Marable’s Weblog

May 20, 2008

Walking – 10,000 STEPS A DAY

Filed under: Health & Wellness Tips, Walking — Tags: , — marable @ 10:52 pm

10,000 STEPS A DAY

From thewalkingsite.com
“10,000 steps a day – pedometer walking program, walking routine, beginning walking, beginner walker”
How many steps do you walk each day?

Maybe you have heard the recent guidelines about walking 10,000 steps per day. How far is 10,000 steps anyway? The average person’s stride length is approximately 2.5 feet long. That means it takes just over 2,000 steps to walk one mile, and 10,000 steps is close to 5 miles.

A sedentary person may only average 1,000 to 3,000 steps a day. For these people adding steps has many health benefits. I have outlined the basic 10,000 steps program, but also added a commentary below.

A reasonable goal for most people is to increase average daily steps each week by 500 per day until you can easily average 10,000 per day. Example: If you currently average 3000 steps each day, your goal for week one is 3500 each day. Your week 2 goal is 4000 each day. Continue to increase each week and you should be averaging 10,000 steps by the end of 14 weeks.

Buy Now!Wearing a pedometer is an easy way to track your steps each day. Start by wearing the pedometer every day for one week. Put it on when you get up in the morning and wear it until bed time. Record your daily steps in a log or notebook. By the end of the week you will know your average daily steps. You might be surprised how many (or how few) steps you get in each day.

There are many ways to increase your daily steps. Use your imagination and come up with your own list:

  • Take a walk with your spouse, child, or friend
  • Walk the dog
  • Use the stairs instead of the elevator
  • Park farther from the store
  • Better yet, walk to the store
  • Get up to change the channel
  • Window shop
  • Plan a walking meeting
  • Walk over to visit a neighbor
  • Get outside to walk around the garden or do a little weeding

  • Continue to track your daily steps and/or mileage; and keep notes on how you feel, how your body is improving, or other changes you are making to improve your health.

    If you are in very poor physical condition or at any point you feel that you are progressing too rapidly slow down a bit and try smaller increases. If you have any health concerns seek your physician’s advice prior to starting or changing your exercise routine.

    Notice: We have outlined the standard 10,000 step program because so many people ask about it. This is a good program to help get people motivated, or to get sedentary people moving. It is however our recommendation that most individuals fit 30 to 60 minutes of dedicated walking (or other exercise) into their routine at least 3 to 4 days a week. You can start with as little as ten minutes per day and gradually increase your walking routine.

    April 4, 2008

    Respond better to difficult people and they won’t get you down.

    Filed under: Health & Wellness Tips — Tags: , , — marable @ 2:40 am

    Float Above the Fray

    WebMD Feature from “Natural Health” Magazine

    By Toni Klym McLellan

    Respond better to difficult people and they won’t get you down.

    Problematic people—like strident bosses, selfish colleagues, or indifferent salesclerks—invariably bring out the worst in us. They make us feel angry and helpless. If you deal with them on a daily basis, they can interfere with your health, your productivity, and, ultimately, your peace of mind.

    To regain your equilibrium, you’ll want to change the way you respond to difficult people, says Nando Pelusi, Ph.D., a licensed clinical psychologist in New York City. The goal is not only to find peace with them, he advises, but also to find ways to hop gracefully over common emotional pitfalls. Here are some typical reactions and healthier ways to respond:

    Outrage

    If your blood pressure rises every time you interact with difficult people, think of them as a hassle, not a horror, says Pelusi. Be assertive, not aggressive. Stand up for yourself by sticking to the facts without getting personal. And remember to take a deep breath and remind yourself that their behavior is about them, not you.

    Obsession

    If you continually obsess about difficult relationships, you may be falling prey to the idea that you can change people. “Usually you’re thinking, ‘There’s a right way to behave, and it should apply to everyone,’” says Pelusi. Challenge your inner demand for uniform, fair, or kind treatment, he advises, and recognize that some people will always be obnoxious. Once you lower your expectations, you can reduce obsession to a healthy annoyance. Think of difficult people as obstacles in the road—accept that they exist so you can swerve around them instead of colliding with them.

    Hurt Feelings

    Acting wounded can fuel a difficult person’s negative behavior, adds Pelusi. “Difficult people take advantage of those who need approval.” You don’t have to squelch your emotional nature, but you do want to lessen your vulnerability. First, imagine your typical reaction to difficult behavior. Then visualize changing your emotion from hurt to indifference. With practice, your body will learn to respond with greater calm in real situations.

    Originally published on February 1, 2008

    March 28, 2008

    Talk Yourself to Sleep – Try talk therapy to fight insomnia. It gets better results than sleeping pills.

    Filed under: Health & Wellness Tips — Tags: , , — marable @ 9:32 pm

    Sleep Disorders Health Center

    Insomnia: Talk Beats Sleeping Pills
    Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Better Than Pills for Chronic Insomnia
    By Daniel J. DeNoon
    WebMD Medical News
    Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD

    June 27, 2006 — A few talk therapy sessions help long-lasting insomniainsomnia better than sleeping pills, Norwegian researchers find.

    The simple treatment is a form of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). It isn’t brain surgery — or even in-depth psychotherapy. It’s all about learning how to change behaviors and thought patterns that interfere with sleep.

    Can such a relatively simple treatment work as well as state-of-the-art sleeping pills? Yes, find Børge Sivertsen, PsyD, and colleagues at the University of Bergen in Norway. They randomly treated 46 long-term insomniacs with CBT, Imovane, or inactive placebo pills. Imovane, a sleep drug closely related to Lunesta, is commonly used in Europe but is not available in the U.S.

    After six weeks of treatment — and again six months after treatment – the researchers studied how well the patients were sleeping.

