Best home remedies and natural treatments for poison ivy
May 22, 2012 by Health Blogger
Filed under Organic Foods
As summer approaches, most people spend more time outdoors; and with that comes the chance of developing a poison ivy allergy. Oils from these devilish weeds are highly noxious, causing a long list of poison ivy allergy symptoms. Contact with a poison ivy plant can produce…
Admitted: Conventional cancer treatments sterilize women
March 30, 2012 by Health Blogger
Filed under Organic Foods
Most American women who find out they have cancer are confronted by their doctors with three choices for treatment, which include surgery, chemotherapy and radiation, all of which greatly increase the chance they will never again be able to procreate. Yet, rarely does…
Vitamin D lower in NFL football players who suffered muscled injuries, study suggests
July 10, 2011 by
Filed under Supplements
Vitamin D deficiency has been known to cause an assortment of health problems. Now, a new study suggests that lack of the vitamin might also increase the chance of muscle injuries in athletes, specifically NFL football players.
Calcium plus vitamin D may reduce melanoma risks in some women, study finds
June 27, 2011 by Health Blogger
Filed under Supplements
A combination of calcium and vitamin D may cut the chance of melanoma in half for some women at high risk of developing this life-threatening skin cancer, according to a new study.
For FarmVille, a Crop From a Real Organic Farm
July 14, 2010 by Health Blogger
Filed under Organic Foods
Users of the social network game, who tend virtual crops, will have the chance to plant blueberries from a subsidiary of General Mills.
Childhood cancer survivors have 10 times greater risk of heart disease (because radiation damages the heart!)
June 18, 2010 by Health Blogger
Filed under Organic Foods
(NaturalNews) Survivors of childhood cancers are nearly 10 times more likely to suffer from cardiovascular disease as adults than people who did not have cancer as children, according to a study conducted by researchers from Emory University and published in the journal Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention . Researchers remain unsure of the exact reason for the increased risk, but the effects of radiation therapy appear to play a significant role. “Mechanistically, we are not yet sure why this is, but the association is definitely there,” said researcher Lillian R. Meacham. Using data from the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study, researchers compared data from 8,599 cancer survivors with data from 2,936 of their cancer-free siblings. They found that cancer survivors had a 60 percent higher chance of being on cholesterol medicine, a 70 percent higher chance of suffering from diabetes and nearly a 100 percent higher chance of being on blood pressure drugs. They were no more likely that their siblings to suffer from obesity, however, suggesting that something more than lifestyle factors are at play. “These risk factors are manifesting at about age 32, which is much younger than a non-cancer survivor would exhibit signs of cardiovascular risk factors,” Meacham said. “Some have suggested that when you are a cancer survivor there are parts of you that wear out early, so we need to be vigilant about our follow-up of these patients in order to find these late effects early and intervene.” Physical activity increased a cancer survivor’s risk of suffering more than one symptom by 70 percent compared with cancer free siblings. Being older when the study was conducted increased survivor’s risk by 8.2 times compared with their siblings. Radiation therapy was also strongly associated with cardiovascular risk, with those who had undergone chest and abdomen radiation suffering from 2.2 times the risk of cardiovascular risk factor clustering as those who had not undergone the therapy. Total-body radiation increased the risk by 5.5 times. Sources for this story include: www.businessweek.com; www.sciencedaily.com; www.telegraph.co.uk.