Category Archives: Health

Take Advantage of The Miracle Spice

Herbs

Miracle spices help body to powerful and healthy. Sometimes they have many natural secrets. One secret is really important. Cause, most of people has weight problem. Some want to get weight but some want to lose. Spices help both of them. You try to make many things to lose weight, diet list, exercises, some drugs or medical ways. Don’t you think nature give us everything we need. Now, time to discover plants and decide to eat them everyday to be skinny.

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ginger

Ginger

Every day you can prepare salad with ginger. It has unique taste and serves body to remove of the foods you eat in a short time.

clove

Clove

Clove provides the elimination of toxins in the body. Fat burning center offers to act  and works faster then usual. Brain and body feels like you are doing exercises.

green tea

Green Tea

Green tea assumes the role of antioxidant in the body. Also, to speed up metabolism and fat burning is the task of green tea. Green tea works speedy. You notice the difference in a few day.

cress

Cress Seeds

Accelerate the work of the thyroid gland and speed up metabolism. When you eat cress seeds you will begin to caloric expenditure. It is suitable to use salads.

thyme

Thyme

Thyme is the greatest fat burning plant. How to use it:

  • A pinch of thyme
  • A glass of hot water

Boil water and put the water in a cup. Then put a pinch of thyme in it. Only 3 minutes later. You can drink.  This tea will begin to destroy your fat. Even it works for cellulite problems.

rosemary

Rosemary Plant

Rosemary plant helps to save body from edema. Without edema body seem skinny. And metobolism system works much more faster than ever.

turmeric

Turmeric

Turmeric has real detox property. Help the repair bile and liver. Arrange all body effects and makes what the body need.

All herbal or plants exist for human. We should know how to use them. With these tips you will easily lose weight.

 

The Benefits of Walking

walking benefits

Walking should have big place in our life. Experts always meantion about benefits of walking. In a day, only 30 minutes enough for healty life. While walking, metabolism works faster than normal and it try to organise you to be healty. Also,  walking provides to Fat – Burning in the body.

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Walk-Infographic1

What is the benefits of walking?

  • Walking stumilates blood circulation.
  • Reduces the risk of heart – vessel and brain diseases.
  • It strengthens the muscles of the body.  Allow the muscles to work more efficiently.
  • Increases the amount of blood tha the hearts pumps and reduce pulsation.
  • In case of stress it stops in blood pressure increase.
  • It regulates blood pressure.
  • Reduces the risk of obesity.
  • Facilitates digestion.
  • Provides oxyjen to the brain and mental devalopment occurs.
  • Helps lymphatic circulation.
  • Speeds up the metabolism.
  • Regulates HDL and LDL balance.

Now, time to walk every day.  By spending just 30 minutes a day to be healty.

What is Hyperventilation ?

‘You have to breathe to live. But if you breathe too much, life become* dominated by fear of symptoms, and fear of living life to the full/

Hyperventilation means moving more air through the chest than the body can deal with. Most people have experienced hyperventilation – also called over-breathing – to some degree, usually in the form of an acute attack. It’s a normal reaction to sudden danger or excitement, and the signs are easy to pick.

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  • Breathing and heart rates speed up.
  • Adrenalin pours into the bloodstream.
  • The nervous system is on ‘red alert’.
  • Muscles tense up.

Sometimes people faint or collapse – or find super-human reservoirs of strength. When the stressful event is over, the body returns to its normal relaxed state.
Less easy to spot is chronic hyperventilation, a

breathing pattern disorder in which over-breathing becomes a habit – usually in response to prolonged stress or tension. More widespread symptoms are felt, and at times these appear out of the blue. The symptoms may mimic serious disease or remind the sufferer of the perhaps frightening events surrounding a past acute attack. When this happens more widespread symptoms mysteriously occur.

  • Breathlessness at rest for no apparent reason
  • Frequent deep sighs or yawning
  • Chest-wall pains
  • Palpitations
  • Light-headedness and feeling ‘spaced out’
  • Tingling or numb lips or extremities
  • Gut upsets or irritable bowel syndrome
  • Achy muscles or joints, or tremors
  • Tiredness, weakness, broken sleep, nightmares
  • Sexual problems
  • Clammy hands and high anxiety or phobias

cascade of symptoms

cascade of symptoms

When over-breathing becomes chronic the balance between the oxygen-rich air we breathe in and carbon-dioxide-rich air we breathe out is upset: carbon dioxide levels start to drop.

