Sunday 1 September 2013

Top 10 Health Benefits of Sound Sleep


Top 10 Health Benefits of Fresh Pomegranate -

1. Antioxidants – These help t...o wrangle the hoards of free radicals in your system. Free radicals have an uneven number of electrons and like to balance themselves out by stealing from other molecules and cells in your body. These cells are oftentimes very important ones dealing with your DNA, and when they are destroyed, disease steps in. Pomegranate juice is an excellent source of antioxidants that work to help you stay disease-free.

2. Blood Thinner – Pomegranate juice helps your blood circulation, making it easier for blood to travel to your heart, brain, and the rest of your body.

3. Cancer Fighter – Pomegranate has been known to reduce and prohibit the growth of cancer cells and tumors in your body.

4. Digestion Aide – Pomegranate juice is a natural remedy for diarrhea, dysentery, and great number of other digestive problems.

5. Anemia Relief – With a high content of iron, pomegranate juice is a great home cure for anemia because it promotes higher levels of hemoglobin.

6. Anti-Inflammatory – Pomegranate juice has properties that help treat sufferers of arthritis. It can also help cure a cough or sore throat.

7. Neonatal Care – It has been proven that pomegranate juice ingested by pregnant women can help protect the neonatal brain.

8. Artery Protection – It helps keep plaque from building up in your arteries.

9. Cartilage Protection – It works to prevent the deterioration of cartilage in your body.

10. Cholesterol Reducer – Pomegranate juice is capable of lowering blood pressure by as much as 6% in daily drinkers.

Effects of Moderate Caffeine Consumption


Friday 16 August 2013

Benefits of Fruits

Vitamin c has many benefits for skin, it is most important factor in collagen production, Collagen is protein which is necessary for growth of the cells and provides firmness to the skin also Collagen is a primary component of blood vessels, tendons, and ligaments. Also vitamin C is useful in healing all types of wounds.

Saturday 26 January 2013

Herpes

Make the Pain Go Away
One in five people has genital herpes and most of them don’t even know it. Only about one fourth of the estimated millions of people who are infected experience any symptoms. Worse yet, whether or not you have a single symptom, herpes is sexually transmittable. Herpes is caused by herpes simplex virus type II (HSV-2) Another strain, HSV-1, is the type responsible for cold sores, but it also sometimes causes genital infections. Once you’ve contracted the virus, it’s with you for a lifetime, living in nerve cells at the bottom of your spine. If you do have symptoms, they usually consist of a tingly or burning sensation in your genital area followed by the appearance of small red blisters and are often itchy and painful, with a watery yellow centre that eventually ruptures and grows a crusty skin.
Exit pain and suffering; medical treatment is aimed at relieving symptoms. Your doctor will probably treat you initial outbreak and perhaps recurrent outbreaks as well with the anti-viral drug acyclovir. Gradually outbreaks often weaken and may disappear altogether. Meanwhile, here are some ways to make yourself more comfortable. Moreover keep blisters clean and dry, you don’t want blisters to become super infected from bacteria on surrounding skin. Take a bath or shower daily with a gentle soap and water, or just water alone.
Even a warm bath helps relieve genital irritation, and if you have sores, it can also help relieve itching. Best of all is a soak in an oatmeal bath, and many doctors recommended Aveeno bath treatment, available from your chemist. The product contains a finely powdered oatmeal called colloidal oatmeal that’s very soothing to itching skin. Squeezing into tights and underwear or other form fitting clothes will further irritate sensitive herpes sores. You’ll get chafing, which can be extremely painful. Opt for loose fitting clothing until your sores heal. Take a non-prescription painkiller, paracetamol, ibuprofen or aspirin might help relieve blister pain. Follow the directions on the lable. Having sex during a herpes outbreak is bad idea for a number of reasons. The herpes outbreak is always associated with some level of pain and discomfort, and this will be made much worse during intercourse. As part of the herpes outbreak, patients may experience swelling of the lymph nodes in the groin. This swelling may cause some discomfort, or it may by painless. Having sex during an active outbreak will put your partner at risk of developing a herpes infection and may place you at higher risk for contracting other sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV.
If you don’t have herpes, but your life partner does, then using a condom offers some protection against contracting the virus. Use a condom even if no blisters are apparent. The virus is still there, an expert suggests latex over animal-membrane condoms. Best of all may be the female condom. This device consists of two plastic rings connected by a polyurethane sheath. The female condom covers the whole vulva, protecting nearby areas that would otherwise expose the virus or be exposed to it.
Symptoms of herpes, should you experience them, include a burning or tingling feeling in the genital area followed by the eruption of painful small red blisters that rupture and form shallow ulcers. Particularly with the initial infection, other symptoms may include;
Fever
Headache
Swollen lymph glands
Abnormal vaginal discharge
If you see exhibit these symptoms see your doctor, gynecologist or a specialist working in a sexually transmitted disease (STD) clinic. Some family planning clinics also offer specialized services for some STD’s.

