Showing posts with label Health Tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Health Tips. Show all posts

Friday, 10 June 2016

Barley Can Ward Off 'Bad Cholesterol' and Prevent Heart Disease

Barley is a grain commonly found in bread, beverages, and various cuisines of every culture. It is one of the most widely consumed grains in the entire world.  Barley is high in fibre, has twice the protein and almost half the calories of oats as well as an important consideration for people with weight or dietary concerns.

According to a new study conducted by St Michael's Hospital in Canada consuming barley as food or in food recipes can significantly reduce the levels of "bad cholesterol" that are associated with heart disease risk, suggesting that barley has similar cholesterol-lowering effects as oats.



The review, published in The European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, included 14 studies on clinical trials conducted in seven countries, including Canada.The results showed that barley reduced by seven per cent both low-density lipoprotein, or LDL and non-high-density lipoprotein, or non-HDL. "The findings are most important for populations at high risk for cardiovascular disease, such as Type 2 diabetics, who have normal levels of LDL cholesterol but elevated levels of non-HDL or apolipoprotein B," said Scientist Vladimir Vuksan.Barley has a lowering effect on the total bad cholesterol in high-risk individuals, but can also benefit people without high cholesterol. High cholesterol and diabetes are the major risk factors for heart disease and stroke. Measuring non-HDL and or apoB -- a lipoprotein that carries bad cholesterol through the blood, provides a more accurate assessment for heart disease risk, as they account for the total 'bad cholesterol' found in the blood.Despite its benefits, barley is not as well established as some other health-recommended foods -- such as oats, the researchers rued, adding that barley consumption by humans has fallen by 35 per cent in the last 10 years.

Tuesday, 17 May 2016

A Father's Lifestyle Habits Could Cause Birth Defects in His Children



New fathers please take note! Your age, use of alcohol and other lifestyle factors can cause birth defects in your child as well as for the future generations, warns a new research at Georgetown University in the US. The nutritional, hormonal and psychological environment provided by the mother permanently has been previously known to alter the organ structure, cellular response and gene expression in her babies.




The team reviewed past research that focused on how a man's lifestyle could cause epigenetic changes in his sperm's DNA that could eventually affect his kid's genome."Our study shows that the fathers' lifestyle, and his age, can be reflected in molecules that control the gene function," said Joanna Kitlinska, an associate professor. "In this way, a father can affect not only his immediate offspring, but future generations as well," Kitlinska added in the paper published in the American Journal of Stem Cells.The findings showed that, if the father is alcoholic, a newborn can be diagnosed with foetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD), even though the mother has never consumed alcohol. Alcohol use in fathers was also linked to decreased birth weight, marked reduction in overall brain size, and impaired cognitive function.In addition, the advanced age of a father can elevate the rates of schizophrenia, autism in his children, the researchers said.Also, the diet pattern of a man during his pre-adolescence can reduce or increase the risk of cardiovascular death in his children and grandchildren. Paternal obesity has been linked to enlarged fat cells, changes in metabolic regulation, diabetes, obesity and development of brain cancer.Further, psychosocial stress on the father can cause defective behavioural traits in his kids."This new field of inherited paternal epigenetics needs to be organised into clinically applicable recommendations and lifestyle alternations," Kitlinska said adding, "to really understand the epigenetic influences of a child, we need to study the interplay between maternal and paternal effects, as opposed to considering each in isolation.

Saturday, 14 May 2016

Can Sitting in a Salt Room Help in Relieving Asthma?



As the number of asthma cases are rising due to the deteriorating air quality, health experts have suggested a new form of therapy that may be beneficial in treating respiratory diseases. According to them, salt room therapy is helpful and has been tested in various parts of the world. It is completely natural and can provide symptomatic relief to patients suffering from respiratory problems.

“Dangerously high levels of pollution have taken a toll on the health of many people. In this form of therapy, patients are asked to relax in a room with walls thickly lined with salt. Light air is continuously blown into the room, helping the minute salt particles mix in the air which is breathed by the patient," said Animesh Ray, Consultant Pulmonologist at Fortis Vasant Kunj.



