Saturday, May 30, 2009

Omega 3’s Protects Against Parkinson’s

New research findings show that omega-3 fats in your diet may protect your brain cells. It works by preventing the misfolding of a protein resulting from a gene mutation in neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson’s and Huntington’s.

Researchers developed a cell model with a mutation of the Ataxin-1 gene, which induces the misfolding of the protein. These deformed proteins cannot be properly processed by the cell machinery, resulting in tangled clumps of toxic protein that eventually kill the cell. But the omega-3 fat docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) protects cells from this defect.

Dr. Bazan laboratory who leads this study discovered earlier that neuroprotectin D1 (NPD1), a naturally-occurring molecule in the human brain that is derived from DHA also promotes brain cell survival. In this system NPD1 is capable of rescue the dying cells with the pathological type of Ataxin-1, keeping their integrity intact.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

For healthful diet, go Mediterranean

For healthful diet, go Mediterranean


Date published: 5/3/2009

THE Mediterranean eating plan is best at preventing heart disease, better even than a low-fat diet.

That's according to a massive review of nearly 200 scientific studies, just published in Archives of Internal Medicine. The Mediterranean diet and variations have made headlines repeatedly in the past few months.

The review suggested that the eating plan reduced the risk of heart disease by 37 percent, regardless of a person's exercise habits or weight.

A variation of the eating plan that includes nuts may be even more powerful. Spaniards who followed a Mediterranean plan with generous amounts of olive oil reduced heart disease risk by 40 percent; those who also ate an ounce of nuts a day had a whopping 70 percent drop in risk.

The nuts offered were a mix of almonds, hazelnuts and walnuts. That study, called PREDIMED, was convincing because it was both large and long-term, following 9,000 people over a year.

Another version of the Mediterranean diet that emphasized fewer starchy foods and more fiber reduced non-HDL cholesterol (bad cholesterol) by 8 percent in only 12 weeks. When a soy shake supplemented with sterols, hops and acacia was added to the plan, cholesterol levels dropped by 18 percent.

Past studies have linked the Mediterranean eating pattern to lower risks of diabetes, strokes, dementia, asthma, Parkinson's disease, rheumatoid arthritis and cancer.

MEDITERRANEAN PYRAMID

The Mediterranean diet is named for the region where it originated. It's high in fruits, vegetables, olive oil and seafood.

In 1993, a Boston nonprofit group, Oldways Preservation Trust, plus the Harvard School of Public Health and the World Health Organization, created a Mediterranean Diet Pyramid. Last month, they updated it to increase the emphasis on fish, seafood and spices.

According to Oldways, the eating plan:

Emphasizes plant-based foods such as fruits and vegetables, potatoes, breads and grains, beans, nuts and seeds

Recommends less-processed food and more seasonally fresh and locally grown foods to maximize vitamins and antioxidants

Uses olive oil to replace other fats such as butter and margarine

Allows daily cheese and yogurt

Allows fish, eggs and poultry a few times a week, and up to 16 ounces of red meat total in a month

Recommends fresh fruit as the typical daily dessert, and limits sweets to a few times per week

Urges regular physical activity

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Pass the Java: The Healthy side of coffee

(NaturalNews) Have you been trying to kick the coffee habit? Well, before you say good-bye to your favorite morning drink forever, you may be interested in hearing coffee may not be so bad for you after all. In fact, it's been linked to a variety of health benefits. Did you know that one study shows even one cup of coffee each day can cut your risk for Parkinson's disease in half?

Coffee's full of healthful components like magnesium, potassium and vitamin B3. And coffee is the American's number one source of antioxidants, says one 2005 study from the University of Scranton. Another study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition showed that one cup of coffee can have more antioxidants than a serving of blueberries or oranges. Antioxidants play a key role in reducing the inflammation which is associated with many health problems ranging from heart disease to rheumatoid arthritis.

