Author: Staff (Page 45 of 157)

It’s That First Bite That Will Do You In

Staying away from sweet treats and fried foods may be the best strategy to maintain a healthy lifestyle.

You’ve been eating healthy and avoiding junk food.

There is a kind of momentum which develops where you are gaining will power by exercising your will to stay away from fatty, sugary foods.

But, that first whiff leads to that first bite which can lead to a slippery slope into over indulgence.

There’s a reason this tends to happen almost exclusively with fatty and sugary foods and not, say, lettuce. The saturated fats in foods like bacon and cheese impair your brain’s normal ability to regulate appetite and cravings, so you don’t realize you’re full until you’re completely stuffed, says Kelly McGonigal, Ph.D., a health psychologist at Stanford University and author of The Willpower Instinct. What’s more, that effect on your appetite can last for up to three days, the length of time it takes to flush those fats from your system. So one unhealthy indulgence can end up triggering a major relapse.
Add sugar to the fatty food, ice cream, cake, doughnuts, and you have a double whammy. High-sugar foods increase your levels of ghrelin, a hormone that stimulates appetite and increases cravings. “So you may tell yourself ‘Just one bite’ but find yourself wanting more and more, the more you eat,” says McGonigal.

Moderation is a term that gets tossed around often, however, the definition seems to have a wide range of meaning.

If being around treats could derail your diet, then better to avoid them altogether especially considering that there is no nutritional gain to be had from eating junk food anyway.

Antibiotics May Be An Effective Treatment For Appendicitis

Antibiotics may be enough to treat appendicitis.

Surgery has traditionally been the only way to treat appendicitis, however, treatment with antibiotics has been found to be effective in about fifty percent of cases.

This is great news from a cost control perspective.

Also, use of antibiotics reduces the risk of surgery and infections spread in hospitals.

Researchers from the Nottingham Digestive Diseaeses Centre NIHR Biomedical Research Unit report that patients with uncomplicated appendicitis may be safely and effectively treated initially with standard antibiotics. Using antibiotics also significantly reduces the risk of complications and death, compared with surgery, the researchers found. For complicated cases, however — those involving perforated appendixes, for example — still need surgical removal.

Ten Great Reasons To Take Krill Oil!

The benefits of krill oil are gaining recognition for improving health and overall wellness.

Krill are little crustaceans that look like shrimp and provide food for everything from salmon to blue whales and are one of the most nutritious creatures in the sea. Not only are they loaded with a powerful antioxidant called astaxanthin, but they’re a great source of omega-3 fatty acids which for years research has shown to help lower an individual’s risk for heart attack, stroke, certain cancers, depression and overall inflammation. The oil is naturally found in a species of krill called the Euphausia Superba and is extracted and sold as a nutritional supplement.
There has been a lot of research showing krill oil to be superior to fish oil in head-to-head testing. It has found to be healthier, safer, more potent and especially more absorbable.

These little crustaceans pack a powerhouse of health benefits from head to toe.

Ten Benefits Of Krill Oil:

Powerful Anti-oxidant

Protects Your Heart

Reduces Inflammation and Arthritis Pain

Improves Brain Function and Development

Regulates LDL and HDL Cholesterol

Improves Skin Health

Improves Immune Health

Improves Mental Health

Improves Premenstrual Syndrome

Anti-Aging Properties

Tumor Risk From Cell Phone Use Disputed In Study

A recent study has contradicted the tumor risk from cell phone use.

Although the study is far from conclusive it still causes a great deal of confusion to consumers.

There have been warnings about excessive use, use by young children and pregnant women.

It has been advised to blue tooth ear piece devices to divert electro-magnetic energy away from your body.

When the study first appeared last summer, Dr. Joel Moskowitz, from the School of Public Health at the University of California—Berkeley, said, “In my opinion, the interpretation of the results from this study and the accompanying editorial were biased in an attempt to reduce concerns that cellphone use increases brain tumor risk among children and adolescents.”
In December, a commentary in the journal Environmental Health, said, “Yet, in spite of low exposure, short latency period and limitations in study design, analyses and interpretation, there are nevertheless indications of increased risk … In any case, it is to go far beyond the findings of the study to say that the results are reassuring of no significant increased risk.”

Doctors Recognize The Need To Test Less

Doctors urge their colleagues to perform less tests.

When you consider that the majority of insurance dollars are spent in the last 6 months of a patient’s life we have to consider if this is money well spent.

This goes for testing, as well.

The Choosing Wisely project was launched last year by the foundation of the American Board of Internal Medicine. It recruited nine medical specialty societies representing more than 376,000 physicians to come up with five common tests or procedures “whose necessity … should be questioned and discussed.”

The groups represent family physicians, cardiologists, radiologists, gastroenterologists, oncologists, kidney specialists and specialists in allergy, asthma and immunology and nuclear cardiology.

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