    Before treatment, these insomnia sufferers were awake about 20% of the time they were in bed. After six weeks, those who got CBT were awake only about 10% of the night. Six months later, this positive effect was a bit stronger.

    Meanwhile, at both time points, those who got the sleeping pill spent just as much sleepless time in bed as they had when the study began.

    “We were surprised,” Sivertsen tells WebMD. “We expected CBT to be efficient, but we did not expect such strong differences between groups.”

    But this is no surprise to long-time CBT enthusiast Richard Simon Jr., MD, medical director of the Kathryn Severyns Dement Sleep Disorders Center, in Walla Walla, Wash.

    “The main finding of this study is extraordinarily consistent with everything in the medical literature,” Simon tells WebMD. “The bottom line is that whenever one compares CBT to sleep medications, CBT is always at least as good if not better — and, typically, the effect of CBT is longer lasting.”

    The Sivertsen study appears in the June 28 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

    Insomnia, Deep Sleep, and CBT

    What surprised both Sivertsen and Simon was the effect of the different treatments on the patients’ slow-wave sleep — what most of us call deep sleep.

    CBT raised the patients’ average slow-wave sleep 27% by the end of treatment, and had increased it 34% six months later.

    On the other hand, patients who took the sleeping pill had a big drop in the amount of slow-wave sleep they got. They had 20% less slow-wave sleep at the end of treatment. Six months later, they had 23% less slow-wave sleep.

    “That is scary, when you see that lack of slow-wave sleep is responsible for most daytime sleepiness,” Sivertsen says. “And there is an ongoing debate in the American media about traffic-related incidents with sleeping pills.”

    Simon isn’t totally convinced by the finding.

    “For most of the newer sleep medications, investigators have found no decrease in [slow-wave] sleep,” he says. “But with the older drugs, like Halcion, that is a common finding.”

    “We were quite surprised to find that [Imovane] decreased slow-wave sleep,” Sivertsen says. “The manufacturer says [Imovane] increases slow-wave sleep. We found the opposite. True, we had a relatively small number of patients. But all the patients in the placebo arm were randomized to get one of the two treatments. If we put those additional patients into the final analysis, we get even larger effects. The findings were still there and still significant.”

    How CBT Cures Insomnia

    The CBT used by Sivertsen and colleagues consists of six hour-long sessions one week apart. The sessions incorporate five principles:

    • Sleep hygiene. Patients learn how lifestyle habits (such as diet and alcohol use) and environmental factors (such as light, noise, and temperature) affect sleep.
    • Sleep restriction. Patients keep to a strict schedule of bed times and wake times that at first increases their sleepiness by depriving them of sleep.
    • Stimulus control. Patients learn to associate being in bed with going to sleep. They learn not to do anything in the bedroom that does not help them sleep.
    • Cognitive therapy. “The thoughts people with insomnia have about sleep are a bit skewed,” Sivertsen says. “Cognitive therapy gives patients control over what is going on. They become their own co-therapists.”
    • Progressive relaxation technique. Patients learn to recognize and control muscular tension.

    “It is not a deep therapy,” Sivertsen says. “What is most efficient is sleep restriction and telling the patient not to stay in bed while awake. We think it is not that important for a patient to see a trained therapist in order to get an effect. Even a self-help program based on these principles is almost as efficient.”

    Simon says many patients don’t need the whole six-week program tested by Sivertsen and colleagues. By tailoring the CBT to the needs of individual patients, he is often able to relieve their insomnia after only two sessions.

    Staying Awake to Sleep

    “I do the sleep hygiene first, and for most patients I do sleep restriction,” he says. “They typically have been going to bed for eight or nine hours, and sleeping five hours. If they are driving to work in the morning, I restrict them to six hours in bed. But if not, bedtime is 3 a.m. and wake time is 8 a.m. You may go to bed later, but you can’t go to bed earlier. The only bed time they get is time for sleeping. No naps in the daytime.” Once patients’ sleep diaries show they’ve slept 90% of their time in bed, Simon increases bed time by 30 minutes — a bit longer than the 15-minute increments many specialists recommend.

    Simon also offers cognitive therapy. “This is the gentle debate between a therapist and a patient to change the patient’s conceptions about sleep,” he says. “When they wake at night they think, ‘Omigod, what if I don’t get to sleep.’ I try to get them to change it to, ‘This is great, I get to fall asleep again.’”

    Simon estimates that about half of his patients get over their insomnia insomnia within two or three sessions — and he is a sleep specialist who sees only hard cases. Primary care providers, he says, would get much better results.

    While CBT is their initial treatment, both Sivertsen and Simon say sleep drugs play a major role in treating sleep disorderssleep disorders.

    “Sleep drugs are most useful for good sleepers who have sudden life stress,” Simon says. “There is a role for sleep medications in chronic insomnia, and sometimes I do prescribe them long-term. But one does not start there. I believe one starts with CBT.”

    March 26, 2008

    The Best Memory Boosters for Women

    Filed under: Health & Wellness Tips — Tags: , , , — marable @ 9:42 pm

    The Best Memory Boosters for Women

    WebMD Feature from “Health”

    By Lisa Mulcahy

    Feel like you’re losing your marbles? Here are 10 remedies.

    You can’t find your glasses (they’re on your head), you forgot the morning staff meeting (it was an hour ago), and the kids are safely at school (but their lunches are still on the kitchen counter). Oh well, when you’re crazy-busy, exhausted, or valiantly multitasking from morning till night, something’s gotta give—and it’s usually your memory. Not to worry: A little memory loss is perfectly normal once you hit middle age, says Martha Weinman Lear, author of the forthcoming book Where Did I Leave My Glasses? The What, When, and Why of Normal Memory Loss. But, guess what? You don’t have to put up with it. Our 10 memory-boosting tricks will have you remembering where you parked the car in no time.

