Sunday, 31 August 2014

Are you suffering from a “sensitive” gut?

Put your digestive system back on its best behavior! Learn how you can prevent and control heartburn, indigestion, irritable bowel syndrome and other ���gut issues.���

Put your digestive system back on its best behavior!

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August 31, 2014

Special Announcement Harvard Medical School
 

Enjoy the peace and pleasure of better digestion! Learn how you can prevent and control heartburn, indigestion, irritable bowel syndrome and other “gut issues” in...

The Sensitive Gut
A Harvard Special Health Report

The Sensitive Gut
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Dear Reader,

Your "gut" is the series of organs — mouth, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, and colon — that transform the food you eat into the nutrients your body needs to live and to thrive.

If you've ever had an upset stomach, constipation, heartburn or gas, you know how sensitive the gut can be. These "gut reactions" can be painful, disruptive, and sometimes embarrassing.

Fortunately, you can achieve a calmer, quieter coexistence with your digestive system. You can address, prevent, and treat the most common troublemakers, including acid reflux, functional dyspepsia, irritable bowel syndrome, constipation, diarrhea, and excessive gas.

In The Sensitive Gut, you will gain an empowering understanding of your digestive system, how it works, why and how it sometimes acts up, and most important, what you can do about it.

Take heartburn. It's the key symptom of gastroesophageal reflux disease, the most common digestive malady. It can be painful and frightening, especially when it mimics a heart attack. The report will give you strategies for preventing reflux. Plus, you'll learn which pain relievers — from Prilosec and Nexium to Zantac and Tums — are the safest and fastest-acting remedies for heartburn.

In The Sensitive Gut, you'll learn why irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) presents such a challenge to the people who have it and the doctors who treat them. You'll be alerted to six diseases that can mimic the symptoms of IBS. You'll read about new diagnostic tests. And you'll find ways to eliminate the triggers of IBS and manage this vexing condition.

The report explains the brain-gut connection and the effect stress can have on your digestive system. It shares the best ways to treat constipation without laxatives, tells you how simple mealtime changes can spare you from indigestion without forgoing the foods you love, and much more.

When you order The Sensitive Gut now, you'll save 30% off the cover price! So, put your digestive system back on its best behavior. Order your copy today!

To your good health,

Anthony L. Komaroff, M.D.
Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Senior Physician, Brigham and Women's Hospital
Editor in Chief, Harvard Health Publications

Harvard Medical School offers special reports on over 50 health topics.
Visit our website at http://www.health.harvard.edu to find reports of interest to you and your family.

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Saturday, 30 August 2014

Strength training builds more than muscles

Strong muscles lead to strong bones that minimize the risk of fracture.
HEALTHbeat
August 30, 2014
Harvard Medical School

Strength training builds more than muscles

Most of us know that strength training (with free weights, weight machines, or resistance bands) can help build and maintain muscle mass and strength. What many of us don’t know is that strong muscles lead to strong bones. And strong bones can help minimize the risk of fracture due to osteoporosis.

A combination of age-related changes, inactivity, and poor nutrition conspire to steal bone mass at the rate of 1% per year after age 40. As bones grow more fragile and susceptible to fracture, they are more likely to break after even a minor fall or a far less obvious stress, such as bending over to tie a shoelace.



Strength and Power Training
Studies attest that strength training, as well as aerobic exercise, can help you manage and sometimes prevent conditions as varied as heart disease, diabetes, arthritis, and osteoporosis. It can also protect vitality, make everyday tasks more manageable, and help you maintain a healthy weight. This report answers your strength training questions and helps you develop a program that's right for you.

Read More

Osteoporosis should be a concern for all of us. Eight million women and two million men in the United States have osteoporosis. It is now responsible for more than two million fractures a year, and experts expect that number will rise. Hip fractures are usually the most serious. Six out of 10 people who break a hip never fully regain their former level of independence. Even walking across a room without help may be impossible.

