Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts

World’s oldest Man (179Yrs) laments that Death has forgotten about him and being unfair.


World’s oldest Man laments that Death has forgotten about him and being unfair.



AP

The world’s oldest man according to the Guinness world
book of records , 179 year old Mahashta Murasi has
come out lamenting that he has lost all hopes of dying.

Murasi claims he was born in the city of Bangalore on
January 6th 1835, is recorded to have lived in Varanasi
since 1903 and worked as a cobbler in the city until
1957, when he retired at the already venerable age of
122.

The world’s oldest man now says that he has been alive
so long and there is hardly any hope left for him to die.

“My grandchildren have died there a few years, “said
Mûrasi.” In a way, death has forgotten me. And now I
have lost all hope to die!” he said according to an Indian
website (india.com).

Murasi now claims that death may not come for him
since according to human statistics, no one dies after
the age of 150 years, let alone 170.

Source; india.com

8 Great Reasons to Eat Pomegranates


Pomegranates have fantastic health and beauty benefits. They are delicious and versatile. You can use pomegranates in salads, rices dishes, meat dishes, smoothies, yogurts, and drink a pomegranate juice. One pomegranate has around 100 seeds in it and contains around 100 calories, making it a perfect low calorie snack for dieters. Pomegranates can also help to ward off a number of serious diseases, including cancer and heart disease. Check out some of the best reasons to add pomegranates to your eating plan.
1. Pomegranates help to reduce bad cholesterol
Pomegranates are fortified with potent antioxidants that help reduce bad cholesterol, lower high blood pressure and reduce your risk of heart disease. It’s best to eat a pomegranate a day or add them to healthy meals, including salads and smoothies.
2. Pomegranates are low in sugar
Sugar is a culprit in many diseases, including heart disease, cancer, obesity, diabetes and skin problems. It’s crucial to limit your sugar consumption or eliminate it from your diet for good. Most fruits are high in sugar, but pomegranates are very low in sugar, which means they are good for your blood sugar levels. Half cup of pomegranate seeds contains 8 grams of sugar and about 70 calories.
3. Pomegranates boost your brain function
Due to their high content of powerful brain-boosting antioxidants, pomegranates can help to improve your memory, cognitive abilities and neurological function. They can also reduce your risk of Alzheimer’s Disease and can be beneficial for people with this disease.
4. Pomegranates help to reduce high blood pressure
Studies show that pomegranates can help people reduce high blood pressure. They are particularly beneficial for people with chronic high blood pressure. Pomegranate juice as well as seeds have high antioxidant content and have a good effect on arterial walls. If you suffer from high blood pressure, ask your doctor about pomegranates and see what they say.
5. Pomegranates have anti-aging properties
Pomegranates are known for its fantastic anti-aging properties. Incorporating more pomegranates into your daily diet will help you combat wrinkles and look much younger. The thing is, pomegranates contain a powerful antioxidant, polyphenols, which helps prevent any signs of aging. It sounds like a good reason to add some pomegranate seeds to your salad or yogurt today!
6. Pomegranates help to stop the growth of cancer cells
Sure, vegetables and fruits can’t cure cancer, but they can stop the growth of cancer cells. Pomegranates is one of the best fruits that can help you prevent cancer, if you eat them or drink a pomegranate juice regularly. I usually add some pomegranate seeds to my morning smoothie to enjoy their anti-cancer properties.
7. Pomegranates have anti-inflammatory properties
Eating pomegranates helps reduce inflammation and combat symptoms of arthritis. This fruits can also help prevent cartilage breakdown and they are absolutely good for your joints. Due to their great anti-aging properties, pomegranates help to keep your joints young and healthy. Moreover, pomegranate juice can help relieve joint pain.
8. Pomegranates boost mood
Next time you have a bad mood, snack on a handful of fresh pomegranate seeds or drink a glass of fresh pomegranate juice and you will feel much better. Pomegranates help to increase levels of serotonin in your brain, control mood swings and can even prevent anxiety and depression. When I have a terrible mood, I usually add dark chocolate and pomegranate seeds to my low calorie fruit smoothie. It works wonders for me and I feel much better and think much clearly.
You can eat pomegranates from early winter to late spring and enjoy a pomegranate juice all year round, but don’t buy juices that contain sugar. There are many other health benefits of eating pomegranates and these are some of the best ones. How often do you use pomegranates in your meals? Do you think people should eat more pomegranates?

