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Four Healthy Choices to Change Your Life

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If people would just do four things — engage in regular physical activity, eat a healthy diet, not smoke and avoid becoming obese — they could slash their risk of diabetes, heart attack, stroke or cancer by 80%, a new report has found. But less than 10% of the 23,153 people in the multiyear study — published in Monday’s Archives of Internal Medicine — actually lived their lives this way.

“The study has such a simple straightforward focus on making the point that prevention works in preventing serious disease,” said Dr. J. Leonard Lichtenfeld, deputy chief medical officer for the American Cancer Society.

“What really has been difficult is trying to figure out how to get people to take notice of the message and engage in healthy behaviors.”

Researchers at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and in Germany examined the habits of German men and women ages 35 to 65 from 1994 and 1998. At the start of the study, the scientists measured participants’ heights and weights and asked them about their diseases, lifestyle habits and diets.

Healthy factors included never smoking; engaging in physical activity for at least 3 1/2 hours each week; eating a diet low in red meat and high in fruits and vegetables; and having a body mass index lower than 30. (A person with a BMI of 30 or above is classed as obese.)

About 9% of participants practiced all four healthy lifestyle choices.

Four percent practiced none.

Roughly 35% followed two of the healthy practices.

Researchers reviewed participants’ medical records about eight years later, on average, looking for diabetes, heart attacks, strokes or cancer. People who followed all four healthy practices were at far lower risk compared with people who followed none: 93% lower risk for diabetes, 81% for a heart attack, 50% for a stroke and 36% for cancer.

For people who had never smoked and who maintained a BMI under 30, the risk of chronic disease was reduced 72% — the most dramatic reduction of any dual combination of healthy factors.

The scientists also found that each healthy factor reduced chronic disease risk.

A BMI under 30 lowered overall disease risk most — particularly for diabetes.

Never smoking reduced heart attack risk the most of all four factors.

“All of them are important, and trying to pick one is like asking someone to pick their favorite child,” said study coauthor Dr. Earl S. Ford, a senior scientist in the CDC’s Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity.

Dr. Vyshali S. Rao, chairwoman of cardiology at Huntington Hospital in Pasadena and an American Heart Assn. spokeswoman, said the study underscores that shifting to a healthier diet helps the heart even if a person remains overweight.

However, she said, people who alter their diets often find they lose weight as a side benefit.

“Cardiologists try to stress to their patients more and more [that] cardiovascular disease is in hands of each individual patient to change,” Rao added.

The study’s findings, which are consistent with investigations that started in the late 1990s, are likely to apply to people living in the United States as well as those in Germany.

“The strongest reductions in risk for diabetes and [heart attack] are not surprising,” said Dr. Rachel Ballard-Barbash, associate director of the National Cancer Institute’s Applied Research program. “Even within a few years’ time, we can see changes in these diseases associated with these health behaviors,” such as lowered levels of LDL cholesterol and blood pressure.

“For stroke and cancer,” she added, “most studies would suggest it would take longer to see changes.”

Heart disease, cancer and strokes are the top three causes of death in the United States, killing an estimated 1,328,643 people every year, according to the CDC. Diabetes is the sixth cause of death, killing 72,449 annually. Many additional people live constrained lives in poor health because of these illnesses.

Source: The Los Angeles Times

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Two Dietary Oils Gives 2-Sets of Benefit

A study comparing how two common dietary oil supplements — safflower oil and conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) — affect body composition suggests that both oils can lower body fat in obese postmenopausal women with type 2 diabetes.
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In the study, 16 weeks of supplementation with safflower oil reduced fat in the trunk area, lowered blood sugar and increased muscle tissue in the participants.

Conjugated linoleic acid supplementation for the same length of time, on the other hand, reduced total body fat and lowered the women’s body mass index (BMI), a common health measure of weight relative to height.

All of the women in the study took one oil for 16 weeks, followed by the other oil for an equal amount of time.

Reources:

Eurekalert July 7, 2009
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition June 17, 2009

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Hidden Oral Bacteria Triggers Obesity

the taking of a saliva sample
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Is the explosive growth of obesity worldwide being triggered by an infectious agent? Investigators are closing in on the role of oral  bacteria as a potential direct contributor to obesity.

J.M. Goodson and colleagues, who carried out a recent study, measured salivary bacterial populations of overweight women.

Saliva was collected from 313 women with a body mass index (BMI, weight to height ratio) between 27 and 32 and bacterial populations were measured by DNA probe analysis. A BMI above 25 is a sign of being overweight.

Levels in this group were compared with data from a population of 232 healthy individuals from periodontal disease studies.

Analysis of saliva revealed that 98.4% of the obese women could be identified by the presence of a single bacterial species (Selenomonas noxia) at levels greater than 1.05% of the total salivary bacteria.

Analysis of these data suggests that the composition of salivary bacteria changes in overweight women.

It seems likely that these bacterial species could serve as biological indicators of a developing overweight condition.

Of even greater interest, and the subject of future research, is the possibility that oral bacteria may participate in the pathology that leads to obesity, said a International and American Associations for Dental Research release.

The study was published in the June issue of the Journal of Dental Research.

Source: The Times Of India

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Health Alert

When Old, You’ll Fall

Everyone falls, but this is most frequent at the two extremes of life: under the age of three and over the age of 70. In the interim, people fall less. Even if they slip, they can recover unscathed as their reflexes are better and they can get hold of something and correct themselves. In older people, with less muscle strength and a slower reaction time, falls are complete and dangerous. Seventy per cent of the elderly die as an aftermath of the first fall. Thirty per cent suffer fractures, sprains, head injuries or painful bruising. Sixty per cent of the survivors become “recurrent fallers” with three or more potentially fatal episodes during the next year. Even if recovery is complete, 90 per cent suffer from a psychological fear of falling, leading to fear of movement, loss of independence, poor quality of life and isolation.

