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| FDA Warns of Salmonella in Sprouts | The U.S. FDA and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have warned people against eating raw alfalfa sprouts, as they may be contaminated with salmonella.
The contamination appears to be in seeds, so washing the sprouts may not help. Other types of sprouts have not been implicated at this time.
The FDA has been struggling with several high-profile outbreaks of food poisoning, including salmonella linked to peanut products. Congress is discussing the possibility of setting up a new food safety agency. |
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| It's Not That We Have a Short Time to Live, But That We Waste a Lot of It | “On The Shortness of Life” is one Lucius Seneca’s most famous letters. It’s valuable to read it whenever you feel the urge to succumb to social pressure and treat time as less valuable than income. Time is non-renewable, and “On The Shortness of Life” helps put this in a practical context, as relevant now as it was nearly 2,000 years ago.
Seneca says, “It is not that we have a short space of time, but that we waste much of it. Life is long enough, and it has been given in sufficiently generous measure to allow the accomplishment of the very greatest things if the whole of it is well invested.”
The full letter is contained in the link below. For a quick 4-minute overview, you can read the bolded passages. But it’s worthwhile to read the entire piece on a slow evening. Each person identifies with different passages. |
|
| Will Pesticides Make You Fat? | A new study on rats shows that long-term exposure to the common agricultural pesticide atrazine causes weight gain in animals fed normal diets and obesity in those fed high fat diets.
Weight gain and obesity can lead to diabetes. In this case, the conditions could be triggered by damage to critical structures in cells responsible for making energy.
The results suggest a mechanism that explains prior studies which found an association between areas with heavy atrazine use and high obesity prevalence. |
|
| Herbal Extract Inhibits Pancreatic Cancer | An herb recently found to kill pancreatic cancer cells also appears to inhibit development the of pancreatic cancer as a result of its anti-inflammatory properties.
Thymoquinone, a constituent of the oil extract from a Middle Eastern herbal seed called Nigella sativa, has anti-inflammatory properties that reduced the release of inflammatory mediators in pancreatic cancer cells. Nigella sativa seeds and oil are used in traditional medicine by many Middle Eastern and Asian countries. It is used to treat a broad array of diseases, including some immune and inflammatory disorders.
Previous studies have also shown it to have beneficial effects on prostate and colon cancers. |
|
| Natural Osteoporosis Prevention & Treatment | Many of you have or will eventually suffer from osteoporosis. But the drugs designed to treat it are dangerous and loaded with side effects. But there are safe, natural treatments you can use instead. |
|
| The Peptide Crucial for a Long, Healthy Life | Recent studies have shown that the mitochondrial peptide Humanin (HN) protects against neuronal cell death, such as happens in Alzheimer's disease. Now, a study reports that a small infusion of HN is the most potent regulator of insulin metabolism that the research team had ever seen, significantly improving overall insulin sensitivity and sharply decreasing the glucose levels of diabetic rats.
This is the first evidence of a role for HN in glucose metabolism, and it provides new insight into how it may be involved in the development of age-related diseases such as Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus and Alzheimer's. The finding also provides support for the growing understanding that the brain is heavily involved in glucose metabolism.
The power of HN on insulin action suggests a new therapeutic approach to diabetes. Further understanding of HN may also lead to strategies to protect against age-related dementia. |
|
| Organic Apples Beat Conventionals on Antioxidants | Organic apples have a 15 percent higher antioxidant capacity than conventionally produced apples, according to a new study. These findings add to the ongoing debate over whether organically grown produce is more nutritious than conventionally grown produce.
Researchers compared the polyphenol content and antioxidant capacity of Golden Delicious apples grown under organic and conventional conditions over a three year period.
In 2005 and 2006 the antioxidant capacity was 15 percent higher in the organic fruit. Organic apples grown in 2005 also had a higher polyphenol concentration. |
|
| Hidden Link for Asthma that Needs to be Tried for EVERY Asthmatic | New research provides evidence for a link between vitamin D insufficiency and asthma severity. Serum vitamin D levels in more than 600 children were inversely linked to several indicators of allergy and asthma severity.
While previous studies have suggested that vitamin D may affect how airway cells respond to treatment with inhaled steroids, this is the first study of vitamin D and disease severity in children with asthma.