Tachycardia

Everyone heart beats faster when they dash for a bus or swerve out of the way of an oncoming car, jumping to well over 100 beats a minute compared to its normal average of 60 to 80 beats or so. But if your heart simply starts zipping along without any apparent provocation, you may have tachycardia, a scary condition in which the heart temporarily races at a faster than normal pace. The whole episode may last only a few seconds, but for women with tachycardia, the fast beats are quite noticeable.
Here’s what happens; although the heart has a tiny group of cells that normally generate electrical signals to maintain the heart’s rhythm, any part of the heart can generate these fast beats. While temporary episodes of tachycardia aren’t necessarily dangerous in themselves, in some people they could be a sign of heart disease, high blood pressure, cardiomyopathy (an abnormality of heart muscle) or even damaged heart valves. In many people, particularly those with no heart disease, tachycardia is often harmless in that it is unlikely to lead to a heart attack.
For most people tachycardia is nothing to get upset about. Anxious people can often get benign harmless tachycardia, So can people who experience panic attacks a frightening occurrence in which the individual’s heartbeat accelerates for no known reason and they experience a sense of impending doom.
Though all tachycardia should be evaluated by a doctor, here’s what experts suggest you do if it’s not related to serious problems. As soon as your heart starts to race, tighten your stomach muscles, also a cardiologist. That will cause your abdominal muscles to put pressure on a group of nerves that will tell your heart’s electrical system to slow down. Take a deep, long breath and slowly let it out, because sometimes relaxation is all it takes to stop tachycardia. And deep breathing is frequently one of the fastest ways to relax. Anything that speeds up the heart caffeine and cigarettes, for example can trigger a rapid heartbeat. So commonsense says that if you’re prone to tachycardia, you should avoid any substance that might give your heart an extra kick. If your heart starts to race without any apparent reason, don’t ignore the symptoms. Have it checked out, particularly if a racing heartbeat.
You need to see your doctor when is accompanied by weakness light headness or shortness of breath, and returns again and again, as opposed to occurring as an isolated episode.

