Eggs offer many health benefits
January 3, 2012 by Health Blogger
Filed under Organic Foods
(NaturalNews)Perhaps you’ve skipped this breakfast gem for fear of raising your cholesterol. Free yourself from that misconception and indulge in the treasure that a good ol’ egg has to offer. Three eggs per day over a 12-week period for obese participants on a carbohydrate…
What is Cholesterol
December 31, 2011 by
Filed under Supplements
What do quick food restaurant food such as hamburgers, cheese, cheese fries, french fries have in typical? What do they’ve in similarity beside the delicious taste, and also the satisfaction that it provides when eaten? These foods all have an extremely high amount of cholesterol. So we may ask nicely what is Cholesterol then? We [...]
Heart Health Made Easy: How to Lower Blood Pressure & Cholesterol
September 9, 2011 by
Filed under Minerals
Heart Health Made Easy: How to Lower Blood Pressure & Cholesterol Easy to understand, practical take action guide takes you step by step to lower cholesterol and blood pressure naturally. Everything you need to know in one convenient easy to follow guide so you can stop searching for the answers you seek. Heart Health Made [...]
Preventing Diseases: What Are the Benefits of Eating Oat Bran And Other Fiber-Rich Foods
April 26, 2011 by
Filed under Organic Foods
How is your health lately? Great health is hard to get these days. Many individuals would usually go to great measures in order to guarantee that their body is operating at top state all the time. Having said that, a number of people continue to be unaware of the significance of keeping a nutritious life-style. [...]
EBook(R): Lower Cholesterol Naturally.
January 16, 2011 by
Filed under Supplements
EBook(R): Lower Cholesterol Naturally. An EBook(R) To Lower Cholesterol Without Medication. High Click Through Rate. EBook(R): Lower Cholesterol Naturally.
All About Cholesterol
January 10, 2011 by Health Blogger
Filed under Organic Foods
Although this may sound shocking, cholesterol is actually not the main culprit for heart disease. The media and even our doctors tell us about the risks of high cholesterol all the time, so i know this may be hard to believe at all. But the truth is that it is foods and anything else that [...]
Cholesterol Foods E-Report
December 14, 2010 by
Filed under Organic Foods
Cholesterol Foods E-Report A comprehensive Report that explains how to lower cholesterol by using the right foods and avoiding the wrong foods Cholesterol Foods E-Report How To Organize Pesach! Exclusive EBook(R)s On Organizing Passover and all of the Major Jewish Holidays with an added value of 1 on 1 Coaching! How To Organize Pesach!
Statins prove useless, ineffective in children with lupus
November 13, 2010 by
Filed under Organic Foods
(NaturalNews) The push to expand the market for statin drugs has hit a major roadblock. A recent study presented at the annual meeting of the American College of Rheumatology has revealed that the “preventive” administration of statin drugs does nothing to prevent children with lupus from developing atherosclerosis, a buildup of fatty material in arteries that leads to heart attack and stroke. It is assumed by many in mainstream medicine that statin drugs are the cure-all for preventing heart disease, with some having even gone so far as to suggest that the cholesterol-lowering drugs be handed out for free with fast food meals (http://www.naturalnews.com/029590_statin_drugs_fast_food.html). But the new study out of Duke University Medical Center verifies that giving them to kids with lupus provides no benefit. “We thought every child with lupus should routinely be put on statins,” said Laura Schanberg, M.D., a professor of pediatrics at Duke. “This study proves that’s not the case.” For the study, researchers evaluated 221 participants with pediatric lupus over the course of three years, giving one portion of the group atorvastatin (Lipitor) and the other a placebo. The team used ultrasound imaging to monitor the progression of arterial wall thickening, inflammation, blood lipid levels, and lupus disease status, and found that statins did not work as intended to prevent the onset of heart disease. “There are rare long-term risks associated with statins that outweigh the risks of using them routinely without proof of clinically significant benefit,” Schanberg went on to say. “[W]e showed that statins should not be routinely prescribed to children with lupus.” To learn more about the dangers and side effects of statin drugs, visit: http://www.naturalnews.com/statin_drugs.html Sources for this story include: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2010-11/dumc-sdp110510.php