Children with lower vitamin D levels were significantly more likely to have been hospitalized for asthma in the previous year, tended to have airways with increased hyperreactivity, and were likely to have used more inhaled corticosteroids -- all signifying higher asthma severity. These children were also significantly more likely to have several markers of allergy, including dust-mite sensitivity. |
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| Smear Campaign Aimed Against Anti-Aging Proponents | A groundbreaking paper has exposed for the first time the covert misdeeds and extreme abuse of academic and political power by the gerontological establishment.
For the past fourteen years, establishment gerontologists have sought to persecute anti-aging physicians, anti-aging health practitioners, and the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine itself, simply because they defy the prevailing model of disease-based, drug-oriented medicine.
The paper details a complete disregard for truth, academic integrity, and scientific professionalism by some of the most prestigious doctors in the gerontological establishment,. They have waged a multi-million dollar campaign to influence media and exert deliberate control of public information, using selective funding of journalists to deliberately misrepresent the anti-aging movement.
Dr. Imre Zs.-Nagy, a part of the gerontology movement for four decades, and founder and Editor-in-Chief of the Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics, has courageously stepped up to speak the truth. At great professional risk, he has come forth to blow the whistle on fourteen years of censorship and repression of the science of anti-aging medicine. I, myself, just spoke at the American Academy of Anti Aging Conference in Orlando on April 25. I am glad to see that the truth is coming out at last. |
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| When Unhealthy Foods Hijack Your Brain | In a book being published next week, former FDA chief Dr. David Kessler brings to consumers the disturbing conclusion of numerous brain studies -- some people really do have a harder time resisting bad foods.
At issue is how the brain becomes primed by different stimuli. Neuroscientists increasingly report that fat-and-sugar combinations in particular light up the brain's dopamine pathway -- its pleasure-sensing spot. This is the same pathway that conditions people to alcohol or drugs.
The culprits foods are "layered and loaded" with combinations of fat, sugar and salt, and they are often so processed that you don't even have to chew much.
Overeaters must take responsibility, too, and basically retrain their brains to resist the lure, says Kessler. |
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| Leave Your Work at Work | Do you always think about your job? Is it causing an unintentional distancing between you and your family? Here are some ways to keep yourself from thinking about work 24-7:
- Change your route: If you have a bad or overly stressful day at work, take the long way home. During the first half of your journey home, turn the radio off and think about what you have to accomplish at work and how you will execute. During the second half of the drive, turn on whatever music you like, talk radio, (whatever) and begin the process of thinking about things outside of work.
- The boss at work does not equal the boss at home: Just because you are an important guy at work doesn't mean that you get to make demands at home. You have to remember that the people you live with are not paid to take your BS.
- Vent: Once you get home after work, give yourself a 15-minute window to let it out. You should set this up in advance with your spouse but leave the time limit at 15 minutes. After that, you must agree that work is over.
- Blackberry/Laptop: If you really don't need to work, keep the electronics off. Don't log in just because you are curious.
- Questions first: When you get home, immediately ask how your spouse's day went -- and listen! Many times their response is enough to get you to think of family tasks and break you away from work.
- Survival: Your company will survive without you. It is key to remember this as you choose where to spend time.
- No work, no matter what: Set specific nights and times in your calendar and tell co-workers that you are absolutely unavailable then no matter what.
- 25 Percent Rule: When you plan my days, leave a minimum of 25 percent of the time open. Use this time for emergencies, task lists, etc. instead of reserving them for off-hours.
- Get up earlier: As your family sleeps, you can easily get some stuff done by heading to the office early.
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| Alpha Lipoic Acid -- One Powerful Antioxidant! | Take a look at this video -- you'll be amazed by what this one antioxidant can do. |
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| Alcohol Has More Calories Than You Think | Many people are unaware of the calorie content of alcohol, according to a survey. Four in 10 did not know a glass of wine has the same calories as a slice of cake.
The poll of 2,000 adults in England was carried out as part of a government drive to curb people's drinking habits. The campaign also stresses that a heavy drinking session is often followed by an unhealthy breakfast.
