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This Easy Meditation Method Will Help Calm Your Anxiety

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

Clear my mind—seriously? If you’re an anxious-type, and you’ve ever tried to meditate, you’ve probably asked yourself this question (while trying desperately to concentrate on your breathing).

Well, Buddhist teacher Susan Piver has heard it all before. In this excerpt from her new book, Start Here Now ($12, amazon.com), she clears up some of the most common confusions that keep people from beginning a regular practice—including exactly how to do it if you’re a worry wart.

How can I meditate when I am extremely worried about something and can’t take my mind off of that?

This is an excellent question. When we sit down to meditate with a lot of anxiety or obsessive thinking, meditation can make it worse—if in meditation, we try to shut it down rather than feel it. Sometimes we simply can’t let go of our thoughts. If, after some time of attempting to do so, you conclude that it is simply not possible, no problem. You can still meditate.

Here’s how to do it: Instead of making your breath the object of your meditation, make your anxiety its object. (I recognize this does not sound fun—it isn’t.) Take your attention off of your breath and place it instead on your anxiety.

Now, please listen to this next refinement to this instruction because it is of the utmost importance: place it on the feeling of the anxiety not the story behind it. In other words, notice how it feels to be anxious. Do you hold anxiety in your belly? Chest? Shoulders? Does it feel hot or cold, sticky or slippery? Does it pulse or is it constant? This is what I mean by feeling. Usually, our attention promptly jumps from the feeling to the story behind the feeling: I wouldn’t feel this unless… It is all my fault because … I am doomed and there is no exit … If this happens, then that will happen, and then I will lose … If you notice that your attention has become absorbed in the narrative, let it go, just as you would let go of thoughts in meditation practice.

Return your attention to the felt-sense of anxiety. Then, when you are able, let go of anxiety as the object of your practice and resume attention on breath. If you are unable to do so, no problem. Try again tomorrow.

RELATED: A Meditation to De-Stress

But aren’t some people just not cut out for this?

There is no need whatsoever to clear the mind of thought, stop thinking, or think only peaceful thoughts. The idea in meditation is to rest with your mind as it is, including those times when it may be speedy, sleepy, agitated, blissed-out, grumpy, dull, or all of the above.

I am crazy busy. How can I possibly carve out time to meditate regularly?

To begin, just meditate five minutes at a time. That is totally great. Then, when or if you feel so inclined, try to fit in two five-minute sessions per day. If even this is too much, you could meditate for as little as one minute—at your desk, on the bus, or anyplace you can sit quietly. You could even connect with the mind of meditation for a few seconds by turning your attention within and simply allowing it to rest on your breath.

RELATED: Yoga Moves to Beat Insomnia, Ease Stress, and Relieve Pain

From Start Here Now by Susan Piver, © 2015 by Susan Piver. Reprinted by arrangement with Shambhala Publications, Inc. Boulder, CO. http://ift.tt/pMCwyO

 

 

 




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Risk of Bladder Cancer Rising for Workers in Many Industries

THURSDAY, Oct. 8, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Despite efforts by lawmakers and manufacturers to protect workers and provide safe working environments, the risk of bladder cancer is still rising in certain industries, a new study finds.

Most cases of this common form of cancer develop following exposure to carcinogens that are inhaled, ingested or come into contact with the skin, the researchers explained.

Bladder cancer is also often tied to smoking or exposure to tobacco smoke, said a team led by James Catto, of the University of Sheffield in England.

In the study, Catto’s group reviewed data from 263 studies involving 31 million people worldwide.

The new analysis revealed an increased risk of developing bladder cancer in 42 out of 61 occupational classes, and an increased risk of dying from bladder cancer in 16 out of 40 occupational classes.

Those at greatest risk from the malignancy were workers exposed to chemicals known as aromatic amines. Exposures often occurred when people worked with tobacco, dye, rubber, printers, leather and hair products, according to the study published online Oct. 8 in JAMA Oncology.

Also at high risk for bladder cancer and death from the disease were those exposed to heavy metals, diesel and combustion products. People working around toxins called polycystic aromatic hydrocarbons were at heightened risk, the study found. People exposed to these potential carcinogens include metal workers, electricians, mechanics, military service members, chimney sweeps, nurses, waiters, aluminum workers, seamen and oil/petroleum workers, Catto’s team reported.