The leading cause of food allergic reactions


Eating this common food may kill you

Here’s what really goes on inside your body during allergic attack



Emirates 247

For some people, a peanut is all it takes to end their lives.

Yes, it’s pretty serious, especially when you’re highly allergic to certain kinds of food, as they can turn deadly once ingested.


Emirates 247

And peanuts happen to be the leading cause of severe food allergic reactions, followed closely by shellfish, fish, tree nuts and eggs.


Dr M. Jay Al Khatib

"When you’re allergic to nuts, your immune system will think that a dangerous substance has been ingested, so it mistakes the protein to be a disease or virus, and so your immune system fights it," explained Dr M. Jay Al Khatib of York Diagnostic Laboratories in Dubai.

Speaking to ‘Emirates24|7’, the Laboratory Director explained that the first time you’re exposed to a nut allergen, you may not immediately notice any symptoms from the protein.

He added: "However, the immune system recognizes it as a serious threat and prepares to fight it the next time it enters the body."

So when this protein enters the body again, the immune system automatically launches an attack by releasing histamines, causing the allergy symptoms, which fall on a broad spectrum.

Allergy sufferers could develop one or all of these symptoms that include mild ones such as sneezing, swelling, rashes, hives, itchy skin and watery eyes.

But the severe symptoms can be deadly, as the swelling caused by the allergic reaction, can also lead to anaphylaxis - a highly dangerous condition in which the release of histamine causes the throat and airways to swell and become completely blocked .

That’s when sufferers should always carry an adrenaline injector, such as an EpiPen, where an injection of adrenaline re-opens the airways, allowing you to breathe again.

Dr Jay has seen numerous patients during the years who were unaware that they were allergic to certain foods, and only discovered it after taking part in the food allergy test, where specialists run a series of tests to find out what people are allergic to.

"We check for specific protein, not the common compounds, so we extract the protein from the nuts," he explained.

Dr Jay added: "What we expect when we get the blood sample of the patient, is to screen that blood sample for the antibody against that specific protein extracted in the testing plates."

Once the food allergy is confirmed, it’s usually irreversible, meaning the sufferer cannot eat peanuts for a very long time, if not forever.

Added to that, avoiding peanuts could be a little difficult, since they are a commonly used ingredient in the preparation of foods.

"Take care when eating foods that might contain the nut you’re allergic to, and the more diligent you are, the better the results and outcomes will be," explained Dr Jay, in a nutshell.



















culled from :incaseyoumissed.blogspot.ae

images from:incaseyoumissed.blogspot.ae

Coffee with Butter

Adding butter to coffee helps lose weight?

A new weird caffeine craze is sweeping cafesFrom 24/7 Staff
Published Thursday, February 26, 2015


Fans of butter coffee often drink it as meal substitute. (File)
The concept of a breakfast-in-a-cup concept has taken the world of cafe by storm. The new, weird new caffeine craze has been labelled ‘butter coffee’, ‘bullet coffee’ or ‘fat black’ and it is available at the trendy coffee or juice chains in Londodn and is likely to make your pockets lighter by anywehere between £2.50 - £3.50, per cup, reports Daily Mail.

Fans of butter coffee are hailing it as the new meal substitute and gush over the fact that it helps them burn more calories, sharpen their focus, and strip the excess fat from their bodies and cuts down on cravings.

However, those who tried the buttery brew for the first time, complained of nausea and diarrhoea, for it is an acquired taste.

Dave Asprey, an US entrepreneur came up with the idea of buttery coffee when he was trekking in Tibet and he was served tea laced with yak butter. He found that the people of that rough and mountainous terrain use the drink to get energy.