    Keep track of your to-do’s.

    The trick: Play a mind game.

    When you plan your day, tie everything together through creative visualization, sort of like telling yourself a story that draws from your appointments and errands. It may sound hokey, but it works, says Scott Hagwood, a memory contest champ and author of Memory Power: You Can Develop a Great Memory—America’s Grand Master Shows You How. “Say you have to remember to buy milk and also take your son to the dentist. You can link those tasks together by imagining your son drinking a glass of milk, and seeing the milk wash over his teeth, depositing calcium,” Hagwood says.

    Ace a presentation.

    The trick: Stop and smell the roses.

    In a recent German study, some students sniffed a rose scent as they matched pairs of cards and then were exposed to the scent again as they slept; other students didn’t get to sniff anything. When they woke up, the rose-sniffers were better at recalling the cards they had matched. To sharpen your own wits, try spraying a favorite fragrance on your sheets the night before you give that big presentation.

    Remember names.

    The trick: Exercise your eyes.

    Before you walk into your next cocktail party, move your eyes back and forth horizontally for 30 seconds. Yeah, you might look weird, but British researchers say the exercise can help you retain words (including names) you’re about to hear. The horizontal movement makes the brain’s hemispheres interact, and that’s important in memory retrieval, the experts say.

    Absorb critical info.

    The trick: Breathe deeply.

    Have a boss who likes to give pop quizzes after he talks for two hours? Keep your mind focused during meetings by meditating beforehand. Studies show it’s a great way to boost your attention span—and “attention is the main door to memory,” says Sonia Lupien, PhD, director of the Center for Studies on Human Stress at the Douglas Institute in Montreal. Never meditated before? Sit or lie on the floor in a quiet room in a comfortable position, rest both hands on your stomach, and breathe deeply, focusing on the silence. Try to meditate for at least 10 minutes daily.

    Multitask gracefully.

    The trick: Learn a new language.

    “Stretch your mind, and you can create new pathways in the brain,” says Margie Lachman, PhD, professor and chair of psychology at Brandeis University, and director of the Lifespan Developmental Psychology Laboratory. The new pathways can help you stay on top of everything you’ve already got simmering. One way to stretch: Dip into a foreign language. There’s no need to get fluent; just drill vocab with an instructional CD in the car. Other ideas: Try a new hobby like cooking or dancing.

    Master a new workout move.

    The trick: Hit snooze.

    Get a good night’s sleep, and you’ll be better prepared to kick butt in any situation that requires your memory to guide your body. Research from Boston’s Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center shows that the cerebellum, the part of the brain that controls speed and accuracy, is especially active after a full slumber session.

    Find your parked car.

    The trick: Take a good look.

    Think parking garages and mall lots were designed to torture you? You won’t forget where you parked for the fourth time this week if you look back at your ride as you walk away, Hagwood suggests. Just before you leave the garage or lot, take a final glance backward.

    Deliver the punch line.

    The trick: Vary your routine.

    Forget the punch line every time you tell a joke? Shake up your routines, Lachman says. Try brushing your teeth with the other hand, or take a new route to work. This stimulates nerve cell growth in the brain, something your noggin probably needs if you’re still telling knock-knock jokes.

    Avoid senior moments.

    The trick: Get moving.

    You just forgot why you walked into the laundry room? A new study from Columbia University shows that exercise encourages neuron growth in a region of the brain that’s associated with normal, age-related memory loss. Researchers haven’t figured out what form of exercise best fits the bill yet, but right now they believe any aerobic workout or an intensive strength-training regimen is great. Both get oxygen flowing to the brain, Lachman says. For starters, she recommends walking briskly for 30 minutes at least three times a week, if your doctor approves.

    Power through a grocery run.

    The trick: Play mah-jongg.

    Where’s that mango chutney hiding—the one you picked up last month? If you want to remember things more quickly, grab a few friends and start a mah-jongg night. It’s not just for elderly ladies. It’s a pretty complicated game of skill in which players visually match tiles as quickly as possible. Mastering the game may help you rapidly commit locations to memory. You can play solo, too.

    March 25, 2008

    Fruits & Vegatables

    Filed under: Fruit and Vegatables, Health & Wellness Tips — Tags: , , — marable @ 11:30 pm

    1.     Braeburn Apple – Very GoodApple competes with Red and Golden Delicious

    Braeburn is one of the most important commercial apple varieties.  It originated in New Zealand in the 1950s, and by the last decades of the 20th century had been planted in all the major warm apple-growing regions of the world.  Braeburn accounts for 40% of the entire apple production of New Zealand.  Even in conservative Washington state, the most important apple-producing area of the USA, where Red Delicious and Golden Delicious have always held sway, Braeburn is now in the top 5 varieties produced.

    The reasons for this success are not difficult to pinpoint.  Braeburn has all the necessary criteria for large-scale production: it is fairly easy to grow, produces heavily and early in the life of the tree, it stores well, and withstands the handling demands of international supply chains.  What marks it out from the competition is flavour.  Braeburn was the first modern apple variety in large-scale production where the flavour was genuinely on a par with the older classic apple varieties.  Braeburn’s depth of flavour makes its main competition – Red Delicious and Golden Delicious – seem one-dimensional in comparison.  At a time when consumers were starting to look for something less bland in their weekly shopping, Braeburn was the right apple at the right time.

