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Saturday, May 31, 2008

Lotus Therapy

The patient sat with his eyes closed, submerged in the rhythm of his own
breathing, and after a while noticed that he was thinking about his troubled
relationship with his father.





Steven Tabbutt



Multimedia


Craig Hunter, a science editor, discusses some of the topics in
this week's Science Times.



Jim Ross for The New York Times

ANXIETY AID Zindel Segal, a psychologist,
demonstrating meditative therapy.


“I was able to be there, present for the pain,” he said, when the meditation
session ended. “To just let it be what it was, without thinking it through.”


The therapist nodded.


“Acceptance is what it was,” he continued. “Just letting it be. Not trying to
change anything.”


“That’s it,” the therapist said. “That’s it, and that’s big.”


This exercise in focused awareness and mental catch-and-release of emotions
has become perhaps the most popular new psychotherapy technique of the past
decade. Mindfulness meditation, as it is called, is rooted in the teachings of a
fifth-century B.C. Indian prince, Siddhartha Gautama, later known as the Buddha.
It is catching the attention of talk therapists of all stripes, including
academic researchers, Freudian analysts in private practice and skeptics who see
all the hallmarks of another fad.


For years, psychotherapists have worked to relieve suffering by reframing the
content of patients’ thoughts, directly altering behavior or helping people gain
insight into the subconscious sources of their despair and anxiety.
The promise of mindfulness meditation is that it can help patients endure flash
floods of emotion during the therapeutic process — and ultimately alter
reactions to daily experience at a level that words cannot reach. “The interest
in this has just taken off,” said Zindel Segal, a psychologist at the Center of
Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto, where the above group therapy session
was taped. “And I think a big part of it is that more and more therapists are
practicing some form of contemplation themselves and want to bring that into
therapy.”


At workshops and conferences across the country, students, counselors and psychologists
in private practice throng lectures on mindfulness. The National
Institutes of Health
is financing more than 50 studies testing mindfulness
techniques, up from 3 in 2000, to help relieve stress, soothe addictive
cravings, improve attention, lift despair and reduce hot flashes.


Some proponents say Buddha’s arrival in psychotherapy signals a broader
opening in the culture at large — a way to access deeper healing, a hidden path
revealed.


Yet so far, the evidence that mindfulness meditation helps relieve
psychiatric symptoms is thin, and in some cases, it may make people worse, some
studies suggest. Many researchers now worry that the enthusiasm for Buddhist
practice will run so far ahead of the science that this promising psychological
tool could turn into another fad.


“I’m very open to the possibility that this approach could be effective, and
it certainly should be studied,” said Scott Lilienfeld, a psychology
professor at Emory. “What concerns me is the hype, the talk about changing the
world, this allure of the guru that the field of psychotherapy has a tendency to
cultivate.”


Buddhist meditation came to psychotherapy from mainstream academic medicine.
In the 1970s, a graduate student in molecular biology, Jon Kabat-Zinn, intrigued
by Buddhist ideas, adapted a version of its meditative practice that could be
easily learned and studied. It was by design a secular version, extracted like a
gemstone from the many-layered foundation of Buddhist teaching, which has
sprouted a wide variety of sects and spiritual practices and attracted 350
million adherents worldwide.


In transcendental meditation and other types of meditation, practitioners
seek to transcend or “lose” themselves. The goal of mindfulness meditation was
different, to foster an awareness of every sensation as it unfolds in the
moment.


Dr. Kabat-Zinn taught the practice to people suffering from chronic pain at
the University
of Massachusetts
medical school. In the 1980s he published a series of
studies demonstrating that two-hour courses, given once a week for eight weeks,
reduced chronic pain more effectively than treatment as usual.


Word spread, discreetly at first. “I think that back then, other researchers
had to be very careful when they talked about this, because they didn’t want to
be seen as New Age weirdos,” Dr. Kabat-Zinn, now a professor emeritus of
medicine at the University of Massachusetts, said in an interview. “So they
didn’t call it mindfulness or meditation. “After a while, we put enough studies
out there that people became more comfortable with it.”



One person who noticed early on was Marsha Linehan, a psychologist at the University of Washington who was trying to treat deeply troubled patients with histories of suicidal behavior. “Trying to treat these patients with some change-based behavior therapy just made them worse, not better,” Dr. Linehan said in an interview. “With the really hard stuff, you need something else, something that allows people to tolerate these very strong emotions.”

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Multimedia
Craig Hunter, a science editor, discusses some of the topics in this week's Science Times.

Science Times Podcast (mp3)
Related
Learning How to Reflect (or Not) (May 27, 2008)
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Get Health News From The New York Times » In the 1990s, Dr. Linehan published a series of studies finding that a therapy that incorporated Zen Buddhist mindfulness, “radical acceptance,” practiced by therapist and patient significantly cut the risk of hospitalization and suicide attempts in the high-risk patients.

Finally, in 2000, a group of researchers including Dr. Segal in Toronto, J. Mark G. Williams at the University of Wales and John D. Teasdale at the Medical Research Council in England published a study that found that eight weekly sessions of mindfulness halved the rate of relapse in people with three or more episodes of depression.

With Dr. Kabat-Zinn, they wrote a popular book, “The Mindful Way Through Depression.” Psychotherapists’ curiosity about mindfulness, once tentative, turned into “this feeding frenzy, of sorts, that we have going on now,” Dr. Kabat-Zinn said.

Mindfulness meditation is easy to describe. Sit in a comfortable position, eyes closed, preferably with the back upright and unsupported. Relax and take note of body sensations, sounds and moods. Notice them without judgment. Let the mind settle into the rhythm of breathing. If it wanders (and it will), gently redirect attention to the breath. Stay with it for at least 10 minutes.

After mastering control of attention, some therapists say, a person can turn, mentally, to face a threatening or troubling thought — about, say, a strained relationship with a parent — and learn simply to endure the anger or sadness and let it pass, without lapsing into rumination or trying to change the feeling, a move that often backfires.

One woman, a doctor who had been in therapy for years to manage bouts of disabling anxiety, recently began seeing Gaea Logan, a therapist in Austin, Tex., who incorporates mindfulness meditation into her practice. This patient had plenty to worry about, including a mentally ill child, a divorce and what she described as a “harsh internal voice,” Ms. Logan said.

After practicing mindfulness meditation, she continued to feel anxious at times but told Ms. Logan, “I can stop and observe my feelings and thoughts and have compassion for myself.”

Steven Hayes, a psychologist at the University of Nevada at Reno, has developed a talk therapy called Acceptance Commitment Therapy, or ACT, based on a similar, Buddha-like effort to move beyond language to change fundamental psychological processes.

“It’s a shift from having our mental health defined by the content of our thoughts,” Dr. Hayes said, “to having it defined by our relationship to that content — and changing that relationship by sitting with, noticing and becoming disentangled from our definition of ourselves.”

For all these hopeful signs, the science behind mindfulness is in its infancy. The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, which researches health practices, last year published a comprehensive review of meditation studies, including T.M., Zen and mindfulness practice, for a wide variety of physical and mental problems. The study found that over all, the research was too sketchy to draw conclusions.

A recent review by Canadian researchers, focusing specifically on mindfulness meditation, concluded that it did “not have a reliable effect on depression and anxiety.”

Therapists who incorporate mindfulness practices do not agree when the meditation is most useful, either. Some say Buddhist meditation is most useful for patients with moderate emotional problems. Others, like Dr. Linehan, insist that patients in severe mental distress are the best candidates for mindfulness.

A case in point is mindfulness-based therapy to prevent a relapse into depression. The treatment significantly reduced the risk of relapse in people who have had three or more episodes of depression. But it may have had the opposite effect on people who had one or two previous episodes, two studies suggest.

The mindfulness treatment “may be contraindicated for this group of patients,” S. Helen Ma and Dr. Teasdale of the Medical Research Council concluded in a 2004 study of the therapy.

Since mindfulness meditation may have different effects on different mental struggles, the challenge for its proponents will be to specify where it is most effective — and soon, given how popular the practice is becoming.

The question, said Linda Barnes, an associate professor of family medicine and pediatrics at the Boston University School of Medicine, is not whether mindfulness meditation will become a sophisticated therapeutic technique or lapse into self-help cliché.

“The answer to that question is yes to both,” Dr. Barnes said.

The real issue, most researchers agree, is whether the science will keep pace and help people distinguish the mindful variety from the mindless.

A variety of meditative practices have been studied by Western researchers for their effects on mental and physical health.

Tai Chi

An active exercise, sometimes called moving meditation, involving extremely slow, continuous movement and extreme concentration. The movements are to balance the vital energy of the body but have no religious significance.

Studies are mixed, some finding it can reduce blood pressure in patients, and others finding no effect. There is some evidence that it can help elderly people improve balance.