A regular beer drinker who drinks five pints a week will, over the course of a year, ingest the same number of calories as someone eating 221 doughnuts. The average wine drinker consumes 2,000 extra calories each month -- over the course of a year, that is the equivalent of eating an extra 38 roast beef dinners. |
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| Can Chewing Gum Make You Smarter? | This article in the Los Angeles Times claims that a study found evidence that chewing gum boosts academic performance. The study looked at about 100 students, who were assigned to either chew or abstain from sugar-free gum during math class. Those who chewed gum apparently showed a 3 percent increase in standardized math test scores.
You will likely want to read the date on this article twice to confirm that it is not an April Fool's article, and indeed a real story that is not in the Onion, but in a legitimate newspaper -- the LA Times. After that, you will realize the reason that this nonsense study ever saw the light of day. It is because it was funded by the Wrigley institute, which of course makes chewing gum. The blatant conflict of interest is quite obvious.
The authors added no explanation for their ridiculous observation. However one could speculate that it helps Wrigley earn more money. Chewing gum is actually harmful to your health for a number of reasons. One is that it filled with either natural or artificial sweeteners, which virtually none of need more of. But even more importantly, you simply waste your digestive enzyme capacity when you chew and there is nothing to digest. |
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| Don’t Believe the Hype -- Fructose Truly is Much Worse Than Glucose | New research shows that there are big differences in how the sugars fructose and glucose are metabolized by your body. Overweight study participants showed more evidence of insulin resistance and other risk factors for heart disease and diabetes when 25 percent of their calories came from fructose-sweetened beverages instead of glucose-sweetened beverages.
A study looked at 32 overweight or obese men and women. Over a 10-week period, they drank either glucose or fructose sweetened beverages totaling 25 percent of their daily calorie intake.
Both the groups gained weight during the trial, but imaging studies revealed that the fructose-consuming group gained more of the dangerous belly fat that has been linked to a higher risk for heart attack and stroke. The fructose group also had higher total cholesterol and LDL ("bad") cholesterol, and greater insulin resistance. |
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| Shocking Update -- Sunshine Can Actually Decrease Your Vitamin D Levels | As you no doubt know, exposure to sunlight causes vitamin D to be produced in your skin. But it is only a portion of the solar spectrum known as UVB that has this effect. Other parts of the solar spectrum can have very different results.
Malignant melanoma has been increasing at an exponential rate in indoor workers since before 1940. The reason may be indoor exposure to UVA radiation. Unlike UVB, which is blocked by glass, UVA can pass through windows.
UVA can cause cancerous mutations, and can also break down vitamin D formed after outdoor UVB exposure. And vitamin D is a potent defense against melanoma -- melanoma cells convert it to calcitriol, which causes growth inhibition and apoptotic cell death in vitro and in vivo. New research shows that increased UVA exposures and inadequately maintained cutaneous levels of vitamin D promote melanoma. |
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| Fatty Foods Boost Your Memory | A study suggests that eating fatty foods can help boost your memory. Oleic acids from fats are converted into a memory-enhancing agent in the gut.
Evidence shows high levels of oleoylethanolamide, or OEA, can reduce appetite, produce weight loss and lower blood cholesterol as well as triglyceride levels. Researchers discovered that OEA also causes memories to be laid down by activating memory-enhancing signals in the amygdala -- the part of the brain involved with memories of emotional events.
When they gave OEA to rats, it improved their memory retention in two different tests. When they blocked OEA with a drug, their performance on the tasks declined. |
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| Is Omega-6 More Important Than Omega-3? | According to the American Heart Association, Americans should not reduce their consumption of omega-6 fats -- and might even benefit from eating a little more.
Omega-6 and omega-3 fats are "essential fats" that your body can't produce and must obtain from food. These fatty acids play a very important role in heart and brain function, along with normal growth and development.
Most omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) in the diet come from linoleic acid, found in vegetable oils such as corn oil. There are no firm recommendations on how much omega-6 PUFAs people need, but at present U.S. adults consume about 15 grams per day of linoleic acid. But according to the Institute of Medicine, 17 grams per day and 12 grams a day are adequate for men and women, respectively. Questions have been raised about whether omega-6 PUFAs might harm the heart by promoting inflammation, because these fatty acids are the building blocks of several types of inflammatory molecules. But some scientific evidence suggests omega-6 fatty acids actually reduce inflammation, and they also have well-documented effects in lowering cholesterol levels. |
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| Fascinating Video on Income, Health and Life Expectancy | Gapminder.org can now visualize change in life expectancy and income per person over the last two centuries. In the video above, Hans Rosling shows you how all the countries of the world have developed over the past years ago. I encourage you to look at this amazing interactive graph for details. In the subsequent videos, Rosling again uses his data tools to show how countries are pulling themselves out of poverty, and explains what population growth really is. |
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| Incredible Daredevil Balances on Edge of 1,000 Foot Cliffs | Extreme artist Eskil Ronningsbakken, who enjoys nothing more than precariously perching on the edge of a clifftop or walking on a tightrope between two hot-air balloons. His most recent endeavor was traveling upside-down on a bicycle 1,000 meters above an icy Norwegian fjord, with just a weight dangling below him for stability.
