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Archive for the ‘katy internal medicine’ Category

How Much Should I Weigh?

scale and feetMost people overestimate how much weight they can realistically lose, which leads to frustration. To find your happy or healthy weight look back on your weight history as an adult and identify a weight you were able to maintain naturally and fairly easily.

And if you’ve gained more than a few pounds since your wedding day, forget trying to fit into that bridal gown. “As you gain weight, you experience an increase in fat cell size and number, which will probably prevent you from getting back to your married weight. Instead of focusing on the numbers on the scale, set behavioral goals: “Eat breakfast every day, go for daily walks, eat more fruits and vegetables — when you set behavior goals, they are easier to accomplish and they make you feel good.”  Stick with these behaviors for 3-6 months and they will become part of your life.

Based on your current weight, eat about 10 calories per pound of nutritious food (low in fat, rich in lean protein, high in fiber), get regular exercise, and assess your weight after a month or so.

As you get to a healthy weight, you can go up to 12 calories per pound.


Katy Tx Internal Medicine – What is Internal Medicine? – Part 1

Dr. Karen Thampoe is specializes in Internal Medicine. She practices in Katy, Tx at Christus St. Catherine Hospital. Her patients are of all genders and age group from young adults to the elderly.

Internal Medicine is a specialized of medicine where the specialty focuses on whole body of the patient. Although the name suggests internal organs, internists also treat external conditions. Internists are often used to solve medical puzzles, since they are familiar with a wide range of medical conditions and their causes.

Specialists in internal medicine treat people with all sorts of conditions, from hepatitis to cancer, and careers in internal medicine are incredibly varied.

General Internal Medicine covers all aspects of the pathology of adolescents, adults and the elderly (it does not treat children). It is neither surgical nor invasive.

The preferred level of attention of General Internal Medicine is curative or “secondary prevention”, although internists have the knowledge and training for primary attention. 
Internal Medicine can treat the medical pathologies (non obstetric) of pregnant women and the medical complications associated with surgery and anesthesia.

Internal Medicine has a strong foundation in epidemiology and evidence based medicine, nevertheless its objective is not the attention of great populations but the patient himself, using the bio-psycho-social model.