Transcendental Meditation

Meditators sit comfortably, eyes closed, and breathe naturally. They repeat and concentrate on the mantra, a word or sound chosen by the instructor to achieve state of deep, transcendent absorption. Practitioners “lose” themselves, untouched by day-to-day concerns. Studies suggest it can reduce blood pressure in some patients.

Mindfulness Meditation

Practitioners find a comfortable position, close the eyes and focus first on breathing, passively observing it. If a stray thought or emotion enters the mind, they allow it to pass and return attention to the breath. The aim is to achieve focused awareness on what is happening moment to moment.

Studies find that it can help manage chronic pain. The findings are mixed on substance abuse. Two trials suggest that it can cut the rate of relapse in people who have had three or more bouts of depression.

Yoga

Enhanced awareness through breathing techniques and specific postures. Schools vary widely, aiming to achieve total absorption in the present and a release from ordinary thoughts. Studies are mixed, but evidence shows it can reduce stress.

Hereditary Cancers

All cancers are genetic in origin. When genes are working properly, cell growth is tightly regulated, as if a stoplight told cells to divide only so many times and no more. A cancer occurs when something causes a mutation in the genes that limit cell growth or that repair DNA damage.

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Andy Martin

Related
Some Pitfalls of Genetic Testing (May 27, 2008)
Health Guide: Cancer »

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Get Health News From The New York Times » This is true even if the carcinogen is environmental, like tobacco smoke or radon, or if the cause is viral, like Helicobacter pylori or human papillomavirus.

Carcinogenic agents induce cancer by causing genetic mutations that allow cells to escape normal biological controls. Most cancers arise in this way, sporadically in an individual, and may involve several mutations that permit a tumor to grow.

But sometimes, a single potent cancer-causing mutation is inherited and can be passed from one generation to the next. An estimated 5 to 10 percent of cancers are strongly hereditary, and 20 to 30 percent are more weakly hereditary, said Dr. Kenneth Offit, chief of clinical genetics at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

Genetic Chances

In hereditary cancer, the mutated gene can be transmitted through the egg or sperm to children, with each child facing a 50 percent chance of inheriting the defective gene if one parent carries it and a 75 percent chance if both parents carry the same defect.

You might be familiar with the BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations that are strongly linked to breast and ovarian cancer in women and somewhat less strongly to breast and prostate cancer in men. A woman with a BRCA mutation faces a 56 to 87 percent chance of contracting breast cancer and a 10 to 40 percent chance of ovarian cancer.

For some hereditary cancer genes, the risks are even greater. A child who inherits a so-called RET mutation faces a 100 percent chance of developing an especially lethal form of thyroid cancer. Likewise, the risk of stomach cancer approaches 100 percent in those with a CDH mutation, Dr. Daniel G. Coit, a surgeon at Memorial Sloan-Kettering, said at a recent meeting there.

Megan Harlan, senior genetic counselor at Sloan-Kettering, said these were red flags that suggest a cancer might be hereditary:

¶Diagnosis of cancer at a significantly younger age than it ordinarily occurs.

¶Occurrence of the same cancer in more than one generation of a family.

¶Occurrence of two or more cancers in the same patient or blood relatives.

For example, a woman with a BRCA mutation is at high risk for both breast and ovarian cancer. A mismatch repair mutation, known as MMR, significantly raises the risk for colon cancer and somewhat for uterine and ovarian cancer. Thus, the occurrence of colon, uterine and ovarian cancers among blood relatives suggests that the family may carry the MMR mutation.

Preventive Actions

Knowing that you have a high-risk cancer gene mutation offers the chance to take preventive actions like scheduling frequent screenings starting at a young age or removing the organ at risk. While surgery is clearly a drastic form of cancer prevention, in the future drugs may be able to thwart cancers in people at high risk, Dr. Offit said.

A third possibility, when a cancer gene runs in a family, is in vitro fertilization and genetic analysis to identify affected embryos and implant those lacking the defective gene.

Ms. Harlan suggested that a woman with a BRCA mutation should start at an early age to conduct monthly breast self-exams and have a doctor examine the breasts two to four times a year. She also advised alternating mammograms and breast M.R.I.’s every 6 to 12 months, starting at age 25.

Likewise, someone who carries an inherited colon cancer gene should start yearly colonoscopies at 20 or 25. A woman with a uterine cancer gene mutation should be screened with sonography and endometrial biopsies yearly and, Dr. Offit added, consider having her uterus removed when she has finished having children.

A growing number of women with BRCA mutations are choosing prophylactic mastectomies and, in some cases, oophorectomies, or removal of the ovaries. That reduces their risk of breast or ovarian cancer 75 percent.

Dr. Coit described a family in which the father and his father both developed thyroid cancer linked to the RET mutation. The younger man’s 6-year-old son was tested and found to carry the same damaged gene. Because the boy was certain to develop thyroid cancer, most likely at a young age, his thyroid was removed. Although the boy will need to take thyroid hormone for the rest of his life, the surgery reduced to zero his chance of developing this often fatal cancer.

Dr. Coit also told of a 33-year-old woman who carried the CDH mutation associated with highly lethal stomach cancer. Her stomach was removed and found to contain three microscopic cancer sites, making her preventive surgery also curative. She is one of 131 patients with the mutation who have had their stomachs removed and a stomachlike pouch created from the small intestine.

The doctor acknowledged that the surgery was a drastic measure, with an operative mortality of 1.5 percent and a complication rate of 53 percent. Most patients cannot eat as much as they used to after the surgery. They develop food intolerances and lose weight, but they do eventually adapt to their new digestive system, Dr. Coit said.

Practical Considerations

Before choosing surgery to reduce risk in an otherwise healthy person, Dr. Coit said these factors should be carefully considered:

¶Possible nonsurgical alternatives.

¶Actual cancer risk from the inherited gene and how much surgery can reduce it.

¶Timing of any operation.

¶Effects of surgery on quality of life.

Another question is how and whether to disclose hereditary cancer risk. Though many people fear limits on their job and ability to obtain affordable health insurance, a federal law was passed this month to prevent such genetic discrimination.

What if someone with a hereditary cancer gene refuses to warn family members of the possible risk and need for tests? These types of questions have begun to arise, in a handful of lawsuits against doctors. In a 1995 case in Florida, for example, the state Supreme Court ruled that a doctor has to inform patients of the risk to family members, but left it to patients to tell them about tests and the potential for prevention.

The deciphering of the human genome has prompted a number of entrepreneurs to cash in on people’s genetic concerns. They offer DNA testing to look for aberrant genes associated with the risk of developing various diseases, especially cancer.

Such testing, when done reliably, might encourage some people to take charge of their health and make better plans for the future. But some professional genetics counselors say this approach to determining cancer risk is fraught with hazards, not the least of which is a false warning of a serious risk that does not exist.

“This kind of testing is premature,” said Dr. Kenneth Offit, chief of clinical genetics at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. “Some companies are selling research tests for mutations that carry a low risk of causing cancer, leading people to worry needlessly or be falsely reassured.”

Another problem, he said, is the prescription offered after the tests.

“Other companies are telling people what kind of foods to eat and what to put on their skin based on their genes,” Dr. Offit said. “Testing for known cancer genes is legitimate, but often the prescription given for a ‘gene makeover’ is not. Regulation of these labs is sorely needed. And people facing real hereditary cancer risks require intensive professional counseling.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: May 29, 2008
The Personal Health column on Tuesday, about inherited cancers, misstated a viral cause of certain cancers. It is human papillomavirus, not herpes papilloma virus.

Urinary Incontinence Coping Away From Home

Urinary incontinence is an inconvenient, sometimes embarrassing health
problem. But living with incontinence can be made easier, if you're willing to
put in just a little effort.


Here's how you can make living with incontinence easier:


Urinary Incontinence: You're Not Alone


About 12 million adults in the U.S. have some form of urinary incontinence.
Women are affected more often than men. While incontinence is more common in
older people, it affects younger people as well.


Among the most common types of urinary incontinence are stress incontinence,
which can cause leaking urine when you laugh, cough, or sneeze as pressure is
applied to your lower stomach muscles, and urge incontinence, in which you feel
a sudden urge to urinate -- so sudden that it is often difficult to make it to
the bathroom in time.


Educate Yourself About Urinary Incontinence


A number of reputable organizations can help you obtain credible information
about urinary incontinence, including:



  • The National Association for Continence is a nonprofit consumer
    advocacy organization that provides educational information about urinary
    incontinence, incontinence products and services, and can help you find a doctor
    who specializes in treating urinary incontinence.
  • The American Urogynecologic Society is involved in research and
    education about incontinence and other urogynecologic conditions. They offer
    educational information about incontinence and referrals to urogynecologists --
    gynecologists who have extra training in female urologic conditions.

