barre

Move of the Week: Wide Knee Plié

Want to learn a move that will strengthen your core and lower body all at once? Watch as Sarah Wingo from Pure Barre demonstrates how to perfect the wide knee plié.

RELATED: Get Sweating in This 10-Minute Pure Barre Workout

Here’s how to do it: Place one hand on the back of a chair that’s hip height. Bring your other hand to your hip. Step your feet wider than your hips, turn your toes out. Bend your knees and sink your seat toward knee level. With a heavy tailbone, rise onto your right tippy toes, then lower to a flat foot. Repeat for 30 seconds. Now do the same with your left leg for 30 seconds. Then rise onto tippy toes of both legs and press your knees back. Repeat this small, tight movement for 30 seconds. Finally, press your knees back, extend your outside arm in front of your body, and hold. Repeat the entire sequence.

Trainer tip: Focus on squeezing your inner thighs to keep them fired up.




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Middle Schoolers Exposed to Alcohol Ads Every Day: Study

TUESDAY, May 17, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Kids as young as 11 see alcohol ads on a daily basis, through television, billboards and signs, new research shows.

Black and Hispanic children were especially likely to be exposed to such ads, as were girls, the study authors added.

The researchers said they fear that exposure to these ads will encourage kids to drink when they’re under age.

“The evidence is strong that kids are at greater risk if they’re exposed to alcohol advertising,” said study leader Rebecca Collins. She is a researcher with the Rand Corp., a nonprofit global policy think tank.

The findings are based on the experiences of nearly 590 Los Angeles-area children, aged 11 to 14, who used hand-held devices to record each time they encountered alcohol ads over a two-week period.

The study found that the kids typically saw two to four ads a day. Hispanic and black kids saw more ads, an average of three or four a day, respectively, while white kids saw an average of two ads a day, the findings showed.

“It’s pretty disturbing that African American kids saw twice as many ads,” Collins said.

The research suggests that girls see 30 percent more ads than boys, possibly because alcohol advertisers are expanding beyond TV sports, Collins suggested. Girls also read more magazines than boys, she added.

Outdoor billboards and signs (such as those outside stores and restaurants) accounted for 38 percent of ads. TV commercials accounted for another 26 percent, according to the report published in the May issue of the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs.

Collins said the findings should encourage policymakers to focus on outdoor alcohol advertising. And, she said, parents should be aware.

“Just know that kids’ decisions to drink don’t suddenly come up in college,” Collins said in a journal news release. “Young kids are being exposed to alcohol ads all the time, and that can influence them.”

More information

For more about alcohol and children, visit HelpGuide.org.





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As Fitness Levels Rise, Diabetes Risk Drops

TUESDAY, May 17, 2016 (HealthDay News) — A higher level of heart-lung fitness may reduce your risk for prediabetes or type 2 diabetes, new research finds.

The study provides evidence to support the widely held belief “that fitness is beneficial in reducing the risk for prediabetes/diabetes,” said Dr. Lisa Chow, from the University of Minnesota, and colleagues.

The study included more than 4,300 adults. The volunteers lived in Birmingham, Ala.; Chicago; Minneapolis; and Oakland, Calif. They all underwent treadmill exercise testing for the first time in 1985 or 1986, when they were between the ages of 18 and 30. Repeat treadmill tests were done during the study’s seventh and 20th years.

During that time, those with better heart-lung fitness had a lower risk of developing prediabetes or type 2 diabetes. That was true even when the researchers adjusted for changes in body mass index (BMI — a rough estimate of body fat based on weight and height).

Specifically, an 8 percent to 11 percent higher fitness level reduced the risk of prediabetes or type 2 diabetes by 0.1 percent.

That higher level of fitness required either vigorous exercise for 30 minutes a day, five days a week, or moderate exercise for 40 minutes a day, five days a week, the researchers said.

While higher levels of fitness were associated with only a small reduced risk of prediabetes or type 2 diabetes on an individual basis, the effect is significant in terms of the overall population, the study author’s explained.

“As this benefit remained significant even when adjusting for BMI, exercise programs remain critically important for reducing the development of prediabetes and diabetes,” the study authors concluded.

Results of the study were published May 16 in the journal Diabetologia.

More information

The U.S. Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion explains how to prevent diabetes.





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As Fitness Levels Rise, Diabetes Risk Drops

TUESDAY, May 17, 2016 (HealthDay News) — A higher level of heart-lung fitness may reduce your risk for prediabetes or type 2 diabetes, new research finds.

