A reason to change

January 31st, 2010 by admin

I went to the book store looking for a book on marketing and social media. I left with a new perspective on obesity.

For the longest time I held to the belief that as long as my cholesterol was in check, and my blood pressure not too high, I did not have to worry about heart disease as a result of being obese. But when I ran into Dianne at the book store I quickly realized that I was being very shortsighted.

Dianne’s mother had passed away just a few months earlier after suffering a massive stroke. Like me, her mother’s heart was strong, and her cholesterol and blood pressure was perfect. However, she was also obese.

Over the years Dianne’s mother had eaten herself into death. Despite her heart being strong the excess weight she carried began taking its toll on her liver and kidneys. Soon blood clots began to form until one day she suffered the stroke that took her life.

Since hearing of this lady’s story my attitude toward my weight has changed. Even as I write these words I weigh 380 pounds and know that until I do something about my the behavior that got me here, I run the risk of cutting my life short.

I do not want to die before getting the chance to see my children’s children. I do not want to cut short the year I could be spending with my wife and kids. I do not want to waste all the opportunities I might be given to make a difference in this world. I want to live, and live well. For this reason I have designed the Culinaria Weight Loss Program.

Why do you want to change?

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Open Question: (Physics)solution to the problems of HCV?

January 31st, 2010 by admin

Where can I download the complete solution of Chapter 25 of concepts of Physics -H C Verma (calorimetry)which consists of 18 questions? I found many links which contain the solutions of various chapters of HCV but only the solution of 3 questions are given in the chapter 25(CALORIMETRY). Please help .It is very very urgent. 10 points are assured for the best answer.

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Open Question: I had done HBs Ag and Anti- HCV tests and results was NON-REACTIVE, does it mean negative?

January 31st, 2010 by admin

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RECIPES FOR DAIRY-FREE and GLUTEN-FREE COOKING

January 30th, 2010 by admin

                                                                                                                           JAPANESE FOODS

The Japanese have a long and beautiful tradition of healthy and delicious foods. From cold water fish, such as tuna and salmon,  high in Omega-3’s, to rice (opt for whole grain when you can) and soy-based tofu, seaweed, vegetables, ginger and that oh-so-irresistable green Wasabi paste- a Japanese horseradish.  I love the diet!  They do not herald carb-heavy breads or crackers or cakes in their menus, as with American and European diets. And other than a nod to ice cream, with green tea or ginger sorbet, they pretty much exclude dairy products. 

So if you are going dairy and gluten free, this countries designer style foods are an easy transition, requiring little thought.  Here are a few suggestions. You can find the ingredients in the ethnic aisle of your supermarket, a specialty health food grocery, or an Asian market. You will get used to the terms and names of things, so don’t shy away!

                                                                                                                                   MISO SOUP

INGREDIENTS

4 cups water                                                                                      

4 shitake mushrooms, sliced 

1/2 oz. Bonito dried fish flakes/granules   

6 oz.(1 small box) firm tofu, cubed

1 tbsp Sake’ (optional, but nice)

4 tbsp miso paste, or shiromiso

1 tbsp Tamari wheat-free soy sauce 

 2 scallions, sliced fine

1 nori (seaweed) wrapper, cut in strips

2 tsp white sesame seeds, toasted

DIRECTIONS

Add water to a pan, heat, and add bonito fish flakes. Stir in sake, soy sauce, and salt to taste, if desired. Add cubed tofu and sliced mushrooms, allowing to simmer gently for about 3 minutes. Now add miso paste and stir until it has dissolved. Turn off heat, add the sliced scallions, and divide between four bowls. Sprinkle 1/2 teaspoon of the toasted sesame seeds over each bowl, and serve!  Serves 4.