Check Out Treatment Options for Urinary Incontinence


Treatment options for urinary incontinence are plentiful, and the outlook is
far from dismal. About 80% of those who are affected by urinary incontinence can
get better with treatment. But, to make living with urinary incontinence easier,
you must seek help.


Treatment options depend on the type of incontinence you have and how severe
it is. Sometimes a simple dietary change, such as cutting back on fluids, is all
that is needed to put an end to urinary incontinence.


But more often, you will need a combination of approaches to get relief. For
instance, for stress incontinence, you may be advised to do Kegel exercises to
strengthen the pelvic floor muscles and use panty liners or pads to prevent
excess leakage.


For more severe urinary incontinence, your doctor may recommend prescription
medication or a surgical procedure, such as an operation designed to support the
bladder and prevent leakage of urine, to make living with urinary incontinence
more tolerable.



Besides taking advantage of medical help for your incontinence, there are many other ways to make living with urinary incontinence easier. Among the experts' best tips for living with urinary incontinence:

Monitor your fluid intake. Managing your fluid intake -- say, keeping your daily water intake to a quart or so -- may be all you need to do notice improvement. However, talk to your doctor before making any major changes in fluid intake.
Pay attention to your diet. Among foods and drinks that may worsen your incontinence are alcoholic beverages, caffeine-containing foods and drinks, spicy foods, high-acid foods such as citrus fruits and juices, and carbonated drinks. If you notice symptoms of urinary incontinence worsen after you have any of these foods or drinks, eliminating them or cutting back on them may make living with urinary incontinence easier.
Be aware of the potential emotional toll of urinary incontinence. Incontinence can cause emotional distress and depression, particularly urge incontinence since it is so unpredictable. Continue to seek effective treatments until you get relief.
Plan ahead and plan accordingly.The simplest planning can make living with urinary incontinence easier and less stressful. If you know, for instance, that the stair-climbing machine at your gym makes you leak, try something else. If you know you always shop longer than you plan to, consider one of the many urinary incontinence productssuch as panty liners or pads to help avoid embarrassing situations.
Talk about urinary incontinence with your partner. Living with urinary incontinence can mean you leak urine during sex. And while that is embarrassing, try to talk about it calmly with your partner. If you focus on solutions, it's bound to get better. Among the experts' tips: Empty your bladder right before intercourse. Cut back a bit on fluids to minimize leaking urine. Experiment with different positions; one may be better then another for minimizing leaking.

Incontinence and Over Active Bladder

Urinary incontinence affects about 12 million Americans -- more women than
men. It happens when you lose urine by accident. There are several different
types of urinary incontinence.


Types of Urinary Incontinence: Stress Incontinence


This may happen when there is an increase in abdominal pressure -- such as
when you exercise, laugh, sneeze, or cough. Urine leaks due to weakened pelvic
floor muscles and tissues.


Causes of this type of urinary incontinence include:



  • Multiple pregnancies and childbirths, which cause stretching and damage
  • Being overweight
  • Genetic weaknesses
  • Radiation therapy
  • Other chronic conditions

Types of Urinary Incontinence: Urge Incontinence


This type is often called "overactive bladder": You have an urgent need to go
to the bathroom, and may not get there in time, leaking urine.


Causes of this type of urinary incontinence include:



  • Damage to the bladder’s nerves
  • Damage to the nervous system
  • Damage to muscles

Conditions such as multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s
disease, and stroke can harm muscles or nerves, leading to this type of urinary
incontinence.


Some women have both of these types of urinary incontinence -- "stress" and
"urge." Doctors call this mixed urinary incontinence.


Types of Urinary Incontinence: Overflow Incontinence


You may have this type if you are not able to empty your bladder when you
urinate. As a result, you have a constant or frequent dribble of urine. This is
the type of urinary incontinence that most often strikes men.


Causes of this type of urinary incontinence include:



  • Weak bladder muscles
  • Blockage of the urethra
  • Medical conditions such as tumors

Types of Urinary Incontinence: Functional Incontinence


With this type of incontinence, physical problems such as arthritis or
cognitive problems such as dementia prevent you from getting to the bathroom in
time.


Treatment for Different Types of Urinary Incontinence


To improve or eliminate the problem, you can make lifestyle changes and get
treatment for each of the types of urinary incontinence.


For stress incontinence, treatment options include:



  • Pelvic floor exercises. If you've had a baby, chances are you've been
    told to do Kegel exercises. These help to strengthen the pelvic floor after
    childbirth. It is wise to keep doing the Kegels to keep your pelvic muscles and
    tissues strong, which can help prevent stress incontinence.

To do Kegels:





    • Pretend you are trying to stop the flow of urine.
    • Hold the squeeze for 10 seconds, then rest for 10 seconds.
    • Do 3 or 4 sets daily.


  • Biofeedback. Using monitors, the biofeedback instructor feeds you
    information about bodily processes, including when your bladder and urethral
    muscles contract. This helps you gain control. It's also often used in
    combination with Kegel exercises.

  • Medications or surgery. Medications can help tighten muscles at the
    bladder neck, preventing leakage. Or, in more extreme cases, surgery can help.
    One procedure pulls the bladder back up to a more normal position, relieving the
    pressure and leakage. Another surgery involves securing the bladder with a
    "sling," a piece of tissue or other material that holds up the bladder to
    prevent leakage.

For urge incontinence, treatment options include:



  • Timed voiding and bladder training. First, you complete a chart of
    the times you urinate and the times you leak. You observe patterns and then plan
    to empty your bladder before an "accident" would likely occur. You can also
    "retrain" your bladder, gradually increasing the time between bathroom
    visits.

  • Medications or surgery. Doctors sometimes prescribe medicinesdesigned
    to inhibit the contractions of an overactive bladder. Surgery is reserved for
    severe cases. It aims to increase the storage capacity of the bladder.

Bringing up the Topic


All types of urinary incontinence can be embarrassing to talk about, but
overcoming your reluctance is worth it. Treatment can reduce or eliminate the
problem.


Here are some tips that may help you overcome your embarrassment:



  • Be straightforward. Just tell the physician or the nurse you are having
    problems. Keep it simple: "I'm having bladder problems."
  • Expect your doctor to ask many questions about your situation: how long the
    leakage has been happening, how bad it is, how much it upsets your life. If this
    doesn’t happen, it may be time to switch doctors or at least to ask for a
    referral to another doctor with expertise in this kind of problem.

Living With Severe Allergies

Experts share 3 strategies to cope with chronic
allergies.

By Kathleen Doheny
WebMD
Feature




Allergies affect more than 50 million people in the United States -- the poor
souls who sniffle, sneeze, and get all clogged up when face to face with the
allergen (or allergens) that set them off.


For many, allergies are seasonal
and mild, requiring nothing more than getting extra tissue or taking a
decongestant occasionally. For others, the allergy is to a known food, and as
long as they avoid the food, no problem.


But for legions of others adults, allergies are so severe it interferes with
their quality of life. The allergens -- whatever it is that sets off the
symptoms -- may affect them more severely than others and may be harder to
avoid.


Defining "severe" allergies, and pinpointing how many people are affected, is
difficult even for allergists.


"When we say severe, we mean the allergies basically cause severe enough
symptoms that they are interfering with life," says Paul V. Williams, MD, a
staff allergist at Northwest Asthma & Allergy Center, Mount Vernon,
Wash.


That means, for instance, having to take sick days to cope with symptoms so
severe you can't work, or not being able to go outside on a day with a high
pollen count, if that's your primary allergen.


If your allergies are this severe, you know who you are. And experts offer
these three strategies for coping.


Allergy Strategy 1: Know Your Allergens


The top environmental allergens, Williams and other allergists tell WebMD,
are:



  • Animal dander
  • Dust mites
  • Molds
  • Pollen

"It's most common to be allergic to multiple things," Williams says, "but not
necessarily all of them." Some people, however, are highly allergic to just one
allergen, such as cat dander.


Whatever the allergen, it can trigger nasal symptoms, eye irritation and
stinging, skin diseases or asthma, says Williams.


Sometimes it's clear what your allergen is. If you visit a house with a cat,
for instance, and start to have symptoms, you know. If it's hay fever season and
your nose starts running when you go outdoors, you know.


But if you can't figure out what the offending allergen is, you can ask for
skin tests. A doctor will place a tiny bit of the suspected allergen under your
skin and watch for a reaction. The doctor should then be sure that your symptoms
match the allergen he used, Williams tells WebMD.



Allergy Strategy 2: Control Your Allergens


Once you know your target, you can start to eliminate or control it.


Controlling Animal Dander


Lovable as household pets may be, they can create big problems for people
with allergies, says Michael M. Miller, MD, associate professor of medicine at
the University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center, Knoxville.