    March 19, 2008

    Sugar: What Kinds to Eat and When

    Filed under: Health & Wellness Tips — marable @ 1:47 am

    Sugar: What Kinds to Eat and When

    WebMD Feature from “Men’s Fitness” Magazine

    By Joseph Wuebben and Mike Carlson

    It’s been two years since Russ started to get his diet in shape. Slowly but surely he cut out the late-night pizzas, the morning doughnuts and the evening drive-thru. It wasn’t easy, but the weight came flying off. To a point. Then, no matter how miserly he became toward fat grams, he still couldn’t get that lean, chiseled look. As he cracked his third Mountain Dew of the day-congratulating himself because it’s fat-free-he began to think that he would never get the six-pack of his dreams.

    Unless you’ve got a Ph.D. in biochemistry, you’re probably exhausted from the endless debate surrounding sugar. And if your info has come largely from television, you’re hopelessly confused. Treading that fine white line demands some balance. If you eat too little, you don’t have the energy to work out; too much, and you get fat. It’s really a simple matter of figuring out what kinds of sugar to eat and when, in order to lose weight, build muscle and protect your health.

    The Science of Sweet

    Okay, kids, sit down and listen closely. All sugars are carbohydrates, known as “simple” carbs, since they’re composed of just one sugar molecule. The label on a can of Pepsi reads 41 grams of carbs and 41 grams of sugar. This means that every single carbohydrate comes from sugar. The label on a package of plain oatmeal will read 18 grams of carbs and only one gram of sugar. Almost all of the carbs in oatmeal are made up of long chains of sugar molecules called “complex” carbs. Oatmeal, along with sweet potatoes, wheat breads, rice and corn, is a complex carb, also known as a starch.

    In this age of convenience foods, the terms complex and simple are a bit outdated. For the purpose of losing fat and building muscle, it’s smarter to look at carbs as either “unrefined” or “processed.” The former refers to whole foods that contain sugar, such as fruits, vegetables, juices, grains and legumes, and that still hold their natural water, fiber, phytochemicals, vitamins and minerals. Processed foods include white bread, soda, candy, crackers, cookies and just about any commercial product labeled “fat-free.” These have been stripped of their wholesome attributes and are dense with nothing but empty calories. For instance, one gram of a cracker will contain four calories, but one gram of an orange contains about 0.2 calories, because the bulk of its weight is water and fiber.

    The Glycemic Index

    The glycemic index rates how quickly certain foods turn into glucose (a form of sugar) in the bloodstream, and is a valuable tool when trying to control sugar intake and limit its effect on you. While high-glycemic-index foods can cause a rapid jump in blood sugar, followed by a massive crash, low-glycemic-index foods increase blood sugar slowly, providing constant and stable energy levels over a considerable period of time. Several factors contribute to a low rating, such as the presence of protein, fiber and fat. Pure processed sugars garner the highest scores, with the most highly processed foods topping the list. For instance, out of a possible 100, instant rice earns a 90 while fibrous, vitamin-rich brown rice gets a 55.

    Recent studies by the Harvard School of Public Health show that diets loaded with high-GI foods lead to an increased risk of type 2 diabetes, coronary heart disease and obesity. In fact, the World Health Organization is spearheading a movement to include GI ratings on food labels, and several products in Australia already bear the grade. For an extensive rundown of the glycemic index, go to www.mensfitness.com/glycemic.

    Sugar: What Kinds to Eat and When

    (continued)

    The Dreaded Insulin Dump

    Although sugar is lower in total calories per gram than fat, it contributes mightily to a fatty frame. “In our society, sugar is consumed in excessive amounts through unhealthy foods, and it increases total calories, leading to weight gain,” says Eric Sternlicht, Ph.D., professor of kinesiology at Occidental College in Los Angeles and president of Simply Fit Inc. This effect is largely due to a hormone called insulin.

    The more highly processed sugar you eat, the greater the release of insulin from the pancreas. That’s because the main role of insulin is to return blood-sugar levels to normal. However, when blood-sugar levels jump violently — which is what happens when you eat high-GI foods — your body pumps a massive amount of insulin into the bloodstream. This causes an overshoot, making blood-sugar levels bottom out, which triggers appetite, leading to a vicious cycle of overeating. In fact, sugar is often compared to a drug rather than a nutrient in the way it can leave you craving more instead of leaving you satisfied.

    Overeating isn’t the only danger. Some doctors, including Walter Willet, M.D., chairman of the department of nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health, believe that years of eating processed food and experiencing the constant blasts of insulin can actually exhaust your pancreas’ ability to produce insulin, putting you at risk for diabetes. Another condition, known as insulin resistance, can also develop, in which your body is so accustomed to insulin surges, the hormone loses its power to reduce levels of blood sugar. Recent research published in the British Medical Journal shows that men with elevated blood-sugar levels have a higher mortality rate from cardiovascular disease.

    The Upside of Sugar

    We’ve been over the evils of sugar, but it does have its benefits, especially if you’re active. “Sugar has a bad connotation attached to it,” says Sternlicht. “But in moderation, unrefined sugars are an important and vital part of your diet.” Sugar that is needed for activity-such as weight training or a cardio workout-can be used as fuel, and the rest will be stored in the liver and muscles as glycogen for later use. Unfortunately, our storage space is limited, and anything left over turns to fat.

    This balancing act is a result of science which shows that sugar boosts performance. According to John Ivy, Ph.D., professor in the department of kinesiology and health education at the University of Texas, Austin, “[Any kind of] carbs taken during exercise improves endurance performance, especially if an athlete is competing for a prolonged period of time during which stores would be depleted. In fact, there is even some indication that carbs also improve short-term performance of intense exercise as brief as 20 minutes.”

    Sugar: What Kinds to Eat and When

    (continued)

    The Upside of Sugar continued…

    Taken after a workout, sugar-combined with protein-expedites recovery while helping you pack on new muscle. We’ve already established that sugar boosts insulin levels, which are typically low after a workout. In turn, insulin propels amino acids-the building blocks of muscle that you get from protein-directly into your tired and hungry musculature. In this way, sugar acts as a transport system, efficiently feeding your muscles when they need it most. (This also works with creatine, which is why many commercial creatine products are mixed with a Kool-Aid type of powder and why experts recommend you mix plain creatine in a non-acidic fruit juice.)

