Skip to main content

Home/ Nutrition/ Group items tagged places

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Matti Narkia

WHFoods: A Healthy Way to Roast Almonds - 0 views

  •  
    Roasting brings out the flavor of the nuts, and develops their sweetness. It is safe to roast nuts if done at a low temperature-typically a 160-170 degree Fahrenheit (71-76 Celsius) oven (at higher temperatures than this, research clearly shows damage to nuts' delicate fats) for 15-20 minutes will do the trick. Place nuts on a cookie sheet in a single layer. To enhance the "roasted" flavor, try putting a little Bragg's Liquid Aminos or soy sauce into a spray bottle and misting the nuts before roasting.
Matti Narkia

Irradiated food causes demyelinating neurological disorder in cats at iHealthBulletin News - 0 views

  •  
    Published March 30th, 2009 in General Interest, Health, Health News, Health and Wellness, Life, Medical News, Nutrition, Parents, Popular Scientists studying a mysterious neurological affliction in pregnant cats that have been fed irradiated food have discovered a surprising ability of the central nervous system to repair itself and restore function when placed back on a normal diet. In a study published today (March 30, 2009) in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a team of researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison reports that the restoration in cats of myelin - a fatty insulator of nerve fibers that degrades in a host of human central nervous system disorders, the most common of which is multiple sclerosis - can lead to functional recovery
Matti Narkia

Multimedia - Harvard School of Public Health - 0 views

  •  
    The Harvard School of Public Health delivers live and on demand video of symposia, graduation, courses, and other important events taking place at the school. The school employs both Windows Media technology as well as RealNetwork's technology.
Matti Narkia

The 10 Best Foods You Aren't Eating - menshealth.com - 0 views

  •  
    there are many superfoods that never see the inside of a shopping cart. Some you've never heard of, and others you've simply forgotten about. That's why we've rounded up the best of the bunch. Make a place for them on your table and you'll instantly upgrade your health -- without a prescription.
Ezmelts Nutritional Supplements

Buy Nutritional Supplements l Buy Vitamins l EZMELTS - 0 views

  •  
    EZ MELTS is the only full line of Fast Melting Tablets in the nutritional supplements marketplace. EZ MELTS vitamins and nutritional supplements dissolve in the mouth very quickly. No water needed. No need to swallow. Simply place them on your tongue, enjoy the great taste, and they will quickly melt away.
Matti Narkia

Whole Health Source: Are the MK-4 and MK-7 Forms of Vitamin K2 Equivalent? - 0 views

  •  
    "As far as I can tell, MK-4 is capable of performing all the functions of vitamin K. MK-4 can even activate blood clotting factors, which is a role traditionally ascribed to vitamin K1. Babies are often born clotting deficient, which is why we give newborns vitamin K1 injections in the U.S. to prevent hemorrhaging. In Japan, they give children MK-4 to prevent hemorrhage, an intervention that is very effective. Could that have to do with the fact that Japan has half the infant mortality rate of the U.S.? Today, I found another difference between MK-4 and MK-7. I was reading a paper about SXR-independent effects of vitamin K2 on gene expression. The investigators found that MK-4 strongly activates transcription of two specific genes in osteoblast cells. Osteoblasts are cells that create bone tissue. The genes are GDF15 and STC2 and they're involved in bone and cartilage formation. They tested K1 and MK-7, and in contrast to MK-4, they did not activate transcription of the genes in the slightest. This shows that MK-4 has effects on gene expression in bone tissue that MK-7 doesn't have. That being said, MK-7 may still have a place in a healthy diet. Just because it can't do everything MK-4 can, doesn't mean it has no role. It may be able to fill in for MK-4 in some functions, or reduce the dietary need for MK-4. But no one really knows at this point. Hunter-gatherers would have had a source of longer menaquinones, including MK-7, from livers. So it's possible that we're adapted to a modest MK-7 intake on top of MK-4. "
Matti Narkia

Vitamin K2: An emerging story - Heart Scan Resource Center - Track Your Plaque - 1 views

  •  
    Research has uncovered the fact that vitamin K also plays a crucial role in maintaining bone health. It was found that the amount of vitamin K required to halt bone absorption leading to osteoporosis requires much greater intakes than that required for blood clot regulation. Further, it appears that bone and vascular tissue (like coronary arteries) maintain a preference for a different form of vitamin K than that required for blood clotting regulation. Rather than vitamin K1 needed for clotting, vitamin K2 is the form preferred by bones and arteries (Schurgers LJ et al 2001). It appears that much of the information generated over the years for vitamin K focused on the K1 form, ignoring the K2 form necessary for bone and vascular health. Normal deposition of calcium occurs only in bone and in teeth. Abnormal deposition of calcium in the body occurs in three places: the inner lining of the arteries of the body (the intima) that causes atherosclerotic plaque; the muscle layer of arteries ("medial calcification"); and heart valves. K2 appears to be the form of vitamin K responsible for controlling these phenomena.
Matti Narkia