The offending allergen is a protein found in the saliva, dead skin scales
(called dander) or the urine of an animal with fur, including dogs and cats,
according to the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. The
protein, when airborne, can land in the eyes or nose or be inhaled into the
lungs.


Allergy symptoms can pop up immediately after contact or even up to 12 hours
later.


The only way to eliminate the
allergen, allergists say, is to get rid of the pets. But the advice often falls
on deaf ears, Williams says. "Most of the time, patients won't eliminate the pet
from their environment."


Even if an allergic person does part with a dog, the animal's allergens may
hang on in the house for a year or longer, according to the Academy.


If parting with the pet is not possible, Williams says: "Keep the pet out of
the bedroom and no carpeting in the bedroom." Hardwood or tile floors collect
less allergen. Damp mop floors often to reduce allergen levels, he suggests.


"Have at least one 'safe zone' in the house" if you can't part with a pet,
advises Neeti Gupta, MD, an allergist in East Windsor, N.J. Your bedroom would
be ideal as a safe room that's off limits to your pet.


Brushing a dog regularly -- outdoors, so the allergen doesn't get trapped
inside -- can also help, Williams says.


And if you're furniture shopping for sofas or chairs, pick leather over
fabric if possible, Williams says. "You can wipe it off," he says.


Controlling Dust Mites


Dust mites feed on common house dust, a mixture of small pieces of plant and
animal material. The microscopic creatures also cling to carpets, bedding and
furniture. The dust mites' fecal matter contains the allergens, Williams says,
and these allergens are airborne for a short time before dropping to surfaces.
"Most exposure comes from being up close and personal with the dust mite."


Put barriers between you and those mites, he says, by buying and using the
allergy-proof covers for bedding.


Miller suggests allergy-proof encasings for the mattress, pillows, and box
springs. "The mites feed on skin cells, and they live on your bed. They dig
down into the mattress. The encasings don't allow them to penetrate into the
mattress."


Pay close attention to the cleanliness of your bedding, too, to avoid
allergens. Wash it weekly in hot water that is 130 degrees or higher, Williams
says, to kill the critters. Newer models of washers may be capable of heating
the water this hot, he says, but "most of the time you have to turn up the water
heater."


His advice: "Turn it up and measure the water the next day, 12 to 24 hours
later, with a candy thermometer. If there are kids in the home, turn it up a day
before you do the wash [and then lower it later, to reduce the risk of
scalding]."


Using a dehumidifier to keep the humidity lower than 50% can help control
your dust-mite population, according to experts at the American Academy of
Allergy, Asthma and Immunology.


While some allergy-prone people take great pains to plant so-called
''low-allergy" trees and shrubs, it's not foolproof. "Pollen can travel great
distances," Miller says.


"Even if your yard has 'low
allergy' trees, pollen can come from miles away," Miller says.


With pollen, agrees Gupta, "There's only so much you can do without having to
live in a bubble. If you are indoors, keep your windows shut, use the air
conditioner, drive with the car windows shut."


Controlling Mold


Molds are more an outdoor problem than indoor, says Williams, unless your
plumbing indoors is leaking. If the bathroom shower or tub gets a little mold
ring around it, he says, it typically won't bother the allergy-prone unless it's
disturbed and the spores become airborne.


To get rid of household mold, apply a cleaning solution of 5% bleach and a
small amount of detergent, suggest experts from the American Academy of Allergy
Asthma & Immunology.


Outdoors, airborne mold from vegetation can trigger an allergic reaction,
too. Allergic reactions to mold are most common from July to late summer,
according to the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America.


Allergy Strategy 3: Obtain Good Treatment


Allergy treatment won’t "cure" your allergies, but they can significantly
reduce your allergy symptoms. Key treatments include antihistamines and
decongestants. Antihistamines treat the runny nose and itching eyes and nose.
Decongestants reduce the stuffiness.


Prescription nasal steroid sprays also help, Williams says. Nasal steroid
sprays prevent the release of substances that inflame mucus membranes, thus
reducing your inflammation. "For these to be most effective they need to be used
on a regular basis," he says.


Another option, says Miller, is to use antihistamine nasal sprays; there are
even some prescription-strength sprays approved to treat seasonal allergies.


The asthma prescription drug montelukast can also help allergy symptoms,
Miller says.


Immunotherapy, better known as allergy shots, can help, too, he says. "Those
are for people whose allergies are difficult to control [even with medication or
environmental measures], or people who don't want to continue taking medication
all their lives," Miller says.


For some people, the medications may not work as well over time, Gupta says.
"Patients often tell me the medications that worked last year don't work this
year." Some patients can switch to another medication; other patients may
consider immunotherapy.


Immunotherapy can also reduce the risk of developing asthma, Miller says.
"It's never too late to start."


Before you start allergy shots, your allergist will do a series of tests to
pinpoint which allergens cause your allergies. Then, typically, allergy shots
are given twice a week for a few months, tapered to once a week for about six
months, then every one to four weeks for up to five years, Miller says.

The Six Biggest mistakes That Men Make



By Martin F. Downs
WebMD
Feature


Hey guys, think you know everything there is to know about having sex with
women? That erotic encyclopedia you carry around in your head may contain a lot
of basic errors and omissions about women's sexuality -- errors that can lead to
sex mistakes.


That's because -- after learning
the facts of life -- most of us are left to figure out sex for ourselves. Guys
tend to take a lot of cues from adult movies, and we all know how true-to-life
those are. Experience may help, but many women can be shy when talking about
what they like.


To help us with some sex tips, WebMD asked two acclaimed sex educators,
Tristan Taormino and Lou Paget, to tell us what they think are the most common
sex mistakes men make with women.


Taormino is a prolific author, lecturer, and video producer. Her latest
project is the Expert Guide educational video series from Vivid Ed.


Paget is author of The Great Lover Playbook and other sex manuals, and
she gives seminars nationwide.


Sex Mistake No.1: You Know What She Wants


Men often make assumptions about what a woman wants based upon what they've
done with other women. But women aren't all the same.


"You develop a repertoire as you mature sexually, but you should never assume
that what worked for the last person is going to work for this person," Taormino
says.


That applies not only to sexual predilections, but also to relationships,
she says. "There are women who can have no-strings-attached sex, and women who
can get attached very easily, and then everyone in between."


Sex Mistake No. 2: You Have All She Needs


Some women can't have an orgasm with less than 3,000 rpm. No human tongue or
fingers can generate that kind of vibration. But men typically think something
is wrong if a woman needs a vibrator.


"If the only way that a woman can achieve orgasm is with a vibrator, she's
not broken," Taormino says.


Think of a vibrator as your assistant, not your substitute. Many couples use
vibrators together. "While you're doing one thing, or two things, the vibrator
can be doing something else," Taormino says.


Sex Mistake No. 3: Sex Feels the Same for Men and Women


Paget says there tends to be a "huge disconnect" between men and women in the
ways that sex feels good.


"When a man has intercourse with a woman, and his penis goes into her body,
that sensation is so off the charts for most men, they cannot imagine that it
isn't feeling the same way for her," Paget says. "It couldn't be further from
the truth."


The inside of the vagina is probably less sensitive than the outer parts for
most women. Also, deep thrusting may not feel so nice on the receiving end. If
the penis is too long, "it feels like you're getting punched in the stomach,"
Paget says. "It makes you feel nauseous."



Sex Mistake No. 4: You Know Your Way Around a Woman's Anatomy


Most guys know generally what a clitoris is and where to find it. That's not
to say that they really understand it.


More than 30 years ago, at the
start of the "sexual revolution," a best-selling book called the Joy of
Sex
got Americans hip to the orgasmic importance of the clitoris. But the
belief that women must be able to orgasm from vaginal penetration stubbornly
persists.


"I still get letters from people who say things like, my wife can't [orgasm]
from intercourse unless she has clitoral stimulation -- please help," Taormino
says. "I want to write back and say, 'OK, what's the problem?'"


"For the majority of women, it's not going to happen that way," Paget
says.


Men also lack information about how to touch it and how sensitive it is,
Taormino says.


A touch that's bliss for one woman may feel like nothing special, or may even
be painful for someone else. Some prefer indirect stimulation.


How can you find out how she likes to be touched? Try asking her.


Sex Mistake No. 5: Wet = Turned On


Guys sometimes get hung up if a woman doesn't get slippery enough for easy
penetration. Don't worry about it.


"I think there's a myth that if you're turned on, you're wet," Taormino says.
Not necessarily.


Some women tend to get wetter than others, and how much natural lubrication a
woman has can change from day to day. It varies by the phase of her menstrual
cycle
, and it's subject to influences like stress and medications.


Sex Mistake No. 6: Silence Is Golden


A lot of guys think they should be silent during sex, but unless you speak
up, your partner has to guess what's doing it for you and what isn't.