Statin drugs cause liver damage, kidney failure and cataracts, says BMJ
November 7, 2010 by
Filed under Organic Foods
(NaturalNews) Cholesterol-lowering statin drugs significantly increase a person’s risk of cataracts, muscle weakness, liver dysfunction and kidney failure, according to a study in the British Medical Journal . The study also confirmed that the drugs lower the risk of heart disease and esophageal cancer, but claims of other health benefits were unsupported. Researchers from Nottingham University in the United Kingdom examined data on more than 2 million patients between the ages of 30 and 84, seen at 38 different general practices, who had been prescribed the cholesterol-lowering drugs. More than 70 percent were taking simvastatin (Zocor), 22.3 percent were taking atorvastatin (Lipitor), 3.6 percent were taking pravastatin (Pravachol, Selektine), 1.9 percent were taking rosuvastatin (Crestor) and 1.4 percent were taking fluvastatin (Canef, Lescol, Lochol, Vastin). The researchers confirmed prior data suggesting that statins increase patients’ risk of cataracts, liver dysfunction, kidney failure and a form of muscle weakness known as myopathy. They found that for every 10,000 women treated with the drugs, 23 would develop acute kidney (renal) failure, 39 would develop myopathy, 74 would develop liver dysfunction and 309 would develop cataracts. Men suffered an even higher risk of myopathy, but their risks of the other three conditions were similar to those suffered by women. Putting it in different terms, the researchers found that only 434 people would need to be treated with the drugs for five years for one case of acute renal failure to develop. It would take only 136 treated for each case of liver dysfunction and 33 for each case of cataracts. Among women, 259 would need to be treated for each case of myopathy; among men, the number was only 91. The risk of developing all conditions was highest during the first year of treatment, but continued throughout the course of the study. Risk of liver and kidney problems increased proportionally with the dose of statins being taken. All drugs appeared to pose a similar risk of all conditions, with the exception of fluvastatin, which increased the risk of liver dysfunction more than its competitors. Men taking fluvastatin were twice as likely to develop liver dysfunction as those not taking statins, while women’s risk increased by 2.5 times. The researchers did find, however, that the risk of cataracts returned to normal within one year of stopping statin treatment, while the risk of liver and kidney problems returned to normal within one to three years. Additionally, they found no connection between statin use and the risk of dementia, osteoporotic fracture, Parkinson’s disease, rheumatoid arthritis or venous thromboembolism. Examining the purported benefits of the drugs, researchers found that they did in fact lower the risk of heart disease, averting 271 cases for every 10,000 high-risk patients treated. Put another way, 33 high-risk men or 37 high-risk women would need to be treated with the drugs to avert one case of the disease. Although advocates of the drugs have claimed that they may also reduce the risk cancer, the researchers found almost no data supporting these claims. The study “largely confirmed other studies that reported no clear association between statins and risk of cancers,” the researchers wrote. The only cancer-fighting effect uncovered in the study was a slightly lower risk of esophageal cancer, with eight cases averted for every 10,000 high-risk women treated. In other words, 1,266 high-risk women or 1,082 high-risk men would need to be treated with the drugs to prevent one case of esophageal cancer. Although sales of the blockbuster drugs are unlikely to be reduced as a result of the study, the researchers encouraged closer monitoring of patients for side effects and said their findings “would tend to support a policy of using lower doses of statins in people at high risk of the adverse event.” Sources for this story include: http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE64J7B820100520; http://www.medpagetoday.com/Cardiology/Atherosclerosis/20232.
Inspiring Points On Why Cholesterol Does Not Cause Heart Disease
August 5, 2010 by
Filed under Supplements
The terms cholesterol and heart disease seem to be permanently linked together, almost as if the former is the main cause of the latter. This is not true at all, however, as the majority of evidence links atherosclerosis as the primary cause of coronary heart disease, a condition caused when ruptured scar tissue appears within [...]