Far from being just a waste gas at the end of the respiratory cycle, carbon dioxide is a powerful governor of many of the body’s systems – including blood flow to the brain. With chronic over­breathing the normal acid/alkaline balance (pH) of the tissues is altered. The body becomes more alkaline, and the nerve cells are the first to respond to this respiratory alkalosis. Dizziness and tingling or numbness are often the first signs.

The autonomic nervous system, which looks after the body’s involuntary functions (for example, heart rate, blood pressure and digestion), is affected too. This system is divided into two: the sympathetic, which governs action and ‘get up and go’, and the parasympathetic, which is responsible for rest, recuperation and calmness. Low carbon dioxide levels stimulate the sympathetic nervous system more than the parasympathetic, putting the body on continuous red alert.

If carbon dioxide levels in the blood fall further with continued over-breathing, body cells begin to produce lactic acid in an effort to balance their pH. Muscles ache. Metabolism is less efficient.

Exhaustion and chronic tiredness soon follow, with feelings of physical and mental depression – all typical signs of long-term chronic hyperventilation.

Not only nerve cells are affected.

Muscle cells become more twitchy, and the smooth muscles of our blood vessels, airways and gut tighten and constrict in response to lowered carbon dioxide. There is an increased release of

Autonomic nervous system, controller of involuntary body functions

Autonomic nerwus system, controller of involuntary body functions

histamines, which aggravates allergic responses. The heart starts pounding and the hyperventilator may feel panic-stricken, with palpitations and feelings of ‘air hunger’.

When carbon dioxide levels are too low oxygen clings to its carriers – the red blood cells – and tissues, especially the brain, become starved of oxygen. The brain may have its oxygen supply cut by as much as 50 per cent, making it difficult to concentrate, let alone feel part of this planet. The drop in oxygen supply to the brain stimulates the breathing control centre to increase breathing ** and the chronic nature of the hyperventilation is reinforced.

chronic-plan

As the oxygen and carbon dioxide exchanges fuel every cell in our body, every system is ultimately going to be affected – leading to a distressing as well as puzzling range of symptoms.

Why does chronic hyperventilation happen?

Over-breathing is a normal reaction to stress or strain: it only becomes abnormal when stresses and strains reach levels that lead to chronic hyperventilation and outbreaks of symptoms. These stresses and strains may have started from:

  •  organic causes, for example, asthma, physical pain, pneumonia, anaemia, chronic chest or heart disease;
  •  physiological causes, for example, fever, high progesterone levels, prolonged talking, high altitude, diabetes, liver or kidney disease;
  •  psychological and social causes, for example, fear, anxiety, depression, perfectionist personality, separation/divorce, redundancy, unemployment, loneliness;
  •  drugs, for example, nicotine, caffeine, aspirin, amphetamines.

While these original causes may be dealt with, stabilised or cured, in certain people the respiratory centre in the brain is reset and the over-breathing becomes habitual. Even though the bad times are over, the increased breathing rate stays.

World-wide, the 1990s have been a decade of change and uncertainty. Our minds evolved in an ancestral environment that lacked the Pressure, noise and speed of the present electronic age.

we’re constantly bombarded with information and our brains often can’t cope with it all. We need to consciously take time out to counter this mega­stimulation, but few of us do.

The increase in stress disorders and diseases is alarming. Computerisation has pinned many workers in front of screens for extended periods of time, but the human body is not designed for prolonged sitting. We experience maximum stimulation from minimum effort and breathing is affected.

Adapting to rapid change is especially difficult if the change is unwanted or out of personal control. Stress levels soar, and with them adrenalin levels and heart rate, and nervous exhaustion follows – all fuelled by over-active lungs.

Is hyperventilation a modem disorder?

For centuries philosophers and scientists have understood the importance of good breathing. Hippocrates, the father of Western medicine, noted in the fifth century BC: ‘The brain exercises the greatest power in mankind – but the air supplies sense to it’

Adherents of both Buddhism, which originated in India also in the fifth century BC, and Taoism, from ancient China, combined breathing with relaxation and exercise to harmonise heart rate, breathing, digestion and circulation. Yoga and t’ai chi are modem versions of these ancient wisdoms.

Despite well-observed accounts in Western literature of ‘breathless’ heroines or heroes with their ‘breath taken away’, little was understood about the link between over-breathing and ill- health. The first detailed medical description of

hyperventilation was not published until 1871, in a study of 300 American Civil War soldiers. A doctor noticed ‘disabling shortness of breath, irritable heart and oppression of breathing’ and thought the cause of these problems lay in the heart.