The study provides evidence to support the widely held belief “that fitness is beneficial in reducing the risk for prediabetes/diabetes,” said Dr. Lisa Chow, from the University of Minnesota, and colleagues.

The study included more than 4,300 adults. The volunteers lived in Birmingham, Ala.; Chicago; Minneapolis; and Oakland, Calif. They all underwent treadmill exercise testing for the first time in 1985 or 1986, when they were between the ages of 18 and 30. Repeat treadmill tests were done during the study’s seventh and 20th years.

During that time, those with better heart-lung fitness had a lower risk of developing prediabetes or type 2 diabetes. That was true even when the researchers adjusted for changes in body mass index (BMI — a rough estimate of body fat based on weight and height).

Specifically, an 8 percent to 11 percent higher fitness level reduced the risk of prediabetes or type 2 diabetes by 0.1 percent.

That higher level of fitness required either vigorous exercise for 30 minutes a day, five days a week, or moderate exercise for 40 minutes a day, five days a week, the researchers said.

While higher levels of fitness were associated with only a small reduced risk of prediabetes or type 2 diabetes on an individual basis, the effect is significant in terms of the overall population, the study author’s explained.

“As this benefit remained significant even when adjusting for BMI, exercise programs remain critically important for reducing the development of prediabetes and diabetes,” the study authors concluded.

Results of the study were published May 16 in the journal Diabetologia.

More information

The U.S. Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion explains how to prevent diabetes.





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Giving the ‘Green Light’ to Migraine Relief

TUESDAY, May 17, 2016 (HealthDay News) — A new study sheds light — literally — on a potential means of easing migraine pain.

Researchers in Boston exposed 69 migraine patients to different colors of light. They found that while blue light exacerbated headache pain, a narrow spectrum of low-intensity green light significantly reduced light sensitivity.

In some cases, this green light also reduced migraine pain by about 20 percent, the researchers found.

They noted that migraine headache affects nearly 15 percent of people worldwide, and a frequent symptom of migraine is light sensitivity, also known as photophobia.

“Although photophobia is not usually as incapacitating as headache pain itself, the inability to endure light can be disabling,” study author Rami Burstein, of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, said in a medical center news release.

“More than 80 percent of migraine attacks are associated with and exacerbated by light sensitivity, leading many migraine sufferers to seek the comfort of darkness and isolate themselves from work, family and everyday activities,” he added. Burstein directs the medical center’s Comprehensive Headache Center.

Two experts said the treatment may have merit.

“Certainly Dr. Burstein’s work suggests that more research should be done, as this is a potentially beneficial new avenue for treatment,” said Dr. Noah Rosen, who directs Northwell Health’s Headache Center in Great Neck, N.Y.

He pointed out that “light therapy has been used successfully in other conditions such as certain dermatologic issues and seasonal affective disorder [SAD].”

Dr. Gayatri Devi is a neurologist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.

He said the success in some patients with light therapy “implicates the thalamus — a brain ‘relay station’ between the sensory organs, including the eyes and the cortex of the brain — as the area where migraine-related photophobia is amplified.”

For his part, Burstein said he’s now trying to develop an affordable light bulb that emits narrow-band green light at low intensity, as well as sunglasses that block all but the narrow band of green light.

Rosen stressed, however, that more study may still be needed.

“In general, it seems a safe treatment but one that is limited by cost, access and whether its use on a regular basis would decrease disability,” he said.

The findings were published May 17 in the journal Brain.

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about migraines.





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Giving the ‘Green Light’ to Migraine Relief

TUESDAY, May 17, 2016 (HealthDay News) — A new study sheds light — literally — on a potential means of easing migraine pain.

Researchers in Boston exposed 69 migraine patients to different colors of light. They found that while blue light exacerbated headache pain, a narrow spectrum of low-intensity green light significantly reduced light sensitivity.

In some cases, this green light also reduced migraine pain by about 20 percent, the researchers found.

They noted that migraine headache affects nearly 15 percent of people worldwide, and a frequent symptom of migraine is light sensitivity, also known as photophobia.

“Although photophobia is not usually as incapacitating as headache pain itself, the inability to endure light can be disabling,” study author Rami Burstein, of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, said in a medical center news release.

“More than 80 percent of migraine attacks are associated with and exacerbated by light sensitivity, leading many migraine sufferers to seek the comfort of darkness and isolate themselves from work, family and everyday activities,” he added. Burstein directs the medical center’s Comprehensive Headache Center.