Dr. Joe's E-News - A Diabetes Newsletter: East German Infants Taking Vitamin D - 0 views

  •  
    "From 1955 to 1990, all infants in East Germany received 600,000 IU of Vitamin D every three months for a total of 3,600,000 IU at age 18 months. With the 400 IU/day recommendation of the American Pediatric Association in mind, I ran across this amazing paper while surfing Medline for Vitamin D. According to this paper, all infants in the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) received dangerously high doses of Vitamin D every three months in their doctors office. The policy was in place for 35 years. The first 600,000 IU dose was given at three months and then every three months until the child was 18 months of age. This works out to an average of 6,000 IU per day (actually, for several technical reasons it is not equivalent) for 18 months. The authors collected blood before the dose and then 2 weeks after the quarterly dose to obtain 25(OH)D, 1,25(OH)D, and calcium levels on a total of 43 infants. Before the first dose, at 3 months of age, the average infant was extremely deficient (median 25(OH)D of 7 ng/ml). Two weeks after the first dose the average 25(OH)D level was 120 ng/ml, the second dose 170 ng/ml, the third dose, 180 ng/ml, the fourth dose, 144 ng/ml, the fifth dose, 110 ng/ml and after the sixth and final dose, 3.6 million total units, at age 18 months, the children had mean levels of 100 ng/ml. That is, by the 15 and 18 month doses, the children were beginning to effectively handle these massive doses. The highest level recorded in any of the 43 infants was 408 ng/ml at age 9 months, two weeks after the third 600,000 IU dose. Thirty-four percent of the infants had at least one episode of hypercalcemia but only 3 had an elevated serum 1,25(OH)D. The authors reported that all the infants appeared healthy, even the infant with a level of 408 ng/ml, that is, no clinical toxicity was noted in any of these infants."
Matti Narkia

Coconut Oil & Diets on MedicineNet.com - 0 views

  •  
    "Some people promote coconut oil as a healthy addition to a weight-loss diet, even though it has higher levels of saturated fat. WebMD Feature Reviewed By Brunilda Nazario Is it possible to add fat to your diet and lose weight? Yes, if it's the right fat, says naturopath Bruce Fife, ND, author of Eat Fat Look Thin. He recommends adding coconut oil and substituting it for polyunsaturated oils to suppress appetite, boost metabolism, and bring about weight loss. "Lots of people have reported that when they add coconut oil to their diet, it was enough to promote weight loss," says Fife. "Some people don't notice a drop in weight, which often means they're simply eating too much. Calories are important." His own experience with coconut oil produced a gradual weight loss over six months of about 20 pounds, which he'd been unable to lose previously through diet and exercise. He advises using about three tablespoons of natural coconut oil, either virgin or processed, daily. His patients use it in place of polyunsaturated fats for stir-frying and salad dressings, add it to other foods, or take it straight. The fat is also present in canned coconut milk (not the liquid inside the coconut), which can be substituted for milk in many recipes, and fresh coconut fruit, which can be eaten as a snack or grated over fruits and salads"
Matti Narkia

The Vitamin D-Antimicrobial Peptide Pathway and Its Role in Protection Against Infectio... - 1 views

  •  
    The vitamin D-antimicrobial peptide pathway and its role in protection against infection. Gombart AF. Future Microbiol. 2009 Nov;4:1151-65. PMID: 19895218 Vitamin D deficiency has been correlated with increased rates of infection. Since the early 19th century, both environmental (i.e., sunlight) and dietary sources (cod liver) of vitamin D have been identified as treatments for TB. The recent discovery that vitamin D induces antimicrobial peptide gene expression explains, in part, the 'antibiotic' effect of vitamin D and has greatly renewed interest in the ability of vitamin D to improve immune function. Subsequent work indicates that this regulation is biologically important for the response of the innate immune system to wounds and infection and that deficiency may lead to suboptimal responses toward bacterial and viral infections. The regulation of the cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide gene is a human/primate-specific adaptation and is not conserved in other mammals. The capacity of the vitamin D receptor to act as a high-affinity receptor for vitamin D and a low-affinity receptor for secondary bile acids and potentially other novel nutritional compounds suggests that the evolutionary selection to place the cathelicidin gene under control of the vitamin D receptor allows for its regulation under both endocrine and xenobiotic response systems. Future studies in both humans and humanized mouse models will elucidate the importance of this regulation and lead to the development of potential therapeutic applications
aleena khan