If you're respectful about it, a woman who wants to please you will probably
appreciate some directions.


"I'm not saying push her head in your lap," Taormino says. "I think that,
'this is how I like it,' is a very useful conversation to have."

Reproductive Health


Sex & Intimacy


Do you know everything there is to
know about sex? We didn’t think so. For men hungry for a little more knowledge,
our sex primer answers big questions about penis size, porn, reviving a
stalled-out love life, and a lot more.


Sex Play




Ever feel like your sex life could
be better? Who hasn’t? Try these six tips for fantastic sex.



Some guys still think of foreplay
as a chore — something to get out of the way before getting to the good stuff.
Here’s why they’re wrong.



Are you ready for teledildonics?
Take a tour of the virtual universe of online sex — from X-rated chat rooms to
avatar hook-ups to plug-and-play sex toys.



Everything you need to know about
condoms — including 10 tips for getting the best protection.



Do you really know how to use a
condom or do you just think you do? Since the stakes are pretty high, try this
condom quiz out for size.


Touchy Topics




How big is the average penis? Can
men have multiple orgasms? And just where is that mysterious G-spot? Grab a
ruler and a stopwatch as we sort sex myths from the facts.



Admit it — you’ve always wondered
if yours could be bigger. Here’s a rundown of all the purported ways to expand —
pumps, pills, exercises, and surgery. But do any work?



Circumcision reduces the risk of
HIV, syphilis, and other diseases — but many consider it barbaric. What are the
pros and cons of circumcising your son?



Are some men really porn
junkies? Some say that smut acts like a toxin in your brain. Many experts say
that’s nonsense. Here are the facts.



It’s no joke — according to
experts, sex addiction can be a serious problem for some people. How do you know
if your sex drive has become something destructive?



You want more sex and she wants
less. Or vice versa. Sexual frustration affects almost every couple at one time
or another. So how do you get past it?



Has your sex life become a bit dull
— or disappeared altogether? Get some tips from the experts on what kills
passion and how to rekindle it.



Feeling like you’ve lost your sex
drive? What causes a low libido — and what can be done to get it back to normal?
Find out the answers here.


Sexual Problems




Too fast? Too slow? Here’s
everything you need to know about overcoming premature ejaculation, delayed
ejaculation, and other problems.



Sexually transmitted diseases are
the nasty side of sex. Here’s what you need to know about STDs in men —
including how to avoid them.



Overcoming Ejaculation Problems


Too fast? Too slow? Treating Ejaculation Problems

By Tom Valeo
WebMD Feature




Are ejaculation problems an issue of mind over matter?


Well, if a man and his partner don’t mind how long it takes him to ejaculate,
then it really doesn’t matter. For example, Ian Kerner, PhD, a sex therapist and
author of She Comes First, advises men to bring their partners to the
brink of orgasm before having intercourse. Then, if he’s prone to premature
ejaculation, it doesn’t matter since both of them come away satisfied.


Conversely, if a man takes longer than average to ejaculate, but both
partners enjoy marathon sex sessions, then delayed ejaculation can be a real
plus.


However, some men do mind how long it takes them to ejaculate. They mind a
lot -- and so do their partners. But while the mind often plays a big role in
creating ejaculation problems, it’s also key in overcoming them. Here are some
tips on what to do.


Common Ejaculation Problems


When it comes to ejaculation, there are basically three different things that
can go wrong.



  • Premature ejaculation is by far the biggest complaint that men have
    about their sexual performance. After studying data gathered by the National
    Health and Social Life Survey, sociologist Edward Laumann, PhD, estimated that a
    third of American men complain that they ejaculate too quickly. They want to
    last longer during intercourse to prolong the pleasure, both for themselves and
    their partners.
  • Delayed ejaculation (or retarded ejaculation) affects a much smaller
    number of men – as few as 3%, according to some estimates. It’s one of the most
    poorly understood ejaculation problems. Some men cannot reach orgasm at all, at
    least not with a partner.
  • Retrograde ejaculation is the least common of the ejaculation
    problems. It causes semen to back into the bladder during orgasm instead of
    exiting by way of the penis. The semen is then later flushed out when you
    urinate.

    Retrograde ejaculation can be caused by diabetes, nerve damage,
    various medications, and surgery that disturbs the sphincter muscle. It’s
    harmless and won’t interfere with the feeling of orgasm. (It can also make for
    an easy post-sex clean-up.) But since it does affect fertility, some men may
    need treatment if their partners are trying to get pregnant.

What Causes Delayed Ejaculation?


There are lots of different reasons for delayed ejaculation. Some medicines
-- like antidepressants -- are common culprits. For many men, it’s age. As we
grow older, the nerve endings in the penis become less sensitive, according to
Barbara Keesling, PhD, author of All Night Long: How to Make Love to a Man
Over 50
, and a professor of human sexuality at the University of California,
Fullerton.


“When the reflexes slow down, it takes longer,” Keesling says. “Another thing
that happens with age is that your erection ability goes down too, so it becomes
more difficult to ejaculate without a full erection.”


You may also have a hand in your delayed ejaculation problem. By adopting a
masturbation technique that involves intense pressure, friction and speed, some
men train themselves to respond to a level of stimulation no partner could
duplicate -- at least not without coaching, which the man usually is reluctant
to provide.


Michael A. Perelman, PhD, a sex and marital therapist in New York City says
he sometimes tries to get men with delayed orgasm to agree to a masturbation
moratorium. This does more than stop the practices that may be contributing to
the problem. It also allows a build-up of sexual desire, which provides “a
mechanism for reducing the threshold of arousal necessary for orgasm,” he
says.


But while masturbation can cause delayed ejaculation, it can also aid in the
cure. If a guy won’t agree to keep his hands off, Perelman will urge him at
least to alter his masturbation style -- to switch hands, for example -- in
order to break old habits. The problem is that your tried-and-true,
quick-and-dirty masturbation style is probably terrible practice for sex with
another person.


So instead of just masturbating efficiently to achieve orgasm, Perelman
encourages men to fantasize about a sexual experience with their partners while
they masturbate. He tells them to try “to approximate, in terms of speed,
pressure and technique, the stimulation he likely will experience through
manual, oral, or vaginal stimulation with his partner.” It might take a little
longer, but it makes masturbation more of a “dress rehearsal” for sex. You can
also talk to your partner about your fantasy afterwards, Perelman suggests.


Premature Ejaculation Cure: Self-Love


So what about the much more common problem of premature ejaculation? In this
case, masturbation can be just the ticket. Having repeated orgasms will bring on
delayed ejaculation in almost any guy. Some believe that the best premature
ejaculation tip is to double the number of orgasms a man has per week. And if
that doesn’t work, to double it again.


There’s some evidence to support this folk remedy.


“Young men with a short refractory period may often experience a second and
more controlled ejaculation during an episode of lovemaking,” says Chris G.
McMahon, MD, in a 2004 study published in the Journal of Sexual Medicine.


Masturbation may also help men learn to control their level of arousal, which
is essential for delaying orgasm.


Other Ways to Treat Premature Ejaculation


One time-honored technique for premature ejaculation is to distract yourself
-- to think about something boring or even disgusting to delay your orgasm.
While this may work for some, it has the unfortunate side effect of distancing
men from their partners and the sexual experience.


There’s also an obvious alternative: pull out and stop having sex for a few
minutes to postpone orgasm. Sex researchers William Masters and Virginia Johnson
elaborated on this when they developed the “squeeze-pause” technique, also known
as the “penis grip,” to quell the desire to climax. As the name implies, this
involves squeezing the head of the penis as orgasm approaches



Perelman helps men last longer by teaching them a variation of the Masters
and Johnson technique. It involves slowing themselves down and altering their
movements in a way that maximizes their partner’s pleasure. They do this while
maintaining their erection but without overexciting themselves.


Antidepressants for Premature Ejaculation?


For men who aren’t helped by any of these techniques, there’s a
pharmaceutical option. Since some antidepressants -- selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs -- are known to cause delayed ejaculation,
researchers tried them as a way to treat premature ejaculation. By taking an
antidepressant four to six hours before intercourse, men prone to premature
ejaculation can last longer.


Not surprisingly, drug companies were quick to take notice. A short-acting
SSRI called dapoxetine has already been developed specifically for premature
ejaculation. According to a 2006 study published in The Lancet, when
taken one to three hours before sex, the drug increased the time from
penetration to ejaculation from 1.75 minutes to 2.78 minutes for men treated
with 30 milligrams of the drug. Men who got 60 milligrams lasted 3.32
minutes.


“A couple of minutes may not sound like much, but for these guys it was
huge,” said the lead author of the study, Jon L. Pryor, MD, when the results
were published in September 2006. However, dapoxetine has not yet been approved
by the FDA and is not available in the United States.


