Archive for the ‘Health’ Category

Pure pomegranate is the best

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

Fruits are the natural resource that comes with excellent properties. It leads the front against herbs as it can be consumed at any time without any restriction. One such fruits, like apple which as tremendous property is pomegranate. Pomegranate juice is getting popular these days due to the awareness of this basic quality.

We can achieve balance in our body with the consumption of pure pomegranate juice. These are used for treating the prostate cancer. It will control and keep PSA level stable in men who are in prostate cancer condition. Pomegranate juice as considered as the best for reducing even the diabetics. It will slowly build the immunity power and restrict the sugar level on our body. Many research papers say that 100% pomegranate juice will have great benefits against the diabetics.

Apart form the medical significance, this juice is good for your health. It will maintain the body temperature when taken it at summer seasons. Pure pomegranate juice has become ideal these days until we prepare it at our home. The response will be rapid as we are taking it in the form of liquid. Hence try to search for pure pomegranate juice and lead your life with healthy body.

Fat Burners for Weight Loss

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

Food we eat gets digested by acids present in the stomach. Energy produced in that process is sent to all parts of body. Some essential vitamins and proteins present in food help in strengthening bones and muscles. Fat present in food items is not digested by enzymes produced in the stomach. This undigested fat occupies areas like abdomen, buttocks, and thighs. Fat molecules increase weight of the body. In order to decrease overweightedness people should use fat burners. Fat burners are special diet pills, which break fat molecules and decrease weight of body.

Top fat burners available in the market have the ability to break fat molecules and decrease weight permanently. These products are free from side effects. Top 10 diet pills available in market are Clinicallix, Nuphedragen, 7-DFBX, Noxycut, Curvatrim, Orovo Detox, Ambislim PM, Hydroxy Cut Hardcore, 72 Hour slimming pill, and LipoSeduction 2250. Importance of these products may vary from person to person.

Superdrine is an effective fat burner. Pills of consist of 10mg of ephedra alkaloids. Recently Hoodia has also been added to the top 10 products list. This pill is made from the stem of the Hoodia plant found in the great African desert. Hoodia helps in reducing hunger.

Need a Dog Bite Layer in California? Know Your Rights!

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Everyday, many people are bitten by dogs. Dogs attack for many reasons, and many times the bites are unwarranted. If you are ever attacked by a dog, try to identify it and find out who the owners are. You may be entitled to compensation. You can find out how good your chances are by consulting with dog bite attorneys. Los Angeles is known to be the home of many dangerous dogs, so if you live in or around that area, then odds are you’ve come across mean dogs a time or two.

Getting medical help for a dog bite is expensive. Sometimes even surgery is required. With a good dog bite lawyer in California, you may be able to get all your medical expenses paid for. You should get medical treatment and make your claim as soon as possible. Not only will it help your chances of winning the lawsuit, but you’ll also be bringing other families’ attention to the dog.

Good, experienced dog bite attorneys in Los Angeles will help you every step of the way. All you have to do is contact one right away for a consultation, so that you can learn about your rights and options.

Scientists map Neanderthal genome

Friday, February 13th, 2009

In a development which could reveal the links between modern humans and their prehistoric cousins, scientists said they have mapped a first draft of the Neanderthal genome.

Researchers used DNA fragments extracted from three Croatian fossils to map out more than 60 percent of the entire Neanderthal genome by sequencing three billion bases of DNA.

“The Neanderthal genome sequence will clarify the evolutionary relationship between humans and Neanderthals as well as help identify those genetic changes that enabled modern humans to leave Africa and rapidly spread around the world,” Germany’s Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology said in a press release.

“These DNA sequences can now be compared to the previously sequenced human and chimpanzee genomes in order to arrive at some initial insights into how the genome of this extinct form differed from that of modern humans.”

Research suggests that the last common ancestor of Neanderthals and humans lived about 660,000 years ago. Neanderthals are widely believed to be the hominid form most closely related to present-day humans, although the precise relationship remains unclear.

The squat, low-browed Neanderthals lived in parts of Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East for around 170,000 years but traces of them disappear some 28,000 years ago, their last known refuge being Gibraltar.

Erectile Dysfunction Predicts Heart Disease

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

Erectile dysfunction makes for lots of snickering, slick drug commercials, and no doubt plenty of frustration in the bedroom. But it can also serve as a window to serious disease.

