barre

The 3 Keys to Healthy Aging After 40, According to Cameron Diaz

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

 

“Around my 40th birthday, I started thinking about what it means to age,” Cameron Diaz writes in the introduction to her latest work, The Longevity Book ($28; amazon.com). Inspired to learn more about how the passage of time affects our bodies, she began traveling the country to consult with top medical experts on the subject. What she learned? It’s the simple things in life that have the greatest effects as we grow older: “Eating nutritious foods, moving often, and getting enough rest are the keys to healthy aging,” she concludes. In the excerpt below, Diaz describes her ideal formula for a “most perfect” day.

I wake up rested from a night of sleep and dreams. The first thing I do is make my bed, smoothing the covers down with purpose, because this is one of the rituals that, for me, marks the beginning of a bright new day. After I brush my teeth, I’ll drink a liter of water, and then I’ll meditate for 20 minutes, because it relaxes my body and brain, putting me in a calm, energetic state. Then it’s time for food, some protein and some carbs and some fat—perhaps a piece of avocado toast or a bowl of savory oatmeal. After that, I work out. This whole routine takes about an hour and 15 minutes from start to finish, and the balance of its components—rest, nutrition, and movement—is what I have found to be the perfect formula for getting me energized, excited, and ready for the day ahead.

RELATED: 10 Secrets of People Who Age Gracefully

Throughout my day, I try to be conscious of my food intake and my movement. How I feel is a good indicator of whether or not I’ve given myself adequate rest, nutrition, and activity. If I’m active without getting enough food, I’ll feel depleted. If I eat too much and move too little, my stomach will hurt or I will feel slow and weighted down. If I move throughout the day, and I fuel that movement with consistent healthy snacks, my energy stays up.

I eat dinner on the earlier side, because I don’t like to go to sleep with a full stomach. In the evening it is time to reverse that energy flow and start to wind down. So I avoid heavy foods before bedtime. I make sure my room is nice and dark. I keep all those electronics and their blinking blue and green and red lights out of my sleeping space. I create the best setting for rest I can give myself, so that I’ll have energy for the next day. And in the morning, I wake up, and the process begins again.

RELATED: 17 Ways to Age-Proof Your Brain

Of course this perfect day is imaginary, because no day is perfect. But any day that I can implement some version of this formula is a better day than the ones I can’t. If I don’t sleep well, if I miss breakfast or eat something that looked rich and delicious on a menu but turns out to be tooooo rich and delicious, if I miss my workout because I have a stack of meetings that seem more pressing at the moment—well, I suffer for it, just as we all suffer for choosing not to take care of ourselves. And only one element of the trifecta of strength is not enough, and two out of three won’t cut it, either. Letting these basic needs become imbalanced hurts our hearts, hurts our brains, and speeds up the rate of aging in our cells and organs. No day is perfect, but some days seem to inch closer than others.

Excerpted from The Longevity Book: The Science of Aging, the Biology of Strength, and the Privilege of Time by Cameron Diaz and Sandra Bark, © 2016 by Cameron Diaz. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins.

 




from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/23dBKdn

I Took Gwyneth Paltrow’s Healthy Living Advice for a Week

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

A few weeks ago, I asked my little sister if she had ever heard of vagina steaming.

Text-with-Teeny


She isn’t the most pop-culture-savvy 19-year-old, but even for her, “vagina steaming” is synonymous with the name Gwyneth. Last year, Gwyneth Paltrow touted its alleged restorative benefits on her lifestyle website, goop, and was widely ridiculed for suggesting women should spend 50 bucks to blow hot steam on their lady parts.

This wasn’t the first (or last) time the actress and lifestyle guru’s advice was subject to scrutiny. She’s known for her hybrid vegan, gluten-free, macrobiotic diet, she indulges in many holistic healing and detoxifying treatments that fall into a scientific gray area, and she frequently recommends outrageously expensive products (think $185 bobby pins and $45 socks).

But skepticism from science experts and fans hasn’t stopped the star. Her 2013 cookbook, It’s All Good ($20; amazon.com) was a New York Times Best Seller, and her follow-up, It’s All Easy: Delicious Weekday Recipes for the Super-Busy Home Cook ($20; amazon.com) comes out April 12. She also recently released a much-ballyhooed organic skin and beauty line with Juice Beauty. And the goop brand, as far as anyone can tell, is thriving.