Although they also have not been approved, the antihistamine cyproheptadine
and the anti-flu drug amantadine have been used with moderate success to treat
delayed ejaculation, McMahon says.


Instead of drugs, some men use a desensitizing cream to delay orgasm. There’s
an even simpler solution: double up your condoms to reduce your stimulation.


Treating Ejaculation Problems


Whatever your ejaculation problem, there are solutions. The key is to get
help. And we don’t just mean from a doctor, although that’s important --
ejaculation problems can be signs of more serious medical issues, after all.


But you also need to talk openly with your partner -- something that many men
are loath to do.


“Almost universally, men [with ejaculation problems] fail to communicate
their preferences for stimulation to either their doctor or their partners,
because of shame, embarrassment, or ignorance,” Perelman tells WebMD.


So don’t stay mum and let shame or male pride ruin your sex life (and your
partner’s). Letting that tension build up will just make things worse. With some
openness, some discussion, and maybe a few fun new techniques in the bedroom,
you can overcome your ejaculation problem. That means less worry and more
sex.




Fitness & Exercise

Whether you’re a weekend warrior
fine tuning your physique or a lay-about who gets breathless walking to the
mailbox, we’ve got what you need to know. Learn how to get fit and avoid
injury.


From Flabby to Fit


Hate exercise? You’re not alone.
But here’s a rundown of the reasons why you need to get moving — such as to live
longer — and easy ways for you to do it.



Want to get buff but don’t know
where to start? WebMD’s got a complete rundown of the strength-building
exercises you need — for your arms, shoulders, chest, core, and legs.



Finding a health club isn’t easy.
What’s most important? The location? The equipment? The price? Here are five
ways to determine whether a fitness club is right for you.



Is your gym bag gathering dust?
Maybe you need a personal trainer to get your fitness plan back on track. We
provide some tips on what to look for in a trainer.


Playing It Safe




Watch out, weekend warriors! We’ve
got the rundown on how to prevent seven dreaded sports injuries.



From athlete’s foot to jock itch to
jogger’s nipples — join us on a tour of an athlete’s chamber of little horrors,
and get some tips on how to avoid them.



Do you organize exercise around
your life — or your life around exercise? Find out when a passion for fitness
becomes unhealthy.

Men's Health


The Lonely Disease




Counting Crows front man Adam Duritz reveals how he
battled a debilitating mental disorder to record the best music of his
career--and reclaim his life


It all fell apart within a span of 5
minutes, with one phone call and one text message. Of course there was the long
downward slope leading to that moment, but I see that now only in
retrospect.


The date was March 28, 2004. We'd
had a gig in Perth the night before, the first of a tour that would take us
across Australia. That morning, I received a call from a relative in America who
told me that my grandmother had died. Minutes later, I got a text from the girl
I was in love with, saying, basically, "We've been around and around and I'm
moving on with my life. You need to get on with yours."


I was my grandmother's firstborn grandchild. We were really close. But I
hadn't visited her in more than 5 years. I was on the road all the time, so I
had a lot of excuses. And even when she died, I still wouldn't be there. I had
gigs. I wasn't there when my sister's twins were born 3 months early and almost
didn't make it. Again, I had gigs. I've missed many things in my life because so
many people's jobs depend on me being there. That, and because of a much darker
problem I was facing.


So I'm talking to a friend about the funeral. "It's such a shame I can't go
because I have to fly to Adelaide today," I say.


My friend says, "Dude, you are turning into such an jerk."


"What?" I say. I'm dumbfounded.


"Let's see," he says, "your mother's mother died and you lost the girl you
love. When are you going to learn a lesson here? You have completely lost the
plot. You've turned into such an jerk."


The jerk still flew to Adelaide later that day. The hotel gave me this weird
penthouse room with sliding glass doors and a balcony surrounding it. That
night, a massive thunderstorm swept through the city. I had all the doors open
so I felt like I was hanging in the middle of it, 30 stories up, with lightning
ripping all around me. I sat up all night. About 4 in the morning I called a
travel agent and said, "I need to fly to Baltimore by this time tomorrow.
Whatever you have to do, find a way."


Then I called my tour manager and said, "I'm leaving."Distance has always
been a big thing for me. Not just physical distance, but emotional distance as
well. By the time I reached Baltimore (15 minutes late for a funeral at which I
was a pallbearer), I'd decided that I had completely lost touch with
reality--and that I needed help.



Diet and Nutrition

Trying to get rid of chubby cells? Fat chance


Nothing reduces your number of fat cells — not even weight-loss surgery

Want to get rid of some fat cells
as you age? Fat chance.


You're stuck with the number of
fat cells you have acquired by about age 20, a new study finds.


Researchers have known that people
gain and
lose weight
at least in part by changing how much fat is in their fat cells.
The new finding is particularly important for obese people,
who the researchers say can have twice as many fat cells as their lean
counterparts.



Story continues below



The finding also suggests that
obesity in adulthood is at least partly determined by diet and exercise in
childhood.

Strange
study

To determine the age of fat cells in 35 subjects,
researchers focused on a marker found in fat cells — radioactive carbon from
above-ground nuclear bomb
tests
in the 1950s and 60s. More of a naturally occurring but rare type of
carbon, called carbon-14, was produced during the testing.


Bruce Buchholz, a chemist at
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, Calif., explained how his
team used this marker to make their discovery.


Our bodies incorporate carbon-14
from the food we eat, along with the vastly more abundant types called carbon-12
and 13. Since carbon-14 from the testing is decreasing with time as it mixes
with the oceans, the amount of rare carbon-14 that a cell has taken up is like a
timestamp for when the cell formed, Buchholz said.


The researchers knew that cells
were dying and being replaced over time, because people born before the nuclear
testing had fat cells that were created after the testing. The scientists also
found that about 10 percent of fat cells were replaced every year whether or not
a person was obese.


Despite that replacement rate,
another aspect of the study with a larger sample of people revealed that the
total number of fat cells per person remained relatively constant over time.
Even extreme weight-loss strategies, such as bariatric
surgery
, did not reduce the number of fat cells in study subjects.


Aha!

The tightly regulated number of fat cells in adulthood may explain why it
seems easy to gain back lost weight, Buchholz said.


If you already have more fat cells
from adolescence than other people, "it's harder
to become thin
," Buchholz told LiveScience.


The study raises a new mystery:
Something tells the body to make a new fat cell when another dies, Buchholz
said. In the future, if scientists could interfere with this turnover, they
might actually reduce fat-cell number in adults, he said.


The findings, detailed in the May
4 online issue of the journal Nature, suggest that the focus for
controlling obesity should be on children, said Dr. Jeffrey Gimble, who studies
fat stem cells at the Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge and
was not involved in the research. The idea is that if the number of fat cells is
capped by age 20, then the smart approach is to prevent their formation in
children.


Obesity prevention in the early
years could have "a lifetime impact," Gimble said.








Diabetes.

Facing up to the

diabetes

challenge


As the number of elderly people in the population rises, society faces
difficult questions from funding social care to revamping the pensions
system.


But increasingly doctors too are facing growing health challenges.


On the one hand medical advances are improving the life expectancy of the
elderly. But on the other, an increasing number of people are being beset
with chronic conditions.


One of these is diabetes.


The disease currently affects 3% of the adult population, but among those
aged 70 and above, the figure rises to between 7% and 9%.


And experts say that the condition among the elderly brings with it a
different set of medical problems which need special handling.














You have to remember that many elderly people become frail and
there is evidence to suggest that diabetes increases that level of
frailty








Alan Sinclair




Last week saw the opening of Europe's first dedicated Institute of
Diabetes for Older People at the University of Bedfordshire.


Professor Alan Sinclair, who heads up the new institute, said that
diabetes among the elderly had long been a neglected area.


"With the ageing demographics of the population as a whole both in this
country and in northern Europe the numbers of older people are higher - so
the number of people with diabetes is higher.


"Obviously, what is contributing to this is the advanced age of the
population, plus increasingly levels of obesity and other risk factors.


Neglected area


"Care for older people is often absent from published clinical guidelines
on diabetes.


"Advice is often extrapolated from the young to the old rather than
dealing with the specific needs and issues of older people.


"Those sorts of special needs relate to the fact that as we get older we
aren't as mobile, and we experience falls and memory changes which can
impact on our quality of life.


"This scenario is often exacerbated by chronic disease such as diabetes,"
he said.










Professor Sinclair

Professor Sinclair says elderly people with diabetes need special
care





Professor Sinclair said that, in general, issues such as mobility and
memory deterioration were not considered when managing the condition, but
said they should be.


"You have to remember that many elderly people become frail, and there is
evidence to suggest that diabetes increases that level of frailty."


He said that as many as one in four residents of care homes are diabetic
and need special care, and that although there are care guidelines for such
residents, they need to be updated - something the institute plans to be
involved with.