                                                                                                                       YAKITORI CHICKEN

2 chicken breasts, cut into 24 chunks

4 scallions, cut into 18 pieces

6 wooden skewers, soaked in water

1/2 cup yakitori marinade (see below)

DIRECTIONS

Soak the skewers in water for 20 minutes. This prevents burning! Meanwhile, make the marinade. Pre heat the broiler to high. Thread 4 chunks of  chicken and 3 pieces of scallion, alternately, onto each skewer. Brush the skewers with marinade, then cook under broiler for 4 minutes on each side, brushing again with yakitori when turning. Plate the skewers, sprinkling with the remaining marinade.  You may also choose to provide a small dipping dish of the yakitori sauce with each serving. Makes 6 skewers, for 2 or 3 servings, depending.

                                                                                                                                 YAKITORI SAUCE

 6 tbsp Tamari wheat-free soy sauce

 4 tbsp sake

 6 tbsp mirin (sweet rice vinegar)

 2 tbsp superfine sugar

Put soy sauce, mirin, sake and sugar in a small pan and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and continue to simmer for one minute. Remove pan from heat and cool. Reserve some of this sauce for drizzling over finished chicken. You may want to double the ingredients if you want to provide personal dipping sauces of Yakitori with each serving. 

                                                                                                                                       SUSHI ROLLS

Don’t be intimidated by the idea of rolling your own sushi!  I learned at home, with a friend, so the embarrassment of too large and loosely pressed rolls was spared me, and surpassed by the intoxicating flavor and taste of freshness. With practice, you just get better.  You will need a bamboo stick sushi rolling mat, and a wide wooden sushi rice spoon.  You can buy these affordably in sets in some specialty groceries or kitchen supply stores. Also, keep plastic wrap on hand for the inside out-rolls. Nori strips are those flat dark green sheets of pressed seaweed that are used to roll up your sushi. And if you can locate it, I prefer the tiny orange fish eggs, known as flying fish roe, for topping the cut pieces, or rolling the inside-out rolls in. This section begins with making sushi rice, then onto rolls. Compai!

                                                                                                                                            SUSHI RICE

1 1/2 cups sushi rice, or short to medium grain rice

2 tbsp rice vinegar

1 1/2 cups water  

1 tbsp sugar, 1/4 tsp salt combined

Rinse rice under cold water until the water runs clear. Strain, then place in pan with water (or use a rice cooker and follow directions). Cover pan and bring rice to a boil. Reduce heat, and simmer for 10 minutes. Remove from heat, let stand for another 15 minutes,  do not remove the lid!

Turn rice into a wide, flat-bottomed, non-metal bowl. Pour over the sushi rice seasoning (rice vinegar, sugar & salt, combined). Using quick, cutting strokes, cut the seasoning into the rice, fanning it as you work. You can do this in front of an actual fan, of hold the spoon up high and let the rice drop down into the bowl.  DO NOT STIR as this may break the grains. Keep cutting and fanning until the rice is room temperature and looks shiny.  Keep it covered with a cloth, and use immediately.  It is reccomended you do not refrigerate mixed sushi rice.

                                                                                                                                 PHILLY ROLL

Ingredients:

2 oz. fresh, sushi grade salmon, cut into  1/2 ” strips   

2 sheets nori (seaweed wrapper)

1  cup sushi rice  

@2 oz. Tofutti/dairy free cream cheese

Wasabi paste, soy sauce, pickled ginger, as garnish

 Directions:

Lay a sheet of  nori wrapper flat on top of your rolling mat. Divide the rice into 2 equal portions. Wet your hands, and spread one portion of rice over the nori, as evenly as you can. Re-wet your hands as often as needed. Leave a 1/2 inch border at the top edge, for sealing the roll.

Dip a finger into your wasabi paste, and drag it across the length of the rice/wrapper. Place a line of the sliced salmon strips, then another thin strip of the cream cheese above that.

Pick up the nearest edge of the rolling mat. Slowly roll the mat away from you, to wrap the nori over and around the fillings. Use light pressure, lifting the mat out of the way as you roll. Press the roll into the bare border of nori. To seal the roll, it helps to dip a finger in water, run it over the edge of the seaweed wrapper, roll and press to seal.