Numerous studies have shown that strength training can play a role in slowing bone loss, and several show it can even build bone. This is tremendously useful to help offset age-related decline in bone mass. Activities that put stress on bones stimulate extra deposits of calcium and nudge bone-forming cells into action. The tugging and pushing on bone that occur during strength training (and weight-bearing aerobic exercise like walking or running) provide the stress. The result is stronger, denser bones.

And strength training has bone benefits beyond those offered by aerobic weight-bearing exercise. It targets bones of the hips, spine, and wrists, which, along with the ribs, are the sites most likely to fracture. What’s more, resistance workouts — particularly those that include moves emphasizing power and balance — enhance strength and stability. That can boost confidence, encourage you to stay active, and reduce fractures by cutting down on falls.

For more information on the benefits of strength training, buy Strength and Power Training, a Special Health Report from Harvard Medical School.

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Strength and Power Training

Featured content:


The basics: Strength training, power training, and your muscles
The health benefits of power and strength training
Getting set up
Safety first
Designing your program
•  ... and more!

Click here to read more »
Harvard Medical School offers special reports on over 50 health topics.
Visit our website at http://www.health.harvard.edu to find reports of interest to you and your family.

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Copyright © 2014 by Harvard University.
Harvard Health Publications, 10 Shattuck Street, 2nd Floor, Boston, MA 02115, USA

* Please note, we do not provide responses to personal medical concerns, nor can we supply related medical information other than what is available in our print products or website. For specific, personalized medical advice we encourage you to contact your physician.

Thursday, 28 August 2014

Vitamins and your heart

Also: Some doctors oversell artery-opening angioplasty; 5 myths about heart disease.
HEALTHbeat
August 28, 2014
Harvard Medical School

Vitamins and your heart

Do vitamin and mineral supplements really promote heart health? Some studies have suggested that calcium supplements have heart health benefits, and many have shown that fish oil is good for your heart, too. But calcium supplements have recently come under scrutiny following a report that men who took more than 1,000 milligrams of supplemental calcium daily over a 12-year period were 20% more likely to succumb to heart disease than those who didn’t take the pills. And while some studies have found that popping fish oil capsules lowers the chance of having a heart attack or other related problem, others have failed to find such benefits.



Product Page - Diagnosis: Coronary Artery Disease
Most people fear heart disease — and with good reason: it’s the leading cause of death for both men and women. But something that people may not realize is that preventing this disease is often within their control. Most people who develop heart disease have one or more major risk factors that are within their power to change. These include lack of exercise, high blood pressure, and abnormal cholesterol levels. There are surefire ways to tackle these risk factors that you can include in your daily life.

Read More

Some observational studies have also shown links between heart health and higher intakes of certain vitamins — specifically, vitamins C and E, beta carotene, and three B vitamins (folic acid, B6, and B12). But more rigorous studies that compared people who took specific vitamins with those who took placebos have come up short. In fact, guidelines from the American Heart Association state that supplements of the vitamins listed above should not be taken to prevent heart disease. Not only do they not help, there’s even some suggestion that taking vitamin E supplements may slightly raise the risk of heart failure and hemorrhagic (bleeding) strokes.

The bottom line? It’s better to get your nutrients from foods, not pills. When you eat whole, healthy foods, you don’t get individual nutrients in isolation — you get a blend of vitamins, carbohydrates, fiber, and some fat, all of which have been proven to be beneficial for heart health.

For more on the latest advances in treating coronary artery disease, buy Diagnosis: Coronary Artery Disease, a Special Health Report from Harvard Medical School.

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News and Views from the Harvard Health Blog

Some doctors oversell artery-opening angioplasty

Two new studies indicate that how doctors talk about artery-opening angioplasty can prompt unnecessary procedures.

Read More

5 myths about heart disease

Over the past decade, we’ve learned a great deal about what causes heart attacks and how to prevent them. But many people have misconceptions about the risk factors for heart disease, or heart disease itself. Here are five commonly held but mistaken beliefs, plus the facts that will put you on the path to a healthy heart.

MYTH 1: If you have heart disease, you need to take it easy.

“For the vast majority of people with heart disease, being sedentary is a bad idea. It can lead to blood clots in the legs and a decline in overall physical condition,” says cardiologist and Harvard Medical School professor Dr. Richard T. Lee. Physical activity helps strengthen the heart muscle, improves blood flow to the brain, and improves overall health and well-being.