Friday 25 January 2013

Insomnia

Toss and Turn No More
When everyone else in the house is asleep, do you find yourself taking a sheep census? Or watching late night reruns? Or folding laundry to wear you out? If you are like most people with insomnia, you’ll do just about anything to get a few good Zzzs. On third of all adults can’t sleep at one time or another. And as women get older, they’re especially prone to insomnia. One you turn 40, you are 40% more likely to experience some degree of insomnia, thanks to the midlife hormonal changes that precede menopause.  During and after menopause, a common cause of insomnia is night’s sweats, or hot flushes that occur during sleep. For most women occasional insomnia isn’t much of a problem. But a wakeful night can leave you less than perky for the day at hand. Here are what women physician’s advices for those who crave some shut-eye. You need to turn the clock to the wall, because starting at the clock makes you more tense about getting back to sleep. Instead of checking the time concentrate on restful thoughts. Dial into your comfort zone, which make sure that your bedroom isn’t too hot or cold. Many individuals  sleep best in a cool room, so open the window when you turn out the lights.  If you haven’t gone to sleep after 20 minutes, you could try to head for another room and do something dull. If you distract your brain with something boring and stop fretting over wakefulness, you will nod off.
To prevent future episodes of sleeplessness you have to follow these advices.
Take a morning walk outside. Light exposure during the day helps keep your body clock regulated. An early morning walk in the daylight upon rising will help promote sleep at night.
Set a daytime worry hour. Set a concrete time for worrying during the day, be very focused about it. List each worry in writing with a plan for handling each one. When a worry wakes you, tell yourself that you have it covered and go back to sleep.
Resist the urge to nap. Napping during the day after a sleeplessness night will only throw your body clock off balance. You want to consolidate your sleep and get enough of it.
Set a bedtime. Adults need a regular bedtime, just like children, we have body clocks that synchronize our systems. Establish a set sleep and wake time, then stick to it every day. That tells your clock to make you sleepy at night and wakeful in the morning.
Wind down before you get into bed. Giving yourself about 45 minutes of quite time before you get into bed signals your body clock that the day is done and sleep time is imminent, listen some knowledgeable stuff, write a letter something boring, but do nothing that jazzes you up and nothing work related.
De-stress your bedroom, you perhaps don’t sleep in your office. Conversely, you shouldn’t work in your bedroom. Because your bedroom is for two things only sleeping and sex, so remove your computer your office reading pile, your fax machine, emails, and even your iphone, if you can, and put your TV in the sitting room.
Lose the Booze, if you need a good night’s sleep don’t have a nightcap, though you may feel relaxed at first, use of alcohol will disrupt your sleep later. Avoid drinking anything alcoholic, and offcourse avoiding caffeine is smart too.  Moreover there are solid proofs that smoking disrupts sleep, because nicotine is a stimulant. It raises blood pressures, gets your heart going faster and makes your brain more active.
if you have tired from everything and still can’t good sleep , then it’s time to see your doctor advice, she may refer you to a sleep disorders clinic for further evaluation.

Thursday 24 January 2013

Enlarged Pores

Concealment Tactics to Minimize Flaws
You have great skin, great hair and a great body. In fact, the only thing standing between you and a cover girls perfection may very well be the enlarged pores around your nose that deflect attention from your sweet nose and sparkling eyes. Just about everyone gets enlarged pores. That’s because pores are actually tiny openings in your skin that provides a way for the oil glands underneath to lubricate and protect the surface of your skin. Pore enlarges during puberty, when oil glands in your skin begin to increase the amount of oil that they pump through your pores. The pores get bigger so that they can handle the increased output. And they stay enlarged until somewhere around menopause, when they shrink into the perfect, totally unnoticeable size that you have always wanted.
You are most likely to notice enlarged pores around your nose, because that area has more oil glands per square entimetre than any other part of your body. But it’s also possible to shrink your pores and minimize their appearance. Even models have enlarged pores; they just know how to hide them.
Here’s what expert suggest, After washing your face, smooth a lotion containing alpha hydroxyl acids (AHAs) over your skin to peel away old skin cells that build up around your pores. The AHAs are fruit and milk acids that encourage older cells to peel off, leaving younger, smoother skin underneath. You can buy an AHA containing lotion in most chemists. Use an Alpha hydroxyl acid product that is 10% glycolic acid and follow packet directions. You can improve the appearance of your pores by removing dead skin cells. Moreover use a foundation that suspends powder in liquid an apply it like a filler. Further make sure that the base you use is non-comedogenic and oil-free. There are some products available in market which minimize pores, after you smudge it over your enlarged pores, the liquid evaporates leaving your pores full of powder, like applying filler to a hole in the wall. Let the pore minimize dry for 3 to 5 minutes, then apply a water based foundation over the top. Your face including the enlarged pore area will look as smooth as silk.  