Transfer your roll onto a cutting board or smooth surface. Taking a very sharp knife, wet it under running water, shake off the excess, and cut the roll in half.  Wet again, if neccessary, between slices, and cut each half into 3 equal pieces. Repeat with the second half, for 6 pieces. Repeat, making another roll, cut into 6 more pieces.

Arrange your Philly salmon roll pieces on a plate (preferably a square, japanese style plate, for visual effect!). Serve with a shallow dipping dish of soy sauce, a dollop of wasabi paste, and a pinch of pickled ginger.  Enjoy!

                                                                                                                                     CALIFORNIA ROLL

Ingredients:

@ 1 cup sushi rice 

 2 nori sheets

1/2  avocado, sliced thin    

2 long slices cucumber, seedless

2 lengths of crab leg  or imitation crabmeat                                       

Flying fish roe or toasted white sesame seeds

Tamari wheat-free soy sauce, wasabi paste, pickled ginger

Directions:

Divide sushi rice in half.  Place a sheet of nori wrapper on top of your rolling mat. With wet fingers, spread half the rice evenly over the wrapper, leaving at least 1/2 inch border at the top. Dip a finger in wasabi paste, and drag it across the length of rice on the bottom of the roll.

Lay a line of avocado strips, followed by a strip of crabmeat, and thin strips of cucumber sticks, de-seeded.               

Pick up the nearest edge of the rolling mat, and slowly roll away from you, gently pressing as you wrap the nori around the filling.  Lift the mat  out of the way as you roll. Take a wet finger and run it across the end border of the nori, and finish rolling, pressing the edge against the finished roll to seal it.

Transfer the roll to a cutting board, seam side down, and cut in half with a very sharp, wet knife. Cut again, for four larger pieces. Turn onto a plate, flat side up, and spread the tops with flying fish roe or toasted sesame seeds. Transfer to a presentation platter, adding a dollop of wasabi, a fat pinch of pickled ginger, and serve soy sauce in shallow dipping bowls.

                                                                                                                                    INSIDE-OUT ROLLS

Inside out rolls reverse the ingredients of a sushi roll, with the green nori sheet being rolled up backwards and inside the roll, rice on the outside.  Lay down your nori sheet on the sushi mat, and spread with rice, as described above.  Now cover the rice with a sheet of plastic wrap.  Lift and flip the wrapper over, so that the plastic covered rice surface is now pressed against the mat, and the green nori wrapper is facing up.  Spread with a thin line of wasabi, and add your ingredients, as above.

 Now you begin to roll away from you, lifting the plastic covered mat away from you as you go.  Press the nori border into the rice as you finish, giving the roll one final gentle squeeze to hold its shape.  Pull up the remaining plastic to reveal your inside out roll.  Sprinkle sesame seeds over a wide plate, and roll the rice covered sushi roll in this, coating it with sesame. Transfer to a cutting board, and cut in half, then in half again, for four pieces.  Repeat, with the remaining ingredients, for another roll.  Plate these, and garnish with the usual dollop of green wasabi paste, pickled ginger, and serve with soy sauce.

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Nutrient Content Claims & % Percent Daily Value

January 30th, 2010 by admin

Ever wonder what the difference is between fat free, saturated fat free, low fat, reduced and less fat? The government has defined certain claims that can be used on food packaging. For example, you’ll see the claim “less sodium” on some brands of chili with beans. This means the product has at least 25% less sodium than the regular version. Some of the popular claims are listed here.