According to doctors, the salt particles after reaching the nose and the respiratory tract remove all debris and bacteria. They also help in the abatement of bronchial inflammation and strengthening of the immune system that decreases allergic reaction to pollen.

Varsa, a Delhi-based respiratory expert, explains that the passage of air through the bronchial tubes, leads to widening of the airway passages, restores the normal transport of mucus and unclogs blockages in the bronchi, thereby controlling asthmatic attacks.

Anju Chandra, founder of Salt Room Therapy in New Delhi, says in agreement, "Salt room therapy is a drug-free treatment for asthma, chronic bronchitis, sinusitis, allergic and skin ailments. I am hopeful that this initiative will not just help people with respiratory and skin conditions but will offer them an effective and natural treatment option to fight the rising pollution around us."

Salt therapy is also known as Halotherapy, a spa-type therapy which claims to bring health benefits by surrounding a person with salt in real or simulated salt caves. It also takes the form of salt rooms and breathing through salt pipes, called SpeleoTherapy. Supporters of the salt therapy say that simply sitting in a space surrounded by salt creates a micro-climate that may be beneficial to some respiratory and skin conditions.

Wednesday, 11 May 2016

Can Sitting in a Salt Room Help in Relieving Asthma?



As the number of asthma cases are rising due to the deteriorating air quality, health experts have suggested a new form of therapy that may be beneficial in treating respiratory diseases. According to them, salt room therapy is helpful and has been tested in various parts of the world. It is completely natural and can provide symptomatic relief to patients suffering from respiratory problems.

“Dangerously high levels of pollution have taken a toll on the health of many people. In this form of therapy, patients are asked to relax in a room with walls thickly lined with salt. Light air is continuously blown into the room, helping the minute salt particles mix in the air which is breathed by the patient," said Animesh Ray, Consultant Pulmonologist at Fortis Vasant Kunj.



According to doctors, the salt particles after reaching the nose and the respiratory tract remove all debris and bacteria. They also help in the abatement of bronchial inflammation and strengthening of the immune system that decreases allergic reaction to pollen.

Varsa, a Delhi-based respiratory expert, explains that the passage of air through the bronchial tubes, leads to widening of the airway passages, restores the normal transport of mucus and unclogs blockages in the bronchi, thereby controlling asthmatic attacks.

Anju Chandra, founder of Salt Room Therapy in New Delhi, says in agreement, "Salt room therapy is a drug-free treatment for asthma, chronic bronchitis, sinusitis, allergic and skin ailments. I am hopeful that this initiative will not just help people with respiratory and skin conditions but will offer them an effective and natural treatment option to fight the rising pollution around us."

Salt therapy is also known as Halotherapy, a spa-type therapy which claims to bring health benefits by surrounding a person with salt in real or simulated salt caves. It also takes the form of salt rooms and breathing through salt pipes, called SpeleoTherapy. Supporters of the salt therapy say that simply sitting in a space surrounded by salt creates a micro-climate that may be beneficial to some respiratory and skin conditions.

Monday, 9 May 2016

What Causes Appetite Loss During Illness



A new study at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) in California, US published in the Journal of Neuroscience have discovered how an immune system molecule hijacks a brain circuit and reduces appetite when you are inflicted with an illness.



While loss of appetite during illness is common, it contributes to reducing a patient's strength and in cancer patients, it can even shorten lifespan. The new research points to potential targets for treating loss of appetite and restoring a patient's strength.

'Treating loss of appetite won't cure an underlying disease, but it could help a patient cope,' said senior author of the study Bruno Conti, professor at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) in California, US. 'Many times, loss of appetite can compromise clinical outcome. A weak individual is less likely to be able to cope with chemotherapy, for instance,' Conti adds.

Many people recover their appetite after illness. But in patients with diseases such as cancer or AIDS, loss of appetite can turn into a wasting disease called cachexia, also known as "the last illness" because it can accelerate a patient's decline.

