Archive for August, 2005

What is cholesterol?

Cholesterol is a fatty substance made by your liver. And despite its bad reputation, you actually do need it. It helps to form cell membranes and some of your hormones.

Your body makes all the cholesterol it needs. But when you eat foods high in saturated fat, it triggers your liver to churn out more cholesterol, much more than you require. That excess cholesterol builds up in your arteries, blocks bloodflow and, if left untreated, can set the stage for a heart attack or stroke. When we say you have high cholesterol, it means that the total amount of cholesterol in your bloodstream is above a certain number that experts have deemed a risk to your health.

But there’s more than just your total cholesterol. There are actually two types of cholesterol—low-density lipoproteins (referred to as LDL) and high-density lipoproteins (called HDL). Lipoproteins are combinations of fat and protein made by your body. They are responsible for delivering other fats, which don’t dissolve in your blood, to your cells.
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How can I gain weight?

The key to gaining weight is shifting the body weight equation so that you take in more calories than you burn. To gain weight, you may need to eat more food. Instead of the traditional “three square meals a day,” add two or three substantial snacks between three moderate-size meals. By spreading out your food choices during the day, you’ll be more likely to enjoy your meals and snacks without feeling overstuffed.

Begin by choosing calorie-rich foods from each group of the Food Guide Pyramid, plus fats, oils, and sweets in moderation. Aim for the higher number of servings from each group shown in the Pyramid. For example, in the Bread Group, choose granola, bagels, biscuits, and cornbread. In the Fruit Group, choose canned fruit in syrup, dried fruits, and fruit nectars. For vegetables, choose avocado, olives, potatoes, peas, corn, and squash. In the Meat Group, choose beef, pork, lamb, poultry, salmon, swordfish, omelets, nuts, peanut butter, and chickpeas and other dried beans. In the Milk Group, choose milk, fruited yogurt, hard cheeses, ice cream, pudding, custard, and milkshakes.
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Causes of Heartburn

To digest food, the stomach is flooded with acid. Between the stomach and the esophagus is a sphincter muscle that lets the food get to the stomach but then closes to keep the stomach acid from flowing back up the throat. If this muscle becomes loose or doesn’t work properly, the stomach contents can backflow into the esophagus, making it burn.

Or you can eat foods that are acidic themselves that can irritate tiny areas of irritation you already have on the walls of your esophagus.
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British scientists create first pure brain stem cells

Scientists have made the world’s first pure batch of brain stem cells from human stem cells. The breakthrough is important in the fight against neuro-degenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s and could also reduce the number of animals used in medical research.

Stem cells can change into any type of cell in the body. How they change, a process known as differentiation, remains a mystery but scientists think certain chemical and environmental signals must trigger it.

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Austin Smith of Edinburgh University’s institute for stem cell research bathed stem cells taken from mouse embryos with two proteins called epidermal growth factor and fibroblast growth factor, both of which are known to be involved in the normal development of the embryonic brain. After his team had shown the process turned embryonic mouse stem cells into brain stem cells, they repeated the experiment on human embryonic stem cells.
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