What you can do: Ask your doctor what kind of exercise would be right for you, and how much you should do. Most people can walk, and any amount of walking is good for your heart.

MYTH 2: It’s okay to have higher blood pressure when you’re older.

Blood pressure tends to rise with age, but the fact that this trend is common doesn’t mean that it is good for you. It happens because artery walls become stiff with age. Stiff arteries force the heart to pump harder. Blood pounding against the artery walls damages them over time. The overworked heart muscle becomes less effective and pumps even harder to meet the body’s demands for blood. This further damages the arteries and invites fat into the artery walls. This is how high blood pressure increases the risk of heart attack and stroke.

What you can do: Have your blood pressure checked. If it’s above 140/90, ask your doctor what you can do to bring it down.

MYTH 3: You can lower your risk of heart disease with vitamins and supplements.

The antioxidant vitamins E, C, and beta carotene factor into lowering heart disease risk. However, clinical trials of supplements of these vitamins have either failed to confirm benefit or were conducted in such a way that no conclusion could be drawn. The American Heart Association has stated that there is no scientific evidence showing that these supplements prevent or treat cardiovascular disease.

What you can do: The body absorbs and utilizes vitamins and minerals best when they are acquired through foods. To ensure you get the vitamins and minerals you need, skip store-bought supplements and eat a wide variety of nutritious foods of every color of the rainbow.

MYTH 4: Heart disease is really a man’s problem.

Since 1984, more women than men have died each year from heart disease. Heart disease is the leading cause of death in women over age 65, just as it’s the leading killer of men.

By retirement age, 70% of men and women have some form of cardiovascular disease, which includes coronary artery disease, heart failure, stroke, and high blood pressure. Risk continues to rise, and by age 80, 83% of men and an even higher percentage of women — 87% — are affected.

What you can do: Whether you are a man or a woman, ask your doctor to conduct a baseline heart examination that includes checking your cholesterol and blood pressure. Then follow your doctor’s recommendations.

MYTH 5: If you have heart disease, you should eat as little fat as possible.

It’s true you should eat a diet low in saturated fat and avoid trans fat altogether. But other fats, notably the unsaturated fats in vegetable oils and other foods, are beneficial. In fact, eating fish high in omega-3 fatty acids, such as salmon, twice a week can lower the risk of heart disease.

What you can do: Include low-fat dairy products, fatty fishes, nuts, and olive oil in your diet. If you eat meat, make sure the cuts are lean, and remove the skin from your poultry.

To read more about the risk factors for heart disease and the latest advances in treating it, buy Diagnosis: Coronary Artery Disease, a Special Health Report from Harvard Medical School.

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Diagnosis: Coronary Artery Disease

Featured content:


What is coronary artery disease?
Recognizing and reducing risk factors
Assessing your level of cardiovascular risk
Special bonus section: Lifestyle habits that help your heart
Diagnosing heart disease
•  ... and more!

Click here to read more »
Harvard Medical School offers special reports on over 50 health topics.
Visit our website at http://www.health.harvard.edu to find reports of interest to you and your family.

PHONE ORDERS - please call our toll-free number: 1-877-649-9457.
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Harvard Health Publications, 10 Shattuck Street, 2nd Floor, Boston, MA 02115, USA

* Please note, we do not provide responses to personal medical concerns, nor can we supply related medical information other than what is available in our print products or website. For specific, personalized medical advice we encourage you to contact your physician.

Wednesday, 27 August 2014

Harvard Health Publications Focus On Blood Pressure: Part 8

Focus On: Blood Pressure — Should we all cut back on salt—regardless of our blood pressure level?

In this Issue:
Should we all cut back on salt—regardless of our blood pressure level?

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Focus On Blood Pressure Harvard Medical School
ISSUE #8 OF 8 IN AN E-MAIL SERIES  
Featured Report
Healthy Eating: A guide to the new nutrition
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Get your copy of Healthy Eating: A guide to the new nutrition

The Healthy Eating report describes the food-health connection and takes on controversial topics like food additives, cooking methods, the role of carbohydrates and more.