Two experts said the treatment may have merit.

“Certainly Dr. Burstein’s work suggests that more research should be done, as this is a potentially beneficial new avenue for treatment,” said Dr. Noah Rosen, who directs Northwell Health’s Headache Center in Great Neck, N.Y.

He pointed out that “light therapy has been used successfully in other conditions such as certain dermatologic issues and seasonal affective disorder [SAD].”

Dr. Gayatri Devi is a neurologist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.

He said the success in some patients with light therapy “implicates the thalamus — a brain ‘relay station’ between the sensory organs, including the eyes and the cortex of the brain — as the area where migraine-related photophobia is amplified.”

For his part, Burstein said he’s now trying to develop an affordable light bulb that emits narrow-band green light at low intensity, as well as sunglasses that block all but the narrow band of green light.

Rosen stressed, however, that more study may still be needed.

“In general, it seems a safe treatment but one that is limited by cost, access and whether its use on a regular basis would decrease disability,” he said.

The findings were published May 17 in the journal Brain.

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about migraines.





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Joe Montana Scoring Points Against Heart Disease

By Maureen Salamon
HealthDay Reporter

TUESDAY, May 17, 2016 (HealthDay News) — After retiring from a long and illustrious pro football career that included four Super Bowl championships, quarterback Joe Montana abandoned his decades-long habit of daily exercise.

And it was just a few years later when the Hall of Famer was diagnosed with two major risk factors for heart disease: high blood pressure and high cholesterol.

That news, coupled with a family history of heart disease — which claimed a grandfather and two uncles before age 55 — jolted Montana to realize that his physical prowess on the gridiron couldn’t protect him from heart disease.

Montana knew he had to change course and once again become physically fit. Now 59, the three-time Super Bowl MVP counteracts his family history of heart disease — America’s leading killer — by biking frequently with his wife and grown children, and limiting salty foods and red meat.

“I didn’t connect the dots at all,” said Montana, who played for the San Francisco 49ers for the majority of his 16-year NFL career, retiring in 1995. “First of all, I wasn’t educated on heart disease and what the precursors were. And I just never thought it would happen to me, with how long I’d been active,” he said.

The pounding that Montana took during his playing days leaves biking as one of the few aerobic activities he can still do without much pain. And he and his wife Jennifer have teamed up with the American Heart Association, biopharmaceutical company Amgen and Schwinn Bicycles to launch Breakaway from Heart Disease, a cycling movement encouraging people to understand their family heart health and become more physically active.

The national initiative includes a series of bike and spin events called the Heart Health Tour.

Cardiologist Dr. Suzanne Steinbaum, director of women’s heart health at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City, said she constantly hears people telling her they, too, never expected heart disease to strike them.

Cardiovascular disease kills more than 800,000 Americans each year, the American Heart Association says. Family history is one of the most important risk factors for heart disease, Steinbaum said. Other major risk factors include diabetes, a sedentary lifestyle and obesity.

“It’s so important to know your family history and to ask what did family members have, why did people die, and how old were they when they died,” said Steinbaum.

“It takes decades for heart disease to develop,” she added. “So the sooner you know your family history and the sooner you do something about it, the greater the chance you can control your own destiny. Because 80 percent of the time, heart disease is preventable.”

Jennifer Montana’s father died at age 60 of a massive heart attack. So, the couple’s doubled family history shapes how they counsel their four children — now ranging between 24 and 30 years old — about the importance of diet and exercise.

Joe Montana said it was easier and more realistic for him to cut back on “bad” foods, such as red meat and salt, than eliminate them entirely.

“Once you start cutting things out completely, you want to eat it more than ever. And I think it makes it harder for people to make the changes,” he said.

“I could easily eat a whole New York steak, but now I find I take about four bites and take the other part home,” he added. “I feel like I’ve had my fill and I don’t need it again for a while.”

Jennifer Montana, a former model, said their family has long enjoyed outdoor activities such as biking, volleyball, swimming and basketball, so “the exercise has never really been a problem.”

But she finds herself often reminding the couple’s kids that their family history of heart disease could catch up to them if they give in too often to unhealthy food cravings.

“We can do some good by telling people to go ahead and start teaching your own kids about your own family history so they don’t have a late start,” she said.

Steinbaum said the best way to offset a family history of heart disease is by making regular aerobic exercise a priority.

