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Health Focus - May 2008

Cancer doctors under Scrutiny

May 31st 2008 11:21
Cancer Doctors scrutiny




Cancer Doctors Under Scrutiny

Non-FDA approved cancer drugs are being administered in the U.S. by doctors who wish to profit for themselves, regardless of the risk to their patients. Sharyl Attkisson investigates.

















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vegetables raw or cooked






Are Raw Veggies Always Better?


You'd think that boiling veggies would suck the nutrients right out of them. But in the case of carrots and broccoli, that may not be so.


Seems that lightly boiling these two veggies can actually increase the concentration of carotenoids. The downside? It also depletes their phenolic compounds.

Settle for a Happy Medium
Steaming may be your best bet for both preserving phenolic compounds and boosting bioavailable carotenoids -- at least for broccoli. For carrots, you'll have to choose what's more important to you.

Count on Carotenoids

Think orange, yellow, red, and green to protect your DNA.

Carotenoids such as beta-carotene, lutein, and lycopene may help prevent the kind of DNA damage that contributes to cardiovascular disease and cancer. Bright orange, yellow, red, and green fruits and veggies are good sources of these carotenoids, so pile your plate high with carrots, sweet potatoes, squash, red bell peppers, spinach, and kale.

Your diet is the best way to get the optimal amount of carotenoids, which have disease-fighting antioxidant properties. Chopping, slicing, shredding, or pureeing carotenoid-containing fruits and vegetables will help you get the biggest antioxidant boost from these foods. Also, a tiny bit of dietary fat will aid absorption of carotenoids, so add a dab of olive oil or another item containing unsaturated fat. In a small study, postmenopausal women age 50 to 70 took either 12 milligrams (mg) of a mixed-carotenoid supplement containing 4 mg each of lutein, beta-carotene, and lycopene; 12 mg of beta-carotene; or a placebo daily for about 2 months. At the end of the study, women who took carotenoid supplements exhibited less DNA damage than the women who took a placebo. It's best to get your nutrients from food, so feast on spinach salads, sweet potatoes, and stir-fry vegetables sautéed in olive oil. A supplement also can help boost your carotenoid intake when your diet falls short.


Whatever cooking method you choose for your veggies, keep in mind that frying or sauteing kills off the most antioxidant compounds. Read this article for answers to the fresh vs. frozen debate.

All They're Cooked Up to Be
Try out these other tips and tricks to make your veggies extra nutritious:

* Skip the thaw. Cooking straight from frozen retains more vitamin C.

* Spice them up. Adding cumin, ginger, and these herbs will boost the antioxidant punch of both raw and cooked veggies.

4 Herbs for High-Powered Salad

Fresh herbs add extra cell-protecting phenols to salads. To boost the nutrition in your bowl -- and your belly -- add sage, rosemary, marjoram, and thyme. In a recent study, these herbs added the most antioxidants to a salad (fresh marjoram leaves more than doubled the antioxidant value). For spices, cumin soared up the salad chart. Second to cumin: fresh ginger.

Which vegetables pack the strongest antioxidant punch? Artichoke, beetroot, broccoli, garlic, a variety of leek, a type of radish, and spinach were top produce picks in a recent study. Adding onions also upped the antioxidant ante.

* Drizzle a little. Olive oil, that is. Your body better absorbs the nutrition in veggies when eaten with a bit of fat.

Why opt for cooked tomato sauce over a fresh tomato salad? Cooking actually increases its level of lycopene -- an antioxidant thought to help prevent certain types of cancer, heart disease, and vision loss.



Brought to you by Real Age - available free on the web






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Falls can be deadly for elders

May 30th 2008 08:20
falls elders



Falls Can Be Deadly For Elders

Falling is the main cause of injuries leading to death among the elderly. In 2005, nearly 16,000 died after falling. Dr. Sanjay Gupta reports on a growing effort to stop this deadly problem.













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Dubious male libido enhancers

May 27th 2008 23:08
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Fruit to fight wrinkles.

May 20th 2008 04:27
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Sleepless nights for a toddler

May 19th 2008 07:59
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The benefits of vitamin D

May 17th 2008 09:24
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Colds may be good for kids

May 16th 2008 04:48
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An alternative to mammograms?

May 14th 2008 07:02
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Is Autism linked to Vaccines?

May 14th 2008 06:52
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Learning from military medics

May 12th 2008 07:27
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Measles makes a comeback

May 5th 2008 09:54
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Burning the Midnight Oil

May 3rd 2008 09:48
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Healthy Food Donations

May 3rd 2008 09:31
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Health Watch

May 1st 2008 12:44
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