There are also plans to liaise with other diabetes experts in the UK and
overseas to collaborate in research into the effects of the condition and
the drugs on the elderly.


Giving confidence


David Cohen, 81, was diagnosed with type two diabetes in 1990.


He suffers headaches, poor vision and circulation, takes 14 tablets, and
sleeps about 16 hours a day.


He and his wife Joyce worry about his health, but say they get comfort
from the fact that their doctors also specialise in treating elderly people
with diabetes.














It is important to address these issues to enable older people
with diabetes to lead a full and active life








Cathy Moulton




Joyce said: "They make you feel confident here at the institute, and give
you the confidence you need as an elderly diabetic.


"Elderly people worry too much and their partners find it very
stressful.''


Cathy Moulton, a care advisor at Diabetes UK, said a specialist centre
for elderly diabetics was a very welcome addition.


"The number of people with diabetes in the UK is growing fast. Our ageing
population is playing a big part in this, as type two diabetes - the most
common form of the condition - usually appears after the age of 40.










The damaged eye of a diabetic. Photo Credit: ISM/SPL

Diabetes can damage the retina, and sufferers can go blind





"Life expectancy is higher so people are more likely to develop diabetes
and live with it for longer.


"As a group whose voice is often not heard loud enough, support and
research looking at how diabetes affects older people is very important.


"Issues some older people with diabetes may face include an increased
risk of blindness, reduced mobility due to nerve damage, needing care and
support to take their medication, and eating healthily.


"It is important to address these issues to enable older people with
diabetes to lead a full and active life."


Friday, May 30, 2008

Health and Fitness Make the
Difference Between Living Well and Living






Quality of
life is what we all want. Good health helps us achieve a high quality of life.
Fitness makes us want to live it every day. If you agree with these three
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Diet and
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2002!

Benign Prostrate Enlargement (BPH )

Your
Prostate
Gland





The
prostate
is an exocrine gland of the male reproductive system. Its main
function is to
store and secrete a clear fluid that constitutes up to one-third
of the
volume of semen.





  • A
    healthy prostate
    is slightly larger than a walnut.


  • It is
    situated in
    front of the rectum, just below the bladder where urine is
    stored, and surrounds
    the tube (urethra) that carries urine from the
    body.


  • The
    gland
    functions as part of the male reproductive system by producing the
    white fluid
    that contains semen.


  • The
    prostate also
    contains smooth muscle that helps expel semen during
    ejaculation; thus, prostate
    problems can lead to impotence.



The
prostate gland
has four distinct glandular regions:



1.
The
Peripheral Zone (PZ) - The sub-capsular portion of the posterior aspect
of
the prostate gland which surrounds the distal urethra and comprises up to
70% of
the normal prostate gland in young men. It is from this portion of the
gland
that more than 70% of prostatic cancers originate.



2.
The
Central Zone (CZ) - This zone constitutes approximately 25% of the
normal
prostate gland and surrounds the ejaculatory ducts. Central zone
tumors account
for more than 25% of all prostate cancers.



3.
The
Transition Zone (TZ) - This zone is responsible for 5% of the prostate
volume
and very rarely is associated with carcinoma. The transition zone
surrounds
the proximal urethra and is the region of the prostate gland which
grows
throughout your lifetime. It is involved in benign
prostatic
enlargement.



4.
The
Anterior Fibro-muscular zone - This zone accounts for approximately 5% of
the
prostatic weight, is usually devoid of glandular components, and
composed
only, as its name suggests, of muscle and fibrous tissue.



Prostate
Disorders

Three
types of disorders can occur in the prostate gland:
inflammation or infection
(prostatitis), enlargement (benign prostatic
hyperplasia - BPH), and
cancer.




















NormalInflamedEnlarged


1) Prostatitis is a clinical term used to
describe a wide
spectrum of disorders ranging from bacterial infection to
chronic pain
syndromes. It is not contagious (generally not spread through
sexual
contact):





  • Acute Bacterial Prostatitis is the least common
    but easiest to
    diagnose and treat. It is caused by bacteria and comes
    suddenly with chills and
    fever, pain in the lower back and genital area, and
    burning or painful
    urination. Additional indications are excessive white
    blood cells and bacteria
    in the urine.


  • Chronic (Nonbacterial) Prostatitis (chronic
    pelvic pain
    syndrome) is the most common, but least understood, form of
    prostatitis. Found
    in men of any age from the late teens on, the symptoms go
    away and then return
    without warning, and may be inflammatory or
    non-inflammatory. In the
    inflammatory form, urine, semen, and other fluids
    from the prostate show no
    evidence of a known infecting organism, but do
    contain the kinds of cells the
    body usually produces to fight infection. In
    the non-inflammatory form, no
    evidence of inflammation, including
    infection-fighting cells, is present.



  • Asymptomatic Inflammatory Prostatitis is the
    diagnosis when
    there are no symptoms, but the patient has infection-fighting
    cells in the
    semen. It is often found when a doctor is looking for causes of
    infertility or
    is testing for prostate cancer.


2) BPH, or benign prostatic hyperplasia, is the
second common
problem that can occur in the prostate. "Benign" means "not
cancerous" and
"hyperplasia" means "too much growth."
As
men age, the prostate
gland slowly enlarges.
The gland tends to expand in an area
that doesn't
expand with it, causing pressure on the urethra, which can lead to
urinary
problems. The urge to urinate frequently, a weak urine flow, breaks in
urine
stream, and dribbling are all symptoms of an enlarged prostate. At its
worst,
BPH can lead to a weak bladder, bladder or kidney infections,
complete
blockage in the flow of urine, and kidney failure.



Since the prostate has propensity to grow once
manhood is
reached, BPH is the most common prostate problem for men older
than 50.
The
American
Urological Association assesses that by age 60, more than half of
American men
will have BPH.
By
age 70, almost all men have some prostate enlargement. By age 85,
about 90
percent of men have BPH but only 30 percent will
exhibit
symptoms!



3)
Prostate Cancer
is one of the most common cancers in American men. There are
no warning signs
of symptoms of early prostate cancer. Once a malignant tumor
causes the
prostate gland to swell significantly, or once cancer spreads
beyond the
prostate, the following symptoms may be present:

































  • A frequent need to urinate, especially at
    night


  • Difficulty starting or stopping the urinary
    stream


  • A weak or interrupted urinary stream

  • A painful or burning sensation during urination
    or
    ejaculation


  • Blood in urine or semen


Symptoms of advanced prostate cancer
include:





  • Dull, incessant deep pain or stiffness in the
    pelvis, lower
    back, ribs or upper thighs; arthritic pain in the bones of
    those areas


  • Loss of weight and appetite

  • Fatigue

  • Nausea

  • Vomiting


There are 4 stages of Prostate
Cancer:





  • T1 - Tumor is microscopic and confined to
    prostate but is
    undetectable by a digital rectal exam (DRE) or by ultrasound.
    Usually
    discovered by PSA tests or biopsies.


  • T2 - Tumor is confined to prostate and can be
    detected by DRE
    or ultrasound.


  • T3 / T4 - In stage T3, the cancer has spread to
    tissue adjacent
    to the prostate or to the seminal vesicles. In stage T4,
    tumors have spread to
    organs near the prostate, such as the
    bladder.


  • N+ / M+ - Cancer has spread to pelvic lymph
    nodes (N+) or to
    lymph nodes, organs, or bones distant from the prostate
    (M+).




























Prostate cancer
is the most
common cancer, other than skin cancers, in American men. It is
the second
leading cause of cancer death in American men, behind only lung
cancer, and
accounts for 9% of cancer-related deaths in men. The American
Cancer Society
estimates that during 2008, about 186,000 new cases of
prostate cancer will be
diagnosed in the United States.
30%
of prostate cancers
occur in men under age 65.
About 1 man in 6 will be
diagnosed with prostate
cancer during his lifetime, but only 1 man in 35 will
die of it. More than 2
million men in the United States who have been diagnosed
with prostate cancer
at some point are still alive today.


Prostate
Disorder
Symptoms
Different prostate
problems
sometimes have similar symptoms. For example, one man with
prostatitis and
another with BPH may both have a frequent, urgent need to
urinate. A man with
BPH may have trouble beginning a stream of urine; another
may have to urinate
frequently at night. Or, a man in the early stages of
prostate cancer may have
no symptoms at all.



Common
symptoms of
prostate disorders are:





  • Sensation
    of not
    emptying your bladder completely after you have finished
    urinating.


  • Frequent
    urination
    (consistently in intervals of less than 2 hours and / or multiple
    times during
    the night).


  • Interrupted
    urination
    (you have to stop and start several times during urination).


  • Difficulty
    in
    postponing urination.


  • Weak
    or limited
    urinary stream.


