Ole Rang: Administrateur

Nombre de messages: 7017 Date d'inscription: 16/09/2004
 | Sujet: Re: Sante Mer 5 Mar à 11:49 | |
| oh! ca semble interessant ... merci  |
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Mina

Nombre de messages: 3705 Localisation: Sweetzerland Date d'inscription: 22/09/2004
 | Sujet: Re: Sante Mer 5 Mar à 15:50 | |
| de rien... il m'a boulversée... écrit y'a trèèès longtemps (1949 !), mais très visionnaire... la réécriture du passé, les guerres vides de sens pour faire marcher l'industrie, la drogue pour les gens, les "télé-écrans" chez tout le monde qu'on ne peut pas éteindre... ça fait flipper. tu vas adorer je suis sûre. |
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Ole Rang: Administrateur

Nombre de messages: 7017 Date d'inscription: 16/09/2004
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Mina

Nombre de messages: 3705 Localisation: Sweetzerland Date d'inscription: 22/09/2004
 | Sujet: Re: Sante Mar 1 Avr à 12:26 | |
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Ole Rang: Administrateur

Nombre de messages: 7017 Date d'inscription: 16/09/2004
 | Sujet: Re: Sante Mar 1 Avr à 13:38 | |
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Ole Rang: Administrateur

Nombre de messages: 7017 Date d'inscription: 16/09/2004
 | Sujet: Re: Sante Jeu 10 Avr à 8:12 | |
| Morgellons DiseaseJe ne sais plus où... je t'avais parle de cette nouvelle maladie et voila que je trouve dans les news qu'une femme a fait du terrorisme avec la maladie: http://www.aliceechonews.com/articles/2008/04/02/local_news/news02.txtvoila la description de la maladie: "Morgellons is an unexplained and debilitating condition that has emerged as a public health concern…Persons who suffer from this condition report a range of coetaneous symptoms including crawling, biting and stinging sensations; granules, threads or black speck-like materials on or beneath the skin; and/or skin lesions (e.g., rashes or sores) and some sufferers also report systemic manifestations such as fatigue, mental confusion, short term memory loss, joint pain and changes in vision." |
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Ole Rang: Administrateur

Nombre de messages: 7017 Date d'inscription: 16/09/2004
 | Sujet: Re: Sante Jeu 12 Juin à 17:21 | |
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Ole Rang: Administrateur

Nombre de messages: 7017 Date d'inscription: 16/09/2004
 | Sujet: Re: Sante Mer 17 Déc à 14:31 | |
| il y a des cosmetiques (lotions, cremes) qui contienent des sortes d'hormones et ce n'est pas liste dans les ingredients!!! | Citation: | Breast cancer patients who apply moisturizers may be dosing themselves with estrogen without even knowing it, investigators reported at a breast cancer symposium in San Antonio.
Dr. Adrienne Olson, with Breastlink in Hawthorne, California, and colleagues analyzed 16 widely available moisturizers for estrogen-like compounds.
None of the creams analyzed noted any estrogen content in their list of ingredients. Even so, six samples contained estriol or estrone. |
http://naturalhealthnews.blogspot.com/ |
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Mina

Nombre de messages: 3705 Localisation: Sweetzerland Date d'inscription: 22/09/2004
 | Sujet: Re: Sante Ven 19 Déc à 13:41 | |
| je savais pour la crème solaire (et là c'est la merde...)... moi je me fournis chez Body Shop, en espérant que c'est clean... plus tard je ferai ptet mes pots moi-même ! _________________ Bring me Solo. And a cookie.
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Ole Rang: Administrateur

Nombre de messages: 7017 Date d'inscription: 16/09/2004
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Ole Rang: Administrateur

Nombre de messages: 7017 Date d'inscription: 16/09/2004
 | Sujet: Re: Sante Jeu 4 Juin à 8:27 | |
| Doctors warn of 'mobile phone elbow'Too much mobile phone use can lead to an overextension nerves, and painful condition which leaves a tingling or numb sensation from the elbow to the fingers, according to orthopaedic specialists. They are reporting cases of mobile phone elbow, in which patients damage a main nerve in their arm by bending their elbows too tightly for too long. ...... The condition is known to doctors as cubital tunnel syndrome and sufferers experience weakness in their hands and have difficulty opening jars, typing, writing, or playing instruments. ...... http://www.telegraph.co.uk/scienceandtechnology/technology/technologynews/5439991/Doctors-warn-of-mobile-phone-elbow.html |
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Ole Rang: Administrateur