………………an oldman falls on ground

Poor vision is a common cause of accidents. Ageing decreases vision. Perception of objects and adaptation to light and darkness are faulty. The eyesight should be checked every year, spectacles purchased and timely cataract surgery performed, if required.

Hearing too is essential for balance and safety. With age, in addition to the loss of hearing that occurs naturally, there may be a build up of hard earwax blocking the ear and affecting balance. Applying a few drops of baby oil to the outer ear canal regularly and not using ear buds (which may accidentally push the wax in) will go a long way to preventing this.

Body weight should be maintained so that the body mass index (BMI) — the weight in kilograms divided by height in metre squared — is 23. If it is less than 20, the chances of a fracture are greater, with no protective pads of fat to cushion the bones. If it is greater than 23, the chances of osteoarthritis and loss of balance are greater.

The elderly tend to walk slowly, stooping at the head and shoulders. Arm swing is decreased and there is more side to side movement. This leads to subtle alterations in the centre of gravity and a tendency towards loss of balance. The propioceptors (sensors that respond to stimuli) also react slowly, contributing to falls. To correct this, practise walking consciously correcting these defects. Also, stand with both legs planted firmly on the ground, close both eyes for a minute, and then balance on one leg with the eyes still shut. This helps in maintaining a sense of balance.

Footwear slips if it is too large, the straps are not firm and the soles are smooth. These defects have to be eliminated.

Bathroom floors can be slippery and treacherous. The tiles should be rough, not glazed and smooth. Handrails should be fixed near the toilet and shower to aid in getting up from the squatting position. Lighting in the bathroom should be bright and the switch near the door.

With ageing come diseases like arthritis, foot deformities, stroke, Parkinson’s and other tremors, epilepsy, dementia and peripheral neuropathy (numbness of the feet). These complicate other long-standing illness like diabetes and hypertension. Multiple diseases require treatment with a “polypharmacy” of drugs. These medications can contribute to giddiness and falls. Drugs for controlling high blood pressure may cause “postural hypotension”, a condition in which the blood pressure is apparently normal and well controlled on lying down but drops on standing. This is because the body does not compensate for the postural change and bring the pressure to normal levels quickly enough. Diabetic medication may cause sugar levels to drop precipitously, causing a loss of consciousness and a fall. Sometimes, elderly patients are placed on antidepressants or sedatives. They may fall off the bed, or, if they wake up suddenly in the night, they may be confused and disoriented.

The following risk factors triple the chances of a fall. Just remember “I hate falling”.

I — Inflammation of joints (or joint deformity)

H — Hypotension (orthostatic blood pressure changes)

A — Auditory and visual abnormalities

T — Tremor (Parkinson’s disease or other causes of tremor)

E — Equilibrium (balance) problem

F — Foot problems

A — Arrhythmia, heart block or valvular disease

L — Leg-length discrepancy

L — Lack of conditioning (generalised weakness)

I — Illness

N — Nutrition (poor; weight loss)

G — Gait disturbance

To estimate you’re chances of a fall, sit on a stool, get up without assistance, walk 10 steps, return to the stool and sit again within 10 seconds. If you can do this, your muscle strength, power and coordination are good and you are not likely to fall.

To prevent falls, exercise aerobically by walking 40 minutes a day. Balance can be improved with regular yoga. Exercise improves muscle and bone strength and dissipates the force of an impact during a fall. It lessens the chance of fracture by 60 per cent.

As the Indian population ages, we have to concentrate on measures to ensure that the elderly are not bed ridden and a burden to their younger caregivers. Be it at 50-60 or 80, age is no bar to exercising.

Source: The Telegraph (Kolkata, India)

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Testosterone Replacement Improves Men’s Liver Function

[amazon_link asins=’B01MQ1JLWY,B01MCSVH7S,B01GQSB3TQ,151519390X,B0157CQLDK,B06XVZQWWJ,B01HHOG6DQ,B00GWL6EHY,B06XFLYSYB’ template=’ProductCarousel’ store=’finmeacur-20′ marketplace=’US’ link_id=’610888fe-46df-11e7-942f-b37a9c205722′]A new study suggests that testosterone replacement for men with low levels of the hormone greatly improves their fatty liver disease
as well as their risk factors for cardiovascular disease and diabetes.

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“Physicians often are reluctant to prescribe testosterone for conditions not related to sexual function. However, our study shows that testosterone has a much wider therapeutic role than just for improving sexual desire and erectile function,” said the study’s co-author, Dr Farid Saad, of Berlin-headquartered Bayer Schering Pharma.

During a presentation at The Endocrine Society‘s 91st Annual Meeting in Washington, DC, it was revealed that the study included 122 testosterone-deficient men, aged 36 to 69 years.

The researchers found that restoring testosterone to normal levels led to major and progressive improvements in many features of the metabolic syndrome over the 2 years of treatment. They said that, particularly, the men’s weight, waist line and body mass index continued to decline over the full study period.

According to them, the other metabolic risk factors also significantly improved during the first year of testosterone treatment. Of the 47 men who met the criteria for a diagnosis of the metabolic syndrome at the beginning of the study, 36 no longer had the diagnosis after 2 years of treatment, the authors reported.

Furthermore, liver function significantly improved during the first 12 to 18 months of therapy and stabilized for the remainder of the study period.

The researchers said that the treatment also greatly decreased blood levels of C-reactive protein, a measure of inflammation that is linked to increased risk of cardiovascular disease.

“We conclude that testosterone therapy in men with testosterone deficiency can largely improve or even remedy the metabolic syndrome, which will most likely decrease their risk of diabetes and cardiovascular disease,” Saad said.

Source
: The Times Of India

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