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Showing posts with label with. Show all posts

Kristen Stewart Falls Deeply In Love With Robert Pattinson

Robert Pattinson and Kristen Steward portray a perfect couple in their box office hit movies like Twilight and New Moon. The chemistry between the couple is too strong that even off-cam; people can see that they’re in love with each other.

Actress Kristen Stewart just can’t stop raving about her co-star Robert Pattinson. She admits that she has a strong feeling for him. She has several reasons why she loves Pattinson. Rob always wants to be the best and she admires him for it. He can be very childish at some point, which makes her smile. When he does something right or wins something, he talks in a different way just like a five-year-old boy with a little voice. The actress finds him sexy in a tortured artist way, maybe because he is British. He’s tall and he looks like he’s thinking all the time, which is incredibly funny. It breaks her heart when the actor sings. She also added that Rob is a very bad liar, because he just can’t do it.

Stewart claims that Pattinson had already proposed to her once. He asked her to marry him, but it was just a joke.

Women with hormonal disorder at risk of heart disease

Adelaide researchers have found evidence of a link between a common hormonal disorder in women and heart disease - and they're seeking more women to take part in a new study to confirm their results.

Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a hormonal disorder affecting about 10% of women of reproductive age and is a leading cause of infertility.

A preliminary study - conducted by researchers with the University of Adelaide's Robinson Institute and the Cardiology Department of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital - has exposed other major health risks and some common misconceptions about PCOS.

The pilot study, involving a small sample of women, showed that:

  • Young women (average age of 31 years) with PCOS had significant abnormalities in blood clotting and blood vessel function, which are important risk factors in heart disease;
  • This risk was not limited to overweight or obese women with PCOS - it affected women of all body shapes and sizes, including lean women.

"The degree of blood clotting and blood vessel abnormalities seen in women with PCOS in this study was very striking, similar to what we would normally see in older patients with known heart disease," says Dr Alicia Chan, Cardiologist at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital and PhD student with the University of Adelaide's Robinson Institute.

"With women now making up almost half of all Australians affected by heart disease, it's very important that we understand the link between PCOS and these heart disease risk factors.

"Importantly, this is the first study to suggest that PCOS is strongly associated with an increased risk of heart disease independent of women's weight or evidence of diabetes. It's a common misconception that only overweight or obese women are affected by PCOS - we need women to understand that they could still have these heart disease risk factors regardless of their weight,"