Saturday, July 23, 2011

Ang Tuko, Gamut kaya? (Gecko)

Chinese were pioneer in Traditional Medicine. It is up to us to believe or not.

by NATA on APRIL 26, 2010

Many people look for Gecko, it is because Gecko is believed to cure various diseases. Since there are many who are looking for, these geckos too expensive. What are the properties of gecko meat that can reliably cure the disease?

Benefits gecko meat packaged in the form of food or powder believed to cure various diseases like skin diseases, asthma and also increases stamina men. But until now no studies are definitely capable of showing the efficacy of treatment using these geckos. Gecko been reported in clinical practice (trials to living things) that showed a positive effect on malignant tumors.

A research team led by Prof. Wang from Henan University of China had reported this. The findings were published in World Journal of Gastroenterology. But there is noresearch on pharmacological studies (the study of interactions between drugs, systems and processes of life) from the gecko, that its mechanism of action as anti-tumor remains unclear.
From the results of clinical practice report that was published by Medicalnewstoday,Gecko can not only strengthen the immune system of an organism, but also can induce tumor cells opoptosis namely tumor cells that can destroy himself. In clinical practice, the team of researchers used mice that female gender. In addition gecko also believed to decrease the activity of VEGF and bFGF protein. These proteins affect the growth of cancer cells. Impact of increasing immune system is detected based on thymus gland that can produce immune cells in the neck, pagosit and spleen cells. Well known to the decrease of VEGF and bFGF protein expression, and improvement of apoptotik cells that can kill  tumor cells.
Currently the World Health Organization (WHO) is currently doing research on the efficacy of the meat and skin geckos which are believed to cure the disease of AIDS, asthma and various other skin diseases. This is to determine if these treatments are truly effective or not, and to see is there any side effects that might arise.

Gecko has been known since decades ago as a traditional medicine in China and also as one of the food menu. Along the development of information that shows the efficacy of this gecko, geckos now including one animal that has a high selling price.


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Gecko gruel treatment of asthma
   
Adult 1 Gekko Gecko, codonopsis 30 g, 50 g glutinous rice. First with the rice wine and honey coated on the Gecko, sunburn over time. Research into powder Gecko, codonopsis pilosula, respectively, plus the amount of honey made two cakes alternate. The glutinous rice boiled rice water, mix with 1 Gecko cake, take warm clothing below. Sooner or later the clothing 1 times. Typically continued for about 1 month more. Gecko to dry, full, bug-free, and does not open your mouth, not broken as well.
Guangxi jingxi Liang Banghong
   
Professor of respiratory medicine beijingzhongyiyaodaxue dongzhimen hospital Su Huiping comments:
Tonifying the kidney and lung, is satisfied that the gas temperature to relieve asthma Gekko Gecko; dangshen invigorating the spleen and lung, Yiqi Shengjin; heat of spleen and stomach stuffed with glutinous rice. Composed of three common herbal, effect of treatment of asthma. It should note that this only applies to the lung, spleen and kidney loss in patients with asthma, needs to be taken on the basis of syndrome differentiation of traditional Chinese medicine. Evoked chuan rinse fever, infection, rejection, amount of silt on deficiency heat should not be taken under such circumstances. In addition, the glutinous rice of viscous difficult to digest and not eat too much at a time, or live on rice. (Editor’s Note: this party and Gecko party of proprietary Chinese medicines ointment would be similar of the wonderful, Gecko codonopsis lanceolata extract on asthmatic old chronic bronchitis and has a good effect)

Saturated fat ( Such as Coconut fat)


HIndi po Buko kundi niyog. 

HIndi po gamut kundi less lang po ang chance ng heart disease and heart attack.
LDL- low density lipoprotein
HDL-High density lipoprotein

Tiyagaan po nating basahin, malalim kasi usapang medical.


A Big Fat Mistake

New research has weakened the perceived link between saturated fat and heart disease. Today, many experts agree that refined carbs pose a much greater danger.
Is it possible — even imaginable — that nearly everyone has been wrong about saturated fat and its connection to heart disease? Brace yourself. Based on a wave of new research, all the dietary admonitions about saturated fat could end up being little more than a huge mistake.

“The question is whether saturated fat is harmful or is just a bystander,” says Ronald M. Krauss, MD, a lipid specialist and the director of atherosclerosis research at the Children’s Hospital Oakland Research Institute. “Saturated fat may have an effect on cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk, but the effect is so small that we just can’t detect it. We shouldn’t be demonizing saturated fat.”

Krauss can back up his opinion with hard science. He and his colleagues recently analyzed 21 published studies involving almost 350,000 people who were tracked from five to 23 years. Their conclusion: People who consumed the most saturated fat did not have a higher risk of heart disease, stroke or any other form of CVD. They published their findings last year in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

Krauss is by no means the first doctor to question the role of saturated fat in CVD. But, if he and other critics are right, it raises a couple of important questions: How could anti-saturated-fat advocates make such a huge miscalculation? And do we now have a license to eat saturated fat with abandon?

The answers aren’t as simple or straightforward as you might think.

There’s no denying that scores of studies over many years have shown a link between saturated fat and CVD risk. Krauss believes, however, that many of the saturated-fat-is-bad studies have not accounted for diets that included a lot of sugars, refined carbs and trans fats, along with saturated fats.

“It doesn’t make sense to focus on just one feature of the diet, such as saturated fat, while ignoring the health effects of the overall diet,” he says.

Origins of a Theory

The late Ancel Keys, PhD, a researcher at the University of Minnesota, first linked saturated fat and cholesterol with the risk of CVD in the 1950s.