He brainstormed and cooked up what he calls a 'bullet-proof diet' formula, which includes high fat, low carbohydrate diet, which not only provides protection against lethargy, fat and diseases, but also results in weight loss.

It is a known theory that if people do not consume carbohydrates, the body tends to burn fat to give energy, thus resulting in extreme weight loss.

However, some claim that a low-carb diet often leads to to headaches, muscle cramps, general weakness and digestive problems, says the UK daily.

Asprey's butter coffee ingrediets include organic coffee, grass-fed, unsalted butter and organic coconut oil.












There's no denying Milla Jovovich is pregnant.


And it seems she's working hard to induce labour by her constant hikes with husband Paul W. S. Anderson in the hills of Los Angeles.

On Tuesday the 39-year-old actress and her director husband was seen with their two dogs on another brisk wall with Milla's bump proudly on display.


xposure images


Let's get this baby moving: Milla Jovovich proudly displays her bump on a hike with husband Paul W. S. Anderson



Ready to pop: She displayed her baby bump in a pale pink vest top on Tuesday




Countdown: Milla is less than two weeks away from her due date

Jovovich is less than two weeks away from her delivery date, and she recently hinted that she was trying to get her baby out soon than later with some strenuous excercise.

On Tuesday she wore a pale pink vest top that stretched over her baby bump, with a pair of black leggings and a sports bra to match.

Exercise is believed to be a natural way of inducing labour, though it has not necessarily been proven.

                                     images xposure
Speeding up the process: The parents may be hoping exercise might be a natural way of inducing labour


Happy days: The couple looked like they were enjoying this time together ahead of the birth

Milla took to Instagram on Monday to document her exercise efforts, suggesting she's ready for an early delivery.

'Relaxing after my first hike of the week! 14k steps and still going to take my daughter to Tae Kwon Do this evening, so will probably get 16k before the day is done,' she wrote with a worn-out looking selfie.

'Only about 12 days or so left before I go into labor!who knows?Could have a baby by the weekend at this rate! #countdowntodelivery #ladiary,' Milla added.


Inducing labour? Milla Johovich, right, was spotted on yet another hike with her husband Paul W.S. Anderson, left, in Los Angeles on Monday




Due any day: The actress/model looked about ready to pop in her tight taupe blouse

Milla looked about ready to pop as she, her husband Paul W.S. Anderson, puppies, and friends went on their outdoor stroll at the beginning of the week.

The Fifth Element star was clad in a sleeveless tight taupe shirt, cropped black leggings, and hiking boots.

The mother-of-one sported a touch of mascara and pink lipstick to brighten up her look while also covering her eyes with black plastic-rimmed glasses.


Puppy playtime: The two brought along their cute little canines for the outdoor stroll


On March 6, The Resident Evil actress took to her Facebook account to share the merits of her daily six-mile hikes.

'I have to say, if I wasn't hiking 5 1/2 to 6 miles every day, I think I would be 20 lbs. heavier than I am right now (185 lbs.) which is still reasonable for pregnancy gain,' she wrote.

Milla, who already has a seven-year-old daughter Ever, certainly believes in the workout, as she has been spotted nearly every day.


My turn! A pal took a shot at carrying the pet pooch

The busy mom hasn't been slowing down either, as she has a few projects that are set to begin filming following the birth of her second daughter.

Among them is Resident Evil: The Final Chapter, which is to be directed by her husband and will begin filming in the summer.

Milla will also be back on the big screen opposite Ethan Hawke and Ed Harris in the film Cymbeline, which is due out for release on March 13.



Wilderness gal: Milla happened to be carrying a stick during their rigorous walk


Expanding brood: This will be the second child, and girl, for the proud parents


21 year old man has organ restored in world’s first successful penistransplant



A 21-year-old man has undergone the world’s first successful penis transplant. The ‘ground-breaking’ operation took South African surgeons nine hours to perform, and allowed the patient to urinate normally and become sexually active again.

