Health & Wellness
When microbiologist Bruce Hemming was hired two years ago to test breast milk samples for residues of the key ingredient in the popular weed-killer Roundup, Hemming at first scoffed at the possibility.
Hemming, the founder of St. Louis-based Microbe Inotech Laboratories, knew that the herbicidal ingredient called glyphosate was not supposed to accumulate in the human body.
Here is a gather up of some of the most important uses for baking soda.
Some of these benefits are:
- a reduced risk and prevention of diarrhea, metabolic acidosis, acidity, peptic ulcer, and drug intoxication,
- improved skin and hair quality due to its antipruritic (anti-itching) properties,
- effective treatment of cold and flu,
- plaque removal,
- prevention of hyperkalemia, bladder infection and kidney stones.
I yelled, "run!" and my daughter took off like a rocket back the way we had come. Within seconds, I followed hoping the dog would distract the bear long enough for us to make it safely back to the vehicle. Time loses all meaning in moments like that and what could have been minutes felt like seconds. I quickly realized that the shock of accidentally crossing paths with a bear sow with cubs and the sudden burst of speed had stressed my heart. I was nowhere near close enough to the car and it already felt like my heart was going to burst and the muscles in my legs were on fire.
At the same time, the old saying, "I don't have to outrun the bear, I just have to outrun you" flashed through my head. I was very glad to see my daughter running down the path and over fallen trees with the speed and agility of a deer. And I took comfort that, although I loved my dog very much, she would probably give her life to protect me from the bear...until she shot past me like a bullet.
Comment: Diet plays a big part in achieving these five components of physical health. Avoid GMO's and inflammatory foods and check out the benefits of a low carb, ketogenic diet.
I was taught in medical school that a lowered salt diet was a healthy diet—for everyone. Furthermore, it was drilled into my head that anyone with heart disease, particularly heart failure, should limit salt in his/her diet. In fact, it is still standard-of-care for a cardiologist to tell his/her heart patient to limit salt in their diet. This is especially true when the patient is suffering from heart failure.
So, does limiting salt in the diet of a patient with heart failure result in a better outcome?
Dr. Stephanie Seneff, who made these remarks during a panel presentation in Groton, MA last week, specifically cites the Monsanto herbicide, Roundup, as the culprit for the escalating incidence of autism and other neurological disorders. Roundup, which was introduced in the 1970's, contains the chemical glyphosate, which is the focal point for Seneff's concerns. Roundup was originally restricted to use on weeds, as glyphosate kills plants. However, Roundup is now in regular use with crops. With the coming of GMO's, plants such as soy and corn were bioengineered to tolerate glyphosate, and its use dramatically increased. From 2001 to 2007, glyphosate use doubled, reaching 180 to 185 million pounds in the U.S. alone in 2007.
If you don't consume corn- on- the -cob or toasted soybeans, however, you are hardly exempt from the potential affects of consuming glyphosate. Wheat is now sprayed with Roundup right before it is harvested, making any consumption of non- organic wheat bread a sure source for the chemical. In addition, any products containing corn syrup, such as soft drinks, are also carrying a payload of glyphosate.
The discovery came after the city switched its water supply and the medical staff noticed an increase in people coming in for treatment who were diagnosed with Legionnaires,' McLaren Hospital said.
Legionnaires' disease is a respiratory bacterial infection usually spread through mist that comes from a water source.
Kissing and cuddling trigger the release of oxytocin - the so-called love hormone - which sparks reward activity in the brain and makes partners appear more attractive to each other. However, researchers from Bonn University in Germany have discovered that the Pill shuts down the besotted response.
The team recruited forty women in their twenties and loving long-term relationships, half of whom were taking hormonal contraceptives. Some were given an oxytocin boost using a nasal spray while the rest were administered a placebo. Then they were shown a series of photos featuring their partner, a close female friend and similar-looking strangers of both sexes. The women were asked to rate them all out of 100 for attractiveness while brain scans kept watch on their mental responses to the pictures.
Lovers topped the poll in every case, though the oxytocin boost came into play too. Husbands and boyfriends whose partners had taken the spray but not the Pill outscored male strangers by an extra ten per cent. The same sub-group of women experienced far more activity in the nucleus accumbens - the part of the brain which deals with pleasure and emotional arousal - when photos of their lovers flashed up. However, for those on the Pill, oxytocin caused the region to light up more when pictures of their friends were shown.
Today we'll be revisiting the topic of EMF exposure with our guest, Larry Bowers. Here's the link to part one.
Included, as always, is the Pet Health Segment. This week's episode features the effects inflammation on your pets and how to reduce it.
Running Time: 01:48:00
Download: MP3
Also included will be Zoya's Pet Health segment on strange behavior, trauma and PTSD in your pets.
Running Time: 02:35:00
Download: MP3















Comment: It would be great if the EPA-USDA respected 'consumer concerns' and includes tests for glyphosate residues in the Pesticide Data Program. The reality is that it isAgriculture industry norm to not conduct such tests and to keep consumers in the dark about the extreme amount of toxic chemicals we are exposed to daily!