Meanwhile, lower rates of bladder cancer were found in six out of 61 occupational classes and reduced risk of death from the disease was identified in just two of 40 classes. People working in agriculture were among those with the lowest risk, the researchers noted in a journal news release.

Gender also appeared to be key, with risks for the disease rising faster among women than men, the study showed. According to Catto’s group, this may simply be the result of improvements in screening and detection of the disease — more cases being detected. However, higher numbers in women might also be the result of rising numbers of women in the workforce, or a growing number of carcinogens in jobs predominantly held by women, the study authors said.

Efforts to reduce the risk of bladder cancer among workers should target jobs associated with the greatest risk of death from the disease, the researchers said.

Writing in a journal commentary, Dr. Elisabete Weiderpass, of the Institute of Population-Based Cancer Research in Oslo, Norway, and Dr. Harri Vainio, of the Finnish Institute of Occupational Health in Helsinki, said the new report should sound alarm bells for cancer prevention.

“Bladder cancer continues to vary considerably by occupation, sex and calendar time — all indications that prevention is possible, and warranted,” the editorialists said. “Workers around the world have the right to demand and get a safe and carcinogen-free workplace.”

According to the American Cancer Society, there will be about 74,000 new cases of bladder cancer diagnosed in the United States in 2015, and about 16,000 Americans will die from the disease.

More information

The American Cancer Society has more about bladder cancer.





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Carrots Do Help Aging Eyes, Study Shows

By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, Oct. 8, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Your parents may have told you, “Eat your carrots, they’re good for your eyes,” and a new study suggests they were on to something.

Pigments called carotenoids — which give red or orange hues to carrots, sweet potatoes and orange peppers, or deep greens to produce like spinach, broccoli and kale — may help ward off the age-linked vision ailment known as macular degeneration, researchers said.

While the study can’t prove cause-and-effect, one vision care expert wasn’t surprised by the findings.

“I tell my patients that fruit and vegetable consumption are very important for eye health — this study validates that notion,” said Dr. Paul Bernstein, a professor of ophthalmology and visual sciences at the University of Utah School of Medicine in Salt Lake City.

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is one of the most common causes of vision loss, especially in the elderly. It affects the macula, the center part of the retina, and can lead to declines in sharp central vision and even blindness, experts say.

Scientists have already linked a variety of factors to the condition including genetics, smoking and nutrition, said Bernstein, who was not involved in the new study. However, treatment for AMD may be limited depending on the type of macular degeneration that a person develops, he said.

Prior research has produced mixed findings about links between carotenoids and macular degeneration, the researchers said. So, a team led by Joanne (Juan) Wu, a graduate student in nutrition epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, sought to better understand any connection.

In the new study, Wu’s team looked at data from health surveys that tracked people aged 50 and older — more than 63,000 women and almost 39,000 men — from 1984 or 1986 until 2010. Participants were all nurses and other health professionals.

Overall, about 2.5 percent of study participants developed either intermediate or advanced forms of the eye condition during the years of the study.

Wu’s team found that people who consumed the very highest levels of carotenoids known as lutein and zeaxanthin had a 40 percent lower risk of the advanced form of AMD compared to those who ate the very least.

“Other carotenoids, including beta cryptoxanthin, alpha carotene and beta carotene, may also play protective roles,” Wu added. People who consumed the very highest amount of these carotenoids — found in foods such as carrots and sweet potato — had a 25 to 35 percent lower risk of the advanced form of the illness, the findings showed.

Researchers did not find any link between the carotenoids and the intermediate form of macular degeneration, however.

Lutein is found in eggs and dark leafy vegetables including broccoli, kale and spinach, Bernstein said. Zeaxanthin is harder to find in the diet, he said, but you can get it from corn, orange peppers and goji berries.

Wu noted that both lutein and zeaxanthin concentrate in the macula, where they are thought to protect it from damage from oxygen and light.

