Health & WellnessS


Alarm Clock

Pesticides linked to Parkinson's risk in people with specific gene

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Several studies have linked pesticides with the development of Parkinson's disease, and now a new study has found a specific gene that may explain why some people are particularly susceptible to developing Parkinson's after exposure to certain pesticides.

Parkinson's disease results from the loss of neurons involved in processing the neurotransmitter dopamine. Researchers had previously found a gene that was involved in dopamine processing, and in animal experiments, they determined which pesticides inhibited this gene's pathway.

In the new study, they found that one variant of the gene, called ALDH2, may be even more susceptible to inhibition from pesticides. They then tested for this gene variant in Californians with Parkinson's disease whose exposure to various pesticides could be measured by comparing where they had lived with charts of pesticide use in the state.

Comment: Additional information about the growing concern that Pesticides Cause Parkinson's Disease:

Pesticides and Parkinson's

NIH Links Pesticides to Parkinson's
Study: Many pesticides in EU may damage human brain
Pesticides Shown to be Huge Parkinson's Disease Risk
Pesticide Exposure Boosts Parkinson's Risk by 60 Percent
Study: Roundup and other pesticides directly linked to Parkinson's and neurodegenerative disorders


Handcuffs

Los Angeles sushi chefs plead guilty to serving whale meat

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© Gerard Soury/Getty ImagesChefs Kiyoshiro Yamamoto and Susumu Ueda pleaded guilty to conspiracy and to selling the illegally imported meat of sei whales.
The plea comes nearly four years after the chefs were caught in an undercover sting and months after being indicted by a grand jury.

Two sushi chefs who worked at a Santa Monica, Calif., restaurant pleaded guilty Monday to buying and serving illegally imported whale parts in a stomach-turning case that began four years ago, when staff from the Oceanic Preservation Society and their boss, The Cove director Louie Psihoyos, launched a series of sting operations against the now-defunct establishment.

In a plea deal with federal officials, Kiyoshiro Yamamoto and Susumu Ueda each agreed to three misdemeanor charges in exchange for providing evidence against the owners of the restaurant, the Hump, which went out of business in 2010.

The chefs pleaded guilty to conspiracy and to selling illegally imported meat from sei whales caught off the coast of Japan, a violation of the federal Marine Mammal Protection Act. Sei whales are protected by the U.S. Endangered Species Act.

Comment: Truly Psychopathic behavior on the part of Typhoon Restaurant Inc.! As the author clearly states: "I hope all of them sustain the wrath reserved for such inhumane behavior. What I would like to see done to all of them would not be suitable for print." Hopefully there is a special place in hell for such sadistic deviants!


Donut

Five dangers to indulging in simple carbs

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While sugarcane remains one of the world's leading crops, its refined version has become the subject of escalating scrutiny. The white crystals are devoid of nutrients and have a slew of negative effects on health, including diseases such as metabolic syndrome (Type II Diabetes, Obesity, Cholesterol), brain atrophy, substance addiction, cancer and fatty liver disease.

Brain atrophy

A recent study from the American Academy of Neurology argues that even within the upper levels of the normal range (approaching 110 mg/dL), blood sugar accounts for 6 to 10 percent of the brain shrinkage in the hippocampus and the amygdala. These two brain structures are part of the limbic system, also known as the emotional brain. They regulate autonomic and endocrine functions and affect associative learning, focus, memory, and fight or flight responses. Shrinkage in these areas leads to depression, mood swings, rage, aggression, Alzheimer's and other dementia and emotional diseases.


Cheeseburger

Eleven charts that show how the modern diet is destroying our health

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The modern diet is the main reason why people all over the world are fatter and sicker than ever before. Everywhere modern processed foods go, chronic diseases like obesity, type 2 diabetes and heart disease soon follow.

The studies are clear on this... when people abandon their traditional foods in favor of modern processed foods high in sugar, refined flour and vegetable oils, they get sick (1, 2, 3). Of course, there are many things that can contribute to these health problems, but changes in the diet are the most important factor.

Here are 11 graphs that show everything that is wrong with the modern diet.

1. Total Sugar Intake Has Skyrocketed in The Past 160 Years

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People in Western countries are consuming massive amounts of refined sugars, reaching about 150 lbs (67 kg) per year in some countries. This amounts to over 500 calories of sugar per day.

The sources vary on the exact figures, but it is very clear that we are consuming way more sugar than our bodies are equipped to handle (4). Controlled human studies show that large amounts of sugar can lead to severe metabolic problems, including insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome, elevated cholesterol and triglycerides - to name a few (5, 6).

Added sugar is believed to be one of the main drivers of diseases like obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart disease and even cancer (7, 8, 9, 10).

Comment: The lack of nutritional value isn't the only problem with wheat. Check out these articles for more information:

Gluten sensitivity & nerve damage

What's behind 'Grain Brain': Are gluten and carbs wrecking our brains and our health?

Gluten and the autoimmune disease spectrum


Bacon

Bacon sales sizzle to all-time high‏

Bacon illustration
© Inconnu

It's a question that veteran "As Seen on TV" marketer Scott Boilen asked when he was given the opportunity to introduce yet another bacon product to an already crowded marketplace. But Boilen couldn't resist the invention, a simple gizmo that turns a few strips of bacon into an edible shell. And so the Bacon Bowl was launched by Boilen's Allstar Products Group via a series of infomercials in late 2013.