So as polarizing as Paltrow’s lavish, all-natural, spa-heavy lifestyle may be, a lot of people are taking her advice to heart—and for a week, I did too. (No, this is not a tale of getting my you-know-what steamed—that’s actually one of the 5 Things You Definitely Should Not Be Doing to Your Vagina.) I walked away with hydrated skin, an offensively expensive grocery bill, a slightly tighter tush, the stomach flu, and the urge to mail Paltrow a handwritten apology letter.

Here’s why I semi-loved the Paltrow life, for better or worse.

Day 1: Baking, burgers, and bath time

First step to channeling Gwyneth: meal prep—which I knew would be a huge challenge, because I’m pretty clueless in the kitchen and I rarely craft meals that take longer than 15 to 20 minutes. I decided to roughly follow the 2016 goop Detox as a jumping off point. I switched out certain recipes and relied on leftovers to save myself time and money, and I also adjusted for personal pickiness (curry, yuck) with alternative dishes from goop or It’s All Good. 

My boyfriend helped me with grocery shopping at Whole Foods. Several embarrassing Google searches later—Is Himalayan sea salt the same as regular salt? What does miso look like? Where can you buy Moon Juice?—we emerged $146 poorer, sans Moon Juice.

When we got home, I put him to work on the salmon burgers, which required skinning the fish and putting it in the blender. I opted to keep my hands fish-gut-free and bake instead. I took a stab at these zucchini and carrot muffins, made primarily from gluten-free baking mix and applesauce.

Salmon-burgers

The end result: dinner was divine. The salmon burgers were filling and flavorful, and the side salad crunchy and light. And with an extra few teaspoons of cinnamon, the zucchini bites were…edible.

To wrap up the evening, I drew myself a hot bath. I hate baths; I overheat quickly and see no value in pruning in my own filth. But Paltrow takes one every night with Epsom salts. (On the plus side, it’s a Health-approved move; a soothing bath is a known stress-reliever.)

The 6 minutes I lasted weren’t awful, to my surprise.

Breakfast: Scrambled eggs with avocado on Ezekiel bread
Lunch: Grilled chicken with steamed bok choy
Dinner: Five-spice salmon burgers with Asian detox salad

Day 2, part 1: Breakfast 

Paltrow revealed on goop that her new year’s resolution is to meditate more. I woke a few minutes earlier than usual to try it myself. I didn’t have high hopes that I’d find Zen; I get antsy quickly, and I’m not good at letting go of nervous thoughts. But it was still worth a shot: Mindfulness meditation has been linked to lowering blood pressure, easing anxiety, and even aiding digestion. My coworker recommended the Meditation Studio by Gaiam app, which features a 5-minute practice for beginners. It took some major concentration to get through those 300 seconds.

Breakfast called for GP’s morning “smoothie.” The quotation marks should have been warning enough that Gwyneth’s version of a smoothie would be nothing like the fruity, frosty ones most of us enjoy. I skimmed the recipe with horror: it called for several ingredients I’d never heard of, including vanilla mushroom protein powder, cordyceps (?), and sex dust (?!). And that’s when I finally realized what Moon Juice is: it’s a company that sells organic juices, milks, and snacks, as well as supplements and several “dusts” meant to be mixed into cold or hot liquid. Moon Juice’s products are sold in the goop Shop and on moonjuiceshop.com. I placed an order for each of the tiny, expensive jars required for this recipe, and had the chia pudding recommended in the detox for breakfast instead. At first, the mixture looked gloppy and gray. The reality? It was so yummy and dessert-like that I went to bed excited to make it again.

Day 2, part 2: Working out with Tracy Anderson

Eating like Gwyneth obviously tried my patience, but when it came time to sweat like Gwyneth, I felt back in my element. She has been a Tracy Anderson loyalist for nearly a decade, taking five to six classes with the fitness guru each week. For the unfamiliar, Anderson is a fitness instructor (and a Health contributor!) whose method builds long, lean muscles through dance-inspired cardio and toning exercises. Being a former dancer myself, I was dying to try it out, so I signed up for a 7 p.m. class.

I took a spot in the front, introduced myself to the instructor, and followed along. Tracy Anderson teachers don’t talk during the class—you hear nothing but good music. Space heaters warm the room, where chic clients dance in unison like a music video. Even as a total newbie, I was immediately hooked. I left feeling a gentle soreness in every mini muscle and forced myself into another lavender bath before bed.