Men with erectile dysfunction (ED) are 80 percent more likely to develop heart disease compared to men who do not have ED, a new Mayo Clinic study finds. Men ages 40 to 49 with ED are twice as likely to get heart disease.

The results, published in this month’s issue of the journal Mayo Clinic Proceedings, suggest that younger men and their doctors may need to consider erectile dysfunction a harbinger of future risk of coronary heart disease, said Mayo Clinic researcher Jennifer St. Sauver.

Researchers don’t know why the link exists.

Some have theorized that erectile dysfunction and coronary artery disease may be caused by the same underlying problem. A buildup of plaque that can block arteries around the heart may plug the smaller penile arteries first. Another idea is that arteries may lose elasticity over time, affecting the penis first and the heart later.

The study followed 1,402 men age 40 and up who lived in Olmsted County, Minn., for a 10-year period starting in 1996. None had heart disease at the start of the study.

Erectile dysfunction increases with age. The prevalence of ED at the start of the study:

  • Age 40-49: 2.4 percent.
  • Age 50-59: 5.6 percent.
  • Age 60-69: 17 percent.
  • Age 70 and up: 38.8 percent.

In men in their 50s, 60s and 70s, the total incidence of new cases of heart disease also was higher in those with erectile dysfunction. However, the differences were not as striking as those seen among the 40- to 49-year- olds.

“In older men, erectile dysfunction may be of less prognostic importance for development of future heart disease,” St. Sauver said.

Two previous studies, in 2005, reached similar but preliminary conclusions.

The new findings, rooted in data, “raise the possibility of a ‘window of curability,’ in which progression of cardiac disease might be slowed or halted by medical intervention,” Dr. Martin Miner of the Men’s Health Center at Miriam Hospital in Providence, R.I., writes in an editorial in the Proceedings.

LiveScience.com chronicles the daily advances and innovations made in science and technology. We take on the misconceptions that often pop up around scientific discoveries and deliver short, provocative explanations with a certain wit and style. Check out our science videos, Trivia & Quizzes and Top 10s. Join our community to debate hot-button issues like stem cells, climate change and evolution. You can also sign up for free newsletters, register for RSS feeds and get cool gadgets at the LiveScience Store.

Pfizer pancreatic cancer drug fails, trial halted

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

Pfizer Inc, in its latest research setback, said on Friday it stopped a late stage study of an experimental drug to treat advanced pancreatic cancer after an independent monitoring board found no evidence that it prolongs survival.

The drug, axitinib, is still being studied for kidney cancer in late stage clinical trials, and is in mid-stage trials for non-small cell lung cancer, colon cancer and other tumor types.

Axitinib had shown promise against notoriously tough to treat advanced pancreatic cancer in combination with chemotherapy in mid-stage trials, and the company decided to proceed with larger, more expensive Phase III trials.

“These results were disappointing, given the trend toward prolonged survival seen in a Phase II study of axitinib in this extremely difficult-to-treat patient population,” Mace Rothenberg, head of Pfizer’s oncology business unit, said in a statement.

The company said it has notified all clinical trial investigators involved in the study and regulatory agencies of the findings and recommends patients discontinue treatment with axitinib.

Pfizer, the world’s largest drugmaker, said it would try to find other compounds in its developmental pipeline that can be tested against pancreatic cancer, which has few treatment options.

But the company has endured a long list of research disappointments in recent years as it struggles to find a way to replace the cholesterol fighter Lipitor before the more than $12 billion a year drug goes off patent in late 2011.

The dearth of important new medicines coming out of its research labs is one of the primary reasons Pfizer decided to buy smaller rival Wyeth for $68 billion.

Its shares, which closed down 3.5 percent at $14.48 on Friday, are hovering just above a 12-year low.

Handling the Legal Side of Your Accident

Friday, January 16th, 2009

If you are trying to get the compensation that you deserve after an auto accident, then you are going to have to go a few things. You will have to do a few things for yourself. The first thing could be adopting an attitude of cynicism toward the insurance company. After that, you just have to hire one of the qualified auto accident lawyers Los Angeles. They will be able to handle the insurance company and save you a lot of trouble later on in your case.

The cynicism can even be ignored if you hire a lawyer soon enough. The problem is that the insurance company will usually do everything that they can do to reduce your payout. They are not your friend. This means a lot of confusing paperwork and a lot of secretive efforts to record you discussing the case. Any wrong move could really hurt you down, the line. The best thing that you can do is ignore their efforts and refer them to your attorney. Don’t let them record you and just politely make official meetings with your lawyer.