Claims for calories
Calories free: fewer than 5 calories per serving
Low calorie: 40 calories or fewer per serving

Claims for fat
Fat free: less than 0.5 g of fat or saturated fat per serving
Saturated fat free: less than 0.5 g of saturated fat and less than 0.5 g of trans fatty acids
Low fat: 3 g or less of total fat
Low saturated fat: 1 g or less of saturated fat
Reduced fat or less fat: at least 25% less fat than the regular version

Claims for sodium
Sodium free or salt free: less than 5 mg of sodium per serving
Very low sodium: 35 mg of sodium or less
Low sodium: 140 mg of sodium or less
Reduced sodium or less sodium: at least 25% less sodium than the regular version

Claims for cholesterol
Cholesterol free: less than 2 mg per serving
Low cholesterol: 20 mg or less
Reduced cholesterol or less cholesterol: at least 25% less cholesterol than the regular version

Claims for sugar
Sugar free: less than 0.5 grams (g) of sugar per serving
Reduced sugar: at least 25% less sugar per serving than the regular version

Claims for fiber
High fiber: 5 g or more of fiber per serving
Good source of fiber: 2.5 g to 4.9 g of fiber per serving

Percent (%) Daily Value
The Percent (%) Daily Value indicates how much of a specific nutrient one serving of food contains compared to recommendations for the whole day. The percentage is based on a 2000-calorie diet. If you need more or fewer calories, then your Daily Values would be different.
To find out how many calories you need each day, talk with your dietitian or certified diabetes educator. The Percent (%) Daily Value is a useful tool to check whether a food is high or low in a certain nutrient such as fat or fiber. A product is:
a good source of a particular nutrient if one serving provides 10 to 19% of the Daily Value
high in a given nutrient if it contains 20% or more of the Daily Value
low in that nutrient if the Daily Value is 5% or less

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Would you like to give life to someone?

January 30th, 2010 by admin

My wife’s cousin (her name is Estera, or Esther in English), has suffered from the effects of Hepatitis C, and is in Stage III-IV of the disease, which means her liver is pretty much shot to pieces. Doctors say she’s got to get a liver transplant this month or next month, or it’ll be too late to do an operation. You can see her and her two daughters in this photo. Estera is the third from the left, on the couch, next to her husband, Adrian.

Estera has already placed herself on a liver transplant list long ago, and has waited patiently, but time is running out. Her blood type is also rare (O1), and that makes it doubly hard to find a donor.

As you may know, the liver regenerates itself, so whatever bit you give will grow back. The bit the doctors transplant into her will, in time, and if everything goes according to plan, grow into a full-size liver. You’ll end up with an incision above your liver and the priceless knowledge that you helped a mother see her daughters grow up.

If you or someone you know is interested in doing this, please get in touch with Adrian, Estera’s husband, at adydrobota@yahoo.com. Since Estera lives in Romania, we’re looking for someone who lives in Romania or at least in Europe, so it’ll be easier for them to travel to her, but we’re not going to turn away any willing donor.

If you’re Romanian, make sure to read this post on my wife’s blog as well.

Thank you.

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Elizabeth says - “HMMMMM……Not Hungry”

January 30th, 2010 by admin

Elizabeth’s Journey on the Liberation Diet

Friday, January 29, 2010

I woke this morning …

Like any other … had some coffee and cream – yum – and then a thought entered my head … I was not hungry … now, this may not seem so unusual to some of you but … for me it was noticeaby different.

As in, “hmmm, not hungry” … not full, not feeling yucky, just not hungry … so I decided to ride that wave and see where it took me.

I got up at 5:00 and had to train a client at 6:45 so I convinced myself to eat a hard-boiled egg before leaving the house – ok, not a big deal – ate it, went and trained the client … came home, collected some stuff from a neighbor, and then at 8:30, was actually feeling kind of hungry … ate a little cheese, some nuts, a coconut-oil and cocoa “thing” that I had made (like a truffle?) … went to the gym, did the recumbent bike for 45 minutes, stretching and abs with a friend and had coffee … not until around 11:30 when I got home did I actually feel really hungry. Ate some steamed spinach with butter, cheese, and sun-dried tomatoes; some cream and cocoa powder with stevia ….