Eskil sees his balancing acts as expressions of art and not stunts. He is currently working with a group of 50 like-minded performers in Nairobi in Kenya.
'A stunt is something you see in movies, often done with mattresses safety lines or nets,' says Eskil. 'What I do is draw a picture with vulnerable human beings and their bodies, in the surrounding of mother earth. That's the balance between life and death, and that is where life is.' |
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| Leading Expert Tells How to Slow Your Aging Clock | Recent research shows that you can heal yourself with the power of a positive attitude. Professor Ellen Langer has conducted several studies into "mindfulness theory", researching just how much your attitude affects your actual body. The answer is -- quite a lot.
In one experiment, Langer shut several septuagenarians in a hotel that had been redecorated in mid-eighties style, eliminating all evidence of the last two decades. Subjects were instructed to act as if they'd really become younger -- and amazingly, soon their bodies actually seemed younger.
Dr Langer's theory is that all the external reminders that "you are old and broken" can convince the brain and body that it must be so. |
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| How to End Laundry Chaos | Laundry can be one of the most stubborn forms of clutter. But there are ways to keep your laundry chaos to a minimum:
- First and foremost, establish a laundry routine. You can’t let laundry pile up or it instantly becomes chaotic.
- Exclusively use small, sturdy laundry baskets (20 gal. or smaller). Keep one in the bathroom, one in the bedroom(s), and one in the laundry room.
- Have fewer clothes. The fewer clothes you have, the fewer clothes you have to wash.
- Don’t have more clothes than you can store properly in your dresser drawers and closet. If you can’t put all of your clothes away, you’ll always have a reason to have dirty clothes.
- Only buy non-iron clothes to keep clean shirts from stacking up in a “needs ironing” pile.
- When moving, look for a place that has a laundry room on the same floor as your closet. If you’re a DIY person, consider building a closet with the washer and dryer right inside of it.
- Have a designated dry cleaner bag next to your hamper. If you keep it in your car, clothes that need to go to the dry cleaner will certainly pile up on the floor and cause clutter.
- Keep a stack of delicate bags next to your hamper. When you take off delicates, you can put them straight into a delicates bag and then just throw them into the hamper.
- Change into pajamas at least an hour before bedtime so that you have enough energy to do more than throw your dirty clothes on the floor.
- Before buying anything in a color that bleeds (like red), ask yourself if you will want to take the time to sort it out every time you launder it.
- Think about wearing only neutral colors so that you never have to sort your laundry into lights and darks.
- Get a job in an office that allows casual dress so that you stop wearing two sets of clothes on most days.
- Only have two sets of bed sheets -- one on your bed and one waiting on deck.
- By the age of 12 your children should have their own laundry routines.
- Clean out pockets when taking off clothing to avoid having to do it during sorting.
- If something is permanently stained or riddled with holes, get rid of it.
- Keep hangers in your laundry room so that you can immediately hang up the clothes that you don’t fold.
- Replace your washer and dryer with large capacity units so that you can do two to three traditional loads at a time.
- Have a table in your laundry room so that you can have a space to immediately fold clothes as they come out of the dryer. Do NOT allow it to become a clutter table -- keep it clean and only use it for folding.
- Have a designated bag or box in your laundry room to put clothes in that you want to donate to charity. When they come out of the dryer, fold them, and stick them into the bag.
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|
| FDA Warns of Salmonella in Sprouts | The U.S. FDA and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have warned people against eating raw alfalfa sprouts, as they may be contaminated with salmonella.
The contamination appears to be in seeds, so washing the sprouts may not help. Other types of sprouts have not been implicated at this time.