The researchers believe the circuit affected by an immune molecule called interleukin 18 (IL-18) may be a potential drug target for treating loss of appetite, and possibly support weight loss for those with metabolic disorders. 'IL-18 regulates feeding by locking directly into the neuronal circuitry,' Conti said.

Saturday, 7 May 2016

Stop Eating Red Meat Daily to Add Years to Your Life




Beware! Gorging on red meat such as bacon, sausage, unsalted beef or pork on a daily basis can decrease your life, new research warns. The findings showed the steepest rise in mortality rate at the smallest increase in intake of meat, particularly red or processed meat.A decreased risk of 25 percent to nearly 50 percent of all-cause mortality for very low meat intake compared with higher meat intake was found. In addition, the researchers also found a 3.6-year increase in life expectancy for those on a vegetarian diet for more than 17 years, compared to short-term vegetarians.



"This clinical-based evidence can assist physicians in counselling patients about the important role diet plays, leading to improved preventive care, a key consideration in the osteopathic philosophy of medicine," said Brookshield Laurent, assistant professor at New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine in the US."This data reinforces what we have known for so long -- your diet has great potential to harm or heal," Laurent added.For the study, published in the Journal of the American Osteopathic Association, the researchers conducted a review of six large-scale studies involving more than 1.5 million with a goal of giving primary care physicians evidence-based guidance about whether they should discourage patients from eating meat.They followed people over 5.5 to 28 years and considered the association of processed meat (such as bacon, sausage, salami, hot dogs and ham) and unprocessed red meat (including uncured, unsalted beef, pork, lamb or game).Physicians should advise patients to limit animal products when possible and consume more plants than meat, they suggested.

Wednesday, 4 May 2016

Eating Dark Chocolate Can Curb Diabetes, Heart Disease Risk


Fancy eating chocolates every day? You may soon have the recommendation of doctors to indulge a little as researchers have found that a dark chocolate bar daily could reduces the risk of developing diabetes and heart diseases.For the study, the researchers analysed data of 1,153 people aged 18-69 years old who were part of the Observation of Cardiovascular Risk in Luxembourg study.



It was found that those who ate 100 g of chocolate a day -- equivalent to a bar -- had reduced insulin resistance and improved liver enzymes.Insulin sensitivity is a well-established risk factor to cardiovascular disease. The findings were published in the British Journal of Nutrition. The analysis took into account lifestyle and dietary factors, including the simultaneous consumption of tea and coffee.This is because both drinks can be high in polyphenol, the substance which may provide chocolate with its beneficial cardiometabolic effects."Given the growing body of evidence, including our own study, cocoa-based products may represent an additional dietary recommendation to improve cardio-metabolic health; however, observational results need to be supported by robust trial evidence," said Saverio Stranges, visiting academic at the University of Warwick Medical School in England."Potential applications of this knowledge include recommendations by healthcare professionals to encourage individuals to consume a wide range of phytochemical-rich foods, which can include dark chocolate in moderate amounts," Stranges said.However, it is important to differentiate between the natural product cocoa and the processed product chocolate, which is an energy-dense food.Therefore, physical activity, diet and other lifestyle factors must be carefully balanced to avoid detrimental weight gain over time, the researchers warned.

Wednesday, 27 April 2016

The Junk Food Chronicle: Obesity on the Rise Among Rural Children in China



Researchers raised the alarm about an obesity explosion among children in rural China as a Western-style diet high in sugar and carbohydrates starts taking its toll. A 29-year survey of kids in China's eastern Shandong province revealed that 17 percent of boys younger than 19 were obese in 2014, and nine percent of girls - up from under one percent for both genders in 1985.

"This is extremely worrying," the European Society of Cardiology's Joep Perk said of the study published in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology. "It is the worst explosion of childhood and adolescent obesity that I have ever seen."