Weird … just weird …. Like I said, I am going to continue to ride this wave and see where it takes me :)

Posted by Elizabeth at Friday, January 29, 2010


Comment From Kevin Brown – Elizabeth didn’t need the egg in the morning, but thought it should be eaten. Accessing stored fat for energy and not hungry. She is almost naturally down to 2 meals a day. Although to her it seems weird, it is a very normal, very healthy protocol. If you are following the Liberation Diet~


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Syndrome X, Metabolic syndrome…

January 29th, 2010 by admin

Metab_syndr

Metabolic syndrome is a combination of medical disorders that increase the risk of developing cardiovascular disease and diabetes.[1] It affects a great number of people, and prevalence increases with age. Some studies estimate the prevalence in the USA to be up to 25% of the population.[2]

Metabolic syndrome is also known as metabolic syndrome X, syndrome X, insulin resistance syndrome, Reaven’s syndrome, and CHAOS (Australia). A similar condition in overweight horses is referred to as equine metabolic syndrome; it is unknown if they have the same etiology.

Signs and symptoms

Symptoms and features are:
Fasting hyperglycemia — diabetes mellitus type 2 or impaired fasting glucose, impaired glucose tolerance, or insulin resistance;
High blood pressure;
Central obesity (also known as visceral, male-pattern or apple-shaped adiposity), overweight with fat deposits mainly around the waist;
Decreased HDL cholesterol;
Elevated triglycerides;

Associated diseases and signs are: elevated uric acid levels, fatty liver (especially in concurrent obesity), progressing to non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, polycystic ovarian syndrome, hemochromatosis (iron overload); and acanthosis nigricans (a skin condition featuring dark patches).

The description continues at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metabolic_syndrome

Other links:
http://www.bodybuilding.com/fun/reverse_syndrome_x.htm

http://www.bodybuilding.com/fun/syndrome_x_education.htm

http://www.syndromexassoc.org/Home.asp

http://www.syndromexassoc.org/Treatment.asp

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Calcium: That “Miracle” Mineral ~ It’s not just for strong bones and healthy teeth

January 29th, 2010 by admin

When you were a child, your mother probably told you: “Drink your milk. You need the calcium for healthy bones and teeth.”

Well, mom was right. Calcium does help keep bones and teeth strong, and it also plays a key role in other vital bodily functions. But what your mother couldn’t have predicted are the recent headlines heralding calcium as a possible player in the fight against many ailments.

Now the bad news: nearly half of all Americans don’t get enough of this essential mineral.

Here’s how calcium can help protect your health—and how to be sure you’re getting enough.

Lowering Blood Pressure

More than 50 million Americans have high blood pressure (hypertension). What’s so frightening about this so-called silent killer is that it often does not produce symptoms for years, secretly damaging arteries and organs throughout the body until it erupts in the form of stroke, heart attack, congestive heart failure or kidney disease. If left untreated, even mild hypertension can reduce the life expectancy of a 35- year-old by several years. (Readings of 140 to 159 over 90 to 99 are mildly high; about 120/80 is normal.)

That’s why high blood pressure is commonly treated with antihypertensive drugs. But studies suggest that in some people an increase in calcium consumption can help control blood pressure without medication.

Calcium also seems to help prevent high blood pressure. Evaluating the results of a 13-year survey undertaken by the National Center for Health Statistics, James H. Dwyer, associate professor of preventive medicine at the University of Southern California School of Medicine, found that people who consumed 1300 milligrams (mg) of calcium a day were 12 percent less likely to develop hypertension than those consuming only 300 mg a day. In people under age 40, risk was reduced by up to 25 percent.

Soon doctors may urge some hypertension patients to increase their calcium intake, much the way they now advise sodium restriction. “It’s easier to add food or supplements than to go on a low-sodium diet,” asserts Dr. David McCarron, professor of medicine at Oregon Health Sciences University in Portland. “Our studies show that people who try the low-sodium approach don’t stay with it very long.”