Breakfast: Chia pudding
Lunch: Soba noodle salad with grilled chicken
Dinner: Leftover salmon burgers with Asian detox salad

RELATED15 Gluten-Free Recipes

Day 3, part 1: Beauty and brain dust

“TRACY ANDERSON” flashed on my cellphone screen when my alarm went off at 6. I dragged myself out of bed, heated up a cup water, stirred in fennel, coriander, and cumin seeds, then booted up my laptop while my beverage cooled. Normally I hate tea—I think it tastes like warm, dirty pond water. But this DIY breakfast beverage was mild enough that the flavor didn’t bother me at all. In fact, it was energizing.

But it didn’t top the energy I had after doing a Tracy Anderson workout from the comfort of my studio apartment. I pulled ankle weights from my drawer of workout gadgets and streamed the online master class. Now I really felt like a badass—it was only 7 a.m. and I had hot tea, a workout, and soon enough, GP’s morning “smoothie” already checked off my to-do list.

Yep, the Moon Juice holistic supplements had arrived. The smoothie on the website appeared light and creamy, and I was excited to finally try it myself.

Moon-Juice

…until I tried it myself.

The powders were messy, brown, and smelled like cardboard. My kitchen counter looked like the aftermath of a science project, which made sense because the smoothie tasted like a science project. I plugged my nose, forced the rest down, and sponged up the Brain Dust residue before getting ready for work.

Smoothie

A stale, lingering aftertaste stayed with me until later that day, when a special delivery from our assistant beauty editor arrived at my desk: a colorful selection of makeup and skincare products from Gwyneth’s collaboration with Juice Beauty. Being the makeup minimalist that I am, I saved the foundations and funky lip shades for later, and played it safe with a sheer gloss. The Naked hue instantly became my go-to. It was smooth, non-sticky, and I didn’t feel like I needed a layer of lip balm underneath.

Dinner was cauliflower risotto, followed by a meditation session and another in-and-out dip in the tub. Then it hit me: these goop recipes had been time-consuming to prep, but hey, I did it—and they’d mostly turned out delicious, save for the “smoothie.” And the baths, filth and all, were beginning to feel like a mini reward after a long day. I started keeping pouches of seeds in my desk drawer to make tea at work. Having morning and night me-time made me feel like 140 bucks. (Actually, that’s just how much the goop by Juice Beauty replenishing night cream costs.) I was catching the goop fever.

Holding-products

Breakfast: GP’s morning smoothie
Lunch: Leftover soba noodle salad with grilled chicken
Dinner: Cauliflower and spinach risotto

Cauliflower-risotto

Day 4: Actual goop fever 

My alarm went off at 5:45 with a reminder note that I had a Tracy Anderson class at 7. My body felt achy and stiff—residual effects of late-night meal prepping and crack-of-dawn living room workouts, I assumed.

An hour later I had settled into a spot in the heated studio, donning zebra-print leggings and a red tank. But today the ankle weights felt really heavy. My temples pounded to the music. The heat felt nauseating.

Suddenly, as I extended my leg behind me one of Tracy’s classic butt-busting moves, I was sure I was about to throw up. I picked myself up off the floor, weights still Velcroed around my ankles, and took a spot on the bench outside the studio door with my head between my legs.

“Especially hard routine this week?” asked the girl at the front desk.

“I think I’m just overheated,” I muttered.

I slogged through the final 20 minutes before making my way to the office. I had just enough time to hit my regular gym that’s in the building to use the sauna—a page from Paltrow’s recovery playbook—and to take a shower. (There’s some research that suggests saunas may help ease cold and flu symptoms, but my one-time effort was certainly not enough to prove that to be true. Plus, no one wants to sit near a sweaty, sick person.) A quick rinse, blow dry, coating of Juice gloss later, I settled at my desk with a chia bowl and cup of tea and powered through my day job.

When lunch rolled around, I took one look at the slimy, sushi-like nori wraps staring at me from my Tupperware. Me? No appetite? Blasphemy. This never happens. Something was up. The rest of the day felt like a blur before I could finally head home and curl up in a feverish fetal position until the morning.

