Thursday, October 23, 2008

Free Ageless Antiaging Skin Care Serum

How do we want to grow old? In a wheelchair or on roller blades? I would love to be on roller blades.

So, how should we look when we are old? Wrinkled or Tone? I would choose tone anytime! With that in mind, our face should match with our body. It sure will do a lot of good if there is some kind of miracle cream that will give us good looking skin.

I just came across something that might be good for everyone to take a closer look. There is a company - Rejuvenate Worldwide, giving away Free Antiaging Skin Care Serum for trial. This is the website: www.antiagingskincare1.com/a or www.antiagingskincare1.com/ageless.htm. It is rare to find such good deals. Go on! Check it out for yourself!

Cheers!

Saturday, June 14, 2008

The Little Alarm That Sounds Before a Stroke

(NewsUSA) - Many Americans would rather die than experience a stroke, but a stroke isn't always a devastating blow. Today, millions of thriving, happy stroke survivors lead fulfilling lives.


Early detection proves key. Amazingly, one sign of a stroke is a stroke. A Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA), or mini-;stroke, leaves no permanent disability.


TIAs produce only mild stroke symptoms, so many of the 250,000 to 350,000 Americans who suffer TIAs each year dismiss the experience. But patients should consider TIAs a ringing alarm bell -; more than one-third of the patients who have a TIA will later stroke.
Doctors can determine patient's stroke risk after a TIA. Dr. Clay Johnston of the University of California, San Francisco, worked with the National Stroke Association to develop the ABCD2 tool, which predicts short-term stroke risk within two days of a TIA.


Patients should ask their doctors about the ABCD2 tool, which is available for free download from the National Stroke


Association Web site at www.stroke.org/ABCD. With the tool, doctors use five factors -; age, blood pressure, TIA symptoms, TIA duration and diabetes -; to assign their patient a score. The higher the ABCD2 score, the higher a patient's risk for stroking two, seven, 30 or 90 days after a TIA.


TIAs typically last less than 24 hours. If patients experience a TIA, they should seek further medical attention -; early measures can prevent disability or death from stroke.


The symptoms for a TIA and a stroke are the same. If a patient experiences, or a loved one notices, any stroke symptoms, they should immediately call 9-1-1.

Monday, June 9, 2008

Tips for a long, healthy life

Tips for a long, healthy life

TORONTO (Reuters) -- Dan Buettner hasn't discovered the fountain of youth, but he has some pretty good clues on living a longer, healthier life after years of studying what he calls "blue zones" -- areas of the world where longevity and health go hand in hand.

Along with a team of demographers and scientists, Buettner spent seven years studying places where people were living longer and better, as outlined in his book, The Blue Zones. That research, funded in party by the National Institute on Aging, found that people in these four zones are more likely to see their 100th birthday. Many of them also manage to avoid diseases of lifestyle and aging.

Buettner's blue zones are located in four very different parts of the world: Sardinia, Italy; Okinawa, Japan; the Nicoya Peninsula, Costa Rica ; and among the Seventh Day Adventists in Loma Linda, California. (A fifth blue zone may be announced in the fall, he told Reuters in an interview.) These four areas are marked not only by a long life expectancy, with a high concentration of centenarians, but also by a long healthy life expectancy. Simply put, people living in the blue zones are living longer without the years of decline marked by illness like heart disease and cancer that many older North Americans face.

Food at a market in Okinawa.

Unfortunately, these areas are not part of a new trend. They are the remaining zones where people are living long, healthy lives in a world where globalization has rapidly spread the western diet and lifestyle, along with its associated health problems. "I think these pockets of longevity are disappearing," Buettner said.

Buettner's exploration of longevity began in Okinawa, Japan. He was planning a series of expeditions to solve ancient mysteries, and was directed to Okinawa by the country's government, which has been studying the notable health and longevity of Okinawans since the mid-1970s. The World Health Organization (http://www.who.int/en/) had discovered that Okinawa had the world's longest disability-free life expectancy and Buettner found that a mystery worth investigating.

Okinawa not only has a high number of people who live to 100 and longer, these elderly residents are also in great health for their age. Okinawans show one-fifth the rates of breast and colon cancer and one-sixth the rates of heart disease seen in North America, where those two factors will account for the deaths of about 80 percent of people 65 and older, Buettner said. Obesity rates are also very low, and physical mobility remains good even into advanced ages.
"Something is happening with their lifestyle that is yielding these incredible numbers," Buettner said. Okinawans eat a largely plant-based diet, which includes at least eight times the fermented soy as North Americans. But they also have a culture that supports the health of the elderly. The concept of moai explains the extended support network that people have throughout their lives, and elders are venerated in Okinawan society.

Also, Buettner explained that in Okinawa, people live with a defined sense of purpose -- ikigai or "the reason for which you wake up in the world." "It's very easy to trivialize a sense of purpose," he said, "but it's a very important determinant of longevity." People who don't know why they wake up in the morning probably live seven or eight years less than those who do, he said, making a sense of purpose key, especially in middle age. The two most lethal years of life are the year you're born and the year you retire, he pointed out.

The other three blue zones feature their own keys to longevity. Elders are also revered in Sardinia, and two glasses a day of heart-healthy red wine are standard. On Costa Rica's Nicoya Peninsula, the average diet of black beans, fruit, and lime-soaked, antioxidant-rich corn hasn't changed much over the past few millennia.

A meal in Okinawa, Japan.

Loma Linda has the highest concentration of Seventh Day Adventists in the world, Buettner said, making it truly a cultural blue zone. Adventists eat a plant-based diet taken from the Bible, have strong faith and family networks, and strictly observe the Sabbath, taking a day to destress and recharge once a week. The Adventist Health Study completed by the National Institutes of Health showed that this lifestyle earns Adventist women in Loma Linda an extra nine years of life than their American peers, while men average 11. "Once again," he said, "you have a heterogeneous population vastly outliving their cohorts for one and one reason alone: their lifestyle."

Though the blue zones are found in four very geographically and culturally different parts of the world, there are nine characteristics common to all of them that are portable to any location and can be used to make healthy lifestyle changes, Buettner said. They include making low-intensity physical activity part of one's daily routine, building good relationships with friends and family, eating a diet lighter on meat and excess calories and heavier on plants, and finding a purpose for and sense of meaning in your life.

Buettner worked with the University of Minnesota over three years building his vitality compass test, which he says has tested to be the most accurate life expectancy calculator of its kind and is featured on his website. The test asks questions about your health and lifestyle, and the results include your life expectancy, your healthy life expectancy, and your body's current age (as opposed to its chronological age). It also identifies particular areas where care is required, he said, and where simple changes based on the nine longevity characteristics, like making your home a bit less convenient to increase daily movement or eating on smaller plates to cut portion sizes and calories, can start to make an impact on your health.

"Adopting any one of these nine will immediately improve your life expectancy at any age," Buettner said. "It's never too late to start."


http://health.asiaone.com/Health/News/Story/A1Story20080606-69359.html