Three years ago the man, who remains unidentified, was forced to have his penis amputated after a botched circumcision. The operation was carried out by surgeons from Stellenbosch University and Tygerberg Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa, using a penis donated from a deceased person.









They said the procedure allowed the man to regain all function in the newly transplanted organ. Nine more patients will now receive penile transplants.
Professor André van der Merwe, head of the University’s Division of Urology, said they were surprised by the patient’s rapid recovery.

He said: ‘Our goal was that he would be fully functional at two years and we are very surprised by his rapid recovery


Professor Frank Graewe, another of the hospital’s surgeons who assisted on the operation, said: ‘It’s a massive breakthrough. We’ve proved that it can be done – we can give someone an organ that is just as good as the one that he had.’

‘It was a privilege to be part of this first successful penis transplant in the world.’
Professor van der Merwe said having a penis amputated is known to have a seriously adverse psychological effect on men.

‘This is a very serious situation,’ he said.
‘For a young man of 18 or 19 years the loss of his penis can be deeply traumatic.

Culled from UK Daily Mail

Future


You might expect a great philosopher to look past our surface into the depths of the soul – but Ancient Greek thinkers were surprisingly concerned with appearance. Aristotle and his followers even compiled a volume of the ways that your looks could reflect your spirit.
Reported from :www.bbc.com
"Soft hair indicates cowardice and coarse hair courage," they wrote. Impudence, the treatise says, was evident in "bright, wise-open eyes with heavy blood-shot lids"; a broad nose, meanwhile, was a sign of laziness, like in cattle.
Sensuous, fleshy lips fared little better. The philosophers saw it as a sign of folly, "like an ass", while those with especially thin mouths were thought to be proud, like lions.
(Getty Images)
The Ancient Greeks believed wide, flaring nostrils suggested a person could be lazy (Getty Images)
Today, we are taught not to judge a book by its cover. But while it is wise not to set too much by appearances, psychologists are finding that your face offers a window on our deepest secrets. Even if you keep a stony poker face, your features can reveal details about your personality, your health, and your intelligence.
Assertive structure
“The idea is that our biology, like genes and hormone levels, influences our growth, and the same mechanisms will also shape our character,” explains Carmen Lefevre at Northumbria University.
Consider the face’s bone structure – whether it is relatively short and wide or long and thin. Lefevre has found that people with higher levels of testosterone tend to be wider-faced with bigger cheekbones, and they are also more likely to have more assertive, and sometimes aggressive, personalities.
(Getty Images)
(Getty Images)
The link between face shape and dominance is surprisingly widespread, from capuchin monkeys– the wider the face, the more likely they are to hold a higher rank in the group’s hierarchy – to professional football players. Examining the 2010 World Cup, Keith Welker at the University of Boulder, Colorado, recently showed that the ratio of the width and height of the footballers’ faces predicted both the number of fouls among midfielders, and the number of goals scored by the forwards.
(To calculate this yourself, compare the distance from ear-to-ear with the distance between the top of your eyes, and your upper lip. The average ratio of width-to-height  is around 2 – Abraham Lincoln was 1.93)
(Getty Images)
(Getty Images)
It may even clue you in to a politician’s motives. Using volunteers to rate former US presidents on different psychological attributes, Lefevre found that face shape seemed to reflect their perceived ambition and drive. John f kenddey had a thicker -set face than 19th century cheater aruther, for instance. Such analyses of historical figures are perhaps best taken with a pinch of salt, however, and it has to be said that other traits, such as cooperation and intelligence, should be equally important for success.
Plump cheeks
As you might expect, your health and medical history are also written in your countenance – and the detail it offers is surprising. The amount of fat on your face, for instance, provides a stronger indication of your fitness than more standard measures, such as your body mass index. Those with thinner faces are less likely to suffer infections, and when they do, the illness is less severe; they also tend to have lower rates of depression and anxiety, probably because mental health is often closely related to the body’s fitness in general.