Breakfast: Chia pudding
Lunch: Kimchi and chicken nori wraps
Dinner: N/A

RELATED: 18 Reasons Why Your Stomach Hurts

Day 5: The home visit

I trudged through another day like I was straight out of the Walking Dead. Against my better judgement, I still went to work. I bailed on the meal plan and packed plastic snack bags of saltines instead. Nine long hours later, I arrived home, found my candy-cane print Christmas pajama pants, and fell asleep.

The sound of my iPhone jingle startled me awake. It was my doorman calling.

“June’s here,” he said.

“I don’t know a June.”

“O.K., should I tell June to leave?”

“Can you ask her why she’s here?”

“She says she’s the nurse.”

Shit.

There’s a trendy service called a “vitamin IV infusion” that celebrities pay for that purportedly makes skin glow, provides an energy boost, eases sore muscles, and cures hangovers. And it’s exactly what it sounds like (aside from complete BS): A nurse comes to your home and inserts an IV with a vitamin and antioxidant concoction into your arm, and you sit there on the couch while it drips into your bloodstream.

Well, Gwyneth does it. It sounds crazy, but as long as a a real MD is in charge, it’s unlikely to cause you any harm and may make you feel a little better. Minimal sleuthing earlier in the week led me to the company she uses, The I.V. Doc. I spoke to a doctor over the phone, scheduled a home visit from a registered nurse—and there I was days later.

The embarrassment of introducing myself to Nurse June in PJ bottoms and an oversized sorority t-shirt quickly subsided when I realized the next 45 minutes could be the stomach-flu miracle I’d been hoping for.

“JUNE! Yes, send her up,” I said before scurrying to make my bed and change the channel. (Jason Segel’s nude scene in Forgetting Sarah Marshall was on TV.)

I heard a knock and greeted June at the door. Mary Poppins-style, she pulled an extendable IV drip out of a black bag and set it up next to the couch.

“I’m squeamish with needles,” I warned her before offering up every detail of my tummy woes.

All smiles, June listened intently while she checked my blood pressure and hooked up the IV. “This will be good for you. This is all about hydration,” she assured. “This is a bag of electrolytes and water, and I’m adding an antioxidant, and vitamins C and B12.”

“So you’re putting a Gatorade in my arm?”

She laughed, but it was a serious question.

Things were going smoothly for several minutes—until all of a sudden I felt warm. Then hot. Then all of the hairs on my arms stood up. “You’re looking a little flushed,” June said calmly. “Look away from the IV and take a deep breath.”

IV-Doc

The feeling passed. I had a slight vasovagal reaction, she explained, which causes your heart rate and blood pressure to drop as a response to certain triggers (like blood or needles, for me). We moved on to talking about life and work, and Nurse June assured me I wasn’t the only one who’d ever experienced a dizzy, light-headed feeling during the treatment. (A former Miss America contestant almost took a woozy spill recently while getting an infusion, she said, without naming names.)

Whether it was the infusion or my pal June, I stopped shivering, found myself chatty and giggly, and fell asleep that night. I didn’t wake up once with stomach pains. 

Breakfast: Crackers
Lunch: Crackers
Dinner: Crackers

Day 6: Recovery Mode

I didn’t want to feel better after the infusion, simply out of stubbornness and the fact that I have little faith in pseudosciencey, A-list wellness treatments. But I’d be lying if I said I didn’t wake up feeling 100% better. Maybe it was all in my head (more likely, it was just a 24-hour bug)—but whatever it was helped me do a 180 from how I’d felt on day 5.

I plugged my nose through another smoothie and experimented with taking a bath before work. I brought some life back to my face with the enriching face oil, topped with Juice foundation, a little mascara, and a brighter pink lip.

I even felt well enough to stream another Tracy Anderson master class, although I skipped the cardio portion for fear of diving back in too quickly. In order to spoil myself just a little bit more, I made coconut flour pancakes that were just plain enough to be gentle on my digestive system, but still fluffy and satiating.

Breakfast: GP’s morning “smoothie”
Lunch: Chicken noodle soup
Dinner: Coconut flour pancakes

RELATED: Lose 10 Inches in 10 Days With Tracy Anderson

Day 7: Detoxified

As I toasted the final hours with a dinner of Gwyneth’s favorite slow-cooked turkey ragu and a dirty vodka martini, it hit me that there’s some good in the Paltrow health scripture. I did feel, er, detoxified, and not at all deprived. I felt energized, sans stomach bug. I felt exhausted, yet accomplished, after sticking to a routine.

