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Alzheimer’s May Begin 20 Years Before Symptoms Appear

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

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The latest breakthroughs in Alzheimer’s research focus on the time well before patients even know they might have the neurodegenerative condition. Studies so far have found evidence that the biological processes that cause the mental decline may begin 10 to 12 years before people first notice signs of cognitive decline. But in the most recent report published Wednesday in the journal Neurology, experts say that the disease may actually begin even earlier — 18 years earlier, in fact — than they expected.

For 18 years, Kumar Rajan, associate professor of internal medicine at Rush University Medical Center, and his colleagues followed 2,125 elderly people with an average age of 73 and who did not have dementia. Every three years, the researchers gave the volunteers mental skills tests, and then compared these results over time.

When they looked at the group that went on to receive an Alzheimer’s diagnosis, they found that these people showed lower scores on their tests throughout the study period. In fact, their scores steadily declined with each test. For each unit that the scores dropped on the cognitive tests, the risk of future Alzheimer’s increased by 85%.




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Flavored Cigarettes Still Popular Online Despite U.S. Ban

MONDAY, June 29, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Although banned in 2009 by the U.S. Food Administration, flavored cigarettes are still popular and available online, a new study finds.

Researchers from the University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine monitored certain online search terms related to flavored cigarettes and cigars made by the company Djarum. Only the cigars are legal.

Among the first 50 search results for “Djarum cigarettes,” 72 percent of websites promoted and 34 percent sold the illegal cigarettes, according to the study published June 17 in Tobacco Control.

The researchers noted there were also 291 percent more online searches for the company’s illegal flavored cigarettes than its replacement cigars, even five years after the ban was issued.

“We weren’t surprised that the Web is being used to circumvent tobacco regulations,” said the study’s corresponding author, Jon-Patrick Allem, a postdoctoral fellow with the university’s Tobacco Center of Regulatory Science. “Most surprising was the constant rate of interest in the illegal products [cigarettes] versus the legal products [cigars],” he said in a university news release.

The researchers recommended stronger enforcement, fines and taking down websites where flavored cigarettes are available.

“Using data from the Web to inform regulatory science is one of the goals for us here at USC moving forward,” said Allem.

The study was funded by the U.S. National Cancer Institute.

More information

The American Lung Association provides more information on flavored cigarettes.





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Parents Should Set Good Example to Keep Kids Slim, Pediatrics Group Says

MONDAY, June 29, 2015 (HealthDay News) — As rates of childhood obesity continue to climb in the United States, parents should embrace healthy eating habits and behaviors to help kids maintain a normal weight, a new report says.

In updated recommendations released Monday, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) described how families can help combat childhood obesity by following a well-balanced diet, getting regular exercise and limiting sedentary activities.

“It is never too early for a family to make changes that will help a child keep or achieve a healthy weight,” report co-author Dr. Sandra Hassink, president of the AAP, said in an association news release. “Families can improve their eating habits in a variety of ways, but it is important for healthy eating and physical activity to be tailored to the child’s developmental stage and family characteristics.”

Parents don’t have to take on this responsibility alone. The AAP noted that pediatricians can help families find ways to adopt a healthier lifestyle.

“Even when families have knowledge of healthy behaviors, they may need help from pediatricians to motivate them to implement behavior changes,” Dr. Stephen Daniels, chair of the AAP Committee on Nutrition, said in the news release. “Parents and other family members are strongly encouraged to adopt the same fitness and lifestyle changes as the child. Pediatricians can educate families, provide support and help them stay on track.”

Here are some positive steps the AAP recommends for families:

  • Reduce sugar and calories at home. Children will not be tempted to overindulge if sugary and high-calorie foods aren’t in the kitchen. If cakes or other treats are bought for a birthday or special occasion, buy them right before the event, keep them out of sight and get rid of them afterward. High-calorie treats can also be stored in foil or hidden in the back of the pantry so they are less visible and less likely to be eaten.
  • Make healthy foods available. Keeping water, fruits, vegetables and other low-calorie snacks out in the open on the kitchen table or front and center in the fridge will increase the chances that children will opt for these healthy options. Kids should be encouraged to eat five or more servings of fruits and vegetables daily.
  • Get moving. Cut back on the amount of time spent in front of the television. Parents may also want to consider having fewer TVs in their home. It’s also a good idea to keep all electronic devices out of the kitchen and all bedrooms.
  • Promote sleep. Children should sleep at least nine hours a night. Those who sleep less are more likely to be overweight or obese, the AAP noted. Establish a good bedtime routine to ensure kids get the sleep they need for their overall health and well-being.
  • Find group activities. Families can have fun while working toward the recommended 60 minutes of activity daily. Playing team sports, going to a park or playground, taking a walk or bike ride, and bowling are all ways families can develop healthy habits together.

