Yes one wont have any affect to speak of on the other.
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These things have been around for years And I used to take them In the meantime I have had I replacement elbow joint and still have not managed to find any scientific proof that these thing work. I stopped taking them and it has not made a skeric of difference to me.
a few minutes--it takes longer to adjust to darkness than to adjust to light fun fact: people who lack vitamin A often suffer from night blindness
No, Rheumatoid arthritis is an Autoimmune disease and to date no way has been found to stop the immune system from rejecting tissue that it should leave alone. Sun beds may introduce some vitamin D into the system but that has nothing to do with controlling the damage done by RA. add to that the very real risk of melanoma formation in the skin which can easily spread from there to any other part of the body and you are playing with death rather then the alleviation of pain. Sunbeds aren't good for any condition. They are dangerous and increase the risk of melanoma. Not a good idea. If you need Vitamin D, eat foods rich in Vitamin D such as yogurt, mushrooms, fish, etc. or get some actual sunlight for 15 minutes a day or take a Vitamin D supplement. Rheumatoid arthritis has many other treatments to consider.
Probably, but check to make sure that the sunus medication and arthritis med don't both contain the same analgesic for pain.
If you check the vital signs at the same time with the same machine in the same circimstances everyday for a specified time, for example, take all the vital signs at say 08:00, everyday for a week or a month, with the same machine, in the same position. Write them down everyday then at the end of the specific time, the week or month you can graph the vs and it will give you a "plot "