Sure, Gwyneth Paltrow may occasionally come off as tone deaf or insensitive. (See: “I am who I am. I can’t pretend to be somebody who makes $25,000 a year.”) Her extravagant wellness regimen and expensive, in-depth cooking style is far from realistic for someone with a traditional full-time job and salary. Her practices aren’t always medically sound. But I already planned on the salmon burgers making an encore in my dinner repertoire in the upcoming week. Another batch of Chia pudding was gelatinizing in the fridge. I was thrilled that my Tracy Anderson online subscription would last a month.

Before I kicked off the week I put a quote from Paltrow on my fridge: “I’m all goop all the time, baby. For better or worse.”

Well, I’ll never be Gwyneth Paltrow—but I’m all right living with just a smidgen of goop in me (baby), for better or worse. Just take everything with a grain of Himalayan sea salt.




from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/23dhh8s

Bedbugs Widespread in Low-Income Housing, Study Finds

TUESDAY, April 5, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Bedbug infestations are common in low-income apartments, and residents are often unaware of the problem, researchers report.

In the study of nearly 2,400 individual low-income apartments in New Jersey, more than one in 10 were found to have bedbugs. And buildings with high tenant turnover had more infestations, researchers said.

This type of research is vital for controlling bedbug infestations because it “can be used to target our education and bedbug prevention efforts to the most vulnerable communities,” said study author Changlu Wang, of Rutgers University.

Wang’s team examined individual residences in 43 low-income apartment buildings in the state. The investigators found that the overall rate of bedbug infestation was 12 percent, but varied from building to building.

According to the findings:

  • Half of residents with bedbug infestations were unaware of it.
  • Women were more likely to report bedbug bites and more likely to be concerned when they learned their apartment was infested.
  • Infestations were more common in the apartments of blacks than of Hispanics or whites.

The study was published April 5 in the Journal of Medical Entomology.

The researchers said they detected nearly 75 percent of infestations with brief visual inspections that took 10 minutes or less per apartment. The cost would be “about $12 per apartment for labor based on a $50/hour labor rate,” Wang and colleagues said in a journal news release.

The small flat insects feed on the blood of people and animals while they sleep.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more about bedbugs.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1VtlC4R

Harmful Artery-Stiffening Seen in Healthy 40-Year-Olds

TUESDAY, April 5, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Even healthy, young adults may have hardening of the arteries that can harm their brain health, a new study suggests.

Brain changes that can lead to mental decline and Alzheimer’s disease later in life have been found in people in their 40s, the researchers reported.

The new study shows “that increasing arterial stiffness is detrimental to the brain, and that increasing stiffness and brain injury begin in early middle life, before we commonly think of prevalent diseases such as atherosclerosis, coronary artery disease or stroke having an impact,” said study author Pauline Maillard. She is a researcher in the department of neurology and Center for Neuroscience at the University of California, Davis.

“These results may be a new avenue of treatment to sustain brain health,” she added in a university news release.

The study included about 1,900 participants in the Framingham Heart Study who underwent MRI brain scans and an assessment of their arteries.

Among healthy young adults, higher levels of artery stiffness were associated with reduced amounts of white matter and decreased integrity of gray matter in the brain. White matter fibers carry nerve impulses and connect different brain regions to each other, while gray matter is the outer layer of the brain.

The study found these brain changes among people in their 40s, which is much younger than previously recorded, the researchers said.

The study authors also said that elevated arterial stiffness is the earliest symptom of systolic high blood pressure. Systolic is the top number in a blood pressure reading and refers to the amount of pressure in the arteries during contraction of the heart muscle.

However, the association seen in the study does not prove a cause-and-effect relationship. Further research is needed to learn more about the link between arterial stiffness and brain changes, the study authors said.

“Our results emphasize the need for primary and secondary prevention of vascular stiffness and remodeling as a way to protect brain health,” Maillard said, adding that this must start early in life.

The study was published recently in the online edition of the journal Stroke.

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about atherosclerosis.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1VtlDFQ

Sleepless Nights Linked to Brain Changes in Study

By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
HealthDay Reporter

TUESDAY, April 5, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Insomnia is linked with abnormalities in the brain’s white matter — the tissues that form connections and carry information between different parts of the brain, a small Chinese study suggests.

