speed Up Digestion

Yellow poop in pregnancy often happens when hormones like progesterone, estrogen, and hCG alter gut motility and can sometimes speed transit, so bile does not fully break down; diet shifts and some prenatal vitamins can add to this, and it is usually temporary. There are several factors to consider. See below to understand more. Seek care for persistent diarrhea, dehydration, severe abdominal pain, pale or clay-colored stools, jaundice, greasy floating stools, or dark urine, as these can signal gallbladder, liver, infection, or malabsorption issues; see below for important details that can guide your next steps.

Q

Yellow Poop: What Your Stool Color Says About Fat Digestion

Yellow stool often reflects how well you digest fat; a one time change after fatty or brightly colored foods or a short stomach bug can be normal, but ongoing yellow, greasy, floating, or foul smelling stool can signal fat malabsorption or reduced bile flow involving the liver, gallbladder, pancreas, or small intestine. There are several factors to consider, and red flags include symptoms lasting more than a few days, weight loss, abdominal pain, dark urine, pale or clay colored stools, jaundice, fever, or dehydration. See below for key causes, what evaluations doctors use, and treatment options that could shape your next steps.

Q

Yellow, Purple, or Green? A Guide to Post-Surgical Bruising

Bruises often shift from purple to green then yellow after surgery as your body breaks down hemoglobin and clears away old blood cells, with yellow indicating the final healing phase and improved circulation. How quickly and smoothly this happens depends on factors like age, medications, diet, and wound care. See below for complete details on cold and warm compresses, nutrition, warning signs of infection or other complications, and when to seek medical attention to guide your next steps.

Q

Yes, Men Get Yeast Infections: Signs and Your 10-Step Treatment Plan

Men can get yeast infections, and common signs include redness or a shiny rash on the head of the penis, itching or burning, white thick discharge under the foreskin, swelling, and pain with urination or sex. There are several factors to consider, and you should seek urgent care for severe pain, fever, spreading redness, foul smelling discharge, or if symptoms do not improve. Most mild cases respond to over the counter clotrimazole or miconazole plus careful hygiene, avoiding sex during treatment, and managing risks like diabetes, with prescription antifungals for persistent or recurrent cases; see the complete 10-step plan and other important details below that could change your next steps.

Q

Yoga with Wrist Pain: Modifications and When to Stop

There are several factors to consider. See below to understand more. You can often keep practicing by reducing wrist extension and load using fists, forearm versions, blocks or wedges, better hand alignment, warm-ups, and gradual strengthening and cross-training, while favoring styles with less wrist bearing; but stop and seek care for sharp or worsening pain, swelling, bruising, numbness or weakness, night pain, symptoms lasting more than 1 to 2 weeks, or any red flags after a fall.

Q

Your Body After Loss: Tracking Your Cycle and Your Next Steps

After a D&C, ovulation often returns in 2 to 6 weeks and your first period in 4 to 8 weeks, so pregnancy can happen before your first period. The most reliable ways to track are cervical mucus changes, ovulation predictor kits once pregnancy tests are negative, and basal body temperature. There are several factors to consider, including when it is safe to try again and when to call a doctor for heavy bleeding, fever, severe pain, or no period by 8 weeks; see below for complete guidance, key red flags, and personalized next steps.

Q

Your First Experience: A Doctor’s Guide to Comfort and Next Steps

This doctor-guided overview explains how to make a first sexual experience safer and more comfortable, including preventing tearing by going slow, prioritizing arousal, using lubricant, starting small, choosing comfortable positions, relaxing the pelvic floor, and stopping if it hurts. It also outlines what is normal versus not and simple aftercare like urinating soon after and gentle hygiene. There are several factors to consider for your next steps, including when to seek care for severe pain, heavy bleeding, signs of infection, repeated tearing, vaginismus concerns, STI or pregnancy risk, or emotional distress. See the complete guidance below for important details that could change what you do next.

Q

"Few" Bacteria in Urine Results: Infection or Contamination?

Few bacteria in a urine test often reflects contamination from collection rather than a true infection, and interpretation depends on symptoms, how the sample was collected, the presence of white blood cells or nitrites, and sometimes a urine culture. If you have burning, urgency, are pregnant, or develop fever or back or flank pain, seek care, while many people without symptoms simply repeat a clean-catch sample and avoid antibiotics unless a culture confirms infection. There are several factors to consider and important exceptions that can change next steps; see below for the complete answer and guidance.

