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Showing posts with label health benefits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health benefits. Show all posts

Monday, November 14, 2011

Drinking Water Will Keep You Healthy and Vibrant... As Long As You Choose Pure, Clean Water

Drinking Water Will Keep You Healthy and Vibrant... As Long As You Choose Pure, Clean Water

Drinking water is the easiest, most effortless initiative you can take in order to remain healthy or bring your body back to health. Because of the critical role water plays in keeping your body, choose the water that you put into it with care and diligence. Choose Health, Vitality, and Longevity… Choose Kangen Water!

Why Drinking Water Will Keep You Healthy…


The 'Anatomy' of Water 
Water makes up more than 70% of the body; and that number surges to 95% in the brain. It is part of all bodily fluids and is vital to the proper function of all organ systems within the body. Over 2,500 years ago, Hippocrates, the father of modern medicine unequivocally stated, 'You are what you eat', and by extension that includes water too. It is therefore obvious that the quality and purity of the water you drink is critical to your health and wellbeing. 
Facts on Water
Following are some other interesting facts about water that will help you understand the importance of drinking the purest, cleanest water available to you to enjoy a long and healthy life.
  • Two-thirds of Americans do not drink the recommended 8-10 glasses of water daily.
  • Continual loss of water from the body can slow down the metabolic rate by as much as 3%.
  • Over one-third of North Americans have suppressed their thirst mechanism to the point where it is often misinterpreted as hunger.
  • The number one reason for daytime sleepiness and low energy iswater loss.
  • By the time a person feels thirsty, his or her body has lost 1-3% of itstotal water amount, which can affect memory and the ability to concentrate.
  • Water naturally moisturizes the skin from the inside out, giving you afresh looking complexion and a beautiful glow.
  • Water naturally carries more substances than any other liquidfound on Earth, including vitamins, minerals and nutrients.
Dangers of Common Sources of Water
Drinking water is paramount to the body's healthy and optimal functioning.Chemical and organic sources of pollution have contaminated many of the common sources we rely on for drinking water. Nowadays, it is impossible to truly ascertain that the water originating from city water systems, wells or even natural springs does not contain harmful chemicals like chlorine, fluoride, pesticides and many more, all of which negatively our health and wellbeing.
Enjoy Healthy Water: Drink Kangen Water®
Unless you have access to a pure and reliable source of natural water, Alkaline and ionized Kangen Water® offers the best alternative to any other water. Clean and pure, great-tasting, and filled with the vitamins and minerals required for the body to thrive, its balanced (alkaline) pH also help keep the body healthy. By attaining optimal health through optimal hydration, you become more resilient to stress factors and other modern lifestyle habits that would otherwise negatively affect your heath and well-being. So, enjoy this alkaline water every day, and discover the advantages of smart and optimal hydration! Kangen Water® is THE better choice for a healthy and active body! What could be more important? After all, your body can always use more water (8-10 glasses a day is the recommended amount.)
Control The Quality of Your Water with Kangen Water®Systems
The Alkaline Ionized Kangen Water® Systems are compact and easy to install in any home or office. They will conveniently and with 100% guarantee transform your tap water into healthy, balanced water to support your lifestyle and wellness goals. There's a choice for every budget and great financing options available to all too.



For more information on how to get your Kangen Water® System TODAY, call me at 786-308-9552 or email me at aleslerner@hotmail.com.

Monday, January 17, 2011

The benefits of Fitness & Physical Exercise: 'Fit and Healthy Men: Wellness Tips From the Pros'

The benefits of Fitness & Physical Exercise: 'Fit and Healthy Men: Wellness Tips From the Pros'
WebMD Feature
By Stephanie Watson
Reviewed By Brunilda Nazario, MD
December 17, 2010

The secret to building strong and healthy muscles lies in eating a healthy and balanced diet. While as a vegan, I would not recommend the use of animal protein and would sooner replace it with a healthy vegetarian alternative such as soybeans, beans, almonds and large doses of the 'fountain of youth and strength' E3Live, I support switching to lean protein sources and command the balanced plan NFL athletes follow. I'd most definitely stay away from all protein shakes and powder, simply because the level of concentration is so high that it creates huge residues and waste material that are then stored in unduly places.So if it's high doses of healthy protein you are in need of, be sure to click on the E3link above this article so you may find out more about it.  For more about the NFL diet of choice and its health and fitness benefits, be sure to read the article below.