The researchers said these disruptions occur in areas of the brain involved in the regulation of sleep and wakefulness as well as cognitive function.

The researchers explained that white matter tracts are bundles made up of long fibers of nerve cells that connect one part of the brain to another. “If white matter tracts are impaired, communication between brain regions is disrupted,” said researcher Shumei Li. She’s from the department of Medical Imaging at Guangdong No. 2 Provincial People’s Hospital, Guangzhou, China.

Although the study found an association between white tract matter abnormalities and insomnia, it wasn’t designed to prove cause-and-effect.

People with primary insomnia have ongoing trouble falling asleep or staying asleep. This nightly tossing and turning isn’t related to another medical condition or known cause, according to the researchers.

It can lead to daytime sleepiness and cognitive impairment. Some people with primary insomnia also suffer from depression and anxiety disorders, the researchers said.

Up to 5 percent of adults have this sleep disorder, but it’s unclear exactly why they can’t sleep and how the condition affects their brain, the researchers noted.

“Insomnia is a remarkably prevalent disorder,” said Li. “However, its causes and consequences remain elusive.”

For the study, the researchers recruited 23 patients with primary insomnia and 30 healthy volunteers. All of the participants completed surveys that enabled study authors to evaluate their mental status and sleep patterns.

Using an advanced MRI technique called diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), the researchers also looked at the pattern of water movement in white matter to identify any irregularities.

They found that participants with insomnia had significantly reduced white matter “integrity” in several regions of the brain. One area was the thalamus, which regulates consciousness, sleep and alertness. Another was the corpus callosum, the area that bridges the two halves of the brain, the study authors said.

“The involvement of the thalamus in the pathology of insomnia is particularly critical, since the thalamus houses important constituents of the body’s biological clock,” said Li.

Previous studies have shown that sleep deprivation can affect a variety of brain functions, Li pointed out.

She noted her team’s findings suggest that long-term insomnia could accompany other mental health issues, such as depression and anxiety.

“Our results can potentially provide the evidence about how the lack of sleep may lead to the impairment of white matter related to emotional or cognitive disorders,” Li said.

Those who had more severe cases of insomnia or suffered from the disorder for longer periods of time had greater white matter abnormalities. The researchers suggested this could be due to the loss of myelin — the protective coating around the nerve fibers in white matter.

The study findings were published online on April 5 in the journal Radiology.

The brain is constantly creating new connections while unused synapses degenerate, according to Dr. Douglas Moul, a senior sleep psychiatrist at the Cleveland Clinic.

“The brain sets up new connections, reformats, and breaks down connections on a daily basis — breaking down and tearing up connections are daily brain processes,” he said.

It’s still unclear, however, if treating insomnia would restore lost connections, Li said. “This is a very interesting and open question,” she said. “We are also very interested in knowing whether this damage is irreversible or not if the insomnia gets cleared up. But our current study is still not enough to answer this question.”

The Cleveland Clinic’s Moul said this study falls short of helping scientists gain a better understanding of why sleep is so important. “Sleep is a time for brain maintenance and repair,” he said. “Studies have demonstrated that brain maintenance and repair time is more prominent during sleep.”

However, he pointed out that the study doesn’t provide clues about why people need sleep.

More information

The U.S. National Sleep Foundation provides more information on insomnia.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1VtlBOj

VIDEO: Hamstring stretch

 

8. hamstrings website thumbnail.jpg

WH&F Head Trainer Sheena-Lauren helps us perfect shows us how to get more range and motion in our hamstrings.



Source : WHF TV http://ift.tt/1TxLEnx

Vitamin D Boosts Heart Function in Study

MONDAY, April 4, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Regular doses of vitamin D3 may improve heart function in heart failure patients, a new British study suggests.

“These findings could make a significant difference to the care of heart failure patients,” said study leader Dr. Klaus Witte, from the University of Leeds School of Medicine. “It is the first evidence that vitamin D3 can improve heart function of people with heart muscle weakness — known as heart failure.”

The study included more than 160 patients who had pacemakers and/or were receiving blood pressure drugs known as ACE inhibitors or beta blockers.

The study participants took either vitamin D or inactive placebo pills once a day for a year.