Around the turn of the century other medical researchers experimented with normal subjects, asking them to hyperventilate voluntarily; their results noted neurological effects (tingling and muscles spasms) as well.

The term hyperventilation syndrome (HVS) was coined in the 1930s. One British physician called it ‘one of the commonest chronic afflictions of sedentary town dwellers’. Breathing into a paper bag (re-inhaling carbon dioxide-rich air) became a popular treatment for acute attacks of HVS at this time.

No theatre would be without a paper bag in the wings ready for stage-fright victims, frozen in respiratory alkalosis (terror) while awaiting their cue. However, while the paper bag method may be useful in helping with acute panic attacks, it is of no use to chronic over-breathers. It may temporarily restore normal blood gases, but it does nothing to correct the underlying cause – breathing pattern disorders.

It is extremely dangerous during an acute asthma attack to tiy to control rapid wheezy breathing using a paper bag. Increased drives to breathe normal during an attack. It is on record that at least one person has breathed their last into a brown paper bag.

Recent medical research has revealed more about the physiological system derangements, metabolic imbalances and anxiety-related symptoms caused by habitual over-breathing, but it is still an under­recognised and under-treated disorder.

Whether it is primarily a mental or a physical health problem has been hotly debated. Fortunately, the move towards holistic medicine, in which body and soul are treated together, has been of benefit to the vast number of people suffering from chronic hyperventilation and to their doctors, who can add this distressing disorder to their diagnostic repertoire.

I had a medical file as thick as a phone book and I always seemed to be at the doctors having tests for this and that. Nothing was ever found to be really wrong. But a locum picked it straight away. My breathing was grossly askew and my symptoms were a result of this. At last I had something to work on.

Dr. Mike Thomas

Blood and CIRCULATION

blood-and-CIRCULATION

Smooth-flowing Mood that brings oxygon and essential nutrients to every celt in the body is vital for health and wellbeing. To improve your circulation and reduce your risk of disease, you need a healthy level of fats and other blood constituents as welt as optimum blood pressure. Find out how to achieve this in effective and sometimes surprising ways.

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Better
BLOOD

There’s plenty you can do to keep your blood healthy and able to supply the body with the nutrients it needs. Your diet and the amount of exercise you take can influence the composition of your blood. Genetics and environmental factors also have a role to play.

Have beans with your steak Iron is the key component of haemoglobin, the oxygen-carrying substance in red blood cells. To maximise your absorption of this valuable mineral, eat vegetable, meat or fish sources of iron in the same meal. Iron-rich foods include meat, poultry, fish, dark green vegetables, dried beans and dried fruits. The adult body contains around 4g of iron, half of which is found in our red blood cells. If iron levels fall too low, anaemia (low levels of red blood cells) can result.

Drink orange juice with your muesli Did you know that some foods can actually block the absorption of iron from our diet? Notable iron-blocking foods include fibre-rich wholemeal cereals, dairy products, such as milk and cheese, and drinks such as tea, coffee and chocolate. It’s not possible – or advisable – to avoid many of these foods, but you can counteract their effect on iron absorption by drinking beverages between rather than with meals and by having foods or drinks that are rich in vitamin C, which boosts iron uptake. Citrus fruits, such as oranges, are particularly high in vitamin C.

Sprinkle nuts on your salad seeds, nuts, oats, barley and soya products actively lower your blood levels of cholesterol. A study has found that including a portfolio of foods that actively lower cholesterol may be more effective, especially for lowering heart-damaging LDL cholesterol, than a low saturated fat diet alone. Try adding cholesterol-lowering foods to your low-fat regime to maximise the benefits.

Drink green tea to improve your balance of ‘good* to ‘bad’ cholesterol. Chinese researchers have found that green tea helps lower blood levels of bad’ low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol without affecting ‘good’ hlgh-deroity lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol. So while using other cholesterol-lighting tactics such as avoiding fatty foods, enjoy green tea as often as you like.

Watch the label For blood vessel health the most important ingredients to avoid are transfats, which appear on labels in the UK as ‘hydrogenated fats’ or ‘partially

Here’s What You Should Really Be Eating For Breakfast

what makes a healthy breakfast

 

 

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In general, a healthy breakfast contains protein, fruits, whole grains, or vegetables,” says Ruth Frechman, MA, RDN, CPT, nutritionist and author of “The Food is My Friend Diet.” Typically, you want to include foods from at least three of these groups, says Frechman.