Eat to Lose Weight and Build Muscle: How the NFL Does It

NFL players work out hard, both on the field and in the gym. But for them, training is only part of the equation. They also need to eat right. "If you're only doing one, you might not get the body you want, and you might increase your risk of injury," says Leslie Bonci, MPH, RD, CSSD, LDN, director of sports nutrition at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and team sports dietitian for the Pittsburgh Steelers.
"Diet is very important to me as a player," Cincinnati Bengals safety Chris Crocker wrote in an email. "High protein is my main focus, while incorporating a higher level of carbs the night before the game."
Contrary to popular belief, eating everything in sight isn't a plus in the NFL. Having an unhealthy body weight will only slow you down and make you more sluggish and susceptible to injury, says Barry Rubin, head strength and conditioning coach for the Philadelphia Eagles. "You can't outrun your calories," he says. "If you start doing that, you're going to get hurt. You're going to over-train."
If you want to get in shape like an NFL pro, you need to eat like an NFL pro, and that means getting enough protein and the right balance of nutrients in your diet.

Go Pro…tein
There's a reason pro athletes won't go anywhere without their protein. It's an essential ingredient in every cell of the body, including the muscles.
During a workout, your body goes into a catabolic state, where it's breaking down muscle.
Once you're done lifting, you want to put it back into an anabolic state, where it's building muscle again. "It's so important post-workout to get something in your body to start that anabolic phase," says Rob Livingstone, MS, CSCS, SCCC, a strength and conditioning professional in Norcross, Ga., who has trained many pro athletes.
Bonci says 'the goal with eating protein is to optimize performance and build lean muscle mass. Ideally you want to get in a serving of protein both before and after a workout', she says.
When you eat your protein, don't take it solo. "You've got to have some carbohydrates," Livingstone says. "There's got to be some sugar in that protein to increase the absorption."
Carbs not only help your body grow muscle, but they also provide you with
fuel for your workout.

Lean, Not Bulk
During the season, former Tennessee Titan defensive tackle Torrie Griffin was burning so many calories on the field that he had to down upwards of 8,000 calories daily just to maintain his 290-pound playing weight. "That is, I would say, a standard portion for some of the guys," he says. "I was one of those who had to work to keep the weight on."
Griffin, who is now a certified personal trainer and owner of TTrain Fitness Bootcamp in Atlanta, doesn't recommend the kind of diet he and his teammates ate to stay big. For breakfast, they'd down supersized restaurant portions of waffles, eggs, bacon, grits, and toast. At dinner, they'd pack in two burgers, mac and cheese, and fries. "In general for
the linemen, it was three very large meals," Griffin recalls. "I didn't really think about how much of the bad stuff or fat and calories were in the food when we ate out."
The only guys who need to be as huge as defensive linemen are defensive linemen. If you work a desk job and eat like a lineman, the only thing that's going to grow is your belly. Guys who work out but eat nothing but junk food will gain fat on top of their muscle and bulk up. "When you're talking about lean muscle mass, you've got to have a clean diet ... a balanced diet of protein and carbohydrates [with a] low level of fat, and lots of fruits and vegetables," Livingstone says.
For that, you're better off taking nutrition tips from the NFL players who keep their dietslighter, and cleaner.
Crocker only gets 3,000 to 3,500 calories on days when he trains. "As a free safety it is best for me to be lighter on my feet so I am able to get to the ball and get to the plays a lot quicker." He says he can cover the field faster when he's a pound or two lighter.
If you're working out three days a week, you can eat about 15 calories per pound of body weight, according to Bonci. Men who work out five days a week can up their calorie count to 20 per pound. That doesn't mean everyone gets a free pass to eat more than 3,000 calories a day, though. "The range of calories you require on a daily basis varies greatly, and is dependent upon your weight, your activity level, your age, and your muscle mass,"
Bonci says. "So one size does NOT fit all when it comes to determining your calorie cap!"