The researchers explained that they avoided using a calcium-based vitamin D supplement, because calcium can cause other problems for heart failure patients.

Heart pumping function improved from 26 percent to 34 percent in patients who took vitamin D, while there was no change among those who took the placebo pills, the investigators found.

The study was presented Monday at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology in Chicago. Research presented at medical meetings is typically considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

The researchers suggested that the improvement seen in some of the patients who took vitamin D might reduce their need for an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD). An ICD is a device that detects dangerous heart rhythm problems and delivers a shock to restore a normal heartbeat.

“ICDs are expensive and involve an operation. If we can avoid an ICD implant in just a few patients, then that is a boost to patients and [health systems] as a whole,” Witte said in a university news release.

Heart failure affects about 23 million people worldwide, the study authors said.

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about heart failure.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1URqMcl

Train Like a Spartan With This 4-Part Run

You’ve probably seen ads for Spartan Races, and other obstacles courses designed to challenge your endurance and fortitude. (Picture wall climbs and freezing water plunges!) Training for these events can whip you into killer shape. But they require a lot of planning, money, and sometimes travel. That’s why I developed a similar-style workout you can do anywhere. This circuit combines cardio and strength training, and is guaranteed to bring out your inner warrior (without all the mud).

Start by dividing your runeither outdoors or on a treadmillinto four segments. (So if you’re running 4 miles, carve it up into 1-mile legs.) Then as you complete each leg, do the exercises described below.

RELATED: This 9-Year-Old Girl Ran a 24-Hour Navy SEALS Obstacle Course

Part 1

Repeat 2 times

10 Squats

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jen Cohen

Stand with your feet slightly wider than your shoulders. Push your butt back and squat down until you are parallel with the floor. Push through your heels to stand back up to starting position.

10 Reverse lunges

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jen Cohen

Stand with your feet shoulder-width apart. Drop your right foot  behind you and sink into your left hip. Bring your right foot forward to meet your left, and repeat on the other side. (Weights are optional.)

RELATED: 10 Fun Ways to Get Fit Without a Gym

Part 2

Repeat 2 times

5 Push-ups

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jen Cohen

Get into a plank position with your hands shoulder-width apart. Keeping your core tight and your body in a straight line, lower down as far as you can. Press back up while engaging your chest, arms, abs, and legs to return to your starting position. If needed, you can drop to your knees, but make sure that your body still forms in a straight line from the knees up.

5 Knees-to-elbows

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jen Cohen

Get into a plank position with your hands shoulder-width apart. Bring your right knee toward your left elbow, while engaging your core, then return it to the ground. Repeat on your left side. Continue alternating until you’ve completed 5 reps on each side.

RELATED: An 8-Move Circuit for People Who Hate Cardio

Part 3

Repeat 2 times

10 Curtsy lunges

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Jen Cohen

Start with your feet shoulder-width apart. Lift your right leg and step back and to the left as far as you can. Make sure that your left knee stays at a 90-degree angle and doesn’t go past your toes. Push through your left leg to bring your right leg back to the starting position and repeat on the other side. Continue alternating until you’ve completed 10 reps per leg. (Weights are optional.)

10 Single-leg toe touches

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jen Cohen

Stand with your feet shoulder-width apart, knees slightly bent, chest out, and shoulders back. To begin, lift your right leg and keep your weight on your left leg. From here, keeping your chest out and shoulders back, reach down to touch your left toe. Your left leg should stay slightly bent throughout the movement, but should not change position from the start to finish of the exercise. Come back up without allowing your right leg to touch down, and repeat until you’ve completed 10 reps on your left leg. When you’re finished, repeat on your other leg. (Weights are optional.)

RELATED: A Fast 6-Move Circuit to Get You Total-Body Toned

Part 4

Repeat 2 times each

30-second Plank

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jen Cohen

Get into a plank position with your hands shoulder-width apart, abs tight, and body in a straight line. Hold for 30 seconds.

30-second Squat hold

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jen Cohen

Get into a squat position with your feet slightly wider than shoulder width, toes flared out, and your knees above your toes. Hold for 30 seconds.

For more workouts like this, check out A Fat-Burning Treadmill Workout That’s Actually Fun!

