Posts Tagged ‘Stains’
Monday, January 25th, 2010
Pet urine or pet odor got you down? Is Fifi having trouble remembering to use the litter box? Whatsoever to do? Here is the answer!
Cleaning cat urine can be hard, and few trivial, easy ways of how to clean cat urine exist. Pet urine leaves hard to remove stains and odors in your home. The stink can be breathtaking in an enclosed area, and you don’t want that! You can use cleaning products and air fresheners, but stains may remain and the odor may come back if you don’t use dedicated cat urine cleaning products. This is bad because kitty will smell it and be likely to become recidivistic. As cats have a much more highly evolved faculty for smell than do people, they will know that there is a “peepee spot” there much before you do, and long after no longer notice it.
Tags: Air Fresheners, Cat Products, Cat Urine Cleaning Products, Cats, Cleaning Cat Urine, Kitty, Leaves, Litter Box, Odor, Pet Odor Problems, Pet Urine, Problems, Stains, Stink, Urine, Urine Odor
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Saturday, January 23rd, 2010
Despite the fact that we all sweat naturally especially in very warm, badly ventilated rooms, or when working out, excessive sweating is a valid health problem known as hyperhidrosis. People who suffer from hyperhidrosis normally report profuse sweating of the armpits, hands and feet, although it isn’t uncommon to have abnormal sweating of the groin, back, scalp and pretty much any other places where there are numerous sweat glands. There’s even one kind of excessive sweating that only occurs at night, called sleep hyperhidrosis. It doesn’t matter where the excessive sweating occurs because all variations cause issues for the sufferer such as their sweaty hands causing accidents, social problems with handshakes or armpit stains. Unfortunately, in addition to the problem with sweating, thereis also the concern of having bad body odor if the sweat isn’t often washed away. Before seeking treatment of hyper-hidrosis, it’s necessary to know how sweat glands are controlled normally. In people without abnormal sweating problems, the sweat glands are regulated by the central nervous system… specifically the sympathetic nervous system. Humans have hardly any control over the actions of the sympathetic nervous system. It’s the part that regulates our heart-beat, our breathing, our gut movement and many other body functions we’re unaware of.. unless something stops working properly. People who have normal sweat patterns can see how the sympathetic nervous system activates sweating by noticing how much additional sweat is produced simply by being nervous. It may just be an inconvenience to people with normal sweat patterns, but to a hyperhidrosis sufferer, that is the “usual” activity level of their sweat glands! The regulation of sweating goes wrong in sufferers of hyperhidrosis. Scientists know the cause is over-active nerves leading to the sweat glands, because anti-cholinergic drugs, injections of botox, or surgery to sever the nerve leading to the sweat glands will stop the sweating. Those are three of the more dramatic ways to deal with hyperhidrosis. Simpler solutions for excessive sweating are mental relaxation techniques, not drinking caffeinated drinks, using strong antiperspirants such as those with aluminium chloride and avoiding spicy foods. Some people believe that sage tea and zinc may decrease sweating. Usually most people who have abnormal sweating will go for cheap, natural solutions, and if they don’t work will consider the more expensive treatments. Some of the most dramatic treatments (surgery and drugs) can have side-effects, so check with a doctor before taking any action regarding abnormal sweating.
Tags: Accidents, Armpit, Armpits, Bad Body Odor, Excessive, Excessive Sweating, Groin, Health, Hyper Hidrosis, Hyperhidrosis, Remedies, Sleep, Stains, Sufferer, Sweat Glands, Sweating, Sweaty Hands, Variations, Ventilated Rooms
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Thursday, January 21st, 2010
The cat population in America is more than 75 million, and anyone who owns a cat knows that stains and smells from cat urine odor can be a problem. Cat urine that seeps through carpet, into padding and down to the floor beneath can give your home an unpleasant aroma and bad look. In almost all cases, cat urine is the worst perpetrator for cat stains and cat odors.
When cats urinate as a means of elimination, they normally do it on a horizontal or flat surface like the ground or in a litter box. When cats spray in order to mark their territory, they turn their backsides to the object, twitch their tails and spray urine on the vertical surface.
Tags: Carpet, Cat Cats, Cat Odor, Cat Odors, Cat Population, Cat Urine Odor, Dietary Habits, Flat Surface, Health, Kidneys, Liquid Waste, Litter Box, Medication, Odorcan, Perpetrator, Protein Metabolism, Removed, Spray Urine, Stains, Twitch, Unpleasant Aroma, Urine, Vertical Surface
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Wednesday, January 20th, 2010
Dog urine odor can be a huge problem for some pet owners. The highly objectionable odor can overtake even the toughest noses. The reason the odor becomes so strong is clear. Dogs tend to urinate in the same spot repeatedly. Cleaning up the urine often isn’t enough to deter the dog from returning.
A dog’s sense of smell is extreme. That’s why it’s so important to effectively clean away urine so that no odor remains. The task is a tough one, but it can be solved quite easily.
Tags: Clean Urine, Dog Odor, Dog Products, Dog Urine, Dogs, Effectively, Enzymatic Cleaners, Enzymes, Molecules, Noses, Objectionable Odor, Odor, Pet Owners, Proteins, Remove, Stains, Urine, Urine Odor
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Tuesday, January 5th, 2010
How to Clean Dog or Cat Urine Without Harmful Chemicals
One of the worst things a pet owner is faced with is not “number two” but “number one.” Number two may smell until it’s cleaned, but usually it doesn’t leave lasting odors or stains unless it’s in liquid form. Even then, it’s easier to deal with in the long term.
We will talk a lot about cats in this article because they have to urinate inside if you’re using litter boxes and not letting them out to do their business. Dogs, if they’re trained the way they’re supposed to be, should be going outside. This method works on any urine, however, including human.
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How to Clean Dog or Cat Urine Without Harmful Chemicals
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Tags: Carpeting, Cat Urine, Cats, Chemicals, Clean, Clean Urine, Dog Cat, Dog Urine, Dogs, Harmful, Harmful Chemicals, Human Urine, Job, Litter Boxes, Pet Owner, Stains, Urinate, Urine, Wick, Without
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Thursday, December 17th, 2009
Sweating is a normal and healthy thing. It is normal to sweat especially if you are experiencing warm weather, have been exercising, are experiencing emotional stress or anxiety. All the above reasons justify your sweating up to a certain limit. Scientists say that we might lose quite a lot of fluid when one tiny sweat gland tries to cool our body up to one degree Fahrenheit by cooling one liter blood.
Tags: 100 People, Anxiety, Armpits, Body Parts, Degree Fahrenheit, Embarrassment, Emotional Stress, Excess, Excess Sweating, Excessive Sweating, Face, Hair, Head, Irritant, Leaves, Liter, Pals, Scientists, Stains, Sweat Gland, Sweating, Warm Weather
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