“Get your heart rate up in any way, shape or form,” she said. “I say if it’s disco dancing, knock yourself out. Or, looking at someone like Joe, who’s not really able to do everything, biking is a great option.”

Montana said he reflects on his family history of heart disease whenever he needs motivation to stay on a healthier course.

“Every now and then, when I have a weak moment, I start thinking about that,” said Montana, nicknamed “Joe Cool” for his ability to remain calm on the field under pressure. “It kind of gets you back in the right frame of mind.”

More information

Visit Break Away from Heart Disease for more about the new cycling initiative and scheduled events.





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Joe Montana Scoring Points Against Heart Disease

By Maureen Salamon
HealthDay Reporter

TUESDAY, May 17, 2016 (HealthDay News) — After retiring from a long and illustrious pro football career that included four Super Bowl championships, quarterback Joe Montana abandoned his decades-long habit of daily exercise.

And it was just a few years later when the Hall of Famer was diagnosed with two major risk factors for heart disease: high blood pressure and high cholesterol.

That news, coupled with a family history of heart disease — which claimed a grandfather and two uncles before age 55 — jolted Montana to realize that his physical prowess on the gridiron couldn’t protect him from heart disease.

Montana knew he had to change course and once again become physically fit. Now 59, the three-time Super Bowl MVP counteracts his family history of heart disease — America’s leading killer — by biking frequently with his wife and grown children, and limiting salty foods and red meat.

“I didn’t connect the dots at all,” said Montana, who played for the San Francisco 49ers for the majority of his 16-year NFL career, retiring in 1995. “First of all, I wasn’t educated on heart disease and what the precursors were. And I just never thought it would happen to me, with how long I’d been active,” he said.

The pounding that Montana took during his playing days leaves biking as one of the few aerobic activities he can still do without much pain. And he and his wife Jennifer have teamed up with the American Heart Association, biopharmaceutical company Amgen and Schwinn Bicycles to launch Breakaway from Heart Disease, a cycling movement encouraging people to understand their family heart health and become more physically active.

The national initiative includes a series of bike and spin events called the Heart Health Tour.

Cardiologist Dr. Suzanne Steinbaum, director of women’s heart health at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City, said she constantly hears people telling her they, too, never expected heart disease to strike them.

Cardiovascular disease kills more than 800,000 Americans each year, the American Heart Association says. Family history is one of the most important risk factors for heart disease, Steinbaum said. Other major risk factors include diabetes, a sedentary lifestyle and obesity.

“It’s so important to know your family history and to ask what did family members have, why did people die, and how old were they when they died,” said Steinbaum.

“It takes decades for heart disease to develop,” she added. “So the sooner you know your family history and the sooner you do something about it, the greater the chance you can control your own destiny. Because 80 percent of the time, heart disease is preventable.”

Jennifer Montana’s father died at age 60 of a massive heart attack. So, the couple’s doubled family history shapes how they counsel their four children — now ranging between 24 and 30 years old — about the importance of diet and exercise.

Joe Montana said it was easier and more realistic for him to cut back on “bad” foods, such as red meat and salt, than eliminate them entirely.

“Once you start cutting things out completely, you want to eat it more than ever. And I think it makes it harder for people to make the changes,” he said.

“I could easily eat a whole New York steak, but now I find I take about four bites and take the other part home,” he added. “I feel like I’ve had my fill and I don’t need it again for a while.”

Jennifer Montana, a former model, said their family has long enjoyed outdoor activities such as biking, volleyball, swimming and basketball, so “the exercise has never really been a problem.”

But she finds herself often reminding the couple’s kids that their family history of heart disease could catch up to them if they give in too often to unhealthy food cravings.

“We can do some good by telling people to go ahead and start teaching your own kids about your own family history so they don’t have a late start,” she said.

Steinbaum said the best way to offset a family history of heart disease is by making regular aerobic exercise a priority.

“Get your heart rate up in any way, shape or form,” she said. “I say if it’s disco dancing, knock yourself out. Or, looking at someone like Joe, who’s not really able to do everything, biking is a great option.”

Montana said he reflects on his family history of heart disease whenever he needs motivation to stay on a healthier course.

“Every now and then, when I have a weak moment, I start thinking about that,” said Montana, nicknamed “Joe Cool” for his ability to remain calm on the field under pressure. “It kind of gets you back in the right frame of mind.”

More information

Visit Break Away from Heart Disease for more about the new cycling initiative and scheduled events.





