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News on Health & Science

Stay Healthy While Travelling

A workout always helps
To ensure that your hard work at the gym doesn’t go by the wayside on the road, there are a few simple steps that you can take to keep your waistline and calorie intake in check while travelling.

Include workouts in your travel itinerary
You can do a lot of shoulder shrugs and calf raises. Try walking on your toes around the room. If there is no gym at your hotel, try squats, stationary lunges and crunches, which work out your abs and lower back. You can also do full body stretches.

The best alternative is to carry your iPod and go for a jog, advises fitness expert Leena Mogre. When you travel, the days can be long and last-minute client dinners can interfere with your evening workout.

Exercising in the morning helps ensure success.
Determine how you will exercise on your trip before you leave. Most hotels have gyms. Call ahead to determine the gym’s hours and range of equipment. Once you know what the hotel offers, you can decide whether you will need to bring additional equipment, like exercise bands or a swimsuit, if there’s a pool.

Don’t forget your sports shoes
When you travel for business, you would never think of leaving your laptop or cell phone behind. The same should hold true for your tennis shoes and workout gear. Just as your computer provides the tools you need for your work, your tennis shoes offer a wealth of exercise possibilities.

Don’t be rigid when it comes to your fitness routine
When you travel, even the best plans can be disrupted by flight delays, traffic jams and scheduling changes. If you miss your  scheduled  workout, a short routine is better than nothing. Consider doing sit-ups or yoga stretches in your room, or running up and down the stairs in the hotel a few times.

Even 10 minutes of activity can make a difference. Make the most of your time by taking a power walk around the airport.

Pack healthy snacks
When you make a list of things to take on your trip, make sure to include fruits, nuts and dried apricots. Dried apricots are actually the best to carry as they release energy in the body over a period of time,  says nutritionist Naini Setalvad.

Not only will the snacks tide you over until your next meal, they also will ensure that you donât make frequent trips to the coffee shop for a pastry. And, always carry water. Travelling dehydrates the body. Water satisfies hunger and helps you stay alert.

Have it your way
Remember that restaurants are there to serve you. If you can’t finish your meal, take a doggie bag. Also, if you are required to attend cocktail parties, order a glass of water between each beverage. Whether you drink alcohol, colas, or coffee, water decreases the calories that you consume and counteracts the effects of alcohol and caffeine.

At the very least, try not to lose ground
If you know that you are going to eat more when you travel, make sure that you institute some type of daily exercise so that you balance the increase in calories with physical activity. While it may not be realistic to think that you will lose weight while travelling, you will feel better if you maintain some healthy habits.

While travelling for business offers some challenges to your exercise routine, a little creativity can go a long way to helping you stay fit at home and on the road.

Source: The Times Of India

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Fruits & Vegetables Herbs & Plants

Blackcurrant

Botanical Name: Ribes nigrum
Family: Grossulariaceae
Genus: Ribes
Species:R. nigrum
Kingdom:Plantae
Order:Saxifragales

Common Name: Blackcurrant

Other Names: European Black Currant, Quinsy Berries

Habitat : Black Currant is native to temperate parts of central and northern Europe and northern Asia where it prefers damp fertile soils and is widely cultivated both commercially and domestically. It is cultivated throughout Finland, and other places of the world. It also grows in the wild.

Description:   Blackcurrant is a medium sized shrub, growing to 1.5 metres (4.9 ft) by 1.5 metres (4.9 ft). The leaves are alternate, simple, 3 to 5 cm (1.2 to 2.0 in) broad and long with five palmate lobes and a serrated margin. All parts of the plant are strongly aromatic. The flowers are produced in racemes known as “strig”s up to 8 cm (3 in) long containing ten to twenty flowers, each about 8 mm (0.3 in) in diameter. Each flower has a hairy calyx with yellow glands, the five lobes of which are longer than the inconspicuous petals. There are five stamens surrounding the stigma and style and two fused carpels. The flowers open in succession from the base of the strig and are mostly insect pollinated, but some pollen is distributed by the wind. A pollen grain landing on a stigma will germinate and send a slender pollen tube down the style to the ovule. In warm weather this takes about 48 hours but in cold weather it may take a week, and by that time, the ovule may have passed the stage where it is receptive. If fewer than about 35 ovules are fertilised, the fruit may not be able to develop and will fall prematurely. Frost can damage both unopened and open flowers when the temperature falls below -1.9 °C (28.5 °F). The flowers at the base of the strig are more protected by the foliage and are less likely to be damaged.