More information

The U.S. National Institutes of Health has more on childhood obesity.





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Parents, Stop Hovering: ‘Risky’ Play May Have Benefits for Kids

By Amy Norton
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, June 29, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Children may benefit, physically and socially, from being allowed to play with less monitoring from mom and dad, a new research review finds.

There was a time when parents sent their kids outside to play, with the instruction to ‘”just be home by dinner.” Times have changed, however, and worries over children’s safety — whether it’s being injured, or harmed by a stranger — have led to kids having more structured activities, and less “free play.”

But there is such a thing as too much caution, experts say.

The new review found that when kids were allowed to play in ways that involved some sense of “risk” — such as climbing trees or exploring their neighborhood — it seemed to benefit their development.

The study also found that those kids got more physical activity than children whose playtime was less adventurous.

“That just makes sense. Kids who are outdoors more often are just naturally more active,” said lead researcher Mariana Brussoni, an assistant professor at the University of British Columbia’s School of Population & Public Health, in Vancouver, Canada.

But along with the physical benefits, more-adventurous play can help children take important steps in their social development, Brussoni said.

When there is no adult in charge, she explained, “children learn how to negotiate with each other, how to get along, and how to make their own rules.”

Even “rough-and-tumble” activities, like wrestling or play-fighting, may help kids learn to get along, the review found. At the very least, they do not seem to turn children into bullies.

According to Brussoni, that’s not surprising. “Rough-housing is different from fighting or bullying,” she said. “It’s not about one child trying to dominate another. There’s negotiation going on. You adjust your behavior and strength to the other child’s.”

The review, published online recently in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, included 21 previously published articles with about 50,000 kids from eight countries looking at different types of “risky” play. Children in those studies ranged from ages 7 to 15.

Essentially, Brussoni said, “it’s the kind of play we all remember from childhood — climbing trees, riding your bike fast, roaming the neighborhood with no direct adult supervision.”

Overall, the review found that such free play did not put kids in any particular danger. One study found that the risk of injuries requiring medical attention was lower during kids’ free-play hours, compared with sports.

A child psychiatrist who was not involved in the research agreed that free play is crucial for kids.

“There’s a lot of good research showing the value of ‘uninterrupted play,’ ” said Rebecca Berry, of the Child Study Center at NYU Langone Medical Center, in New York City.

“Uninterrupted” means that parents let their child get dirty, climb equipment in the playground, or get themselves out of a minor scrape — without immediately trying to intervene.

Kids need activities that are not led by an adult to truly learn, according to Berry. “Peer-group play is so important,” she said. “That’s how kids learn to take turns and figure out they can’t always go first. They learn to handle their emotions and deal with disappointment.”

If adults are always leading playtime and telling kids the rules, Berry said, children may start to rely on that “external source,” instead of gaining confidence in themselves.

Of course, parents should make sure their kids are in a safe environment, both Berry and Brussoni said. If parents live in an urban neighborhood, or a suburban one without sidewalks or with heavy traffic, they might not be able to let their kids roam.

But parents could relax a bit when they take their kids to the park, for example.

“You often hear parents in the playground saying, ‘No, get down! No, that’s too high!’ ” Brussoni said. “But it’s important to give your kids some space to explore and make decisions, and learn to problem-solve.”

Still, every child is different, and parents do have to consider their child’s “competence,” Berry said. If your child is naturally a big risk-taker, she noted, he or she may need some extra monitoring and guidance on how to stay safe.

But if parents never allow their children to take a chance on falling, or scraping a knee, or having their feelings hurt, they could send some negative messages, Berry explained.

Some children, she said, may learn to interpret every unknown as a danger, and to doubt their ability to deal with challenges. That’s a particular concern when a child has a naturally anxious temperament to begin with, Berry said.

Brussoni made another point: Children just need some breaks from taking instruction.

“Don’t we, as adults, need some time during the day where nobody is telling us what to do?” Brussoni said. “Why would kids be any different?”

More information

The Consumer Product Safety Commission has more on outdoor play safety.





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These Body-Positive Photos Prove All Legs Are Beautiful (Yes, Even Yours)

Instagram Photo

Summer is the time for showing your legs off in short-shorts and barely-there bikinis—and stressing out about it. Thanks to trends like “thigh gap” and rampant body shaming on social media, it’s easy to have anxiety about your legs, particularly when also being bombarded with ideals of what they should look like. Do they touch? Are they weirdly far apart? Are they long enough? Too long?

One woman is combating her own self-doubt while showing the world that all legs are, in fact, perfect just the way they are. Over the past three years Stacey Baker, a photo editor at The New York Times, has been documenting everyday women in New York City and beyond—specifically, their legs—on Instagram and at the website Citi Legs.