  • Pushing
    and
    straining required to begin urination.


  • A
    burning pain
    during urination.


  • Pain
    in lower
    back, in the area between the testicles and anus, in the lower belly
    or upper
    thighs, or above the pubic area. Pain may be worse during
    bowel
    movement.


  • Reduced
    ability to
    gain and hold erections, weak ejaculation, and dissatisfaction
    with sexual
    performance.


  • Some
    pain during
    or after ejaculation.


  • Pain
    in the tip of
    your penis.


  • Fever
    and
    chills.


  • Loss
    of
    appetite.


One prostate problem does not lead to another.
For example,
having prostatitis or an enlarged prostate does not increase the
chance for
prostate cancer. It is true that some men with prostate cancer
also have BPH,
but the two conditions are not automatically linked. Most men
with BPH do not
develop prostate cancer. But because the early symptoms for
both conditions
could be the same, a doctor would need to evaluate them. It
is also possible to
have more than one condition at a time. This confusing
array of potential
scenarios makes a case for all men, especially after age
45, to have a thorough
medical exam that includes the PSA test and DRE every
year.



Diagnostic
Tests
The
PSA blood test determines whether you have cancer of the
prostate. The test
measures how much of a protein essential to human
reproduction, PSA
(prostate-specific antigen), is in your blood. PSA turns your
gelatinous
pre-semen into a liquid, thus supporting ejaculation. If your PSA is
below 4,
most doctors agree that you needn't be tested again for a year. During
annual
tests, remember that it is normal for your reading to go up by a few
tenths
of a point every year. In general, only a drastic increase in PSA
(an
increase of at least 0.75 points or 20 percent) is considered a reason
to
worry. This test is recommended on an annual basis for all men over 50
(and for
men above 45 if there is a family history of prostate
problems).



A
digital rectal
examination (DRE) is a quick and safe screening technique in
which a doctor
inserts a gloved, lubricated finger into the rectum to feel
the size and shape
of the prostate. The prostate should feel soft, smooth,
and even. The doctor
checks for lumps or hard, irregular areas of the
prostate that may indicate the
presence of prostate cancer. The entire
prostate cannot be felt during a DRE,
but most of it can be examined,
including the area where most prostate cancers
are found.


Western
Medicine

Western
medicine relies on aggressive and costly prescription
drugs and
prohibitively-expensive surgery to deal with problems related to
prostate and
reproductive disorders. These methods generally address only the
symptoms of
prostate disorder and not the underlying causes. As soon as you
stop using
the drugs, the problem returns! And these prescription drugs often
result in
unwanted and even dangerous side effects.



While
prostatitis
caused by infection can be treated with antibiotics, there are no
drugs for
treating chronic pelvic pain syndrome. Its symptoms are treated
with
anti-inflammatory drugs and analgesics.



FDA-approved
drugs
only relieve the symptoms of BPH - they do not cure it. The 5
alpha-reductase
inhibitors, Proscar (Finasteride) and Avodart (Dutasteride),
work by blocking an
enzyme that acts on the male hormone, testosterone, to
boost organ growth. When
the enzyme is blocked, growth slows down and the
gland may shrink. This
treatment may not produce a positive effect until
after six to 12 months of
treatment. It also works best for advanced cases of
prostate enlargement.



Alpha-adrenergic
receptor
blockers, which work by blocking adrenergic nerve receptors in the
lower
urinary tract, basically help relax the smooth muscle of the prostate
and
bladder neck to relieve pressure and to improve urine flow. These drugs,
which
do not shrink the size of the prostate, include: Cardura (Doxazosin),
Flomax
(Tamsulosin), Hytrin (Terazosin), and Uroxatral (Alfuzosin). For many
men,
these alpha-blockers can improve urine flow and can reduce symptoms
within
days. But since the underlying cause is not addressed, symptoms will
return
once you stop using the drugs.



The
combined side
effects of Alpha-Blockers and 5-Alpha Reductase Inhibitors
include breast
tenderness and enlargement, decreased sex drive, difficulty
getting an erection,
dizziness, fainting, headache, heart failure, increased
ejaculatory dysfunction,
lightheadedness, nasal congestion, retrograde
ejaculation (ejaculation back into
the bladder), sudden drop in blood
pressure, tiredness, and upper respiratory
tract infection.



Surgical
options
include Transurethral Needle Ablation (TUNA), Transurethral
Vaporization (TUVP),
Laser Surgery, Transurethral Resection (TURP),
Transurethral Incision
(TUIP)
,
and
Open Prostatectomy. All of these procedures often require patients to
wear a
catheter for 3 to 4 days after surgery and carry some risk of
incontinence,
impotence, infection, and complications.



An
alternative
treatment that has become popular is saw palmetto which is used
by millions of
men in the United States to treat BPH. Saw palmetto, however,
was recently
found to have no effect in reducing the frequent urge to urinate
or other
annoying symptoms of an enlarged prostate. Published in the Feb. 9,
2006, New
England Journal of Medicine, a yearlong study found that the plant
extract was
no more effective than inactive pills (placebos) in easing
symptoms of
BPH.



Ayurvedic
Medicine





Ayurveda,
the science of life, prevention, and longevity, is the oldest
and most
holistic and comprehensive medical system available. Its fundamentals
can be
found in Hindu scriptures called the Vedas - the ancient Indian books
of
wisdom written over 5,000 years ago. Ayurveda uses the inherent principles
of
nature to help maintain health in a person by keeping the individual's
body,
mind, and spirit in perfect equilibrium with nature.

India Herbs
has a
seasoned group of Ayurvedic doctors specialized in Vajikarana, one of
the eight
major specialties of Ayurveda. Vajikarana is "a process or a drug,
which make a
man as healthy as a ox and able to undergo many hours of
physical rigors."
Vajikarana prescribes the therapeutic use of various
herbal and tonic
preparations for enhancing the capabilities and vigor of the
your reproductive
and urogenital system while strengthening the body and
overall
well-being.

India Herbs' Vajikarana scientists combine a
proprietary
herbal formula based on centuries' old wisdom with advice on diet, exercise, mental training, and relaxation
to
help men address their prostate health concerns through safe,
natural
means.



Recommendations
You
can optimize your long-term prostate health
by:



1)
Reversing
Damage - Years of stressful living caused damage to your body. To
help
reverse this, Ayurstate releases hundreds of
phytonutrients
that
act at the molecular level to repair damaged tissue, rejuvenate your
prostate
gland, inhibit polyamines and prostaglandins, tone smooth muscles in
your
urinogenital system, and reduce inflammation of the urethra and
prostate
gland.



2)
Increasing Soy
Intake - R
esearchers believe that the
increasing
estrogen-to-testosterone ratio brought on by aging is one of the
factors that
adversely affects the size of the prostate gland. 2 ounces or
more of soy in
your daily diet will help restore the proper
estrogen-to-testosterone ratio that
becomes skewed as men get into their 60s
and beyond. Good sources of soy
include tofu (soybean curd), miso, tempeh,
roasted soy nuts, and soy flour or
powder.



3) Increasing Selenium Intake - Selenium is essential
for
good prostate health. Selenium-rich foods include wheat germ, tuna,
herring and
other seafood and shellfish, beef liver and kidney, eggs,
sunflower and sesame
seeds, cashews, Brazil nuts, mushrooms, garlic, onions,
and kelp.



4) Increasing Zinc Intake - 15 mg of zinc are needed
daily
for healthy prostate function. Pumpkin seed in the shell, oysters,
beans, and
nuts are excellent sources of zinc.



5) Minimizing Alcohol Consumption - Alcohol depletes
both
zinc and vitamin B6 (which is necessary for zinc absorption).



6) Eating Healthy - Eat lots of fruits and vegetables to
get
the necessary antioxidants in your diet. Avoid unsaturated fats, sugars
and
processed foods. High-fat foods like meats and dairy products can
elevate
testosterone level which stimulates prostate cell growth and
enlargement.



7) Supplementing Diet - Take a daily multivitamin
supplement
which includes at least the following for supporting prostate
health - Vitamin A
(25,000 IU), Vitamin E (1,200 IU), and Lycopene (10 mg).



8) Improving Circulation - Perform Kegel exercises to
improve
blood flow to the prostate and urinogenital tissues. Kegel exercises
are done
by pulling up all the muscles around the scrotum and anus, holding,
and
releasing. 10 repetitions of this movement, 5-6 times daily will maximize
blood
flow to your prostate gland.



9) Adopting Healthy Lifestyle - Get sufficient rest and exercise regularly.

Regular exercise has been shown to strengthen the immune system and
improve
digestion, circulation, and the removal of waste matter from the
body. Exercise
also prevents obesity, which is a risk factor for many
diseases, including
cancer. Regular exercise may also reduce the risk of
prostate gland
enlargement.