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Friday, October 24, 2014

Fatty liver

Fatty liver or non alcoholic fatty liver disease is much more common problem.
What simple measures can be taken to help liver heal?
Ofcourse you must take medications as advised by your doctor,but you can do some simple things to help liver heal naturally.
Adding Tahini or sesame seed paste to your diet.
Milk thistle
Pumpkin seeds.
I will be giving scientific information later to substantiate use of these substances.
Tahini makes a very good salad dressing.
It can be mixed with water ,salt,lemon juice and used as dressing or it can be mixed with buttermilk or plain yogurt as dressing or a tsf can be added to a smoothie to make it richer nutritionally.

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

More quotes

Let food thy be medicine and medicine be thy food.

You are what you eat.

Hippocrates quotes on food as medicine

"Leave your drugs in the chemist's pot if you can cure the patient with food. Our medicine should be food and food should be our medicine." — Hippocrates, 420 B.C.

Red meat and heart disease

Processed red meat linked to higher risk of heart failure, death in men

American Heart Association Rapid Access Journal Report

June 12, 2014 Categories: Heart News

Study Highlights

  • Men who regularly eat moderate amounts of processed red meat such as cold cuts (ham/salami) and sausage may have an increased risk of heart failure incidence and a greater risk of death from heart failure.
  • Researchers recommend avoiding processed red meat and limiting the amount of unprocessed red meat to one to two servings a week or less.

Embargoed until 3 p.m. CT/4 p.m. ET THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014

DALLAS, June 12, 2014 — Men who eat moderate amounts of processed red meat may have an increased risk of incidence and death from heart failure, according to a study in Circulation:Heart Failure, an American Heart Association journal.

Processed meats are preserved by smoking, curing, salting or adding preservatives. Examples include cold cuts (ham, salami), sausage, bacon and hot dogs.

“Processed red meat commonly contains sodium, nitrates, phosphates and other food additives, and smoked and grilled meats also contain polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, all of which may contribute to the increased heart failure risk,” said Alicja Wolk, D.M.Sc., senior author of the study and professor in the Division of Nutritional Epidemiology at the Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden“Unprocessed meat is free from food additives and usually has a lower amount of sodium.”

The Cohort of Swedish Men study — the first to examine the effects of processed red meat separately from unprocessed red meat — included 37,035 men 45-79 years old with no history of heart failure, ischemic heart disease or cancer. Participants completed a questionnaire on food intake and other lifestyle factors and researchers followed them from 1998 to the date of heart failure diagnosis, death or the end of the study in 2010.

After almost 12 years of follow-up, researchers found:

  • Heart failure was diagnosed in 2,891 men and 266 died from heart failure.
  • Men who ate the most processed red meat (75 grams per day or more) had a 28 percent higher risk of heart failure compared to men who ate the least (25 grams per day or less) after adjusting for multiple lifestyle variables.
  • Men who ate the most processed red meat had more than a 2-fold increased risk of death from heart failure compared to men in the lowest category.
  • For each 50 gram (e.g. 1-2 slices of ham) increase in daily consumption of processed meat, the risk of heart failure incidence increased by 8 percent and the risk of death from heart failure by 38 percent.
  • The risk of heart failure or death among those who ate unprocessed red meat didn’t increase.

At the beginning of the study, participants completed a 96-item questionnaire about their diet. Processed meat questions focused on consumption of sausages, cold cuts (ham/salami), blood pudding/sausages and liver pate over the last year. Unprocessed meat questions covered pork and beef/veal, including hamburger or ground-minced meat.

Results of the study for total red meat consumption are consistent with findings from the Physicians’ Health Study, in which men who ate the most total red meat had a 24 percent higher risk of heart failure incidence compared to those who ate the least.

“To reduce your risk of heart failure and other cardiovascular diseases, we suggest avoiding processed red meat in your diet, and limiting the amount of unprocessed red meat to one to two servings per week or less,” said Joanna Kaluza, Ph.D., study lead author and assistant professor in the Department of Human Nutrition at Warsaw University of Life Sciences in Poland. “Instead, eat a diet rich in fruit, vegetables, whole grain products, nuts and increase your servings of fish.”