Nombre de messages: 7017 Date d'inscription: 16/09/2004
 | Sujet: Re: Sante Ven 10 Juil à 16:17 | |
|  Scientists tracked 76 rhesus monkeys for as long as 20 years. The one on the left is on a reduced-calorie regimen, the right on a normal diet. | Citation: | Permanent diet may equal longer life
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Evidence has been mounting for years that the practice of caloric restriction -- essentially, going on a permanent diet -- greatly reduces the risk of age-related diseases and even postpones death. It has been shown to significantly extend the lives of yeast, worms, flies, spiders, fish, mice and rats.
Now, in a much-anticipated study funded by the National Institutes of Health, many of the same benefits have been demonstrated in primates, the best evidence yet that caloric restriction would help people.
The findings, published in the journal Science, tracked rhesus monkeys that were on a reduced-calorie regimen for as long as 20 years. The animals' risk of dying from cancer, heart disease and diabetes fell by more than two-thirds.
"It adds to the evidence piling up that caloric restriction, independent of thinness, is a healthy way to stay alive and healthy longer," said Susan Roberts of the Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University, who wasn't involved in the study. "Less diseases in old age has to be something most everyone wants."
Is caloric restriction the solution?
"Mild caloric restriction is beneficial to everybody," said Dr. Luigi Fontana, a medical professor at Washington University in St. Louis.
In his examinations of people who have been practicing caloric restriction for an average of 6 1/2 years, Fontana found their heart function was equivalent to those of people 16 years younger.
Though the regimen sounds grueling, it is hardly a starvation diet, experts said.
It typically begins with an in-depth assessment to determine how many calories an individual needs to consume to maintain a healthy weight. Then that number is shaved by 10% to 30%.
People on caloric restriction can eat three meals a day. A typical menu includes cereal with fruit and nuts for breakfast, a big salad for lunch, and dinner featuring lean meat and reasonable portion sizes. There's also room for a couple of snacks and even a small dessert from time to time.
Caloric restriction has consistently produced health benefits for animals.
In the new study, scientists tracked 76 adult rhesus monkeys from the Wisconsin National Primate Research Center starting in 1989. Half the animals were fed a typical diet of lab chow, and the rest got a version with a higher concentration of vitamins and minerals to make up for the 30% reduction in chow quantity.
Over the course of the study, the monkeys that ate the regular diet were three times more likely to die of an age-related disease than their counterparts on caloric restriction. Fourteen deaths in the control group were attributable to age-related diseases, compared with five such deaths among the animals that ate 30% fewer calories, according to the study.
The rates of cardiovascular disease and pre-cancerous cell growths were twice as high in the control group compared with the reduced-calorie group.
The researchers also noted that although five of the control monkeys became diabetic and 11 were classified as pre-diabetic, all the calorie-restricted animals remained diabetes-free.
Brain scans revealed significantly less atrophy of gray matter in the monkeys that ate less.
They even looked less wrinkled and flabby.
In all, the monkeys on caloric restriction "appear to be biologically younger than the normally fed animals," the researchers wrote in their report.
Scientists aren't sure why eating less slows the aging process, but theories abound.
There's evidence from mice that caloric restriction induces the body to activate fewer genes related to inflammation, which many scientists suspect plays a key role in aging.
Another theory holds that starved organisms hunker down in maintenance mode, shutting down activities such as reproduction that put wear and tear on the body.
Or perhaps caloric restriction reduces body temperature, thus limiting production of dangerous free radicals that gradually break down the body by damaging tissues and DNA.
"It's all speculation," said Dr. Sergei Romashkan of the National Institute on Aging, who is overseeing a clinical trial on caloric restriction in people.
Authors of the monkey study won't be able to calculate how much caloric restriction extended the animals' average life span -- or whether it boosted their maximum life span -- until all the animals have died.
That could take 10 to 15 years, said senior author Richard Weindruch, a medical professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Also left unanswered are questions about the psychological state of monkeys who spend most of their adult lives on a forced diet, Roberts said.
Are they happy? Are they hungry? Can they think as fast?
When UCLA evolutionary biologist Jay Phelan put mice on caloric restriction, he got the distinct impression that they didn't appreciate it.
"They bit people and were more agitated," he said. In contrast, the mice who ate a normal diet "would just sit around and let you pick them up."
It also isn't clear whether caloric restriction would extend human lives by very much, Phelan said. He has combined results from animal studies with data on men on the Japanese island of Okinawa who ate 17% fewer calories than men in Tokyo. He calculated that reducing intake by 35% would extend the human life span by just two years.
"The trade-off just isn't worth it," said Phelan, who said he personally would have a hard time giving up doughnuts.
Weindruch said he was under no illusion that the monkey findings would prompt many people to adopt caloric restriction. He has started a company to create drugs that would provide the same health benefits without the need for extreme dieting.
Physiologists agreed that instead of promoting caloric restriction, a more pressing goal is to help the two-thirds of Americans who are overweight or obese shed their extra pounds.
"That would be tremendous for the health of the nation," said David Baer, a research physiologist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Human Nutrition Research Center in Beltsville, Md.
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http://www.latimes.com/features/health/la-sci-caloric-restriction10-2009jul10,0,2287067.story |
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Ole Rang: Administrateur

Nombre de messages: 7017 Date d'inscription: 16/09/2004
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