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In midsummer the green fruit ripens to an edible berry up to 1 cm in diameter, very dark purple in colour, almost black, with a glossy skin and a persistent calyx at the apex, and containing several seeds dense in nutrients (notably Vitamin C). An established bush can produce about 4.5 kilograms (10 pounds) of fruit each year.


Cultivation and uses

The fruit have a high natural vitamin C content. Like the other true currants (not to be confused with the Zante currant, a type of grape which is often dried), it is classified in the genus Ribes.

In addition to the high levels of vitamin C, studies have also shown concentrated blackcurrant to be an effective Monoamine oxidase inhibitor (Bormann, et al. 1991.) Fifty grams of 5.5X concentrate was found to inhibit 92% of the Monoamine oxidase enzymes. Blackcurrant seed oil is a rich source of gamma-linolenic acid (GLA), a very rare essential fatty acid.

When not in fruit, the plant looks very similar to the redcurrant shrub; they may be distinguished by the strong odour of the leaves and stems of the blackcurrant.

In Russia, it is common to infuse slightly sweetened vodka with blackcurrant leaves, making a deep yellowish-green beverage with a sharp flavour and an astringent taste[citation needed]. Blackcurrant berries can also be used to flavour vodka. In the UK, blackcurrant juice is often mixed with Cider to make a drink called Cider Black. This drink can be ordered at most pubs. It is also believed that adding a small amount of blackcurrant to Guinness will bring out a sweeter taste in the beer, making it a better beverage in some beer-drinkers’ opinions.

Blackcurrants have a very sweet and sharp taste. They are made into jelly, jam, juice, ice cream, cordial and liqueur. In the UK, Europe and Commonwealth countries, some types of confectionery include a blackcurrant flavour, but this is generally missing in the United States, even within the same brand. Instead grape flavour in candy (including grape jelly) almost mirrors the use of blackcurrant in both its ubiquity in the USA, and its rarity on the eastern side of the Atlantic.

The juicy berry is dark, purple-black in colour and highly fragrant and aromatic. It tastes slightly sour, but much sweeter (and better) than red or white currant. In Finland, blackcurrants are mainly used to make jellies, jams and juices, or used in various desserts. They are also eaten fresh, with sugar. The fragrant leaves are used to flavour vegetable preserves, especially pickled or salted cucumbers. Blackcurrants are high in vitamins C and B and hot blackcurrant juice is an old trusted cold remedy.

It may be small, but the mighty blackcurrant is bursting with more health promoting antioxidants than most other fruit and vegetables, including blueberries!

It’s the special antioxidants called anthocyanins, which give blackcurrants their distinctive dark colour. British blackcurrants are grown and bred especially for their deep colour, which makes them extra good for you. The Blackcurrant Foundation has been established by British growers to raise awareness of the numerous health benefits of British blackcurrants.

On this site you will find everything you need to know about this small, but great British fruit!

Blackcurrants are one of the richest sources of vitamin C – weight for weight they contain four times as much as oranges. Blackcurrants are also a rich source of potassium but very little sodium which makes them beneficial in the treatment of high blood pressure and water retention. Their skins contain anthocyanosides an anti-bacterial pigment which is good for sore throats.

Healthy Foods For Good Nutrition and Weight Control
Good diet nutrition is essential for healthy weight reduction. Fad diets or unbalanced eating plans lack the vitamins, minerals and other nutrients necessary to maintain efficient metabolism. Instead, choose a balanced diet plan, which includes foods from all food groups, and offers proper support to lose weight. A healthy choice is Anne Collins Weight Loss Program

History:
During World War II most fruits rich in vitamin C, such as oranges, became almost impossible to obtain in the United Kingdom. Since blackcurrant berries are a rich source of vitamin C and blackcurrant plants are suitable for growing in the UK climate, blackcurrant cultivation was encouraged by the British government. Soon, the yield of the nation’s crop increased significantly. From 1942 on almost the entire British blackcurrant crop was made into blackcurrant syrup (or cordial) and distributed to the nation’s children free, giving rise to the lasting popularity of blackcurrant flavourings in Britain.

Blackcurrants were once popular in the United States as well, but they became extremely rare in the 20th century after currant farming was banned in the early 1900s. The ban was enacted when it was discovered that blackcurrants helped to spread the tree disease White Pine Blister Rust, which was thought to threaten the then-booming U.S. lumber industry .