Preventing Heart Disease

Several studies suggest that there’s another way calcium may shield the heart from harm: it may help lower blood cholesterol. In a study led by Dr. Margo A. Denke, associate professor of internal medicine at the Center for Human Nutrition at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, 13 men with moderately high cholesterol levels were given a low-calcium diet (410 mg of calcium daily) for ten days, and had their cholesterol levels checked.

Then, over another ten days, the men were on a fortified diet that supplied 2200 mg of calcium daily. End result: the high-calcium regimen reduced their levels of total cholesterol by six percent and slashed “bad” LDL cholesterol by 11 percent.

What’s more, “good” HDL cholesterol levels stayed the same. Denke and her colleagues report that getting plenty of calcium may be an effective adjunct to traditional cholesterol-lowering diet therapies.

McCarron agrees: “If you increase your calcium intake—whether with diet or supplements—your cholesterol gets better.”

Easing Menstrual Woes

There’s no cure yet for pre-menstrual syndrome (PMS)—those unpleasant physical and mental complaints some women endure every month prior to menstruation. But several studies suggest that calcium can help tame PMS.

Researchers led by psychologist James G. Penland at the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Human Nutrition Research Center in Grand Forks, N.D., studied ten women suffering common menstrual and premenstrual symptoms. All the women spent half the study period on a diet containing 600 mg of calcium daily, and half on a diet containing 1300 mg daily.

While on the high-calcium diet, 70 percent reported less pain, such as backaches and cramping, during the menstrual phase, and 80 percent had less water retention during the premenstrual phase. Ninety percent experienced less crying, irritability and depression throughout their monthly cycles.

Avoiding Kidney Stones

For years doctors have told patients who suffer from kidney stones to limit calcium. The reason: calcium is a major component in about 80 percent of all stones.

But controversial new research suggests that the way to reduce the risk of kidney stones may be to increase calcium intake. (personal note here: I have been taking a liquid calcium supplement for over 5 years daily…no stones…no hypertension etc.)

In a Harvard School of Public Health study, Dr. Gary C. Curhan and colleagues followed 45,510 men with no history of kidney stones for four years. Those on diets high in calcium (a daily average of 1326 mg) were found to cut their risk of developing stones by one-third, compared with men who consumed the least calcium (516 mg per day).

Skeptics stress the difficulty of establishing calcium as the factor in this reduction of risk. They caution kidney-stone patients to consult with their physicians before changing their dietary habits.

Fighting Osteoporosis

Characterized by a gradual thinning and weakening of the bones, osteoporosis affects more than seven million Americans—most of them women—with another 17 million at serious risk. In the disease’s advanced stages, vertebrae can become so fragile that they easily collapse, often leading to a debilitating curving of the
spine. Increasing fragility can also mean greater risk of fractures, especially crippling fractures of the hip.

Dozens of studies show that increasing calcium intake can be vital in slowing bone loss and reducing fracture rates brought on by osteoporosis. This is especially true when calcium is taken with vitamin D, which increases the ability of the body to absorb the mineral.

In a 1992 French study of 1765 women over age 69, those who were given supplements containing 1200 mg of calcium and 20 micrograms (mcg) of vitamin D had an average 2.7-percent increase in bone mass in the hips and thighs after 18 months. Women taking only a placebo suffered a 4.6-percent loss in bone mass.

Over the same period, the women taking calcium and vitamin D had 43-percent fewer hip fractures than the control group. Many experts think that the time to start increasing calcium intake is in adolescence, when most adult bone mass is being formed.

According to Dr. Robert P. Heaney, professor of medicine at Omaha’s Creighton University, “There’s very good evidence that at least the last two generations of American women have consumed an inadequate amount of calcium beginning
in puberty.” As baby boomers grow older, says Heaney, osteoporosis could become an epidemic. Luckily it’s never too late to start getting plenty of this vital mineral.
Do You Get Enough Calcium?