Auto accident attorney Los Angeles will also make the rest of the case fairly easy. Most personal injury cases don’t go to court. The majority just end in a settlement that is agreeable to both parties. This is actually your ultimate goal, since the strain of a court trial shouldn’t be taken lightly. Having an attorney will do a lot to make them respect you and offer a reasonable settlement early.

Why colas, cornflakes and cookies are as addictive as drugs

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

Foods like cornflakes, biscuits and soft drinks are as addictive as drugs, and now researchers have discovered why people get hooked to certain eatables.

New Zealand scientists explained that these and other heavily processed foods with a high glycaemic index (GI) trigger an addictive sugar rush, which could be difficult to resist and may lead to obesity.

Thus, scientists have warned that such food items could face the danger of advertising bans, strict regulations, high taxes and health warning labels.

After analysing evidence showing compulsive food consumption has similar underlying brain mechanisms that result in drug dependence, scientists have argued that heavily processed carbohydrates are most likely to cause addiction.

Lead researcher Simon Thornley, from Auckland Regional Public Health Service, said foods with a high GI caused blood-sugar levels to spike suddenly.

Such rush of sugar fuels the same areas of the brain linked with addiction to nicotine and other drugs.

Foods with low-GI get the blood sugar and insulin levels soaring, and also triggers a feeling of contentment and satiety.

In his opinion, the theory, if proven, could have important public health implications.

It was the first time that scientists have named GI as a predictor of the addictive potential of foods.

Thornley said that according to evidence, people who ate too much of high-carb foods experienced symptoms of addiction - loss of control, a compulsion to keep taking higher amounts to get the same buzz.

And all these people also suffered withdrawal if they went without eating such foods.

The researchers also said that just like those addicted to cocaine and alcohol, people with a higher body mass index had fewer brain pleasure receptors.

However, people addicted to carbohydrates may benefit from getting their hit of blood sugar more slowly by eating low-GI foods or even using a food version of the nicotine patch.

“Just as slow release forms of nicotine help smokers recover from addiction, low GI foods may reduce cravings in obese or overweight populations,” The Sydney Morning Herald quoted Thornley and his colleagues at the University of Auckland as saying.

First US count finds 1 in 200 kids are vegetarian

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

Sam Silverman is co-captain of his high school football team — a safety accustomed to bruising collisions. But that’s nothing compared with the abuse he gets for being a vegetarian.

“I get a lot of flak for it in the locker room,” said the 16-year-old junior at Westborough High School in Massachusetts.

“All the time, my friends try to get me to eat meat and tell me how good it tastes and how much bigger I would be,” said Silverman, who is 5-foot-10 and 170 pounds. “But for me, there’s no real temptation.”

Silverman may feel like a vegetable vendor at a butchers’ convention, but about 367,000 other kids are in the same boat, according to a recent study that provides the government’s first estimate of how many children avoid meat. That’s about 1 in 200.

Other surveys suggest the rate could be four to six times that among older teens who have more control over what they eat than young children do.

Vegetarian diets exclude meat, but the name is sometimes loosely worn. Some self-described vegetarians eat fish or poultry on occasion, while others — called vegans — cut out animal products of any kind, including eggs and dairy products.

Anecdotally, adolescent vegetarianism seems to be rising, thanks in part to YouTube animal slaughter videos that shock the developing sensibilities of many U.S. children. But there isn’t enough long-term data to prove that, according to government researchers.

The new estimate of young vegetarians comes from a recent federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study of alternative medicine based on a survey of thousands of Americans in 2007. Information on children’s diet habits was gleaned from about 9,000 parents and other adults speaking on the behalf of those under 18.

“I don’t think we’ve done a good job of counting the number of vegetarian youth, but I think this is reasonable,” Amy Lanou, a nutrition scientist at the University of North Carolina-Asheville, said of the government estimate. She works with the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a vegan advocacy group.

Vegetarians say it’s animal welfare, not health, that most often causes kids to stop eating meat.

“Compassion for animals is the major, major reason,” said Richard Schwartz, president of Jewish Vegetarians of North America, an organization with a newsletter mailing list of about 800. “When kids find out the things they are eating are living animals — and if they have a pet….”

Case in point is Nicole Nightingale, 14, of Safety Harbor, Fla. In 2007, Nightingale was on the Internet to read about chicken when she came across a video on YouTube that showed the birds being slaughtered. At the end, viewers were invited to go to the Web site peta.orgPeople for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.