Bernstein cautioned that the study has some weaknesses. It’s based on people’s recollections of their diets, he said, and doesn’t examine the levels of the carotenoids that actually made it into their bodies and eyes. Still, he praised the research.

Would carotenoid supplements help? Bernstein said he often recommends nutritional supplements to people with intermediate and advanced forms of macular degeneration, but it’s not proven if they’ll help people who may be at risk for the condition.

However, he said, a diet high in fruits and vegetables is important, especially colorful vegetables. Consume several servings a day, he advised.

“The people who are only consuming two servings a day are the ones we worry about,” Bernstein said.

The study is published in the Oct. 8 online edition of JAMA Ophthalmology.

More information

For more on age-related macular degeneration, head to the NIH Senior Health site.





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Elephants’ Cancer-Crushing Secrets May Someday Help People

By Alan Mozes
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, Oct. 8, 2015 (HealthDay News) — What weighs upwards of 14,000 pounds, can live well past 70 years, and almost never gets cancer? The elephant.

Scientists hope that by decoding the cancer-fighting skills of the world’s biggest land animal they might gain new insights into how to better fight human disease.

Now, a team of researchers thinks it has found the elephant’s secret: a huge stash of a tumor-suppressing gene that is also found in people, only in much smaller and less aggressive quantities.

“Half of all men and a third of all women will develop cancer in their lifetime,” said study author Dr. Joshua Schiffman, an investigator at the Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah. “The uncontrolled cell division and genomic instability that is cancer is very much a disease of aging, because the older we get the less we’re able to repair damaged cells.”

Because elephants “are 100 times our size, and have so many cells, and live for such a long time, it stands to reason that just by chance alone all elephants should be dying from cancer. But they don’t,” said Schiffman.

Though the naked mole rat is also known to be cancer-resistant, the elephant’s mysterious ability to ward off cancer has been a particular focus of scientific intrigue.

The current findings appear in the Oct. 8 online edition of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Analysis of zoo elephant death records revealed that less than 5 percent died of cancer. The cancer death rate in humans is 11 to 25 percent, the researchers said.

A subsequent analysis of the entire elephant genome placed particular focus on the so-called P53 gene, a known tumor suppressor tasked with preventing cancer by fixing damaged cells and/or killing them when repair isn’t possible.

Human cells carry just two copies of P53. But investigators discovered that elephant cells carry 40 copies.

Blood drawn from eight African and Asian elephants was then stacked up against blood drawn from 11 healthy people and 10 people who had Li-Fraumeni Syndrome. This is a genetic condition in which patients have just a single copy of P53, resulting in a 90 percent lifetime risk for developing cancer.

All the samples were exposed to radiation to inflict DNA damage.

Initially, it appeared that elephant P53 genes and human P53 genes reacted similarly: Both set out to repair DNA flaws.

But delving deeper, the investigators found that an elephant’s P53 genes were much more likely to play the role of assassin than doctor, killing off many more damaged cells than their human counterparts.

“These genes actually kill more than twice as many damaged cells as our genes do,” Schiffman said. They also killed off five times as many damaged cells as those in Li-Fraumeni Syndrome patients, indicating that it’s better to have aggressive P53 and more of them, he said.

“We’re not saying we found the cure for cancer, but now that we think we understand the elephant’s mechanism of cancer resistance, we can work on figuring out how to get this to work in humans,” he said.

That could mean, Schiffman said, finding a drug to mimic the effect of those extra P53 copies, or perhaps to get human P53 to focus on cell death rather than cell repair.

It should be noted, however, that research with animals often fails to produce similar results in humans.

Mel Greaves, a professor of cell biology and team leader at the Institute of Cancer Research in England, suggested that “the real puzzle is why humans appear to have very poor anti-cancer defenses, and very high cancer rates.” Greaves is also the author of an accompanying journal editorial.

“The answer to this puzzle seems likely to be that humans are unique in our extraordinarily fast social evolution,” Greaves suggested. “This brings in its wake much increased cancer risks, and at a pace that’s too fast for evolutionary processes to adapt. Obvious examples are that elephants don’t smoke, get sunburned or consume excessive calories.”

It doesn’t have to be that way, Greaves added. “Most cancers are preventable,” he said.