The current recommended dietary allowances (RDAs) of calcium are 400 mg for children under six months; 600 mg for children six months to a year; 800 mg for children one to ten and men and women over 25; 1200 mg for people 11 to 24 and pregnant or lactating women.

In light of recent findings, however, experts are reevaluating the amount of calcium needed to maintain good health. Scientists assembled by the National Institutes of Health in 1994 found that the RDA may be too low for many people. And, on average, Americans get considerably less than the RDA.

The committee has recommended raising the RDAs to these levels: 1000 mg for women 25 to 50, women 51 to 65 taking hormone replacement therapy and men 25 to 65; 1200 to 1500 mg for people 11 to 24, and pregnant and lactating women; 1500 mg for women 51 to 65 not taking HRT and for people over 65.

Pregnant women need extra calcium to help the fetal skeleton form and, several studies suggest, to help prevent pregnancy-related hypertensive disorders, a major cause of premature, underweight births. The elderly need more calcium to make up for a decline in the body’s ability to absorb the mineral.

One of the best sources of calcium is dairy products (one cup of skim milk equals 96.3 mg of calcium; 8 oz. of nonfat yogurt equal 96 mg). Other calcium-rich fare includes: tofu with calcium (1/2 cup equals 80 mg); pink, canned salmon with bones (3 oz. equal 58 mg); Chinese cabbage (1/2 cup equals 42.5 mg); kale (1/2 cup equals 27.6 mg); sardines (1 oz. equals 29 mg); rutabaga (1/2 cup equals 22.1 mg); white beans (1/2 cup equals 19.2 mg); and broccoli (1/2 cup equals 18.4 mg).

It can be difficult to get enough calcium from food alone—especially if you don’t like or are allergic to milk.

Two possibilities for those who need to boost calcium intake are calcium-enriched products (such as fortified cereals, juices or breads) and supplements.

The safety of calcium supplements, however, has been controversial. Some types—particularly those made from bone meal—may contain lead, which at high levels can stunt young children’s growth and I.Q.

The most commonly recommended calcium supplement is calcium citrate. However calcium citrate contains low levels of elemental calcium and therefore would require that you take more than the daily amount listed on the bottle. Plus the majority of this type of supplement is in  a hard to absorb pill form.

Some people recommend  antacids that contain calcium carbonate. MY PERSONAL OPINION IS THIS IS  A WASTE OF TIME, MONEY AND THE OTHER INGREDIENTS IN THE ANTACID ARE UNNEEDED.

PLUS, calcium carbonate is the hardest type of calcium to absorb…UNLESS IT IS COMBINED WITH AN ACID SUCH AS OROTIC ACID.

Calcium carbonate contain the HIGHEST amount of elemental calcium available and when chelated with orotic acid you come up with CALCIUM OROTATE; WHICH IS THE HIGHEST ABSORBABLE  FORM FOR A CALCIUM SUPPLEMENT.

“Taking 500 to 1000 mg of calcium in supplement form can be an insurance policy,” says Dr. McCarron, “especially for older people and pregnant women.”

Getting enough of this “miracle” mineral every day may require a small effort. If you consider the payoff—good health—it’s worth it.


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TYPE 2 DIABETES- JANUARY EDITION

January 29th, 2010 by admin

TYPE 2 DIABETES- JANUARY EDITION

1. GET ACTIVE

2. CONTROL YOUR CHOLESTEROL

3. EAT HEALTHY

4. MANAGE YOUR BLOOD PRESSURE

5. LOSE WEIGHT

6. REDUCE YOUR BLOOD SUGAR

7. QUIT SMOKING

TAKE THESE NEW TIPS FOR TYPE 2 DIABETES IN JANUARY

OFFICIAL BLOG OF CRYSTALCAREINC.COM

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