How could the plumpness of your cheeks say so much about you? Benedict Jones at the University of Glasgow thinks a new understanding of fat’s role in the body may help explain it. “How healthy you are isn’t so much about how much fat you have, but where you have that fat,” he says. Pear-shaped people, with more weight around the hips and bottom but slimmer torsos, tend to be healthier than “apples” with a spare tyre around the midriff, since the adipose tissue around the chest is thought to release inflammatory molecules that can damage the core organs. Perhaps the fullness of your face reflects the fatty deposits in the more harmful areas, Jones says. Or it could be that facial fat is itself dangerous for some reason.
(Thinkstock)
Wide-faced capuchin monkeys - just like humans - were thought to have more aggressive personalities 
Bbc.com images 
Besides these more overt cues, very subtle differences in skin colour can also reveal your health secrets. Jones and Lefevre emphasise this has nothing to do with the tones associated with ethnicity, but barely-noticeable tints that may reflect differences in lifestyle. You appear to be in more robust health, for instance, if your skin has a slightly yellowish, golden tone. The pigments in question are called carotenoids, which, as the name suggest, can be found in orange and red fruit and veg. Carotenoids help build a healthy immune system, says Lefevre. “But when we’ve eaten enough, they layer in the skin and dye it yellow. We exhibit them, because we haven’t used them to battle illness.” The glow of health, in turn, contributes significantly to your physical attraction – more so, in fact, than the more overt tones that might accompany a trip to the tanning salon.
A blush of pink, meanwhile, should signal the good circulation that comes with an active lifestyle – and it might also be a sign of a woman’s fertility. Jones has found that women tend to adopt a slightly redder flush at the peak of the menstrual cycle, perhaps because estradiol, a sex hormone, leads the blood vessels in the cheek to dilate slightly. It may be one of many tiny shifts in appearance and behaviour that together make a woman slightly more attractive when she is most likely to conceive.
Looking smart
As Jones points out, these secrets were hiding in plain sight – yet we were slow to uncover them. At the very least, this knowledge helps restore the reputation of “physiognomy”, which has suffered a somewhat chequered reputation since Aristotle’s musings. Tudor king Henry VIII was so sceptical of the idea that he even banned quack “professors” from profiting from their readings, and its status took a second bashing in the early 20th Century, when it was associated with phrenology – the mistaken idea that lumps and bumps on your head can predict your behaviour.
But now the discipline is gaining credibility, we may find that there are many more surprises hiding in your selfies. Intriguingly, we seem to be able to predict intelligence from someone’s face with modest accuracy – though it’s not yet clear what specific cues make someone look smart. (Needless to say, it is not as simple as whether or not they wear glasses.) Others are examining the “gaydar”. We often can guess someone’s sexual orientation within a split-second, even when there are no stereotypical clues, but it’s still a mystery as to what we’re actually reading. Further research might explain exactly how we make these snap judgements.
(Thinkstock)
(Thinkstock)
It will also be interesting to see how the link between personality, lifestyle and appearance changes across the lifetime. One study managed to examine records of personality and appearance, following subjects from the 1930s to the 1990s. The scientists found that although baby-faced men tended to be less dominant in their youth, they grew to be more assertive as the years wore on – perhaps because they learnt to compensate for the expectations brought about by their puppyish appearance.
More intriguingly, the authors also found evidence of a “Dorian Gray effect” – where the ageing face began to reflect certain aspects of the personality that hadn’t been obvious when the people were younger. Women who had more attractive, sociable, personalities from adolescence to their 30s slowly started to climb in physical attractiveness, so that in their 50s they were considered better-looking than those who had been less personable but naturally prettier. One possibility is that they simply knew how to make the best of their appearance, and that their inner confidence was reflected on subtle differences in expression.
(Getty Images)
(Getty Images)
After all, there is so much more to our appearance than the bone structure and skin tone, as one particularly clever study recently demonstrated. The scientists asked volunteers to wear their favourite clothes, and then took a photo of their face. Even though the clothes themselves were not visible in the mugshots, impartial judges considered them to be considerably more attractive than other pictures of the participants. The finding is particularly striking, considering that they were asked to keep neutral expressions: somehow, the boosted self-esteem shone through anyway.