Jennifer Cohen is a leading fitness authority, TV personality, entrepreneur and best-selling author of the new book, Strong is the New Skinny. With her signature, straight-talking approach to wellness, Jennifer was the featured trainer on The CW’s Shedding for the Wedding, mentoring the contestants’ to lose hundreds of pounds before their big day, and she appears regularly on NBC’s Today Show, Extra, The Doctors and Good Morning America. Connect with Jennifer on FacebookTwitterG+ and on Pinterest.




from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1RURyg4

More People Surviving Sudden Liver Failure

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, April 4, 2016 (HealthDay News) — The chances of surviving acute liver failure have improved significantly over the past 16 years, a new study finds.

In fact, 21-day patient survival increased from about 59 percent in 1998 to 75 percent in 2013, researchers found. Better diagnosis and treatment may account for this advance, they said.

“Overall survival and transplant-free survival have improved, while the number of patients requiring transplantation has declined,” said lead researcher Dr. William Lee, a liver specialist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas.

Acute liver failure, though rare, affects young people and is often fatal, he said. “It involves the rapid destruction of liver cells by either drugs or viruses, such as hepatitis A or B, resulting in loss of consciousness and failure of multiple organ systems,” Lee said.

The main cause of acute liver failure in the United States is acetaminophen (Tylenol) overdose, some of which are suicides, but many are unintentional overdoses, he said.

Acute liver failure can quickly be fatal because the liver performs many functions. For example, the liver removes bacteria and toxins from the blood, helps prevent infections, processes medications and nutrients from food and hormones, produces proteins that help blood clot, and stores vitamins, minerals, fats and sugars for later use, according to the U.S. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.

There are few therapies for acute liver failure. Although treatment in intensive care units has improved in the past 16 years, “there is no single reason for this improvement that we could identify,” Lee said.

“We speculate that this improved care of the comatose patient is possibly due to less use of blood products, better blood pressure support measures, ventilation and the use of N-acetylcysteine, which is the antidote for acetaminophen but may have other beneficial properties as well,” he said.

“Perhaps less is more, that is, careful management can improve outcomes and does not necessarily involve high-level intensive care procedures,” Lee said.

The report was published April 4 in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

For the study, Lee and his colleagues reviewed data on more than 2,000 patients. All had acute liver failure between 1998 and 2013. The average age of the study patients was 39 years old. The researchers focused on whether features of acute liver failure or outcomes had changed.

Lee’s team found that while the causes and severity of acute liver failure hadn’t changed, survival had improved significantly, even without a liver transplant.

Transplant-free survival was 33 percent in 1998. In 2013, it increased to 61 percent, the researchers said.

The improved survival of patients with acute liver failure is due, in part, to increased awareness of the condition by emergency room doctors and better care in the intensive care unit, said Dr. David Bernstein, chief of the division of hepatology at Northwell Health in Manhasset, N.Y.

“These findings are real,” said Bernstein, who was not involved with the study. “It’s one area where education and technology have come together to improve care in a condition that is essentially always fatal.”

More information

For more on the liver, visit the American Liver Foundation.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1V5ek8x

Shorter, Intensive Radiation Works for Prostate Cancer: Study

MONDAY, April 4, 2016 (HealthDay News) — A slightly higher dose of radiation therapy for early stage prostate cancer may reduce treatment time without compromising effectiveness, researchers report.

The study included about 1,100 men with early-stage prostate cancer that had not spread beyond the gland. Half received the traditional radiation therapy program of 41 treatments over eight weeks, while the others received slightly higher doses during 28 treatments over about 5.5 weeks.

After five years, cancer-free survival rates were just over 85 percent for those in the traditional group and just over 86 percent for those in the shorter treatment group, while overall survival rates were 93.2 percent and 92.5 percent, respectively.

“This study has implications for public policy,” said lead investigator Dr. W. Robert Lee. He is a professor at the Duke Cancer Institute’s department of radiation oncology, in Durham, N.C.

“Because the shorter regimen has advantages such as greater patient convenience and lower costs, it’s important to establishing whether we can cure as many patients with the shorter regimen. Our study provides that information for the first time,” he added in a university news release.

“An estimated 220,000 men are expected to be newly diagnosed with prostate cancer each year in the United States, and the majority will have early-stage disease at low risk for recurrence,” Lee said.

The study, published April 4 in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, was partly funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health and the U.S. National Cancer Institute.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more on prostate cancer.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1S4AnFG