More information

There’s more on cancer risk in animals at the U.S. National Cancer Institute.





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Is Ibuprofen Bad for Your Heart?

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

I’ve been taking ibuprofen for all my aches and pains for years, but I heard it can cause heart problems. Should I stop using it?

Ibuprofen is a common drug to have on hand for everything from headaches and toothaches to joint pain, muscle soreness and menstrual cramps. That said, doctors have actually known for years that taking nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medications (NSAIDs)—including ibuprofen and naproxen—may increase risk of heart attack and stroke. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) added a boxed warning about this issue to prescription nonaspirin NSAID labels back in 2005.

However, the FDA recently conducted a review of new research on NSAIDs. Based on this review, we now know that taking NSAIDs may pose a risk for heart attack and stroke earlier than previously thought—even within the first few weeks of use. What’s more, the longer you rely on these drugs, the worse the risk may become. And if you take NSAIDs at higher dosages, you may also be more vulnerable. That’s why in July the FDA ordered drug manufacturers to beef up warning labels on Rx nonaspirin products, and will request that makers of over-the-counter nonaspirin products update the info on their labels, too.

People with heart disease or risk factors for heart disease are more likely to face problems when they take NSAIDs. But even those who don’t have heart disease or issues such as high blood pressure may be at a greater risk as well.

You can still take ibuprofen, but be sure to stick to the smallest dose you need, and only take it for as long as you really have to. Acetaminophen does not have the same side effects, so consider it as an alternative—while being mindful of its own potential dangers; excessive doses can lead to liver problems.

And keep in mind that you can always start with nondrug options, like hot or cold packs or massage, to help ease your pain.

Health’s medical editor, Roshini Rajapaksa, MD, is associate professor of medicine at the NYU School of Medicine and co-founder of Tula Skincare.




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Surgeon’s Experience Tied to Success of Thyroid Removal: Study

THURSDAY, Oct. 8, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Patients who undergo thyroid removal may be less likely to suffer complications if their surgeon performs many such surgeries each year, a new study says.

Removal of the thyroid gland, located at the base of the neck, is a common operation. More than 72,300 total thyroidectomies are performed in the United States annually, usually to treat thyroid cancer or benign thyroid diseases, the study authors said.

The authors examined data from nearly 17,000 American adults who had their thyroid removed between 1998 and 2009. About half these patients had cancer, and the other half had thyroid disease.

Overall, 6 percent of the patients had complications after their surgery, such as damage to voice box nerves, excessive bleeding, poor wound healing, breathing or heart problems, hormone deficiency and death.

Complication rates were 4 percent among patients whose surgeon performed 25 or more total thyroidectomies a year (high-volume surgeons) and 6 percent among patients whose surgeon did fewer than 25 such surgeries a year.

Only 19 percent of the patients in the study were operated on by high-volume surgeons. The median number of total thyroidectomies performed by surgeons was seven, according to the study.

The researchers calculated that patients undergoing the operation by a surgeon who performed only one thyroidectomy per year had a 65 percent increased risk of complications, compared to patients of high-volume surgeons. More than half the surgeons in the study performed just one thyroidectomy per year.

While the researchers only found an association between a doctor’s surgery rates and thyroidectomy complications, they reported that, on average, patients with low-volume surgeons had twice as long a hospital stay — two days versus one day. They also had higher hospital costs — $6,375 vs. $5,863.

“Although the surgeon’s experience is one of the most predictive factors for patient outcomes from total thyroidectomy, the number of cases that defines a high-volume thyroid surgeon was unclear,” said senior investigator Dr. Julie Ann Sosa, chief of endocrine surgery at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C.

Before selecting a thyroid surgeon, patients should ask surgeons how many such surgeries they perform each year, Sosa said in a college news release.

The study was scheduled for presentation Wednesday at the annual meeting of the American College of Surgeons in Chicago. Data and conclusions presented at meetings should be considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed medical journal.

More information

The U.S. National Library of Medicine has more about thyroid removal.





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Whistle … and Walk … While You Work

By Emily Willingham
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, Oct. 8, 2015 (HealthDay News) — If you have to sit almost all day while you work, take a short walk whenever you can.