Nicole told her parents she was going vegan, prompting her mother to send an angry letter to PETA. But the vegan diet is working out, and now her mother is taking steps to become a vegetarian, too, said Nightingale, an eighth-grader.

She believes her experience was typical for a pre-adolescent vegetarian. “A lot more kids are using the Internet. They’re curious about stuff and trying to become independent and they’re trying to find out who they are,” she said.

Vegetarians are most often female, from higher-income families and living on the East or West coasts, according to previous studies. One good place to find teen vegetarians is Agnes Scott College, a mostly white, all-women’s private school in suburban Atlanta with about 850 students. Roughly 5 to 10 percent of Agnes Scott students eat vegetarian, said Pete Miller, the college’s director of food service.

Frequently, the most popular entree at the college dining hall is a fresh mozzarella sandwich with organic greens. And the comment board (called “the Beef Board,” as in “what’s your beef?”) often contains plaudits for vegetarian dishes or requests for more. “They’re very vocal,” Miller said of his vegetarian diners.

Eating vegetarian can be very healthy — nutritionists often push kids to eat more fruits and vegetables, of course. For growing children, however, it’s important to get sufficient amounts of protein, vitamins B12 and D, iron, calcium and other important nutrients that most people get from meat, eggs and dairy.

Also, vegetarian diets are not necessarily slimming. Some vegetarian kids cut out meat but fill up on doughnuts, french fries, soda or potato chips, experts said.

“Vegetarian doesn’t mean low-calorie,” said Dr. Christopher Bolling, who directs weight management research at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. He said roughly 10 to 15 percent of the overweight kids who come to his medical center’s weight loss program have tried a vegetarian diet at some point before starting the program.

Rayna Middlebrooks, 15, last year started a weight-loss program offered by Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, a nonprofit hospital organization. She said she’s been on a vegetarian diet for four years and now carries about 250 pounds on her 5-foot-3 inch frame.

Her mother confirmed that, and said that although Rayna does a great job of cooking vegetable-rich stir-fried meals for herself, the girl also loves pasta, soda and sweets. “I have to watch her with the candy,” said Barbara Middlebrooks, of Decatur.

On the flip side is Silverman, the Boston-area football player. He’s pleased with his health and has no problem sticking to his diet. Rather than try to negotiate the school cafeteria line, he brings his lunch to school. It’s the same lunch every day — rye bread, some chicken-like tofu, cheese, a clementine and an assortment of Nutrigrain, Cliff, granola and Power Bars.

He was raised vegetarian and said it’s now so deeply ingrained that the idea of eating meat is nauseating. Recently, he ate something he belatedly realized might contain chicken. “I felt sick the rest of the day, until I threw up,” he said.

Cancer cells ‘can outwit chemotherapy’

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

It is believed that chemotherapy uses chemicals to kill all cancer cells. But a new study says that some affected cells are capable to deceive the treatment.Researchers have found that some cancers can ‘recover’ from doses of chemotherapy which would destroy other types of cell — in fact, the diseased cells have a Houdini-like escape tactic which can outwit even potent drugs.

According to them, though it is believed that no cells could live after chemotherapy which triggers a process, called ‘apoptosis’, or cell suicide, the study could explain why some cancers recur even after treatment.

Lead researcher Ming-Chiu Fung at Chinese University of Hong Kong was quoted by ‘The Daily Telegraph’ newspaper as saying: “We have shown various cancer cell lines can survive programmed cell death.

“This research suggests existence of an escape tactic that cancer cells might call upon to survive chemotherapy. Our finding sparks new leads to research what drives cancer cells to come back to life after chemotherapy treatment. “Or to what extent this ability of cancer cells to reverse cell death contributes to their continued division and growth during cycles of anticancer treatment. Answers to these questions will provide potential new therapeutic targets in our battle against cancer.”In their study, the researchers subjected the cancer cells to three different types of the therapy, all of which cause apoptosis. In the laboratory, they gave the cells enough of the deadly chemicals to spark the impulse to die.

But they found that although the cells were damaged by the chemotherapy, once it was stopped they regained their original shape, began to function as normal and continued to divide, causing them to grow and spread.

The cells were mortally damaged only if their central part had already begun to disintegrate. However, this does not usually happen until right at the very end of the normal cell suicide process, the study has revealed.

The findings are published in the latest edition of the ‘British Journal of Cancer’.