The data comes from six government surveys of some 28,000 rural school children (aged 7-18) in Shandong. The percentage of overweight boys had grown from 0.7 percent to 16.4 percent, and girls from 1.5 percent to nearly 14 percent, it found. The study used different measures of Body Mass Index (BMI) for overweight and obesity than the World Health Organisation (WHO) standard. BMI is a ratio of weight-to-height squared.

For the UN's health body, a BMI of 25-29.9 is classified as overweight, and from 30 upwards obese. The study authors used a stricter cut-off of 24-27.9 for overweight, and 28 and above for obese.
This means it would be difficult to compare the numbers to other countries, but does not invalidate the fattening trend observed within China itself, said Perk.

"China has experienced rapid socioeconomic and nutritional changes in the past 30 years," study co-author Ying-Xiu Zhang of the Shandong Centre for Disease Control and Prevention said in a statement.

"In China today, people eat more and are less physically active than they were in the past. The traditional Chinese diet has shifted towards one that is high in fat and calories and low in fibre."

Monday, 25 April 2016

Food for Thought: Are You on a High-Fructose Diet?



To test the effects of fructose and DHA, the researchers trained rats to escape from a maze, and then randomly divided the animals into three groups. For the next six weeks, one group of rats drank water with an amount of fructose that would be roughly equivalent to a person drinking a liter of soda per day. The second group was given fructose water and a diet rich in DHA. The third received water without fructose and no DHA.

After the six weeks, the rats were put through the maze again. The animals that had been given only the fructose navigated the maze about half as fast than the rats that drank only water - indicating that the fructose diet had impaired their memory.


The rats that had been given fructose and DHA, however, showed very similar results to those that only drank water - which strongly suggests that the DHA eliminated fructose's harmful effects.

Other tests on the rats revealed more major differences: The rats receiving a high-fructose diet had much higher blood glucose, triglycerides and insulin levels than the other two groups. Those results are significant because in humans, elevated glucose, triglycerides and insulin are linked to obesity, diabetes and many other diseases.

The research team sequenced more than 20,000 genes in the rats' brains, and identified more than 900 genes that were altered by the fructose. The altered genes they identified, the vast majority of which are comparable to genes in humans, are among those that interact to regulate metabolism, cell communication and inflammation.

Among the conditions that can be caused by alterations to those genes are Parkinson's disease, depression, bipolar disorder, and other brain diseases, Yang said.

Friday, 22 April 2016

What Are the Benefits of Eating Almonds Daily?

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You've heard this before, almonds are one of the healthiest nuts. Our grandmothers have told us time and again not to forget those almonds she diligently soaked a night before.Health experts agree, they are packed with protein, Vitamin E, minerals and monounsaturated fats that have been shown to boost heart health.


 A new study supports the same. According to a team of American researchers, eating a moderate amount of almonds every day may enrich the diets of adults and young children. "Almonds are a good source of plant protein - essential fatty acids, vitamin E and magnesium," said Alyssa Burns, a doctoral student at University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences in US. For the 14-week study, scientists gave almonds daily to 29 pairs of parents and children. Most of the adults were mothers with an average age of 35, while their children were between 3 and 6 years old. The children were encouraged to consume 0.5 ounces of almond butter daily. Parents were given 1.5 ounces of almonds per day. Participants ate almonds for a few weeks, then they resumed eating their typical intake, which included other foods as snacks. Researchers based their conclusions about improved dietary intake on participants' scores on the Healthy Eating Index (HEI), a tool used to measure diet quality and adherence to the 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans. Researchers used an online dietary recall to find out what adults had eaten and how much. That way, researchers could measure diet quality, Burns said. When parents and children were eating almonds, their HEI increased for total protein foods, seafood and plant proteins and fatty acids, Burns said, while they ate fewer empty calories. Parents also decreased sodium intake. Parents and children consumed more vitamin E and magnesium when eating almonds, she said. "Almonds are equally nourishing raw or soaked. When soaked overnight the germination process starts in these seeds so the quality of proteins may show some improvement. By replacing one snack with one ounce of almonds, you are removing empty calorie dense food with a nutrient dense alternative," suggests Dr. Rupali Datta, Chief Clinical Nutritionist at Fortis-Escorts Hospital. Talking about the benefits of eating almonds everyday she adds, "They are sources of unsaturated fats, high-quality vegetable protein, fiber, minerals, tocopherols, phytosterols, and phenolic compounds. By virtue of their nutritional composition they are potent health boosters. Clinical studies across the worlds have shown the positive effect of nuts on cardiovascular risk factors, weight management and to a lesser extent on cancer, inflammation and hypertension."