    Each person reacts individually to sugar, but regardless of one’s metabolism, paying strict heed to the following rules will keep your training efforts on track.

    Limit Refined Sugars

    Lack in nutrients and fiber, refined sugars are calorically dense, meaning they have lots of calories with little bulk. As a result, they don’t put a dent in your appetite, so you can quickly eat too many. Sternlicht says no more than 15 percent to 20 percent of total carbohydrates should come from refined sugars. That’s about 250 calories’ worth in a 2,500-calories-a-day diet.

    Choose Unrefined Sugars

    Unrefined sugars are found in fruits, some vegetables and other whole foods and should make up the bulk of the carbs you eat every day. Fruits and vegetables still have fiber, water and vitamins, so it’s nearly impossible to eat too many of them. For example, the average man would have to eat about 50 oranges or 24 pounds of cabbage per day just to maintain his weight.

    Use Sugar for Peak Performance

    Despite its drawbacks, sugar is essential for tough workouts. “Not only do you need a source of sugar or other carbohydrate to restock glycogen stores necessary for enhanced athletic performance,” says Sternlicht, “but carbohydrates are also needed to burn fat. With an inadequate amount of glucose in your system, you will be left feeling lethargic during workouts and unable to train effectively.” High-glycemic foods such as Gatorade (78) or pretzels (83) are good choices for long hikes or runs.

    Don’t Overdo It

    Just because you work out doesn’t mean you can eat a bowl of Pepsi-over-Cap’n Crunch for breakfast every morning. Your body still has a limited storage capacity for glucose, and excess sugars will be stored as body fat. That means you should eat unrefined sugar sources such as fruits, vegetables and grains to trim down, while avoiding candy, soda and other processed foods.

    Time It Right

    A study in the American Journal of Physiology has shown that taking in sugar immediately before you exercise inhibits the fat-burning effects of cardio. If you run in the morning, do so before eating breakfast. If you work out in the afternoon, focus on foods that have a low glycemic index, and eat them at least two hours before hitting the pavement.

    Sugar: What Kinds to Eat and When

    (continued)

    Take In Sugar After Training

    In contrast, consuming sugar after a workout is vital for restocking muscle-glycogen stores. In fact, in the hour immediately after a workout, almost none of the sugar you eat will be used to form fat. This is where high-glycemic-index foods come into play. Since insulin is anabolic-it quickly shunts nutrients into your muscles, stopping muscle breakdown while hastening repair-a quick insulin spike right after a workout is desirable.

    Eat Your Dinner Before Dessert

    A food’s glycemic index is affected by what you already have in your stomach or what you eat along with it. Avoid eating high-GI foods all by themselves. If you get a box of Godiva chocolates as a gift, be sure to dip into it lightly and only after a healthy meal.

    Go Easy on the Sweet Substitutes

    The dangers of artificial sweeteners like aspartame (NutraSweet) and sucralose (Splenda) have been splattered all over the media. To date, however, aspartame has proven safe. Scientists at the Clinical Pharmacology Group at the University of Southampton, United Kingdom, concluded in the journal Physiology and Behavior that intense sweeteners like aspartame don’t increase your tendency to snack, don’t affect blood sugar or insulin levels, and may even help some people lose weight by lowering sugar intake. However, many high-profile and respected members of the medical community, including alternative-health guru Andrew Weil, M.D., are passionately opposed to aspartame and urge their patients to forgo it. In the end, as with anything, the best path is moderation.

    Nature’s Sugar

    The following is a list of some common natural sugars that can be a little friendlier to your physique than refined ones. Although unrefined, many of these sugars still pack a caloric wallop and can be detrimental if consumed in excessive amounts. Some are worse than others.

    Blackstrap Molasses: The liquid left behind after sucrose is removed from beet juice or sugar cane. Provides calcium and iron.
    Date Sugar: Made of ground-up dates. Rich with minerals and fiber.
    Fruit Juice: Absorbed into the bloodstream relatively slowly, creating only a moderate rise in insulin levels.
    Honey: Will boost your energy, but contains more calories and rots teeth faster than sucrose (table sugar). Use in moderation.
    Maple Syrup: A sweetener that comes from maple-tree sap. Abundant in minerals, potassium and calcium.
    Sucanat: A product of squeezing juice from sugar cane. Similar to white sugar, but contains vitamins and minerals that table sugar doesn’t.

    Man-Made Sweeteners

    Many of the following refined sugars can be found in some of your favorite foods. Keep your distance.

    Corn Syrup: Found in dozens of foods-salad dressings, lunch meats, ice cream and canned fruits. Enhances viscosity, texture and color.
    Dextrose: Comes from the hydrolysis of cornstarch and serves as a yeast food in breads, buns and rolls.
    Brown Sugar: A refined sweetener derived from sugar cane. Contains molasses syrup and is found in many baked goods.
    Granulated Sugar: Comes in many different forms. Can be found in anything from your sugar bowl at home to baked goods like doughnuts and cookies.
    High-Fructose Corn Syrup: Produced from adding enzymes to cornstarch. Found in soft drinks, ice cream and frozen desserts. Invert Sugar: An equal mixture of glucose and sucrose commonly found in carbonated beverages.

    Sugar: What Kinds to Eat and When

    (continued)

    Aspartame: A Bad Rap?