Dr. Joe Vinson, a chemistry professor who led the Scranton study, says, "Antioxidants are your army to protect you from the toxic free radicals, which come from breathing oxygen and eating sugar, that start chronic diseases. Antioxidants help stave off cancer, heart disease, diabetes and stroke."

It may be the high level of antioxidants that helps coffee protect the heart. Researchers from Norway looked at data involving more than 27,000 women in the Iowa Women's Health Study and found women who drank 1-3 cups of coffee each day had a 24 percent reduction in risk of heart disease compared with women who didn't drink coffee at all. Women who drank as much as five cups a day showed up to a 19 percent decrease in risk of death from all causes. However, the study also concluded that more is not always better. Drinking more than six cups of coffee per day did not seem to increase benefits significantly.

Analysis of a collection of studies from the Journal of the American Medical Association showed evidence that consuming coffee can lower the risk of developing type II diabetes. Studies which looked at decaffeinated coffee showed similar results. The benefits increased with the amount of coffee drank: up 28 percent for those who drank at least four cups per day, and up 35 percent for people who drank more than six.

However, just because coffee is good for you doesn't mean you should overload your body with caffeine. Rob van Dam is a Harvard scientist and the lead author of a study which showed the amount of caffeine in just two cups of coffee can constrict blood flow to the heart.

"I wouldn't advise people to increase their consumption of coffee in order to lower their risk of disease," says Dr. Van Dam, "but the evidence is that for most people without specific conditions, coffee is not detrimental to health. If people enjoy drinking it, it's comforting to know that they don't have to be afraid of negative health effects."

Fortunately, most of these benefits can still be enjoyed if you drink decaffeinated coffee, so you don't have to take in surplus caffeine just for the antioxidants' sake. It's also a good idea to look for coffee made from organic sources to limit your exposure to chemical pesticides. At any rate, rest assured you can enjoy your morning cup of joe without regret - so long as you go easy on the sugar.

Parkinson's partially linked to pesticides

Parkinson's partially linked to pesticides


UCLA researchers have provided strong new evidence linking at least some cases of Parkinson's disease to exposure to pesticides. Researchers have suspected for some time that pesticides may cause the neurodegenerative disorder, and experiments in animals have shown that the chemicals, particularly the fungicide maneb and the herbicide paraquat, can cause Parkinson-like symptoms in animals. But proving it in humans has been difficult because of problems in assessing exposure to the agents.

Parkinson's is a disorder of the central nervous system that often impairs the sufferer's motor skills, speech and other functions. It is not fatal of itself, but complications often are. The disease has been recognized since the Middle Ages but became more prevalent in the 20th century. As many as 180 of every 100,000 Americans develop it.

To explore a potential connection to pesticides, epidemiologist Beate Ritz of UCLA and her graduate student Sadie Costello, now at UC Berkeley, studied public records of pesticide applications in California's Central Valley from 1974 to 1999. Every application of pesticides to crops must be registered with the state. Working with Myles Cockburn of USC, they developed a tool to estimate pesticide exposure in areas immediately adjacent to the fields.

They then identified 368 longtime residents who lived within 500 yards of fields where the chemicals had been sprayed and compared them to 341 carefully matched controls who did not live near the fields.

They reported in the current issue of the American Journal of Epidemiology that people who lived next to fields where maneb or paraquat had been sprayed were, on average, about 75% more likely to develop the disease. But those who developed the early-onset form of the disease -- contracting it before the age of 60 -- had double the risk of contracting it if they were exposed to either maneb or paraquat alone and four times the risk if they were exposed to both. In most cases, the exposure occurred years before the onset of the disease. Exposure to other pesticides did not appreciably alter the risk.

"The results confirmed two previous observations from animal studies," Ritz said. "One, that exposure to multiple chemicals may increase the effect of each chemical. That's important, since humans are often exposed to more than one pesticide in the environment. And second, that the timing of the exposure is also important."

-- Thomas H. Maugh II