Your NFL Plate
For most NFL players, eating is a no-brainer. They've got nutritionists on staff, and during the season they eat three meals a day in the team's cafeteria. If you're not a pro, you need to do the meal planning yourself, but you can incorporate elements from the NFL diet.
There's really no big secret to eating like an NFL pro. It's all about balance.
Your plate should look like this:
One-third lean protein
One-third fruits and vegetables
One-third healthy carbs (whole-grain rice, pasta, or bread)
Crocker starts his day with a breakfast of turkey sausage and egg whites with tomatoes and spinach. Lunch is usually a grilled chicken sandwich with a mixed green salad, or sliced ham on wheat with applesauce. And dinner is lean protein -- chicken, pork, or beef -- with brown rice, steamed green beans, and a mixed green salad. If he's hungry between meals, he snacks on cereal bars or fresh fruit.
The bulk of your nutrition should come from what's on your plate, but if you're not getting enough vitamins and minerals from food alone, it's OK to take a daily supplement, Bonci says. Nutritional supplements can help you make up for what you're missing in your diet, but they shouldn't replace it.
"It's very important that the supplement remain a supplement," Livingstone says. "If supplements start to take over the diet, they're not doing their job." Supplements can't provide the same quality of vitamins and nutrients as whole foods like chicken, fruits, and vegetables.
Also, be wary of the specialized supplements marketed to athletes, because they're not always safe. Some supplements that are used to increase athletic performance have been linked to side effects like high blood pressure, irregular heartbeat, dizziness, and nausea.



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The benefits of Fitness & Physical Exercise: 'Move More, Gain Less Weight With Age'

The benefits of Fitness & Physical Exercise: 'Move More, Gain Less Weight With Age'
By Kathleen Doheny
WebMD Health News
Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD
January 2, 2011

'High Activity Levels Over Time Reduce Weight Gain With Age', Study Finds

Dec. 14, 2010 -- Keep moving as a young adult and you will likely lessen the dreaded middle-age spread, according to a new study that focused on physical activity and weight gain over time.
'Young adults who maintained a high level of physical activity gained less weight in middle age', found researcher Arlene Hankinson, MD, an instructor of preventive medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of
Medicine in Chicago.
''Activity has an effect, but it doesn't completely eliminate age-related weight gain," she tells WebMD. 'But it does help', she finds, and the benefit appears greater for women, though she is not sure why.
Highly active women gained 13 pounds less over 20 years than women with low activity levels, while highly active men gained 6 pounds less than the men with low activity levels.

The study is published in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
While some who hope activity can wipe out age-related weight gain may see the results as discouraging, Hankinson disagrees. "I think it's extremely optimistic news," she says. "It's showing how beneficial activity is in reducing weight gain with age."

Physical Activity and Weight Gain: The Study
Hankinson evaluated 3,554 participants in the CARDIA study, an ongoing study that now has 20 years of follow up.
Participants were ages 18 to 30 at the start of the study. They answered questions about activity at follow-up exams done after two, five, seven, 10, 15, and 20 years.
Hankinson evaluated weight, body mass index (BMI), and waist circumference. She took into account such factors as age, alcohol use, and calorie intake.
She looked at the differences in activity levels in two ways: by comparing those in the top level of activity with those in the lowest level and by evaluating those who got 150 minutes or more of moderate to vigorous intensity activity a week. (The 150 minutes of moderate activity is recommended by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.)
When she compared the high activity group with the low? "Women who had low activity gained 33 pounds over the 20 years while women who had high activity gained 20 pounds over the 20 years," she says.
"Men who had low activity gained 28 pounds over the 20 years and men who had high activity gained 22 pounds over the 20 years."
Only 11% of the women and 12% of the men in the highest activity group at the study start kept it up over the 20 years. Over the 20 years, nearly 37% met the 150-minute a week goal.
When she looked at the 150-minute a week group, she found "women who didn't have 150 minutes of physical activity a week gained 32 pounds over 20 years; women who did gained 22 pounds. Men who didn't get 150 minutes gained 29 pounds; men who did gained 26 pounds."
Those in the high activity group also had smaller gains in waist circumference with age.
Physical activity included not just sports and other formal exercise but also occupational activity and home maintenance.
''Physical activity is something everyone can do in some form," Hankinson tells WebMD.

Move More, Gain Less: Second Opinion
The new study findings are scientifically sound and are important, says Tim Church, MD, PhD, director of preventive medicine research at the Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge, La. He reviewed the study findings for WebMD but was not involved in the research.
"It brings some more balance to the discussion [about the obesity epidemic],'' he says. Often, people zero in on food only, he says. "Here's more evidence that physical activity clearly has a role in preventing weight gain. The optimal way to control weight is both through diet and physical activity."
The link found by Hankinson between lesser weight gain among highly active people may be more encouraging than at first glance, he says. He points out that the study followed them only to ages 38 to 50. "I would expect to see bigger group differences [between low and high activity groups] as the groups continue to age," he says.
Minimizing weight gain is just one reason to stay active with age, he says. "You are going to be able to get around easier" if you stay active with age, he says.