The portion sizes will depend on your age, activity, and diet goals, but as a general guideline your “plate” should consist of about 25% protein, 25% carbohydrates, and 50% fruits and/or vegetables, says Frechman.

Frechman emphasizes the importance of eating breakfast, but recommends waiting until you’re legitimately hungry to break bread. “If you force yourself to eat at 7 a.m. when you’re not hungry, chances are you are going to gain weight.”

When you are ready to chow down, here are some healthy breakfast options to make sure you start the day off right.

Eggs

poached-eggs

Eggs are your friends again,” says Frechman. Although one large egg contains 212 milligrams of cholesterol — a relatively large amount compared to other foods — it’s now known that saturated fat increases “bad” blood cholesterol and not the cholesterol in foods.

One egg carries around 70 calories and packs 6 grams of protein. Before you toss the yolk, remember that the yellowish center is where most of the nutrients are found. The yolk is a good source of lutein, a vitamin also found in spinach and kale that helps prevents eye diseases.

Whole-grain bread, cereal, or oatmeal

oatmeal
Breakfast happens to be the easiest time to get in heart healthy fiber from whole grain cereal and oats which can help lower blood pressure and cholesterol,” says Lisa Moskovitz, RD, CDN, owner of Your New York Dietitians. Fiber keeps us full and gives us energy.
“Always look for at least 5 grams of fiber when choosing breakfast cereals,” says Moskovitz. She also says to use any milk with 1% fat or less. “No one over the age of 2 should be drinking higher fat cow’s milk.”

Another warning: If you’re watching your weight, you want to stay away from whole-grain cereals with added sugar because those pack a lot of extra calories.

Peanut butter

peanut-butter
There are 8 grams of protein in two tablespoons of peanut butter, which is roughly 20% of the daily recommended amount for adult men and women. “It helps to have protein at every meal to regulate your blood sugar level,” says Frechman. “If you were to have pancakes, syrup, and juice, your blood sugar would spike and then crash.”
Also, peanut butter mostly contains the “good” unsaturated fat. “I always recommend a nut butter like cashew butter, almond butter, or sunflower butter instead of putting real butter, margarine, or cream cheese on a bagel,” says Frechman. Yellowish spreads like margarine are much higher in “bad” saturated fats.

Fruit

fruit
Berries, bananas, or melon — take your pick. “There’s no such things as an unhealthy fruit,” says Frechman. However, you should mix and match your fruit choices to take advantage of a variety of different nutrients. Blueberries, for example, are high in antioxidants while oranges are loaded with vitamin C and potassium.
If you’re looking for convenience, Frechman recommends bananas since they’re easy to transport and eat without making a mess.

Yogurt

greek-yogurt
A breakfast parfait would make a great, very convenient breakfast,” says Frechman. A 6-ounce serving of yogurt contains as much protein as a serving as meat. Greek yogurt contains even more protein — sometimes double the amount of regular yogurt. If you have diabetes or are watching your calories, plain, non-fat or low-fat yogurt is a healthier choice than fruit-flavored yogurts, which can have a lot of added sugar.

Smoothies

smoothie
A smoothie makes a complete, on-the-go meal. You can add a base of yogurt for protein and fresh or frozen fruit, like strawberries, for sweetness. If you don’t like eating your vegetables with dinner, this blended drink is an easy way to cram greens like spinach or kale into your diet.

Fruit juice

orange-juice
It’s completely acceptable to get your fruit in liquid form, but make sure to choose 100% fruit juice, otherwise there could be added sugar. “Punches and fruit drinks have added sugar, which are just extra calories,” says Frechman.

Coffee

blue-bottle-coffee
Coffee has received a bad rap over the years, but long-term medical studies are now tipping in favor of the caffeinated beverage. As long as you’re not pushing 4 cups a day, there’s nothing wrong with drinking coffee.

Foods to avoid: Bacon, sausage, hash browns, processed cheese, biscuits with gravy, or granola bars

Most of these foods either contain a lot of saturated fat or are high in sugar. They’re alright to eat once in a while, but not on a regular basis.

People tend to think of granola bars as being healthy,” says Frechman. “It’s cheaper and more healthy to have just a bowl of cereal with milk and fruit.
DINA SPECTOR