Wednesday 23 January 2013

Intermittent Claudication

Relief for “Angina of the Legs”
Dressed in shots and trainers, you step outside and breathe in the fresh spring air. You head toward the park for your daily walk. As you reach the first junction, you pick up speed, swinging your arms and striding confidently.  Ten minutes later, a cramp in your calf stops you cold. You massage your leg, wait a couple of minutes, and then resume walking but more slowly this time. That scenario is familiar to women with intermittent claudications. The leg arteries carrying blood from the heart and lungs become so narrowed by cholesterol deposits that blood (with its energizing cargo of oxygen) has difficulty getting through. So you feel pain. It’s seems angina of the legs. The oxygen supply to calf muscles is temporarily insufficient, causing a cramped feeling. Older men and women with heart disease are most susceptible.
Here’s what you can do. Intermittent claudications are brought on by walking and it’s relieved by rest. Essentially your legs have worked so hard to walk that they have run out of air. So all you have to do is stop walking for a minute or two, blood flow will be restored, oxygen will saturate your muscles, and the pain will disappear.
Contradictory though it may seem, exercise can actually build a small network of collateral blood vessels that bypass the clogged arteries in your leg and give muscles an alternate supply of oxygen. So even though walking can trigger occasional bouts of intermittent claudications, you still need to walk to build a natural by-pass. The trick is to walk right up to the moment that you feel pain, stop until the pain stops, than resume movement. Building new blood vessels takes time, but walking every day, as often as you can should eventually pay off. You will find that in time you can walk further and do more before pain sets in. Seek a smoke free environment, because cigarette smoke decreases the amount of oxygen available to your muscles, triggering the onset of intermittent claudications.
You need see your doctor, when calf pain triggered by walking should be evaluated by a doctor but does not indicate an emergency. If you have calf pain with very little walking or if the pain occurs while you are at rest you should see a doctor at once. You should consult your doctor if you know you have intermittent claudication and leg pain wakes you up at night, you should suddenly develop cold, numb or painful feet or legs.

Tuesday 22 January 2013

Stomach Cramps

At Home Comfort Measure
You hurt bad you are doubled over knotted up. You want to scream You want to sleep. Anything to get rid of this plan; Stomach Cramp can career around your abdomen like a ball on a billiard table. Almost every woman has had cramps sometime. If you suffer from irritable bowel syndrome or lactose intolerance or even have the occasional bout of PMT, you know a cramp when it grips you. The exact diagnosis or cause of stomach cramps may or may not be obvious. It could be stress, or a virus, or something else.
Stomach cramps will go away on their own after a few hours or days. But you don’t have to suffer that long. Women doctors offer these comfort measures. A cramp is really just a knotted muscle. If stomach muscles are making you crampy lying in bed with a hot water bottle on your stomach may help ease the pain. A hot water bottle is much safer than a heat pad, because it cools down, while a heat pad stays hot and can burn you if you fall asleep or use it overnight. Stick to the BRAT diet, that’s bananas, applesauce and dry toast foods that are easy to digest and won’t hurt your tummy. High fibre foods like popcorn, nuts or cabbage can be hard to digest and make cramping worse. Drink plenty of water, if you cramping stems from constipation or diarrhea, the best way to ease the cramping are by drinking water, water and more water. Water gets the waste products moving through your intestines, which should ease your constipation. If you have diarrhea, drinking of water will keep you from becoming dehydrated.  
Cook up a batch of chicken soup, it works and nobody knows why, but chicken soup soothes stomach and abdominal cramps and cleans out the digestive system. If you have diarrhea or lactose intolerance, you’ll find that milk and other dairy products such as cheese and milk are hard to digest and often cause cramping. So until your cramps subside, go easy on the white stuff. If you have bowel spasms or trapped wind, peppermint oil stops the aching. Peppermint oil is available in capsule form in health food shops. Take one capsule two or three times a day between meals until your cramping goes away. Valerian fennel, ginger, chamomile, rosemary, peppermint and lemon balm teas also relieve wind and stop spasms of mild stomach cramps.