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Young Children With Sleep Apnea May Face Learning Difficulties: Study

MONDAY, May 16, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Sleep apnea in young children may affect youngsters’ attention, memory and language development, a new study suggests.

The researchers added that as sleep apnea worsens, the risk of these problems also may increase.

“Although evidence suggesting the presence of cognitive deficits in children with sleep apnea has been around for quite some time, the relatively small groups studied made it difficult to demonstrate a strong relationship between increasing cognitive issues and increasing sleep apnea severity,” said Dr. Leila Gozal, from the University of Chicago.

Sleep apnea causes people to experience repetitive pauses in breathing while they sleep. This causes oxygen levels to drop temporarily, according to the U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.

While the new study with children did not prove cause-and-effect, previous research has shown that sleep apnea in adults is associated with trouble concentrating, memory issues, poor decision-making, depression and stress.

The new study involved almost 1,400 public schoolchildren with sleep apnea. The kids ranged in age from 5 to 7. Some, but not all, of the children snored.

The researchers divided the children into four groups based on the severity of their sleep apnea.

The kids participated in an overnight sleep study and answered detailed questions about their sleep. The children also completed tests to measure certain aspects of brain function, including language and decision-making skills.

After comparing the results in each group, the researchers found that even mild problems such as snoring had a negative effect on children’s thinking abilities, the researchers reported in a news release from the American Thoracic Society.

Gozal said the findings suggest that the development of simple brain function tests that could be used along with current clinical evaluation of children with habitual snoring might help guide the treatment of children with sleep apnea.

The findings were to be presented Monday at the American Thoracic Society’s annual conference, in San Francisco. Findings presented at meetings are typically seen as preliminary until they’ve been published in a peer-reviewed journal.

More information

The U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute provides more information on sleep apnea.





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Severe, Untreated Sleep Apnea Linked to Aggressive Melanoma

MONDAY, May 16, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Sleep is key to immune function and health, and a new study finds that may be especially true for patients battling melanoma.

The study found that severe, untreated cases of sleep apnea — interruptions in nighttime breathing — are linked with more aggressive melanomas.

“This is the first large, prospective multicenter study that was specifically constructed to look at the relationship between sleep apnea and a specific cancer,” explained study author Dr. Miguel Angel Martinez-Garcia, from La Fe University and Polytechnic Hospital in Valencia, Spain.

“While more research is needed, this study shows that patients in the study had markers of poor prognosis for their melanoma. It also highlights the importance of diagnosing and treating sleep apnea,” Martinez-Garcia said in a news release from the in a news release from the American Thoracic Society (ATS).

One expert said the finding isn’t overly surprising. “Sleep deprivation can lead to immunologic dysfunction,” noted Dr. Jordan Josephson, a sleep apnea specialist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.

The findings were slated for presentation on Monday at the annual meeting of the ATS, in San Francisco.

The study involved 412 patients, averaging 55 years of age, all of whom had confirmed cases of cutaneous malignant melanoma. All of the patients were also studied to gauge how well they slept.

While it’s impossible from this study to say that sleep apnea causes melanoma to become more aggressive, the researchers found that apnea was more common and severe for patients diagnosed with the most aggressive cancers.

This was true even when they factored out other risk factors for melanoma such as age, gender, weight, skin type and sun exposure, the research team noted.

Experts who reviewed the findings said the results were preliminary but intriguing.

“One person dies every hour in this country from malignant melanoma,” said Dr. Doris Day, a skin cancer expert and spokeswoman for The American Society for Dermatologic Surgery.

Day believes that better sleep might help the body fight melanoma, since “many immunologic and restorative events take place during this time.”

Another expert in sleep health agreed.

“Although the mechanism of this effect is unclear, these results add to the growing list of adverse effects of obstructive sleep apnea and point out the central role that sleep plays in health,” said Dr. Michael Weinstein, who directs the sleep disorders center at Winthrop University Hospital in Mineola, NY.

Martinez-Garcia offered some advice to patients.

“People who snore, frequently wake up at night or have daytime sleepiness should see a sleep specialist, especially if they have other risk factors for cancer or already have cancer,” he said.

“Physicians — especially dermatologists, cancer surgeons and medical oncologists — should ask their patients about potential sleep apnea symptoms, and refer them for a sleep study if they have these symptoms,” Martinez-Garcia added.

Experts note that findings presented at medical meetings are typically considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

More information

The American Lung Association provides more information on sleep apnea.





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