Click here to read more »

Additional Resources
•   Lose Weight and Keep it Off
•   Healthy Eating for Type 2 Diabetes
•   Healthy Eating for a Healthy Heart

Should we all cut back on salt—regardless of our blood pressure level?

Most of the sodium in our diet comes from salt, or sodium chloride. Sodium has many important functions in the body, including:

  • transmitting nerve impulses
  • contracting and relaxing muscle fibers
  • maintaining proper fluid balance.

But Americans get much more than they need—3,400 mg of sodium per day, on average. (See the chart below for recommended intake.)The kidneys regulate the body's sodium level by getting rid of any excess. But if there's too much sodium in the bloodstream, the kidneys can't keep up. Excess sodium in the blood pulls out water from the cells. As this fluid increases, so does blood volume. That means more work for the heart, increased pressure in the blood vessels, and often, eventually, stiffened vessel walls, chronic high blood pressure, and an increased risk of heart attack or stroke.

Current recommended intakes of sodium for healthy adults by age group
Group Adequate intake (AI) of sodium* Salt equivalent Upper limit (UL) of sodium intake**
Ages 19-50 1.5 g/1,500 mg 3,800 mg, or 23 teaspoon (tsp.) 2.3 g/2,300 mg (equivalent to 5.8 g/5,800 mg, or 1 tsp., salt)
Ages 51-70 1.3 g/1,300 mg 3,200 mg, or ~½ tsp. Less than 2.3 g, but a precise amount has not been determined
Ages 71 and over 1.2 g/1,200 mg 2,900 mg, or ½ tsp.  

*The average amount needed to replace sodium lost daily through sweat while providing enough other essential nutrients.

**UL may be higher for people who lose large amounts of sodium in sweat, such as athletes and workers exposed to extreme heat.

Source: Dietary Reference Intakes for Water, Potassium, Sodium, Chloride, and Sulfate, National Academies Press (2004).

Some people are especially sensitive to sodium—their blood pressure rises and falls directly with their sodium intake. That puts them at increased risk for cardiovascular disease, even if they don't have high blood pressure. It also means that they particularly benefit from restricting sodium intake.

Those most prone to salt sensitivity include:

  • the elderly
  • African Americans
  • people with hypertension
  • people with diabetes
  • people with chronic kidney disease.

What about the rest of us?

As many as one in three adults in the United States has high blood pressure, also called hypertension. Many more have "prehypertension," which means that while they don't have high blood pressure yet, they're likely to develop it. Many studies have shown that blood pressure is directly related to dietary sodium, so it makes sense for at-risk individuals to cut back. But what about the rest of us?

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) says that limiting sodium intake should be just about everyone's concern. In a 2009 study, CDC researchers concluded that 70% of American adults should aim for a sodium intake of no more than 1,500 mg per day. People who fell into this group of about 145 million people included:

  • everyone over age 40
  • all African Americans
  • people with hypertension.

Some public health experts believe the 1,500-mg-per-day cap should be extended to everyone. Others say that proposal ignores other factors influencing blood pressure. Almost everyone agrees that we couldn't reach the 1,500-mg limit without reducing the amount of salt in processed and prepared foods—the main source of dietary sodium.

Sources of sodium

Most of the sodium we eat comes from restaurant meals and processed foods, including canned vegetables and soups, pasta sauces, frozen entrees, luncheon meats, and snack foods.

Sodium is also found in many condiments besides ordinary table salt—including soy sauce, Worcestershire sauce, salad dressings, ketchup, seasoned salts, pickles, and olives. Baking soda, baking powder, and monosodium glutamate (MSG) also contain sodium.

What do the studies show?

Many studies have investigated links between sodium intake, blood pressure, and cardiovascular disease. Some of the most compelling evidence has come from the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) trials.

The first DASH trial showed that a diet rich in the following could lower blood pressure:

  • fruits
  • vegetables
  • low-fat dairy products
  • whole grains
  • beans
  • nuts
  • fish
  • lean meats
  • poultry.

