Saturday, September 15, 2007

Facts that do not require a research grant to prove.

We were all born.

We all die.

Men and women look differently

Men and women act differently

Children are not adults

the Sun appears to come up in the east and set in the west

Rain is wet

Eventually everything on your car breaks

Carpets get spots that will not come out

Advertising is designed to make you want to buy something you never knew you needed.

Whatever it is you are looking for is always in the last place you look

Socks get holes, but only the pairs that have mates

Cleaning anything will get you dirty

Someone in a group photograph will have his or her eyes closed

If you go to the store without cleaning up from working in the yard, you will meet someone you know

The only day you have ever been late for work -- your boss will be looking for you

Some people just will not like you for no reason

You will not like some people for no reason


I invite you to add your own truisms

until next time smile
Sharon
(c) Answers For Your Health

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Tuesday, September 11, 2007

What, I didn't hear you? Hearing Loss

I have noticed that my hearing is not what it used to be. I can relate that change to the time I have been working at the store. A busy grocery store can be a very noisy environment. The sounds come at you from all directions and the more people, the louder the sounds. In an effort to turn down the volume in my own mind, I am deliberately shutting out the sounds as much as possible.

I think we all accept that a gradual loss of hearing comes with age. We speak louder to those who cannot hear us and we turn up the volume on the TV. I know I hear better when I can see the face of the speaker. All my life I have disliked talking on the telephone, I have difficulty understanding what is being said.

A thing as simple as a build up of ear wax can interfere with your hearing ability.

Having a doctor remove that build up can reopen the world of sound. This is definitely a process you want a professional to do - sticking small pointed objects in your ear is a good way to rupture an ear drum. As a child, I watched my father cleaning his ears with a hair pin. I copied and ruptured my ear drums. My poor husband has the genetic ear structure that contributes to this problem and must have his ears cleaned out on a regular basis. His doctor gave him instructions on how to do a weekly clean out process with hydrogen peroxide that would stop the build up - but forgetting one week after another to do so, oh well. All the knowledge in the world is wasted if no action is taken.

I read an interesting article on this subject that explains the hearing process and why turning up the volume is not the answer.

According to Dr.D. Robert Frisina, PhD, director, the International Center for Hearing and Speech Research, a joint program between Rochester Institute of Technology and the University of Rochester Medical Center, in New York.

The problem is not the volume necessarily --- it is the connection between the brain and the ear.

Here is what happens when that occurs. When sounds are made, the inner ear sends many rapid-fire nerve impulses to the brain. For a person to "hear" the sounds, the brain must process them at the same rate. If signaling gaps occur, the person thinks he/she didn't hear the sound, but the glitch was not in the sound, it was in the processing. This is why speaking louder may not help older adults "hear" better. More helpful, says Dr. Frisina, is to speak clearly and a bit more slowly, thereby giving the inner ear and the brain more time for signal processing.

Is there hope to regain hearing ability?

Yes, because the brain's nerve cells have the ability to reconnect. Challenging the brain is what it is all about. You constantly read or hear the message that as you grow older you need to keep learning. You may want to learn a new language or take a class at your local college. You may want to learn more about your computer and how to do different things with a not so simple tool. Thinking about those brain training games you see on TV - Dr. Frisina says they provide only temporary improvement in the short run, not lasting prevention of age-related hearing loss. Would that be because once you master the game you stop playing it?

Lack of potassium and balanced sodium contribute to hearing dysfunction.

A hormone, called aldosterone, affects hearing acuity in both men and women. Levels of aldosterone decline with age. Lets face it - every hormone declines with age. In previous studies Dr. Frisina found that older adults with severe hearing loss had on average about half the aldosterone as those with normal hearing.

Aldosterone regulates potassium and sodium, which are both crucial chemicals that the inner ear needs to convert sounds into nerve impulses the brain can understand. Consequently, low levels of aldosterone -- or an imbalance of potassium and sodium -- can affect the inner ear's ability to signal correctly and the brain's ability to process in real time.

Simply adding a banana a day to your diet will increase your potassium and I doubt that any of us need to increase our sodium levels. And you have another reason to be sure you are taking your antioxidants in proper proportion to your diet and lifestyle. Smokers need much more in the way of antioxidants as do those who are over weight and under exercised.

So, if you think your mate, your friends, your co-workers are ignoring you, try speaking just a little slower and much more clearly. Most of us do not realize how much we slur our words, particularly here in the south - y'all. If you can, record your own voice during conversation and then reading from a book. You may be amazed, ashamed, or just slightly alarmed. Just remember, turning up the volume won't help.

until next time smile
Sharon
(c)Answers for Your Health

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Thursday, September 06, 2007

Antioxidants, Smoking and Alzheimer's

The driving force behind natural medicine or alternative medicine is the important key that every individual part of the body flows together in the whole body. If you stub your toe, it has an effect on the entire body. Minimal perhaps but none the less there it is. If you cut your finger -- same thing.

Modern mainstream medicine looks only at the toe or the finger. Your doctor will give you an antibiotic to kill germs, put on a band aid and call it good.

Meanwhile, the whole body has ramped up to kill any infection in the finger and heal the wound from the inside out --- not the outside in.

I found this article on smoking that indicates cigarettes contribute to Alzheimer's. However, I copied this excerpt from the article which I think points to the real cause. I am not saying that smoking is a good thing - far from it. However I do think that we should look a little deeper.

http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/102374.html

She continued, "Another mechanism could be through oxidative stress, which can damage cells in the blood vessels and lead to hardening of the arteries. Smokers experience greater oxidative stress than nonsmokers, and increased oxidative stress is also seen in Alzheimer's disease."

Oxidative stress occurs when a person's body has too many waste products, also known as radicals, produced by chemical reactions,.

Dr. Breteler said that "antioxidants in the diet can eliminate free radicals, and studies have shown that smokers have fewer antioxidants in their diets than nonsmokers."
Alzheimer's is on the rise just like diabetes. Why-- why not-- pollution, bad diet, lack of exercise all contribute. I am happy for the researchers that have identified the gene that indicates a greater chance of getting Alzheimer's. However, the average person certainly does not have the funds to get tested for this gene and if he did - so what. If everyone of your ancestors died of cancer, what would you do? Would you spend your time thinking about getting cancer? Would you modify your diet to increase your health? Would you enjoy every day that you have?

At the end of the discussion, the final answer is the final answer -- we all die. It is the living that is important. And it is that daily living that contributes to how painfully we die - in most cases. Accidents do happen.

Most of us are too busy getting through the day to worry about dieing. Do you worry that the sun will come up in the morning, of course not. If you haven't yet stopped smoking, then do the next best thing - increase your intake of antioxidants. Modify your diet to give more support to your body and mind. Increase your exercise to increase the blood flow and encourage the release of toxins.

If you have stopped smoking or never started or never have been around anyone who does smoke, just in case you have that gene, get your antioxidant levels up as well.

Picked up this joke this morning.
Incompatible

Listening to a young Yuppie couple argue as they waited for their prescriptions at least helped me pass the time. When their meds were finally ready, they paid and walked away. The druggist stood there and shook his head.

I asked, "What's with them ?"

He sighed and replied, "They're incompatible. He's on Xanax and she's on Prozac....."
until next time smile
Sharono
(c) Answers For Your Health

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