Why? Researchers report that even a 10-minute stroll can restore blood flow to legs affected by prolonged sitting.

“Although the size of our sample was small, the effects and results we found were still profound,” said study first author Robert Restaino, a doctoral student at the University of Missouri, in Columbia, Mo.

The findings were published recently in the journal Experimental Physiology.

“The obvious take-home is that uninterrupted sitting and inactivity leads to microvascular dysfunction, and therefore is unhealthy,” said Dr. William Gray, director of endovascular services at New York-Presbyterian Hospital-Columbia University Medical Center, in New York City. Gray noted that sitting for a long time has previously been linked to heart disease.

Restaino said the goal of his study was to “tease apart the impairments elicited by prolonged sitting.”

To isolate the effects of lengthy stretches of sitting, Restaino and his colleagues had 11 young men engage in some “acute sitting” for six hours. The researchers measured the men’s blood flow and a couple of other heart factors both before the sitting session and afterward.

To keep food from affecting the results, all of the men ate the same breakfast — a quesadilla with pineapple juice — two hours before their sitting episode. They had another meal four hours into the sitting.

The study participants were not supposed to move their legs while they sat, and they were seated so their legs hung above the floor. They were allowed to read or use a computer.

Once their six-hour sitting ended and blood flow and other measurements were completed, the men each took a 10-minute walk. Then, the investigators again performed all of the same measurements.

The researchers found that sitting was bad. It reduced blood flow in two major leg arteries and the men’s calves swelled by almost an inch, on average.

After the stroll — which, based on step counters, was about 1,100 steps in 10 minutes — blood flow and other measures returned to pre-sitting levels, the findings showed.

Noting that this group of 11 men represented “healthy individuals,” Restaino said that in other groups of people, such as the elderly or those with previous heart problems, “I would imagine the impairments would be more exaggerated.”

For people who are less healthy, he added, the ability of blood flow and other measures to rebound to normal might require longer, more intense exercise. But “this is purely speculative” for now, Restaino said.

Gray said: “We know that [blood flow] dysfunction is associated with worse cardiovascular [heart] outcomes in the elderly. But we don’t know if age or duration of the activity required would affect the magnitude of the effects seen here.”

Gray said the small size of the study was “OK” because the authors measured objective endpoints and found big differences with walking.

How long the effects of a short walk will last is unclear.

The direct effect of exercise, according to Gray, appears to be increased levels of nitric oxide, a molecule that triggers blood vessels to open up. That reduces friction on the blood and allows it to flow more easily.

Restaino said another factor is likely the contraction of the muscles that happens while walking, which helps boost circulation.

The bottom line, said Restaino, is that “cumulatively, these effects of a short walk are all playing important roles in improving impairments seen during a prolonged bout of sitting.”

More information

Visit the American Heart Association for more on wellness in the workplace.





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The Future of Dieting Is Personalized Algorithms Based on Your Gut Bacteria

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Your friend has cut out sugar and feels amazing as a result. Another friend, on the other hand, is on what sometimes appears to be a strict all-candy diet and still stays perfectly healthy and trim. And you have tried both of these dietary tactics and have seen no real changes in your own body.

The same could be said for dairy or carbs — whatever the nutrient may be, you likely know from experience that just because some eating habit works for somebody else, that doesn’t necessarily mean that it’ll work for you. Everyone’s body is different, of course, which means everyone’s body responds to food a little differently. And this, some scientists across the globe are now arguing, points to the potential future of healthy eating. The key to fighting the increasing threat posed by diabetes and obesity may be personalized diets — that is, eating plans tailored specifically for each individual — instead of the generalized nutrition guidelines we have now.

The answer is in your gut — more specifically, the trillions of bacteria currently residing there. Two of the scientists currently studying the interaction between the gut microbiome and diet are Eran Segal and Eran Elinav, the biologists behind the Personalized Nutrition Project in Tel Aviv. Preliminary results from their research, presented earlier this summer at the Human Microbiome conference in Germany, suggest that a computer algorithm can predict how individuals’ bodies will respond to certain foods, thus creating a tailored meal plan for each according to his or her own unique bacterial profile.