Instagram Photo

RELATED: Happy Feet at Any Age

In a recent interview with Refinery29, Baker explained that she was always scrutinizing her own legs, saying that “we want something we don’t have—to be taller, have larger breasts or smaller breasts. I always wanted longer legs.” That eventually inspired her to celebrate the endless different types of beautiful gams in the world by capturing them on film and posting them for others to admire. Indeed, the stems on Baker’s feed come in a gorgeous array of lengths, shapes, sizes, and skin color, in all manner of fab legwear and shoes—proving that all kinds of body types are worth admiring and appreciating.

Instagram Photo

RELATED: Relax, Your Skinny Jeans Won’t Hurt You

“Most women are more than happy to cooperate,” Baker told Refinery29 about approaching the more than 1000 subjects whose legs she’s shot, mostly clad in leggings, because “leggings definitely show the shape more, and that’s what I’m interested in.”

Has Stacey Baker’s project eased her own self-consciousness? “I’m not going to tell you that it’s solved all my body-image problems,” she admitted to Refinery29, “but it’s made me feel that, while my shape is a little different, there’s something beautiful there, too.”

Instagram Photo

RELATED: Why Lauren Conrad’s New Body-Shaming Policy Is Awesome

 




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Plie squats with dumbbell

Want toned legs and thighs? Incorporate plie squats into your next workout.

Targets: glutes, hips, thighs

How to
Stand with your legs two to three feet apart, toes turned out; hold the weight with both hands.

Push your hips back and lower your body until your thighs are parallel to the floor.

Pause, then slowly push yourself back to the starting position.

Repeat for desired amount of repetitions.

Model: Nichelle Laus; Photo credit: Dave Laus

NEXT: 7 advanced squat variations>>

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Overuse Injuries More Common in High School Females

SUNDAY, June 28, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Young female athletes appear to face a far greater risk for repetitive motion injuries than young males do, new research suggests.

The finding stems from an analysis that looked at overuse injuries among 3,000 male and female high school athletes participating in 20 different sports.

Researchers from Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center in Columbus report that the highest overuse injury rate was observed among girls who ran track.

This was followed by girls who played field hockey and girls who played lacrosse.

By contrast, among boys the most overuse injuries occurred among swimmers and divers. Their rate of repetitive motion injuries was pegged at only about a third of what investigators saw among female runners.

The study was published recently in the Journal of Pediatrics.

“During this point of their lives, this is when girls are developing bones at the greatest rate,” study author Dr. Thomas Best said in a center news release. He is a professor and chair at OSU’s department of sports medicine.

So “it’s incredibly important that they’re getting the proper amounts of calcium and vitamin D,” he said.

Best and his colleagues pointed out that overuse injuries make up about half of all athletic injuries. They are particularly common among children between the ages of 13 and 17.

Overuse injuries also account for about twice as many visits to sports medicine doctors than incidents of acute trauma, the authors noted.

Overall, most overuse injuries involved the lower leg, the study team noted. This was followed by knee and shoulder injuries.

To limit risk, the researchers advised that all high school athletes play more than just a single sport and make a conscious effort to change up their movements. Parents, they added, should encourage their children to get the rest and foods they need to stay healthy.

More information

For more information on overuse and other sports injuries, go to the American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine.





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High protein chocolate cupcakes

 

Protein cupcakes are nothing less than totally awesome. These are intensely chocolate and rich. Top them with whatever you like best. Perhaps this salted caramel cream cheese icing? It’s really good.

Disclaimer: We won’t pretend this caramel sauce is high in protein or low in sugar, because ... it is caramel. But it contains no refined sugar. The secret here is to harness the naturally occurring sugars in the syrup and the coconut milk to produce a delicious and light alternative that has half the fat of traditional salted caramel. It is also simple to make, delicious, suitable for dairy-free and low FODMAP diets and has a gorgeous aroma!


Ingredients (makes 12 standard cupcakes)
•    112 g egg whites
•    100 g granulated stevia blend (or sugar)
•    25 g unsweetened cacao powder
•    65 g oat flour (or plain flour)
•    65 g rice protein powder
•    2.5 g bicarbonate of soda
•    7.5 g baking powder
•    2 g vanilla bean powder
•    ¼ tsp sea salt
•    25 g macadamia oil
•    120 g non-fat Greek yoghurt
•    30 g freshly brewed espresso, cooled
•    Salted Caramel Cream Cheese Icing

WHAT YOU’LL DO
Preheat oven to 180°C. Line a standard, mini muffin or cupcake tin with cupcake liners. This helps the cupcakes to retain their shape while baking. Set aside.