SOURCES:
Arlene Hankinson, MD, instructor of preventive medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School
of Medicine, Chicago.
Tim Church, MD, PhD, director of preventive medicine research, Pennington Biomedical Research
Center, Baton Rouge, La.
Hankinson, A. Journal of the American Medical Association, Dec. 15, 2010; vol 304: pp 2603-2610.

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Thursday, January 13, 2011

Tips For A Healthy Lifestyle: 'Guided Imagery and Surgery'

Tips For A Healthy Lifestyle: 'Guided Imagery and Surgery'
Dr. Weil's Weekend Tip, January 2, 2011

The use of guided meditation has been known to be extremely effective for relaxation and in the relief of a myriad of stress-related disorders. More and more positive results have clearly demonstrated the benefits of guided meditation through countless reliable scientific studies. So much so that Western Medicine practitioners are now integrating these techniques into their own practice to prevent disease, alleviate symptoms, and also reduce the level of anesthetic required in surgery. If your personal health practitioner is not on the page quite yet, you may want to do so yourself. For more, read below.

Guided imagery is the practice of concentrating on vivid mental pictures - which may be evoked by a practitioner or by an audio recording - to promote healing. If you are considering or facing surgery, you may want to add guided imagery to your list of preparations. There is a growing body of compelling evidence for the supportive role of the mind-body connection in facilitating healing, and guided imagery, in particular, may help augment the recovery process for surgical patients by:

1. Decreasing post surgical pain and the need for pain medication
2. Reducing the side effects and complications of surgery
3. Lessening stress and anxiety before and after procedures
4. Reducing recovery time
5. Improving sleep
6. Strengthening the immune system
7. Boosting self-confidence and self-control

If you wish to try guided imagery, consult an experienced practitioner about your challenges and goals. You may also choose to create and play personalized imagery CDs or MP3s both before and after surgery.


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Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Food & Nutrition: The Health Benefits of Green Tea



Healthy Foods: '5 Reasons to Drink Green Tea' 
Dr. Weil's Daily Tip, January 6, 2011

Recent research has highlighted the many health benefits of drinking green tea, especially in boosting immunity and preventing cancer. As with everything, use moderation when consuming green tea. It contains caffeine! For more, read Dr. Weil's article on green tea below.

Looking for a simple resolution to improve your overall health? Start drinking green tea. My beverage of choice, green tea is a potent source of catechins - healthy antioxidants that can inhibit cancer cell activity and help boost immunity. Need more reasons to drink green tea? It can also:
  • Lower cholesterol levels and rates of heart disease
  • Help protect against bacterial infections
  • Promote joint health and stronger bones
  • Reduce inflammation
  • Enhance the effects of antibiotics, even against drug-resistant bacteria and "superbugs"
Green tea is available in a wide range of varieties - introduce yourself by substituting a cup of green tea for a cup of coffee and you will soon be enjoying the health benefits of this delicious beverage! Learn to appreciate the subtle fragrance of good-quality green tea and use tea time to unwind, meditate and take respite from your stress du jour.


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Monday, January 10, 2011

Food & Nutrition: Most Healthful Fruit


Healthy Foods: '4 Reasons to Eat Pomegranates' 
Dr. Weil's Daily Tip, December 29, 2010

Pomegranate fruits may be part of a new health fad yet the benefits they provide are far from the usual exaggerated all-healing claims!  They are a wonderful food and one with an interesting spiritual component too.  For more, read the article by Dr. Weil below.

The pomegranate is an extraordinary fruit, steeped in history: the number of seeds (roughly 613) found in a single fruit was said by ancient scholars to correspond to the 613 commands of the Hebrew Torah. Renowned herbalist James Duke, a former ecologist with the USDA, has published (in
the April, 2008 issue of Alternative & Complementary Therapies) an exhaustive review of the scientific literature on the pomegranate. His conclusion: it is "one of the most promising of health foods" with "a dozen known anti-inflammatory phyto-chemicals and some three dozen antioxidants."

Duke found studies that suggest pomegranate fruit and/or juice may help prevent or alleviate:
1. Heart disease and atherosclerosis
2. High cholesterol
3. Prostate cancer
4. Alzheimer's disease

If you have access to inexpensive pomegranates (as many in the southern U.S. do as the trees grow prolifically with little
tending), by all means indulge. And if you can't, remember that deep-colored fruits such as cherries, blueberries, raspberries
and deep-colored vegetables all offer similar benefits. Enjoy!