This project began more than two years ago and has so far included more than 1,000 people. Segal and Elinav first instructed their participants to wear glucose-monitoring devices, which measured and recorded their levels of blood sugar every five minutes for a week; they also used a mobile app to record what and when they ate that week. Altogether, they collected data on more than 50,000 meals and snacks, plus how each person’s blood-glucose levels responded to each food.

Your gut converts the food you eat into sugars, which are subsequently released into the bloodstream; from there, these sugars are either converted to energy or stored away as fat. Certain foods cause too muchsugar to flow into the bloodstream, and this too-high level of glucose in the blood is what can lead to things like diabetes and obesity. But what foods do this? This is part of the point of nutrition guidelines, to recommend the foods least likely to cause this potentially dangerous spike in blood glucose

But from their data, Segal and Elinav could see that the people in their study were responding to similar foods in wildly different ways. “Already, we could see at a very large scale that, indeed, for any food we looked at, we could see a huge variability in the response,” Segal said. “Some people, you give them sugar and they have a very faint response — even to pure sugar. Whereas others, they have a huge response. And this holds for basically every food that we examined.” And there were more surprises. “Some individuals, they eat whole-wheat rice and their blood-sugar levels remain low, and when they eat ice cream they spike,” Segal said. But for others the results showed just the opposite.

Theirs is not the first study to find an individualized response to similar foods. Studies of twins, for instance, have shown that even people with identical DNA sometimes respond differently to the same diet. And so these results, the researchers argue, suggest “that a universal diet, or universal guidelines, they could never work for everybody, because people are different,” Segal said. “General guidelines are going to have limitations, and they might actually be bad for some people.”

But why might this be the case? Segal and Elinav thought that if they could understand the underlying mechanism that might explain these differences in reactions, they could possibly learn to predict them. Their investigation takes a turn here into the gross: They took stool samples from 800 of their participants, sequencing the genes in each person’s DNA, and used this to complete profiles of the bacterial composition of each individual’s gut. (Basically, they knew that a particular gene is present in a particular type of bacteria, so if they found that gene, it means that bacteria is present, too.) They combined this with the records on their glucose responses to certain foods and used the two data sets to create a computer algorithm, which would create a list of foods that would not trigger that spike in blood-glucose levels.

To investigate the algorithm’s accuracy the researchers started the study that would later be presented at the Human Microbiome conference. They used the algorithm to tailor diets for 25 individuals, all of whom had high enough blood-sugar levels to be considered prediabetic. Some of the foods included on the “approved” list were not exactly the foods you might expect. “For some people it included chocolate, ice cream, pizza — things a dietitian would not prescribe,” Segal said. (Plenty of others didn’t, of course, and stuck to things like whole grains or veggies.) For one week they ate according to their personalized food plan; the following week they ate a diet that was similar in total calories consumed and was in line with more typical dietary guidelines for prediabetics. After the week following their personalized diet, fewer individuals experienced those spikes in blood glucose when compared to their week on the standard diet; some of them even saw their blood-sugar levels dip back down to healthy levels.

It’s an intriguing finding, though very much still a preliminary one. More research needs to be done involving many thousands more people, who are followed for a longer period of time, before anything becomes definitive or clear. And it’s also worth noting that other scientists working on the link between the gut microbiome and diet are skeptical of the notion that this research will eventually lead to eating plans tailored for an individual person. Jens Nielsen, a biochemical engineer at Chalmers University of Technology, believes that it’s more likely that this research will eventually lead to groupings of people, categories of individuals who respond to particular foods in similar ways.

Nielsen is co-author of a study published last month in the journal Cell, which found that people with more diverse populations of gut bacteria are healthier even if they are overweight, when compared to people with less diverse bacterial profiles. Within a decade or so, Nielsen expects that his work may be applicable to weight loss. He’s currently working on the inverse of this problem, investigating the microbiomes of children in developing nations who simply cannot put on weight, even when eating foods expressly designed to help them do so.