The federal ban on growing currants was shifted to individual States’ jurisdiction in 1966. The ban was lifted in New York State in 2003 as a result of the efforts of Greg Quinn and The Currant Company and currant growing is making a comeback in several states including Vermont, New York, Connecticut and Oregon.[2] However, several statewide bans still exist including Maine, Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Since the federal ban ceased currant production anywhere in the U.S., the fruit is not well-known and has yet to reach the popularity that it had in the U.S. in the 19th century or that it currently has in Europe and the UK. The first nationally available black currant beverage in the U.S. since the ban was lifted in many states is a powerful health-food nectar under the brand name CurrantC. Since black currants are a strong source of antioxidants and vitamins (much like pomegranate juice), awareness and popularity are once again growing in the U.S.

Cooking

Other than being juiced and used in jellies, syrups, and cordials, blackcurrants are used in cooking because their astringent nature brings out the flavour in many sauces and meat dishes and lends them to desserts. It was once thought that currants needed to be “topped and tailed” (the stalk and flower-remnants removed) before cooking. This however is not the case as these parts are easily assimilated during the cooking process. If one prefers to do this, however, the blackcurrants can be frozen, then shaken vigorously. The tops and tails are broken off and can be separated easily from the fruit.

Meditional Uses:

Blackcurrant fruits are a good source of minerals and vitamins, especially vitamin C. They have diuretic and diaphoretic actions, help to increase bodily resistance to infections and are a valuable remedy for treating colds and flu. The juice, especially when fresh or vacuum-sealed, helps to stem diarrhea and calms indigestion.

The leaves are cleansing, diaphoretic and diuretic. By encouraging the elimination of fluids they help to reduce blood volume and thereby lower blood pressure. An infusion is used in the treatment of dropsy, rheumatic pain and whooping cough, and can also be used externally on slow-healing cuts and abscesses. It can be used as a gargle for sore throats and mouth ulcers. The leaves are harvested during the growing season and can be used fresh or dried. French research has shown that blackcurrant leaves increase the secretion of cortisol by the adrenal glands, and thus stimulate the activity of the sympathetic nervous system. This action may prove useful in the treatment of stress-related conditions.

An infusion of the young roots is useful in the treatment of eruptive fevers. A decoction of the bark has been found of use in the treatment of calculus, dropsy and hemorrhoidal tumors. The seed is a source of gamma-linolenic acid, an unsaturated fatty acid which assists the production of hormone-like substances. This process is commonly blocked in the body, causing disorders that affect the uterine muscles, nervous system and metabolism. There are no records of the oil from this species being used medicinally, though it is used in cosmetic preparations.

In Europe the leaves have traditionally been used for arthritis, spasmodic cough, diarrhea, as a diuretic and for treating a sore throat. The berries were made into a drink thought to be beneficial for treatment of colds and flu, for other fevers, for diaphoresis and as a diuretic. In traditional Austrian medicine, Ribes nigrum fruits have been used internally (consumed whole or as a syrup) for treatment of infections and disorders of the gastrointestinal tract, the locomotor system, the respiratory tract and the cardiovascular system.

Blackcurrants prevent heart disease, cancer

Other uses:
The plant has various other uses. Blackcurrant seed oil is an ingredient in cosmetics and skin preparations, often in combination with vitamin E. The leaves can be extracted to yield a yellow dye and the fruit is a source for a blue or violet dye. The leaves have been used to assist in keeping vegetables fresh.

Disclaimer : The information presented herein is intended for educational purposes only. Individual results may vary, and before using any supplement, it is always advisable to consult with your own health care provider

Resources:

http://www.blackcurrantfoundation.co.uk/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackcurrant
http://www.annecollins.com/diet_foods/blackcurrants.htm

http://www.herbnet.com/Herb%20Uses_AB.htm

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News on Health & Science

Video games could improve eyesight

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NEW YORK: Playing video games that involve firing guns could improve eyesight, suggests a study….CLICK & SEE

Playing ‘Gears of War‘, ‘Lost Planet‘, ‘Halo‘ and other action video games can improve eyesight, say Daphne Bevelier of the University of Rochester and other researchers who conducted tests on 10 male college students.

The students started out as non-gamers and then received 30 hours of training on first-person shooter action video games, reports the online edition of FOX News.

The participants showed a substantial increase in their ability to see objects accurately in a cluttered space compared to 10 non-gamers given the same test.

Most aspects of vision have to do with the size of one’s eye and the thickness and shape of the cornea and lens. But some visual defects are neural in nature, said Bevelier, author of the latest study on vision and video games.

Source:The Times Of India

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News on Health & Science

New treatment for cancer

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TomoTherapy, a new way to treat cancer, has given a ray of hope to patients, reports Vishnupriya Sengupta.