    Since being approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 1981, aspartame has been repeatedly panned in the media, for different reasons. There’s no agreement on which component of aspartame is toxic: First, it was aspartic acid, then methanol, then phenylalanine, and now it’s the diketopiperazine (DKP). Yet phenylalanine and aspartic acid are both amino acids found naturally in dietary proteins, and most dietary methanol comes from the digestion of fresh fruits and vegetables, not from aspartame. As for DKP, a whopping hit of 12 1/2 grams of aspartame given to six volunteers bore no adverse effects, says a study published in Food Chemistry and Toxicology. As a result, aspartame is still considered safe by the FDA, the American Dietetic Association, and scientists who have tested it in humans at universities around the world. Even so, public fears persist, most likely because of reports that a large number of the population is unwittingly allergic to aspartame. However, according to the journal Modern Nutrition in Health and Disease, only a small segment of the population-one out of every 16,591-actually has this condition (called phenylketonuria, or PKU), in which one cannot properly metabolize phenylalanine, one of the amino acids in aspartame.

    Originally published on July 1, 2007

    March 15, 2008

    Find the best athletic shoes: The Best Sneaker for Your Sport

    Filed under: Health & Wellness Tips — marable @ 4:42 am

    The Best Sneaker for Your Sport

    from Allison Van Dusen, Forbes.com

    Photo: Getty Images

    If something has inspired you to start a fitness regimen or get back into a sport you once played, do yourself a favor. As you prepare for that first outing, skip the trip to your closet for your two-year-old pair of sneakers.

    Not only are they broken down, but they were probably never meant to support the type of motion you’re about to subject them to, whether it’s a long hike, a game of tennis or marathon training.

    In Pictures: Best Sneakers for Your Sport

    If you really want to succeed and stave off runner’s knee, shin splints and tendonitis, not to mention the cost of rehabbing these injuries you need the right shoes, says Gale Bernhardt, a coach for the 2004 Olympics’ U.S. mens’ and womens’ triathalon teams and a columnist for Active.com, an online community for people passionate about sports and recreational activities.

    While a pair of sneakers might not exactly make you “better” at your chosen sport, the right pair can help you stay healthy, prevent you from the distractions of performance-crippling frozen, wet and blistered feet and potentially keep you on the court or trail a little bit longer.

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    “Anybody who has spent any time running, hiking or even kayaking knows that if you have the wrong footwear on,” says Kurt Geller, footwear product manager for outdoor-gear retailer Eastern Mountain Sports, “it ruins it.”

    Just don’t assume that walking into any retailer with a wad of cash will solve the problem. Much like love, money can’t necessarily buy you the right sneaker, either.

    A small study published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine last fall found that there were no major differences among shoes bought from three different manufacturers in three different price ranges. Plantar pressure the force created by the impact of the sole hitting the ground was actually found to be lower in cheap to moderately priced shoes versus the most expensive pairs. Price also wasn’t an indicator of comfort.

    “People get sucked into what shoe looks pretty, which star is supporting which shoe,” says Dr. Rebecca Demorest, an assistant attending physician at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York and team doctor for USA Rowing. “But an expensive shoe doesn’t mean it’s a better shoe.”

    Top Shopping Tips
    Getting the right sneakers for your sport, experts say, starts with choosing a good retailer, preferably a specialty shop or a store where the salespeople will at least examine your gait. What they should be trying to figure out is whether your arch is low, normal or high something you can determine yourself by stepping on a paper towel with a wet foot and examining your print and how much you pronate, or turn your foot inward to distribute the force of impact as you walk.

    Flat-footed people, for instance, typically overpronate and need motion-controlling shoes. Those with high arches, who tend to underpronate, need mid-sole cushioning.

    And don’t forget to get your feet measured. You may have been a size 11 all your life, but as you age or gain weight, your shoe size can easily increase, says Larry Schwartz, CEO of Aetrex Worldwide, an industry leader in pedorthic footwear and maker of the iStep digital foot-scanning system.

    Get measured every time you buy sneakers, or once a year if you tend to buy your shoes online. If you’re really focused on fit, in 30 seconds, an iStep, available at certain retailers, can capture your foot type, pressure points and shoe size, and recommend the ideal footwear and orthotics for you.

    Wearing athletic socks to try on sneakers and shopping for them late in the day, when you’re feet are more likely to be swollen, are essential steps too.

    Next, it’s time to get sport-specific. If you’re a yoga lover, the Keen Roatan’s minimalist style and stretch material will help get you in the mood. People who run to stay fit, rather than cross a finish line, should skip the bells and whistles and go for a performance shoe with a good level of cushioning, such as the Asics Gel-1130, Geller says.

    If you’re taking off on an action-packed weekend and only want to take one pair of shoes, try the Merrell Siren Ventilator, a sort of jill-of-all-trades sneaker designed to maximize traction and keep your feet dry in a variety of conditions. Men, Geller says, should try out the Salomon XA Pro 3D XCR.

    Should you end up sticking with your new routine, remember to frequently change your shoes. For runners, the recommendation is to buy a new pair at least every 300 to 500 miles, or when you start to notice little aches in your knees, hips, ankles or shins with no other explanation.

    In other words, don’t wait two years.

    In Pictures: Best Sneakers for Your Sport

    March 14, 2008

    Top 10 Food Synergy Super Foods

    Filed under: Health & Wellness Tips — marable @ 11:14 pm

    Top 10 Food Synergy Super Foods

    Boost your health with these super-healthy foods.
    By Elaine Magee, MPH, RD
    WebMD Weight Loss Clinic-Feature

    There’s more and more evidence that certain components in the foods and beverages we consume (like minerals, vitamins and phytochemicals, fiber, and fats) interact with each other to give our bodies extra disease protection and a higher level of health. This new nutritional concept is called food synergy, and it couldn’t have come at a better time, as more and more baby boomers pass or near the half-century mark (myself included). While writing my new book, Food Synergy, I noticed that 10 particular foods kept popping up in various chapters. I call these the 10 Synergy Super Foods because they have all sorts of synergistic potential going for them.