Tuesday, 19 April 2016

Magnesium Plays Role in Regulating Body's Internal Clock

Magnesium in our diet has an unexpected role in regulating body's internal clock and metabolism, finds a study."Although the clinical relevance of magnesium in various tissues is beginning to garner more attention, how magnesium regulates our body's internal clock and metabolism has simply not been considered before.


The new discovery could lead to a whole range of benefits spanning human health to agricultural productivity," added senior study author John O'Neill of the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge.Magnesium -- a nutrient found in many foods -- helps control how cells keep their own form of time to cope with the day-night cycle. The discovery is expected to be linked to the body clock, which influences the daily cycle of sleeping and waking, hormone release, body temperature and other important bodily functions in people.Researchers used molecular analysis and found that concentrations of magnesium rose and fell in a 24-hour cycle in all cell types and that this impacts on the cells' internal clocks."Internal clocks are fundamental to all living things. They influence many aspects of health and diseases in our body, but equally in plants and micro-organisms," said lead study author Gerben van Ooijen from the University of Edinburgh's School of Biological Sciences."It is now essential to find out how these fundamentally novel observations translate to whole tissue or organisms, to make us better equipped to influence them in complex organisms for future medical and agricultural purposes," Ooijen added in the paper, published in the journal Nature.The team examined three major types of biological organisms -- human cells, algae and fungi. They found in each case that levels of magnesium in cells rise and fall in a daily cycle and this oscillation was critical to sustain the 24-hour clock in cells.They were surprised to discover that it also had an enormous impact on metabolism in cells -- how fast cells can convert nutrients into energy -- throughout the course of a day.The surprising discovery may aid the development of chronotherapy -- treatment scheduled according to time of day -- in people and the development of new crop varieties with increased yields or adjustable harvesting seasons.

Friday, 15 April 2016

5 Incredible Fenugreek Benefits: From Lowering Cholesterol to Aiding Digestion


Beautiful green leaves with a distinct sweet smell, fenugreek is actually one of the oldest cultivated medicinal plants. Commonly known as ‘methi’ in Indian households, it is a prized ingredient in the culinary world, and can be used as a herb, a spice (seeds) or a vegetable (fresh leaves and sprouts).

How to use fenugreek



India is the largest producer of this ancient herb with over eighty percent of the production centered in Rajasthan. You'll mostly find it as fresh leaves in the market or as a cuboid-shaped, yellow-to-amber coloured seed. The seeds or methi-dana are used as a flavour enhancer while the leaves are used to make leafy delicacies. The quintessential 'Aloo Methi' is a household name synonymous with homely deliciousness. In South India, methi seeds are ground into powder or used whole in various delicacies to boost the flavour of the dish by that extra mile. "You could splutter a little methi-dana in oil and use it to flavour anything from rice to vegetables like okra and even fish (cooked in mustard oil). Or you can add another layer of flavour to fresh chutneys — that can balance sweet, sour and bitter, with the addition of this ingredient," suggests Food Blogger Anoothi Vishal.

Fenugreek in home remedies

No ingredient in an Indian kitchen is truly useful unless it is used as a part of a magical home remedy. Fenugreek seeds contain protein and nicotinic that are extremely useful against hair fall, dandruff and are also known to help in treating a variety of scalp issues like dryness of hair, baldness and hair thinning. It contains large amounts of lecithin as well, which hydrates your hair and strengthens the roots. You can make a hair mask by grinding fenugreek seeds into a paste or you could even soak them in water overnight and later use the strained liquid to rinse your hair.
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