In a brief period, Boilen's New York-based company has sold more than two million units of the $10.99 bacon cooker, making the Bowl a success story potentially on par with the Snuggie, to name Boilen's biggest "As Seen on TV" hit.

The lesson? Never underestimate the power of bacon, says Boilen: "It's almost become a cult-like food."

Comment: Perhaps another reason for this upward trend in bacon sales is the rising popularity of the paleo diet.

For more reading about the wonders of bacon, check out:
The Ketogenic Diet - An Overview


Health

New evidence that chronic stress predisposes brain to mental illness

stress depression
University of California, Berkeley, researchers have shown that chronic stress generates long-term changes in the brain that may explain why people suffering chronic stress are prone to mental problems such as anxiety and mood disorders later in life.

Their findings could lead to new therapies to reduce the risk of developing mental illness after stressful events.

Doctors know that people with stress-related illnesses, such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), have abnormalities in the brain, including differences in the amount of gray matter versus white matter. Gray matter consists mostly of cells - neurons, which store and process information, and support cells called glia - while white matter is comprised of axons, which create a network of fibers that interconnect neurons. White matter gets its name from the white, fatty myelin sheath that surrounds the axons and speeds the flow of electrical signals from cell to cell.

How chronic stress creates these long-lasting changes in brain structure is a mystery that researchers are only now beginning to unravel.

Pills

Big Pharma lobbyists exploit patients and doctors

Prescription Drugs
© PressTV
Ten years ago, when I was a health journalist, I was once contacted by lobbying company working for a large pharmaceuticals firm.

They asked me if I would be interested in travelling to Chicago to attend a cancer conference where, they said, the company was about to make an exciting and important announcement.

Foolishly I accepted. The conference was fascinating, the hospitality generous - but the announcement which I was supposed to write about could not in any way be regarded as news.

I'm ashamed to say I still wrote about it - feeling some sense of misplaced obligation to my 'hosts'.

I should never have done so but in the process learnt an important lesson about the way in which the medical lobbying industry works.

Of several hundred doctors, nurse leaders and pharmacists from the UK who were in Chicago that year almost all were also there at the largesse of the drugs industry.

Health

Antibiotic resistance: death of a wonderdrug

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Needwood House Farm is easy to miss. Only a small sign - the bright pink image of a pig - suspended from a fence post hints at anything of significance down the one-way track that leads off the main road. After a few hundred metres of bouncing over mud and gravel, it is the pungent smell that smacks you first. Then, the sound; the squealing, grunting and growls of 5,000 pigs crammed into this corner of rural Staffordshire.

A hundred or so piglets are excitedly clambering over each other or snuffling around the muddy floor of the gated outdoor enclosure where they are waiting to be transported for slaughter. Inside the great barns, 500 sows lie side-by-side in pens while their offspring fight for space at their teats.The air hangs heavy with ammonia, so thick it stings the lungs.

This is the flagship operation of Midland Pig Producers, which runs nine farms across the country producing 80 tonnes of meat a week to supply leading supermarkets including Tesco, Marks and Spencer and Asda. It is big. But only a few miles away over the border into Derbyshire, something even bigger is planned.

Attention

MSG proven highly toxic: 1 dose causes headache in healthy subjects

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Found everywhere as an additive in your food, new research has uncovered that this "flavor enhancer" is extremely toxic, causing a battery of adverse health effects within normal dietary ranges.

A new study published in the Journal of Headache Pain reveals that a single intake of monosodium glutamate (MSG) produces headache in the majority of healthy subjects tested.[i]

The researchers conducted a double-blinded, placebo-controlled, crossover study to examine the effect of repeated MSG intake on the following:
  • Spontaneous pain
  • Mechanical sensitivity of masticatory muscles (the four muscles that move the jaw laterally)
  • Side effects
  • Blood pressure

Comment: Over the past several years SOTT.net has carried many articles detailing how monosodium glutamate (MSG) is proven to be highly toxic:

Monosodium Glutamate: What We All Should Know
MSG: Delicious Seasoning Or Drug And Poison?
MSG: Drug, Poison Or Flavor-Enhancer?
MSG: The Flavor Enhancer That Sickens In Two Ways
MSG Hidden in Variety of Foods and Contributing To Illness
The Shocking Dangers of MSG You Don't Know
MSG Lurks As A Slow Poison In Common Food Items Without Your Knowledge
Hold the MSG: Food Triggers for Epilepsy and Other Neurological Illnesses


Wolf

'My dog saved my life': Breast cancer patient says her Doberman nuzzled into her chest until she went to the doctor

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Diane Papazian, 56, says she owes her life to her dog, Troy, after he detected a tumour in her breast

A dog owner says she owes her life to her Doberman after he detected a tumor in her breast. Diane Papazian, from New York, says Troy persistently nuzzled into her breast when he was just a four-month-old puppy.

Mrs Papazian then realised Troy was showing an interest in a lump and decided to go for a mammogram - despite having had one just six months earlier.

As a result, she was diagnosed with aggressive breast cancer. Mrs Papazian, 56, went on to have a double mastectomy and chemotherapy and is now cancer-free. Troy, a show dog, is currently the number one Doberman in New York State and ranks ninth in the U.S.