In a large mixing bowl, sift together the sweetener, cacao powder, oat flour, rice protein, bicarbonate of soda, baking powder, vanilla and salt.

In a separate bowl, whisk together the macadamia oil, Greek yoghurt, and espresso. Add the liquid ingredients including egg whites to the dry mix and beat well until the batter is smooth.

Divide the batter equally between the cupcake liners.

Bake for 15 to 18 minutes, or until a skewer inserted into the centre comes out fairly clean.

Do not overbake these cupcakes. They are done when there are still some moist crumbs attached to the skewer when testing.

Remove from the oven and allow the cupcakes to cool completely on a wire rack.

Top with salted caramel cream cheese icing when cooled. It is best to ice these just before serving.

Without icing, these cupcakes will keep for several days in an airtight container at room temperature.

Once iced, they should be stored in the refrigerator.

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Following Water Safety Rules Saves Lives, Red Cross Says

SATURDAY, June 27, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Once the temperatures rise, people of all ages cool off in pools, lakes or the ocean. But no matter how old you are, taking certain water safety precautions is essential, according to the American Red Cross.

Always swim in areas that are supervised by lifeguards. Taking a dip with a buddy is also safer than swimming alone, the Red Cross advises. Other water safety tips that all swimmers and parents should consider include:

  • Remind children that they need to ask permission before they go near water. If they do go swimming, children should always be under adult supervision. Be sure adults supervising children in and around water are not distracted. It’s also important to make sure appropriate safety equipment — such as a first-aid kit, phone and reaching devices — are nearby. Do not make children responsible for the safety of other kids.
  • U.S. Coast Guard-approved life jackets could help keep inexperienced swimmers safe around water, but people should not rely solely on these devices for their safety. It’s important to take lessons and learn how to swim.
  • Pool owners should make sure their pool is enclosed in a barrier. Children can drown in less than five minutes — even when their parents are nearby. If a child is missing, look in the water first. When it comes to preventing death or devastating disability, every second counts.
  • Take a home pool and water safety course as well as a first aid and CPR course to learn what to do during emergencies and how they can be prevented. If an emergency does occur, know when to call 911.

Aside from taking certain water precautions when swimming, it’s also important to consider sun safety. Avoid too much direct sun exposure between 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. It’s important to wear sunscreen with an SPF 15 or higher.

More information

The American Academy of Pediatrics has more about water safety.





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3 Things That Will Make You Feel Great About The World

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

Love is in the air! Here are our favorite feel-good (and do-gooder) stories of the last seven days.

Watch a deaf man hear his daughter say “I love you” for the first time, thanks to new technology

One man’s dream of hearing his daughter’s voice for the first time is finally coming true. D.C. Goutoufas, 47, had been deaf since the age of 4. Now, thanks to a cochlear implant surgery at Tampa General Hospital, Goutoufas’s wish has been granted.

The very first words that he heard? “I love you,” out of the mouth of his 17-year-old daughter Olivia, after which she blew a whistle that Goutoufas’s father had left him before passing away.

Goutoufas will continue to work with technicians at Tampa Bay Hearing and Balance Center for up to three years to reach the full listening capabilities of his breakthrough new “bionic ears,” Tampa news channel WTNH reports.

RELATED: Your Ultimate Guide to Healthy Ears

Check out the 39 random acts of kindness this sweet dad and daughter duo completed together

This daddy-daughter team decided that the best way to spend their birthdays this year was by giving back—in 39 ways to be exact.

Oxford, England native Lee Beck and his daughter Amelie spent the two weeks surrounding their May birthdays completing one act of kindness for each year they had lived—Amelie was turning 7, and Lee 32. The acts, which Beck shared in a YouTube video last week, ranged from picking up litter in a local park to delivering thank-you cards at nearby fire and police stations.

Beck told ABC News that he hopes the video inspires others to perform even one random act of kindness in their own community. “It has been a very emotional time as we have learned about various causes, and we have a lot of memories to take away from it all. We will certainly be doing some kind acts next year,” he told ABC News.

Check out all 39 acts of kindness that Lee and Amelie completed in this video:

RELATED: Acts of Kindness Can Make You Happier

This cat took on a black bear, reminding us that believing in yourself is half the battle

Black bears are a pretty usual sight in Anchorage, Alaska, but resident Darlis Elliott had quite the surprise when one ended up on her porch.

Luckily for Elliott, her cat, Nani, made up for in confidence what she lacked in size: One fierce pounce against Elliott’s glass door from Nani sent the bear scurrying away in fear. We could all take a lesson from Nani and the bear’s David and Goliath tale, namely that even the small can be strong when the situation calls for it. Plus, it’s good to end a long with with a laugh—TGIF!

Watch the hilarious showdown here:

RELATED: Feel Confident At Any Age

 




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