CLICK & SEE

A cancer patient undergoes TomoTherapy at a hospital.
Imagine a cancer patient walking into a hospital on a Monday afternoon, undergoing a 30-minute operation, walking out on Friday with minimum side effects and rejoining office the following Monday. This isn’t quite a dream. It is actually possible, courtesy TomoTherapy, and not very far from home   at Gleneagles Hospital in Singapore.

Imagine a terminally ill cancer patient who doesn’t lose the ability to walk even though the cancer may have spread to the bone, specifically the hip joint of the pelvis. Far from spending the remainder of his life in bed or being bound to a wheel chair, he gets a chance to walk again, without feeling an iota of pain. It’s possible at the National University Hospital in Singapore.

Imagine a young woman in her 30s who goes in for a routine check-up for cervical cancer. But instead of undergoing colposcopy, where her cervix is examined with a special binocular microscope, she is subjected to a visual inspection called MediScan which involves a computerised digital data and image archival system, more effective in tracking changes in cervical lesions. This is a technique used at the KK Women’s and Children Hospital in Singapore.

Singapore, touted as a medical tourism hub, is now fast emerging as a one-stop specialist centre. It houses a large pool of oncologists who use state-of-the-art equipment and targeted therapies which maximise outcomes and minimise undesirable side effects. This has resulted in a rapid influx of patients from Bangladesh, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, the Philippines and the Middle East. In the next five years, the number is set to reach one million.

Some cancers are curable not just in India but also in state-of-the-art hospitals elsewhere. But TomoTherapy, the new revolutionary way to treat the illness, has given a new ray of hope to all cancer patients because it is the most advanced form of image-guided intensity modulated radiation therapy with several advantages.

A year ago, on March 1, 2006, Mount Elizabeth Oncology Centre became the first centre in South East Asia to offer Tomotherapy and treat its first patient with this state-of-the-art machine. While the machine costs well over US $6 million, the good news is that the cost of the treatment in Singapore is less than half the cost of treatment in the US, as it varies between Singapore $20,000 and $ 4,000.

“Tomotherapy combines precise 3-D imaging from computerised tomography (CT scanning) with highly targeted precise radiation beams, says Dr Khoo Kei Siong, deputy medical director, Parkway Cancer Centre, Gleneagles Hospital. With this machine, radiation oncologists can check the location of the patient’s tumour before each treatment. They can then deliver painless and precise radiation therapy based on a carefully customised plan.

Elaborating on the advantages, Dr Khoo Kei Siong says, “As compared to traditional radiation therapy that can only accommodate a few angles, many different angles of entry for radiation beams can be obtained by the use of this machine. More importantly, there is accurate control of radiation delivery to precise areas and at the precise intensity, which minimises side effects because of targeted radiation and precise image guided positioning. Also, there is a lower radiation exposure to the healthy tissues surrounding the tumour.”

Until recently, cancer could only be diagnosed with the help of CT scans and MRIs. But Singapore, in particular the Parkway Group Healthcare, has acquired a super efficient imaging device that helps in the early detection of cancer. The device shows the chemical functioning of organs and tissues and allows a detailed measurement of distinct areas of the human brain while the patient is comfortable, conscious and alert. This imaging technique called Positron Emission Tomography (PET) diagnoses cancers otherwise difficult or impossible to detect.

At times, even when cancer is detected, the patient may be reluctant to undergo surgery. Chang Kat Tat, 59, is a case in point. He has cancer in the rectum and prostate and it has spread throughout the bones in his body. When he was offered surgery for his rectal cancer, he refused. But when he was offered surgery to help him walk again, he agreed.

Assistant Professor Suresh Nathan, an orthopaedic oncologist at the National University Hospital, applied the Harrington Procedure, a palliative surgery — which involves reconstructing the hip and then carrying out a hip replacement, which relieves all pain from standing or walking — on him. Dr Nathan learnt the procedure — which takes three to four hours to complete and costs around Singapore $ 20,000 — at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York. Ever since his return from the US in 2005, he has performed such operations on both adults and children.

Today Chang does not know how long he will live but he is mobile enough to continue his work as a spectacle lens fitter and ride his bike. Says Dr Nathan, “The initial outlay for something like this may be expensive but the alternative is being bed-bound, inviting the cancer to run amok, developing bed sores and dying from the associated blood infection. Also, you save on home and hospice care.”

Singapore has also made significant strides in the early detection of cervical cancer, the second most common cancer worldwide. While there is already a vaccine available which is effective in providing protection against the human papilloma virus which causes cervical cancer, the KKH Hospital in Singapore has also acquired a digital colposcopy network that helps in the diagnoses of cervical pre-cancer.