    There are all types of food synergy, from different nutrients that are found together in the same whole food, to nutrients in different foods that work better together, to the synergy in certain dietary patterns (like the Mediterranean diet, Asian cuisine, The Portfolio Plan, etc.).

    Here are a few examples of food synergy in action from recent nutrition research:

    • Tomatoes and broccoli: The combination was more effective at slowing prostate tumor growth than either was alone (from a study in which male rats were given prostate tumor cell implants).
    • Apples with the peel on. It turns out that the bulk of an apple’s anticancer properties are hidden in the peel. The phytochemicals in the apple flesh seem to work best with the phytochemicals in the peel to reduce the risk of cancer.
    • Cooked tomatoes with the peel on, along with olive oil. Ninety-eight percent of the flavonols (powerful phytochemicals) in tomatoes is found in the tomato skin, along with great amounts of two carotenoids. Absorption of these key nutrients is much greater when the tomatoes are cooked and when you eat some smart fat (like olive oil) along with the cooked tomatoes.
    • Cruciferous vegetables. Two phytochemicals naturally found in cruciferous vegetables (cambene and indole 3-carbinol) were more active when combined, according to research that tested the compounds alone and together in rats. The researchers found that the two compounds were able to protect the rats against liver cancer much better together. Both cambene and indole 3-carbinol are known to activate important detoxification enzymes that help the body eliminate carcinogens before they harm our genes. Foods rich in cambene include Brussels sprouts and certain varieties of broccoli. And all cruciferous veggies are rich in indole 3-carbinol.

    Was it too early to write a book about this topic? While it’s true that some of the research in the book is from lab or animal studies, and more research is needed, the idea of food synergy leads us down a path that I’m completely comfortable recommending. It’s a path toward eating more whole foods and plant foods and fewer processed foods; a path that seeks balance within broad dietary patterns instead of focusing on one or two particular foods or ingredients. It’s a path that leads us beyond “low-fat” or “low-carb.”

    The truth is that there are all sorts of examples of food synergy at work in research published over the last five years. We know now that in so many cases, the power in food is in the package, not the individual components.

    I learned while writing Food Synergy that all of this seemingly disparate scientific research actually comes together in a way that makes perfect sense: When we nourish our bodies with the best foods that nature has to offer, our bodies respond in kind.

    Boost your health with these super-healthy foods.

    (continued)

    10 Synergy Super Foods

    1. Whole Grains
      Whole grains are naturally low in fat and cholesterol-free; contain 10% to 15% protein and offer loads of fiber, resistant starch and oligosaccharides, minerals, vitamins, antioxidants, phytochemicals, and often, phytoestrogens. With all those nutrients in one package, it’s no wonder whole grains provide so many health benefits, including protection from heart disease, stroke, diabetes, insulin resistance, obesity, and some cancers.
    2. Veggies — Especially Dark Green Ones
      Whether it’s the two vegetables high in viscous fiber (eggplant and okra); the cruciferous veggies (like kale and broccoli) with their anticancer organosulfur compounds; or the carotenoid family (like carrots, sweet potatoes, and spinach) with their rich mix of phytochemicals, the message is clear: The more the merrier! Eat as many vegetables as you can, as often as you can. Dark green veggies, in particular, showed up on all sorts of food synergy lists in my book: for vegetables high in vitamin C; foods with multiple carotenoids; foods high in potassium, calcium, and magnesium; and good sources of vitamin E.
    3. Nuts
      Nuts contain mostly monounsaturated fat, and antioxidant phytochemicals (like flavonoids). Most also contribute phytosterols, which in sufficient amounts may help lower blood cholesterol, enhance the immune system, and decrease the risk of some cancers. Nuts also have some vitamins and minerals we tend to lack, like vitamin E, potassium, and magnesium. Two forms of vitamin E tend to work best together (alpha- and gamma-tocopherol), and you’ll find them in almonds, cashews, and walnuts. Walnuts also contain some plant omega-3s.
    4. Tea (Especially Green Tea)
      With each sip, you get two potent flavonoids — anthocyanin and proanthocyanidin — plus a healthy dose of catechin, which may enhance the antioxidant activity of alpha-tocopherol (a form of vitamin E). Green and black teas also contain antioxidant polyphenols, thought to block cell damage that can lead to cancer. Phytochemicals in tea have a half-life of a few hours, so have a cup now and another later to get the biggest bang for your tea bag.
    5. Olive Oil.
      There are 30-plus phytochemicals in olive oil, many of which have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory action in the body, helping to promote heart health and protect against cancer. They’re also found in the olives themselves, of course.
    6. Fish
      Fish offers heart-healthy omega-3 fatty acids, along with a dose of potassium. It’s also a rare natural food source of vitamin D. A recent Norwegian study found that the intake of fish and fish products was strongly linked to higher mental performance in a group of men and women aged 70-74. And because lean fish had the same health benefits as fatty fish in this study, it may not be just the omega-3s at work, but perhaps a combination of components found in fish. Fish omega-3s may also have some synergy with plant omega-3s and olive oil, so cook your seafood with a little canola oil or olive oil. Or, serve your seafood with a side dish rich in plant omega-3s or lightly dressed in olive oil.
    7. Tomatoes
      Tomatoes contain all four major carotenoids, which have synergy as a group. Few fruits and vegetables can say that! Tomatoes also contain three high-powered antioxidants thought to have synergy together (beta-carotene, vitamin E, vitamin C) as well as lycopene, which has synergy with several food components.
    8. Citrus
      The whole citrus family is loaded with synergy because it boasts plenty of vitamin C and the phytochemical subgroup flavones, which are thought to have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory action in the body, as well as other benefits. Oranges also offer two carotenoids: lutein and zeaxanthin. Grapefruits are rich in the antioxidant lycopene.
    9. Flaxseed
      Ground flaxseed seems to have synergy within itself on many levels, through fiber, lignans (plant estrogens), and plant omega-3s. But the seed may have synergy with several other foods, such as fish omega-3s and soy, and these are just the ones we know about. Remember, it’s ground flaxseed you want to add to your yogurt or cereal. All those healthy components aren’t absorbed and available to the body until the seed is ground.
    10. Low-Fat Dairy
      Dairy foods deliver a team of players that’s important for healthy bones (calcium, vitamin D, protein, phosphorus, magnesium, vitamins A and B6), some of which have synergy together. Calcium combined with vitamin D, for example, may reduce the risk of colon cancer. Including a couple of low-fat dairy servings a day is also part of the DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diet to lower hypertension.

