Category: Resources (Page 29 of 32)

This Powerful Herb May Help Fight Cancer

Curcumin/turmeric has been used in Ayurvedic medicine for thousands of years as a ‘cleanser of the body’. It appears to work at a number of levels

Curcumin is the ‘active’ ingredient of the Indian/Asian curry spice Turmeric. To put this technically, curcumin is the principal curcuminoid in turmeric. Curcuminoids are polyphenols.

Turmeric powder is ground from the root of a plant called Curcuma Longa, which is a member of the ginger family and is found throughout Southern Asia, even growing wild in the Himalayas.

There are a dozen or more studies where curcumin has caused cell death in cancer cells; and even more where it prevents tumors forming a blood supply.

Not long ago, researchers at the world-renowned University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center published a groundbreaking scientific review of their favorite anti-cancer nutrient — curcumin. Curcumin, along with several other nutrients, is remarkable in that it can actually tell the difference between a healthy cell and a cancer cell.

According to Wellness Resources, here is how the researchers explained their interest in curcumin:

“’ … Curcumin (diferuloylmethane) … is one of the most powerful and promising chemopreventive and anticancer agents … How curcumin exerts its powerful anticancer activities has been thoroughly investigated, and several mechanisms of action have been discovered … curcumin exerts its biological
activities through epigenetic modulation.’”

In other words, curcumin changes the regulation of DNA to help kill cancer. In fact, curcumin not only influences epigenetic settings, it also manages the downstream consequences, helping to guide multiple steps in the way gene orders are implemented.

Nutrition during pregnancy not as simple as you think

What are the foods I should avoid during pregnancy?

Raw Meat,Deli Meat,Fish with Mercury, Smoked Seafood, Fish Exposed to Industrial Pollutants, Raw Shellfish, Raw Eggs, Soft Cheeses, Unpasteurized Milk, Pate, Caffeine, Alcohol, Unwashed Vegetables

Any pregnancy, even the happiest one, can have sudden unforeseen complications.

Nutrition in pregnancy-a no-brainer, right?

Who would think it was so controversial?

Disagreement over a healthy diet during pregnancy continues to rage, with one side saying that what a woman eats will have no effect on her pregnancy and the other saying it has an enormous impact.

Many pregnant women are deficient in important nutrients. Iron is one of such commonest nutrient lacking in expecting mothers. Iron deficiency lead to anaemia (lack of haemoglobin in blood) which is a risk factor for pre-term delivery, subsequent low birth weight baby pushing mother and babies prone to various infections.

The recommended requirement is 30 mg of iron daily which is not usually met by diet alone during pregnancy. So, oral iron tablet is commonly recommended. It should be taken on an empty stomach. When more than 30 mg of iron is given to treat anaemia, it is suggested to also take approximately 15 mg of zinc and 2 mg of copper, since iron interferes with absorption and utilisation of these materials.

According to some studies, caffeine decreases the availability of certain nutrients, such as calcium, zinc and iron. Current recommendations, therefore, include limiting the consumption of caffeinated products.

Treatments Offer Hope for Diagnosable Mental Disorders

Common Signs And Symptoms Of Depression
Is Depression Curable Or Is It Chronic?
What Is Bipolar Disorder?
Talk Therapy For Bipolar Disorder?’
Normal’ Anxiety Vs. Anxiety Disorders?
I Think A Friend Has An Anxiety Problem?
Relationship Between Work And Stress?
Why Do Some Feel ‘Less Stressed’?

A mental disorder or mental illness is a psychological or behavioral pattern generally associated with subjective distress or disability that occurs in an individual, and which is not a part of normal development or culture.

Mental disorders can arise from a combination of sources. In many cases there is no single accepted or consistent cause currently established.

A common belief even to this day is that disorders result from genetic vulnerabilities exposed by environmental stressors.

FDA Warns Against Food Thickener in Infant Formula

Many different types of milk (other than an infant formula) have been given to babies in the past, but we now know that a lot of these are not suitable for babies and can cause serious health problems.

The base in the majority of infant formulas comes from cow’s milk, goat’s milk or soy beans, which has been modified or changed with important nutrients added so that the formula is similar to breast milk in nutrient composition.

It’s not a perfect match because the exact chemical make-up of breast milk is unknown.

The Food and Drug Administration is telling parents, health care workers and people who take care of babies to avoid using a thickener for breast milk or formula fed to premature infants.

A product called SimplyThick may be causing life-threatening damage to children’s intestines, the agency said.

The FDA, which first learned about possible problems with SimplyThick on May 13, is now aware of 15 cases of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), including two deaths.

In all those cases, the FDA says SimplyThick gel was added to the formula or breast milk fed to the babies, who had trouble swallowing because of complications from their premature birth.

Highways Promote High Concentration of Exhaust Toxicity Leading to Health Risks

Exhaust from cars and diesel trucks contain high concentrations of the ultrafine particulate matter.

These particles have a high degree of toxicity, with concentrations directly related to traffic density.

Studies link pollution from vehicles with brain damage.

A substantial and growing body of scientific evidence has linked airborne toxic pollution from motor vehicles, trains and aircraft to significant health problems, especially in children, including aggravated asthma, chronic bronchitis, reduced lung function, irregular heartbeat, heart attack and premature death in people with heart or lung disease.

But now we’re learning more about what it does to our brains as well as the fact that it may increase the risk of lung and vascular damage.

The same study also found that the fields close to major highways exposed children to levels of ambient ozone above levels shown to cause airway inflammation, abnormal lung function, and asthma exacerbation, with the highest levels in the warmer afternoon hours when games and practices are held and traffic is at its peak.

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