Researchers said they expect to find similar associations in a current study conducted with women.

Almost 6 million Americans have heart failure and about 50 percent die within five years of diagnosis. The healthcare costs and loss of productivity due to heart failure are an estimated $34 billion each year, researchers said.

The American Heart Association recommends that people eat a dietary pattern that emphasizes fruits, vegetables, whole grains, low-fat dairy products, poultry, fish, and nuts while limiting red meat and sugary foods and beverages. For people who eat meat, choose lean meats and poultry without skin and eat fish at least twice a week – preferably fish high in omega-3 fatty acids such as salmon, trout, and herring.

The other co-author is Agneta Akesson, Ph.D. Author disclosures are on the manuscript.

The Swedish Research Council/Medicine and the Swedish Research Council/Infrastructure funded the study.

Additional Resources:


SAUSAGE,BACON,HOTDOGS,HAM,SALAMi are culprits in causing heart failure.

Friday, October 3, 2014

Asian Diabetes prevention Initiative

Did you know Asia has 60% of worlds Diabetic population?
Did you know some Indian cities have 20% diabetic populations.
Asians have more fat for same BMI than Americans with similar BMI?
So what should Asians do?
Try to stick to eating fruits and vegetables,lentils ,beans, legumes, brown Rice and Exercise.
Do not smoke or drink excessive amounts of alcohol.
I am going to share with you an abstract from Lancet that talks about reducing incidence of Diabetes mellitus.Lancet is a prestigious Medical journal.This was published in June 2014

Prevention and management of type 2 diabetes: dietary components and nutritional strategies

Sylvia H Ley PhD aOsama Hamdy MD cViswanathan Mohan MD dProf Frank B Hu MD a b Corresponding AuthorEmail Address

Summary

In the past couple of decades, evidence from prospective observational studies and clinical trials has converged to support the importance of individual nutrients, foods, and dietary patterns in the prevention and management of type 2 diabetes. The quality of dietary fats and carbohydrates consumed is more crucial than is the quantity of these macronutrients. Diets rich in wholegrains, fruits, vegetables, legumes, and nuts; moderate in alcohol consumption; and lower in refined grains, red or processed meats, and sugar-sweetened beverages have been shown to reduce the risk of diabetes and improve glycaemic control and blood lipids in patients with diabetes. With an emphasis on overall diet quality, several dietary patterns such as Mediterranean, low glycaemic index, moderately low carbohydrate, and vegetarian diets can be tailored to personal and cultural food preferences and appropriate calorie needs for weight control and diabetes prevention and management. Although much progress has been made in development and implementation of evidence-based nutrition recommendations in developed countries, concerted worldwide efforts and policies are warranted to alleviate regional disparities.

Instant Noodles And Heart Risk

It is all over the media.
A research was published from dietary patterns of women from Korea and their meat and instant noodle consumption.
Everyday instant noodle consumption was associated with increased risk of heart problems.
However Dr.Frank Hu of Harvard school of public health states once or twice a month consumption of Instant noodles is o.k
Fresh fruits and Vegetables are the best .Fill most of your plate with fruits and veggies .
Do not eat processed foods like hot dogs,hamburgers,cold cuts.
Eat fried foods in limits.
I am going to show you in next blog how you can make homemade fries of not just potatoes but sweet potatoes,carrots,Jicama,rutabaga,turnip.

My Plate as per USDA, see the difference between Harvard recommendations and USDA

This is the my plate version of USDA.As you can see ,it advises you a lot more to eat than the Harvard school of public health.

Healthy eating plate by Harvard school of public health

Healthy Eating Plate & Healthy Eating Pyramid

The Healthy Eating Plate, created by nutrition experts at Harvard School of Public Health and editors at Harvard Health Publications, was designed to address deficiencies in the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)’s MyPlate. The Healthy Eating Plate provides detailed guidance, in a simple format, to help people make the best eating choices.HEPApr2013- Full Size

Use The Healthy Eating Plate as a guide for creating healthy, balanced meals—whether served on a plate or packed in a lunch box. Put a copy on the refrigerator as a daily reminder to create healthy, balanced meals!