And Segal and Elinav expect their work, too, will one day be made available to a wider group of people interested in a personalized meal plan, though, again, the practicalities here are undeniably unpleasant. (Musing on future applications of their work, Segal and Elinav could see a world in which it becomes mainstream to mail stool samples into the lab to get diet advice.) We’re still many years away from that, but the more these researchers look into it, the more individual differences they find, each discovery undermining the idea of blanket nutrition guidelines a little further. “The entire nutritional paradigm we all base our decisions on in our study is proven to be at least partially wrong,” Elinav said. “So we are shifting the paradigm to individuals.”

More from Science of Us:

Your Personality Could Be Making You Fat

15 Ways Your Environment Makes You Eat More (or Less)

Watching Cooking Shows Might Lead to Weight Gain

How Many Steps a Day Should You Really Walk?

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Sensitive Blood Test May Help Rule Out Heart Attack

WEDNESDAY, Oct. 7, 2015 (HealthDay News) — A new, highly sensitive blood test may help doctors quickly rule out heart attack for almost two-thirds of people who seek emergency room treatment for chest pain, a new study suggests.

Researchers said their findings could potentially reduce unnecessary hospital admissions and substantially lower health-care costs.

“Until now, there were no quick ways to rule out a heart attack within the emergency department,” said the study’s lead author, Dr. Anoop Shah, from the University of Edinburgh in Scotland.

“Over the last two decades, the number of hospital admissions due to chest pain has tripled. The overwhelming majority of these patients do not have a heart attack,” Shah said.

Assessing a possible heart attack requires lengthy stays in the ER or hospitalization for repeat testing, the study authors pointed out.

The new test is more sensitive than the standard version, Shah’s team said. It can detect far lower blood levels of troponin, a protein released when heart muscle is damaged. The more damage that occurs, the higher blood levels of troponin will be. A slight increase in troponin suggests some damage has occurred, while very high levels indicate a person has had a heart attack, the researchers explained.

Using this new test, doctors could potentially double the number of low-risk patients able to be safely discharged from the emergency room, the researchers reported in the Oct. 8 issue of The Lancet.

“Use of this approach is likely to have major benefits for both patients and health-care providers,” Shah said in a journal news release.

For the study, the researchers measured troponin levels in more than 6,000 patients admitted to the hospital with chest pain, and assessed their risk for heart attack and death from heart attack within 30 days.

The investigators found that 61 percent of the patients with a troponin level below 5 ng/L (nanograms per liter of blood) were at very low risk of heart attack and could have been discharged early, regardless of age, gender, and risk factors for heart disease. One year out, these patients had a three times lower risk of heart attack and cardiac death than those with higher troponin levels, the researchers said.

The authors of an accompanying editorial in the journal said patient follow-up will be needed to validate use of this test in routine practice.

“Trials are needed to assess the safety and effectiveness of clinical pathways that involve no further testing for such patients,” wrote Martin Than from Christchurch Hospital, New Zealand, and colleagues.

More information

The American Heart Association describes the symptoms of heart attack.





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Here’s How to Prevent Runner’s Diarrhea

Illustration: Aad Goudappel

Illustration: Aad Goudappel

I always have to stop at a bathroom on long runs! How can I avoid it?

You’re not alone. Runner’s diarrhea is a real thing. Though doctors aren’t exactly sure why it happens, food does seem to move more quickly through your colon when you run, which can bring on, well, runs of the digestive kind.

Limiting your fiber intake the day before you have an extra-long sweat session can help (that means going easy on normally good-for-you foods like whole grains and beans). So can avoiding caffeine the day you hit the trail or treadmill and refraining from eating two hours prior. Also, be judicious with energy gels, bars and chews; some people find that these products give them digestive problems. Weirdly enough, dehydration can also lead to diarrhea sometimes, so it’s crucial that you load up on water before and after your run.

Try these dietary tweaks before you resort to taking an over-the-counter antidiarrheal medicine—they’re fine in a pinch, but I don’t recommend using them regularly, since they can cause constipation.

Health’s medical editor, Roshini Rajapaksa, MD, is associate professor of medicine at the NYU School of Medicine and co-founder of Tula Skincare.

RELATED:

Your Guide to Running at Any Level

Just 5 Minutes of Running Per Day Could Add Years to Your Life

7 Running Injuries and How to Avoid Them

 




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