The FDA has been struggling with several high-profile outbreaks of food poisoning, including salmonella linked to peanut products. Congress is discussing the possibility of setting up a new food safety agency. |
|
| It's Not That We Have a Short Time to Live, But That We Waste a Lot of It | “On The Shortness of Life” is one Lucius Seneca’s most famous letters. It’s valuable to read it whenever you feel the urge to succumb to social pressure and treat time as less valuable than income. Time is non-renewable, and “On The Shortness of Life” helps put this in a practical context, as relevant now as it was nearly 2,000 years ago.
Seneca says, “It is not that we have a short space of time, but that we waste much of it. Life is long enough, and it has been given in sufficiently generous measure to allow the accomplishment of the very greatest things if the whole of it is well invested.”
The full letter is contained in the link below. For a quick 4-minute overview, you can read the bolded passages. But it’s worthwhile to read the entire piece on a slow evening. Each person identifies with different passages. |
|
| Will Pesticides Make You Fat? | A new study on rats shows that long-term exposure to the common agricultural pesticide atrazine causes weight gain in animals fed normal diets and obesity in those fed high fat diets.
Weight gain and obesity can lead to diabetes. In this case, the conditions could be triggered by damage to critical structures in cells responsible for making energy.
The results suggest a mechanism that explains prior studies which found an association between areas with heavy atrazine use and high obesity prevalence. |
|
| Herbal Extract Inhibits Pancreatic Cancer | An herb recently found to kill pancreatic cancer cells also appears to inhibit development the of pancreatic cancer as a result of its anti-inflammatory properties.
Thymoquinone, a constituent of the oil extract from a Middle Eastern herbal seed called Nigella sativa, has anti-inflammatory properties that reduced the release of inflammatory mediators in pancreatic cancer cells. Nigella sativa seeds and oil are used in traditional medicine by many Middle Eastern and Asian countries. It is used to treat a broad array of diseases, including some immune and inflammatory disorders.
Previous studies have also shown it to have beneficial effects on prostate and colon cancers. |
|
| Natural Osteoporosis Prevention & Treatment | Many of you have or will eventually suffer from osteoporosis. But the drugs designed to treat it are dangerous and loaded with side effects. But there are safe, natural treatments you can use instead. |
|
| The Peptide Crucial for a Long, Healthy Life | Recent studies have shown that the mitochondrial peptide Humanin (HN) protects against neuronal cell death, such as happens in Alzheimer's disease. Now, a study reports that a small infusion of HN is the most potent regulator of insulin metabolism that the research team had ever seen, significantly improving overall insulin sensitivity and sharply decreasing the glucose levels of diabetic rats.
This is the first evidence of a role for HN in glucose metabolism, and it provides new insight into how it may be involved in the development of age-related diseases such as Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus and Alzheimer's. The finding also provides support for the growing understanding that the brain is heavily involved in glucose metabolism.
The power of HN on insulin action suggests a new therapeutic approach to diabetes. Further understanding of HN may also lead to strategies to protect against age-related dementia. |
|
| Organic Apples Beat Conventionals on Antioxidants | Organic apples have a 15 percent higher antioxidant capacity than conventionally produced apples, according to a new study. These findings add to the ongoing debate over whether organically grown produce is more nutritious than conventionally grown produce.
Researchers compared the polyphenol content and antioxidant capacity of Golden Delicious apples grown under organic and conventional conditions over a three year period.
In 2005 and 2006 the antioxidant capacity was 15 percent higher in the organic fruit. Organic apples grown in 2005 also had a higher polyphenol concentration. |
|
| Hidden Link for Asthma that Needs to be Tried for EVERY Asthmatic | New research provides evidence for a link between vitamin D insufficiency and asthma severity. Serum vitamin D levels in more than 600 children were inversely linked to several indicators of allergy and asthma severity.
While previous studies have suggested that vitamin D may affect how airway cells respond to treatment with inhaled steroids, this is the first study of vitamin D and disease severity in children with asthma.
Children with lower vitamin D levels were significantly more likely to have been hospitalized for asthma in the previous year, tended to have airways with increased hyperreactivity, and were likely to have used more inhaled corticosteroids -- all signifying higher asthma severity. These children were also significantly more likely to have several markers of allergy, including dust-mite sensitivity. |
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