In a follow-up trial, this diet was compared with one closely resembling the average American diet, and both diets were further divided into three sodium levels: high (3,500 mg/day), moderate (2,400 mg/day), and low (1,500 mg/day). More than 400 volunteers followed their assigned diets for 12 weeks, changing their sodium intake every four weeks.

Across the board, less sodium intake led to lower blood pressure. The DASH diet with sodium restricted to just 1,500 mg per day worked best for all participants. And for people with hypertension, it was almost as effective as medication.

The researchers concluded that we could all benefit from reducing our sodium intake. But the study did little to quell controversy over the issue. Critics charged that it was too brief to justify a general recommendation, and they warned of health risks from insufficient sodium in the diet. Proponents say that's unlikely, because most human beings don't even need as much as 1,500 mg a day for good health. Of course, this 12-week study couldn't predict the impact of reduced sodium intake on the risk of cardiovascular disease down the road.

A 2007 follow-up study to the Trials of Hypertension Prevention (TOHP) provided a longer-term perspective. The original TOHP study involved two randomized trials of lifestyle interventions conducted in the late 1980s and early 1990s. A team led by Harvard researchers tracked down the original TOHP participants and found that those who had permanently lowered their sodium intake to between 2,000 and 2,600 mg per day and continued to watch their salt intake had almost 30% fewer cardiovascular events, including death, in the following 10 to 15 years.

The TOHP trials didn't require drastic dietary changes. Instead, the volunteers learned how to look out for hidden salt and avoid it. Those who were able to reduce their salt intake by one-third to one-half teaspoon per day reaped the cardiovascular benefits.

One size doesn't fit all

The controversy about universal salt restriction will probably continue. As in most health matters, one size doesn't fit all. How salt affects your blood pressure and health depends on many things, including your:

  • genes
  • age
  • race
  • medical conditions.

What to do

If you're under age 50, your blood pressure is in the healthy range (under 120/80 mm Hg), and your health is good, you have little reason to worry about your dietary sodium intake, at least for now. Still, try to limit it to no more than 2,300 mg per day.

The risk for high blood pressure rises with age, so you'll do yourself a favor if you wean your taste buds from a yen for salt. Research has shown that people who slowly reduce their intake find that they eventually prefer less salt.

If you're older, obese, African American, or have diabetes, you may be salt-sensitive. Most experts agree people in these categories should cut back. Keep your sodium intake to less than 1,500 mg a day.

If you have hypertension, prehypertension, kidney disease, or heart failure, keep your sodium intake to less than 1,500 mg a day.

If you're hypertensive or prehypertensive or just want a healthy eating plan, consider following one of the three diets that were tested in the OmniHeart trial. The first is the DASH-like diet explained in this PDF published by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. The second was high in unsaturated fats, and the third was high in protein. (See www.omniheart.org for specifics.)

Results showed that all three diets lowered blood pressure, improved cholesterol levels, and reduced the risk of heart disease. (The high-unsaturated-fat and high-protein diets improved cholesterol levels and blood pressure even more than the DASH diet, which was higher in carbohydrates.)

The health benefits of these eating plans can't be attributed to any single ingredient—the magic is probably in the mix—but one reason they work is that they're rich in potassium. Potassium has been shown to be beneficial to blood pressure.

Whatever diet you follow, make sure it includes plenty of fruits and vegetables, which contain little or no sodium and are an important source of potassium. Potassium-rich choices include bananas, orange juice, cantaloupe, spinach, avocado, and sweet potato.

Featured In This Issue
Healthy Eating: A guide to the new nutrition
Read More

Healthy Eating: A guide to the new nutrition

Featured Content:

Fats, carbs, and proteins
Healthy snacks
How safe is your food?
Shopping for food

Click here to read more »

Harvard Medical School offers special reports on over 50 health topics. Visit our Web site at http://www.health.harvard.edu to find reports of interest to you and your family.

Copyright © 2010 by Harvard University.


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* Please note, we do not provide responses to personal medical concerns, nor can we supply related medical information other than what is available in our print products or Web site. For specific, personalized medical advice we encourage you to contact your physician.