Health and Fitness Tips: Health tips for pregnant women - 0 views

  •  
    Pregnant women should take care of their health. They require proper balanced diet which can meet the needs of the changes that take place in their bodies. They have particular nutrition and health needs as they are not only eating for themselves but also for the developing fetus in their womb
Emilia Klapp

Healthy and Very Easy Recipes with Raw Vegan Chocolates | The Diabetes Club - 0 views

  •  
    Do you look at all those rich chocolate goods strategically placed in areas where you cannot miss them when you go to your supermarket? And do you think you have to be strong and not giving in to temptation because chocolate is not good for you? I don't blame you because it is not rare to find articles in health magazines where a doctor advises people, especially women, to concentrate more on walking and to forget about chocolate.
Emilia Klapp

Artificial Flavors Are Heavily Used in the Processing of Food | The Diabetes Club - 0 views

  •  
    Canning, freezing and dehydrating processed foods destroy their natural taste. This means these types of foods need to be "repaired" in order to provide the flavor, consistency, and aroma of the original food. And here is where "the flavor industry" comes into place. In fact, without the flavor industry, fast food will not exist.
Emilia Klapp

Are Sugar Free Desserts Really Sugar Free? | The Diabetes Club - 0 views

  •  
    Did you know that a food manufacturer can place a "sugar Free" label on the front of a box of cookies or a cake although the product contains sugar? And this practice is completely legal. How can this be?
avivajazz  jazzaviva

Raw Tomato Garlic Pasta Sauce | Vitamix Online Store - 0 views

  •  
    Pasta Sauce Recipe - Creamy Roasted Garlic Tomato Sauce Ingredients: 6 large Roma tomatoes, quartered 1 small onion, peeled, halved 6 garlic cloves, peeled 2 tablespoons (30 ml) olive oil 2 tablespoons (8 g) chopped fresh parsley 1 cup (240 ml) soy milk or low fat milk salt and pepper Instructions: Microwave shallot and balsamic vinegar for 1 minute on High. Place all ingredients, except the olive oil, into the Vitamix container in the order listed and secure lid. Select Variable 1. Turn machine on and slowly increase speed to Variable 10, then to High. Remove the lid plug and add olive oil in a thin stream through the lid plug opening. Blend for 1 minute.
Matti Narkia

Metabolic Acidosis Peer Review Articles - 0 views

  •  
    Over acidity has been studied by many scientists as you will see here. You can help prevent the negative side effects by eating plenty of green foods and drinking green alkalizing drinks Excessive dietary intake of protein with consequent increase in metabolic acid production result in compensatory mechanisms that lead to progression of kidney stones, bone disease, renal disease and a catabolic state. Chronic metabolic acidosis is a process whereby an excess acid load is placed on the body due to excess acid generation or diminished acid removal by normal homeostatic mechanisms. Excessive meat ingestion and aging are two clinical conditions often associated with chronic metabolic acidosis. The body's homeostatic response to this pathology is very efficient. Therefore, the blood pH is frequently maintained within the "normal" range. However, these homeostatic responses engender pathologic consequences such as nephrolithiasis, bone demineralization, muscle protein breakdown and renal growth.
Matti Narkia

Hyperlipid: Kwasniewski; praise the lard - 0 views

  •  
    "This article was originally published in 2004 in the Chicago Tribune. It's still knocking around on the web in various places but the original seems to have disappeared. You can't have too much of a good thing. Obviously Stephan's recent posts on lard prompted me to put this one up. The imported nutritionist doesn't seem quite as dismissive as you might expect! But notice in the last paragraph that the big bogeyman is protein overload damaging the kidneys! On 60g/d of protein??? Sobor clearly knows nothing about high fat diets, certainly not the one he is commenting so authoritatively about in this case!"
Emilia Klapp

McDonalds Restaurants Make Fries that Last for Ever | The Diabetes Club - 0 views

  •  
    If you happen to eat at a McDonald's fast food place, you may want to buy some French fries and take them home. You will be surprised at how long they last. Actually, you can keep them on top of your kitchen counter and eat them 8 or 10 weeks after you bought them. Not a bad deal, indeed!
Emilia Klapp

What to Order at an Italian Food Restaurant and Other Ethnic Places | The Diabetes Club - 0 views

  •  
    The foods that most of us have selected in the past few decades have been the exact ones that set the stage for high blood sugar and insulin resistance. However, if we take the time to learn to be savvy food consumers, we'll not only reverse these two health conditions, but we'll prevent them from happening through our life.
Eumom Louise

Health & Nutrition | Recipes | Chicken Sandwich | Eumom - 0 views

  •  
    Use a clean rolling pin to flatten the chicken - it will tenderise and cook faster Grill the chicken or cook it in a non-stick pan until cooked through. Place the salad leaves on the bread When the chicken has cooled, place it in the sandwich Article courtesy of www.safefood.eu
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 106 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page