Shown: posts 1 to 4 of 4. This is the beginning of the thread.
Posted by samplemethod on June 7, 2003, at 23:38:49
HI Guys,
I have enjoyed the health articles from Reuters that have filtered to me someone in newpapers and one some webpages. Yesterday I found out that Vitamin C (high dosage), reduces cortisol in stressful situations, from a reuters like report.... Now of course I'm gonna be taking more vit C in my daily life.....kinda a bitch cos I used to and just stopped cos I felt like it a few years ago ( I shoulda stuck to it). :)
Anyway, I believe those reauters people who pick up on interesting info from journal articles especially in the realm of mood and brain, are a good resource.
What I am wondering is that:
Are there any repositories for nutrition/health/mood/brain related reuters health stories that have been published in recent years. Im thinking like a website that just filters the nutrition/health/mood/brain reuters articles and keeps them on their site. Brain.com, used to do a little but they suck now.
When I read menshealth magazine, I also find a number of these nutrition/health/mood/brain filterings from journals, which I suspect are from reuters sources too. Unfortunately I havent found a whole repository of these articles on their site.Secondly, are there any other info sources that do a similar job to reuters in identifying quality nutrition/health/mood/brain news.
Here is an example I found 2 mins ago. Very interesting.
See a shrink to lose weight
Deflate your spare tireYour stomach is like a balloon. Fill it to the brim with food (or beer) and it'll stretch; abstain and it will shrink. Now a study has found that you might be able to use the elasticity of the stomach to help keep weight off. Researchers from St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital in the US found that obese subjects who traded their Henry VIII helpings for a semi-liquid diet for four weeks needed much less volume to feel full, as measured by an inserted, then inflated, latex balloon. Also, stomach capacity decreased by 36 per cent. Now, you may not need to go on a liquid diet to see these benefits. Simply breaking down your three square meals into six smaller munchings may do the job. After a few weeks, you'll feel well-stuffed throughout the day and, without night-time bingeing, you'll start lose those pesky kilos.
Now I dont know if that is a reuters article, but its the kinda stuff I am looking for.
Now I have more reason to eat smaller, more regular meals.... I might just do that now. :)Oh one thing that was maybe missed out in that article, that I just thought of, is that the use of more liquid in your meals. When you drink more with your meals this may have also lead to feeling fuller faster.
Cheers for the help guys!!!
Posted by BekkaH on June 8, 2003, at 1:31:58
In reply to Reuters - Health News, posted by samplemethod on June 7, 2003, at 23:38:49
I believe that Yahoo News is what you are looking for. Once you are on Yahoo News, click on the Health link and Science link, and you will get Reuters news stories.
Posted by samplemethod on June 8, 2003, at 2:04:47
In reply to Re: Reuters - Health News - sample method, posted by BekkaH on June 8, 2003, at 1:31:58
Ahhhh thats the stuff...
Thanks BeKKaH, just what I was looking for.
Heres some info for the people with sleeping problems... I believe some on this board use this drug..
--------------------------------------
First Effective Drug for Sleep Disorder Identified
Acurian - Thu Jun 5, 8:00 PM ET
In a clinical trial conducted at the University of Illinois at Chicago, researchers have demonstrated the first promising drug treatment for a common and life-threatening sleep disorder called sleep apnea. The drug, an antidepressant called mirtazapine, significantly reduced the symptoms of sleep apnea.Also heres one for the people that use Lithium.... apparently is has some good in terms of alzheimers
Lithium Inhibits Enzyme Involved in Alzheimer's
Wed May 21, 2003 06:27 PM ET
By Stephanie Riesenman
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Lithium, a manic depression drug first used in the 1960s, blocks an Alzheimer's disease-related enzyme in the brains of mice, according to new research.The findings could lead to more effective treatments for Alzheimer's patients, investigators say.
Also, researchers will try to find more specific drugs that target GSK-3. Lithium inhibits two forms of GSK-3 present in the human body -- alpha and beta. Only alpha is involved in Alzheimer's-related plaques, Klein said.
ANyone remember another drug that worked to reduce the alzheimers related plaques. Was it selegiline?Any supps out there that can do the same?? hehe
Im sure there might beCheeers
> I believe that Yahoo News is what you are looking for. Once you are on Yahoo News, click on the Health link and Science link, and you will get Reuters news stories.
Posted by djmmm on June 8, 2003, at 8:10:03
In reply to Reuters - Health News, posted by samplemethod on June 7, 2003, at 23:38:49
> HI Guys,
>
> I have enjoyed the health articles from Reuters that have filtered to me someone in newpapers and one some webpages. Yesterday I found out that Vitamin C (high dosage), reduces cortisol in stressful situations, from a reuters like report.... Now of course I'm gonna be taking more vit C in my daily life.....kinda a bitch cos I used to and just stopped cos I felt like it a few years ago ( I shoulda stuck to it). :)
>
> Anyway, I believe those reauters people who pick up on interesting info from journal articles especially in the realm of mood and brain, are a good resource.
>
> What I am wondering is that:
>
> Are there any repositories for nutrition/health/mood/brain related reuters health stories that have been published in recent years. Im thinking like a website that just filters the nutrition/health/mood/brain reuters articles and keeps them on their site. Brain.com, used to do a little but they suck now.
> When I read menshealth magazine, I also find a number of these nutrition/health/mood/brain filterings from journals, which I suspect are from reuters sources too. Unfortunately I havent found a whole repository of these articles on their site.
>
> Secondly, are there any other info sources that do a similar job to reuters in identifying quality nutrition/health/mood/brain news.
>
> Here is an example I found 2 mins ago. Very interesting.
>
> See a shrink to lose weight
> Deflate your spare tire
>
> Your stomach is like a balloon. Fill it to the brim with food (or beer) and it'll stretch; abstain and it will shrink. Now a study has found that you might be able to use the elasticity of the stomach to help keep weight off. Researchers from St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital in the US found that obese subjects who traded their Henry VIII helpings for a semi-liquid diet for four weeks needed much less volume to feel full, as measured by an inserted, then inflated, latex balloon. Also, stomach capacity decreased by 36 per cent. Now, you may not need to go on a liquid diet to see these benefits. Simply breaking down your three square meals into six smaller munchings may do the job. After a few weeks, you'll feel well-stuffed throughout the day and, without night-time bingeing, you'll start lose those pesky kilos.
>
> Now I dont know if that is a reuters article, but its the kinda stuff I am looking for.
>
>
> Now I have more reason to eat smaller, more regular meals.... I might just do that now. :)
>
> Oh one thing that was maybe missed out in that article, that I just thought of, is that the use of more liquid in your meals. When you drink more with your meals this may have also lead to feeling fuller faster.
>
>
> Cheers for the help guys!!!
>
>this is the only site I could find
This is the end of the thread.
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