Q

"Lipemic Sample" in Lab Results: How Fat in Blood Affects Testing

A lipemic blood sample means there is excess fat in your blood that makes it look milky and can interfere with many lab measurements; it often happens if you were not fasting, but it can also reflect high triglycerides or conditions like diabetes, obesity, or hypothyroidism. There are several factors to consider; see below for when to repeat the test fasting, how lipemia can distort specific results, the triglyceride levels tied to pancreatitis risk, and practical treatment options, since these details can affect your next steps and when to contact a clinician.

Q

"Out of Range" Labs: Why "Abnormal" Isn't Always Dangerous

Out-of-range lab results often reflect statistical reference ranges where 5% of healthy people fall outside, and mild shifts from timing, hydration, exercise, lab variability, or medications are common and not dangerous. There are several factors to consider. See below to understand more. Seek urgent care for critical abnormalities or symptoms like chest pain, confusion, severe weakness, fainting, or irregular heartbeat, since extremes in potassium, sodium, glucose, hemoglobin, or kidney tests can be dangerous. For most mild results, doctors focus on context and trends, and may repeat testing or monitor, so review the complete guidance below.

Q

10-20 WBC in Urine: Does This Always Mean a UTI?

No, 10 to 20 WBC in urine does not always mean a UTI. It can also reflect inflammation from kidney stones, sample contamination, STIs, interstitial cystitis, or kidney disorders, and the meaning depends on symptoms and urine culture results. There are several factors to consider. See below for the complete details and next steps, including when to repeat a clean-catch test, when to get a urine culture or STI testing, and when urgent care is needed for fever, severe back or side pain, vomiting, or visible blood.

Q

3-5 RBC in Urine: Decoding "Microscopic Hematuria"

3–5 RBCs in urine meets the definition of microscopic hematuria; it is often mild or temporary, but it is not fully normal and should not be ignored. There are several factors to consider, including whether it persists on repeat testing, your symptoms, and risk factors like age and smoking, since causes range from UTI and stones to kidney disease or, rarely, cancer, and red flags like visible blood, severe pain, fever, or clots need prompt care. See below for next steps, what testing your doctor may suggest, and when to seek urgent help.

Q

5 Hacks for Sleeping with a Persistent Dry Cough

Five evidence-based hacks can help you sleep despite a persistent dry cough: elevate your head and upper body, add clean humidity kept at 30 to 50 percent, calm the throat with warm fluids or honey, address triggers like allergies, asthma, or reflux, and use medications such as antitussives, antihistamines, nasal steroids, or acid reducers when appropriate. There are several factors to consider that can change your next steps, including when to avoid humidifiers, sleeping on the left side for reflux, specific allergen controls, and red flags like a cough that persists 3 to 8 weeks or longer, shortness of breath, chest pain, or blood that need prompt care. See the complete guidance below for details.

Q

5-10 Squamous Epithelial Cells in Urine: Is it a "Clean Catch"?

Finding 5 to 10 squamous epithelial cells per high power field in urine usually points to minor sample contamination from collection, so it often is not a perfect clean catch and rarely indicates infection or kidney disease. Importance hinges on other results and symptoms like bacteria, white blood cells, blood, or urinary discomfort, and your clinician may simply repeat the test with careful midstream technique; there are several factors to consider, so see below for details that can guide your next steps.

Q

7 Subtle Symptoms of Low Vitamin D You Might Be Ignoring

Seven subtle signs of low vitamin D include constant fatigue, frequent colds or infections, muscle weakness or aches, bone or lower back pain, mood changes such as mild depression, slow wound healing, and hair thinning or increased shedding. There are several factors to consider; see below to understand more. The complete answer below explains who is most at risk, when to get a simple 25-hydroxyvitamin D blood test, what happens if deficiency goes untreated, and safe next steps to discuss with your doctor before trying supplements, which could change what you do next in your healthcare journey.

Q

Abnormal Lab Results but Feeling Fine: 5 Common Reasons

There are several factors to consider: abnormal results when you feel fine are often due to five causes, including early-stage conditions without symptoms, normal biological variation, temporary influences like dehydration, recent illness, exercise, stress, or not fasting, medication or supplement effects, and simple lab or testing errors. Some findings can still be urgent and the right next step may be repeat testing, reviewing trends, and targeted changes to lifestyle or medications, so do not ignore them. See the complete guidance below for red flags, what to ask your doctor, and how to choose the safest next steps.

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