“While colposcopy is an important step in screening for cervical cancer, it’s effectiveness depends largely on the expertise of the doctor performing the procedure,” says Dr Quek Swee Chong, consultant, Gynaecologic Oncology Unit, KK Women’s and Children Hospital, Singapore. “But now with the help of this new networked system called MediScan, doctors can instantly retrieve digital images captured at various stages and track changes in cervical lesions more closely and accurately,” explains Dr Chong, who was part of the developmental team.

As to stem cell research — one area in which India is also doing its bit for advancement with LifeCell, the Chennai-based stem cell banking and research centre, setting up India’s first stem cell transplant centre in the country last year — Singapore is by no means lagging behind.

Take the case of Oh Tze Sun. When he was nine months old, he was diagnosed with Beta Thalassaemia Major. He had to bear the torment of daily injections and blood transfusion every three weeks. But six years later, Dr Patrick Tan, medical director, Haematology and Stem Cell Transplant Centre at Mount Elizabeth Hospital, Singapore, performed a landmark transplant on him with cord blood from an unrelated donor. With the success of the transplant, Tze Sun was given a clean chit. He no longer needs blood transfusion or injections and can finally lead a normal life.

With such major advancements in the field of oncology, cancer patients can now look forward to starting life afresh.

Source:The Telegraph (Kolkata,India)

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Health Alert

Being Fat Starts Early

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When you think of a 3-year-old, the words “obese” and “overweight” probably do not come to mind.
But this may be the age when many children’s problems with weight begin, according to a new study published in the American Journal of Public Health. The study by Rachel Kimbro and her colleagues at the University of Wisconsin in Madison looked at nearly 2,300 urban low-income families.
They found that 35 percent of the 3-year-olds studied were overweight or obese. In addition, Hispanic children were twice as likely as either black or white children to be overweight or obese, suggesting ethnic differences play a big part in childhood obesity.
“There are very few studies of obesity in children this young,” said Gary Foster, director of the obesity research center at Temple University School of Medicine. “This study is very important.”
Foster said the study addresses some of the factors that put children at risk for obesity at such a young age. “We have known for a long time that obesity is disproportionately related to income,” he said. “The poorer you are, the more likely that you are obese.”

Among the other child obesity risk factors suggested by the study are high birth weight, taking a bottle to bed and whether or not a child’s mother is obese.

But researchers were not able to fully explain all of the differences. For example, the differences in childhood obesity rates between racial groups could not be entirely blamed on economic status, overall health or parenting habits, the study said.

No Need for Alarm, Some Experts Say
Other experts argue that the study results are not new and just confirm previous data.
“The finding that we can identify different prevalence rate of obesity in different ethnic groups is not particularly surprising,” said Dr. Darwin Deen, professor of family and social medicine at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. “It correlates well with other data that have shown the same thing.
“The bigger question is whether 3-year-olds in certain ethnic groups are more likely to remain obese as they get older.”

While the idea of overweight and obese 3-year-olds is a concern, experts said a majority of children who are overweight at this age outgrow it.

“The 3 to 5 age group is not predictive of being obese as an adult,” said Deen. “It’s more the older group such as adolescents [that predicts adult obesity].”

But while parents should not necessarily be alarmed if their child is on the heavy side, they should realize the need to change the way they are feeding their child.

Many Parents Overfeed Their Children
“The bottom line is that you can’t become overweight without an energy imbalance,” said Foster. “And the easiest way is by an imbalance on the intake side.
“It’s much easier to increase intake by 500 calories than it is to increase your activity by that much.”
Foster said the study findings suggest parents should pay more attention to both the quantity and the quality of food they feed their kids.

And at the earliest ages, breast-feeding seems to be of utmost importance.
“Breast-feeding is extraordinarily important,” Deen said. “It’s one of the things that plays an important role in preventing obesity.
“This does not mean that most formula-fed babies will become obese or that formula shouldn’t be used, but breast-feeding is sort of tailor-made for the child.”
Monitoring the child’s calorie intake, whether from breast milk or formula, is also important to maintain a healthy weight.
Deen explained that while the study also raises some important concerns about racial differences, it does not change the overall approach to obesity.
“What we are talking about are moderate prevalence rate differences among different ethnic groups,” he said. “I don’t think it helps me much as a practitioner if I know that one group of my patients has more obesity than another group.
“When I have a patient in front of me, my advice about healthy choices remains the same, regardless of what their race is.”
Deen added that as rates of childhood obesity rise, changing kids’ behavior towards food will become more and more crucial.

“I think we need to worry because there clearly is an epidemic of childhood obesity in the country,” said Deen.
The take-home message from this study should be that what we do with children, even in the early years of life, has an impact on their future.”

Source:ABC News

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