    The Bottom Line to Food Synergy

    The bottom line wisdom to food synergy is evident. I predict it will still be evident five years from now after hundreds more studies are published, and I wanted to get this exciting news out as soon as possible. And here’s the bonus: The more you incorporate powerhouse foods and beverages into your day, the less room there is for the more processed and nutrient-poor foods and beverages that now monopolize so many of our diets.

    Power Foods: Grapefruit

    Filed under: Health & Wellness Tips — marable @ 10:15 pm

    Power Foods: Grapefruit

    WebMD Feature from “body+soul” Magazine

    By Zoe Singer, Recipes by Charlyne Mattox

    The health rewards of this winter citrus will leave you feeling in the pink

    The largest common citrus, grapefruits are said to get their name from the way they grow in grape-like clusters. Refreshingly juicy at a time of year when most fruit is scarce, they offer plenty of health-boosting benefits. Just half a grapefruit helps defend against everything from cold-season sniffles to heart disease and cancer.

    Health Benefits: As you might have guessed, grapefruits are full of vitamin C, a major antioxidant that helps fight infection, may shorten the duration of colds, and protects against free radicals. Left unchecked, free radicals damage cells — this damage can contribute to the development of Alzheimer’s, cardiovascular disease, and cancer.
    Red and pink grapefruits like Ruby Reds (a relatively new variety developed in the past century) offer additional antioxidant benefits in the form of the phytonutrient lycopene. Found in red-tinted foods like tomatoes and watermelon, lycopene is associated with a reduced risk of some cancers and heart disease, and it may increase the skin’s resistance to sun damage.

    Pink and red grapefruit also offer about 35 times more of the antioxidant vitamin A than their paler counterparts. That means potentially more protection from many cancers and heart disease, and increased support for the immune system and vision.

    There’s more to this fruit than antioxidants, though. Grapefruits also offer potassium and folate. The potassium lowers blood pressure and is associated with a reduced risk of stroke, while folate, an important nutrient during pregnancy, has been shown to boost energy levels and help ward off depression and memory loss.

    Next time you eat one of these citrus marvels, leave the grapefruit spoon in the drawer. Instead, eat grapefruit segments whole, as you would an orange, and you’ll get 50 percent more fiber. (By leaving the membrane behind you lower the fiber count to just under 2 grams per half fruit.) About half that fiber is insoluble, meaning it doesn’t dissolve in water, contributing to healthy digestion and supporting weight loss by making you feel full. Grapefruits also rank among the richest sources of pectin, a soluble fiber that helps lower cholesterol and regulate blood sugar levels.

    How to Buy: Choose firm and unblemished fruits that feel heavy for their size. They’ll keep in the refrigerator for up to several weeks.

    Cooking Tips: Since vitamin C helps the body absorb iron from plants, scatter grapefruit segments over spinach salad to get the most out of your greens. Add some nuts or cheese, too; the lycopene in Ruby Reds is best absorbed when combined with some fat. Below you’ll find an easy Grapefruit tea to make in 10 minutes.

    Nutrition Breakdown: Per 1 large grapefruit, approximately 332 grams
    Calories: 106 kcal
    Fat: 0.3 g
    Fiber: 5.5 g* = 22 percent DRI**
    Vitamin C: 114 mg = 152 percent of DRI
    Folate: 33 mcg = 8 percent of DRI
    Lycopene: 3,768 mcg

    * Includes membranes
    ** DRI, Dietary Reference Intakes, is based on National Academy of Sciences’ Dietary Reference Intakes, 1997 to 2004

    Power Foods: Grapefruit

    (continued)

    Warm Grapefruit Tea

    Serves 4
    Prep time: 10 minutes
    Total time: 10 minutes

    All grapefruits vary in sweetness, so adjust the honey accordingly.

    Ingredients

    2 cups ruby red grapefruit juice (squeezed from 2 grapefruits)
    2 to 4 tablespoons honey
    1 cinnamon stick
    1/2 teaspoon whole allspice berries

    Directions

    In a medium pot, combine juice, honey, cinnamon, allspice, and 1/2 cup water. Bring to a boil over high heat; strain and discard solids. Serve with a grapefruit segment or strip of zest.

    Per serving: 113 calories; 1 g protein; 0 g fat; 29 g carb; 0 g fiber.

    Did You Know?

    Compounds called furanocoumarins present in even small amounts of grapefruit (and its juice) can significantly increase the blood levels — and side effects — of many oral prescriptions, including some choles­terol and blood pressure medications, antidepressants, antihistamines, sedatives, and estrogens. Ask your doctor about potential interactions. Researchers are working to tap into this phenomenon with the hopes that someday practitioners will be able to prescribe grapefruit along with lower doses of medication.

    Originally published on January 1, 2008

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