Keys was hailed as a pioneer in the area of nutrition and health at the time; in January 1961, he made the cover of Time. Less than 20 years later, Congress was recommending that Americans ditch saturated fats in favor of more carbs, and soon food companies were hawking low-fat everything.

Keys’s research has come under increasing criticism in recent years. Gary Taubes, author of Why We Get Fat and What to Do About It (Knopf, 2011), notes that Keys focused on the eating habits linking saturated fat to CVD in seven nations, “in which he could pretty much draw a straight line between saturated fat and CVD risk.”

According to Taubes, Keys ignored contradictory data from other nations, including France, where people ate a lot of fat but had a low incidence of CVD (the so-called French paradox), which would have led Keys to draw entirely different conclusions.

“More than 20 studies have shown that people who have heart attacks don’t eat more saturated fat than healthy people,” says Swedish researcher Uffe Ravnskov, MD, PhD.

Ravnskov, who has written several books on cholesterol, has been skeptical of the saturated fat–cholesterol theory of heart disease since the 1960s. “Eight studies have shown that people with stroke have eaten less saturated fat than healthy people,” he says. “And no dietary study has succeeded in lowering heart disease deaths by reducing intake of saturated fat.”

Enter Refined Carbs

Americans largely embraced the anti-saturated-fat gospel, substantially cutting their consumption from about 13.5 percent of total calories in the early 1970s to about 11 percent of calories by 2000. In 2006, the American Heart Association recommended that people cut their saturated fat even more — down to 7 percent of total calories, which is half of what people were eating 40 years ago. But there have been unforeseen consequences, Krauss notes. “If you cut down on saturated fat, what do you replace it with?”

Food manufacturers responded by creating thousands of products in which saturated fat and cholesterol were replaced with refined carbohydrates, sugars and trans fats. And therein lies the problem. Not only do trans fats drive bodywide inflammation, but foods rich in refined carbohydrates and sugars trigger sharp increases in blood-sugar and insulin levels, which then set the stage for weight and blood-sugar problems — the leading risk factors for type 2 diabetes and CVD. “Replacing saturated fat with refined carbohydrates and sugars does not decrease CVD risk,” says Krauss. “More and more, the evidence shows that eating more refined carbs and sugars increases CVD risk.”

The late Robert C. Atkins, MD, sounded the alarm about the increase in carb and sugar consumption in the 1980s, when he noticed a dramatic rise in obesity and type 2 diabetes. But his solution, a diet rich in saturated fats, was roundly criticized — mostly because people believed that Atkins advised avoiding all carbs, including vegetables, when, in reality, he meant refined carbs. It took years of research before his approach was eventually vindicated.

This may sound like heresy, but the science behind it is solid. Sabina Sieri, PhD, of Italy’s National Cancer Institute, for example, tracked almost 48,000 people over eight years and found that women who ate more refined carbs and sugars had a significantly greater risk of coronary heart disease than those with a lower refined-carb intake.

The Cholesterol Question

For several decades, medical and nutritional advice boiled down to this: Too much dietary saturated fat leads to higher levels of blood cholesterol and an increase in CVD risk. But several studies have shown that total blood cholesterol is not a reliable indicator of CVD risk, says Ron Hunninghake, MD, chief medical officer of the Riordan Clinic in Wichita, Kan., the largest nonprofit nutritional medical center in the United States. “That’s because half of the people who suffer a heart attack have normal cholesterol levels.”

To find a way to make sense of the relationship between blood cholesterol levels and CVD, researchers began looking at cholesterol fractions, such as low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and high-density lipoprotein (HDL), to get a better handle on CVD risk. These LDL particles happen to be one of Krauss’s primary areas of expertise, and his findings have challenged conventional thinking about the role of saturated fat and cholesterol in CVD.

Although LDL is widely regarded as the “bad” cholesterol, Krauss argues that it has a good side: While “pattern B” LDL consists of small, dense particles that are more likely to infiltrate blood-vessel walls and set the stage for blockages, high blood levels of “pattern A” LDL, which consists of large, fluffy particles, are associated with a lower risk of CVD.

It’s true that saturated fat does increase LDL levels, Krauss explains — but not in the way most people would expect. “We’ve shown in our own research that in the great majority of individuals, this increase in LDL reflects an increase in pattern A LDL.” That’s the good form of LDL. Saturated fat also boosts levels of the “good” HDL form of cholesterol.

Diets high in refined carbs, on the other hand, boost pattern B LDL and lower HDL cholesterol — thereby increasing the risk of CVD. “Little will be gained if saturated fat is simply replaced by carbohydrates, especially if these are mainly refined starches and sugar,” says Walter Willett, MD, DrPH, who heads the nutrition department at the Harvard School of Public Health.

Research by Marianne U. Jakobsen, PhD, of Aarhus University Hospital in Denmark, supports this argument. In a study of more than 53,000 men and women over 12 years, Jakobsen found that people were more likely to suffer a heart attack if they cut back on saturated fat, but then replaced it with a couple hundred more calories a day from high-glycemic foods, such as white breads, muffins, potatoes and desserts. But, if the people in the study replaced saturated fat with low-glycemic foods like vegetables, fruits and whole grains, they were less likely to have a heart attack.

The key, it seems, is not limiting saturated-fat intake, but avoiding insulin-provoking foods such as refined carbs and sugars — basically what Atkins had argued. “Atkins wasn’t right about everything, but he was right about insulin,” says Taubes. “He was probably more right than anyone else at the time.”

Eat Like Your Ancestors

Krauss’s research and dietary recommendations are relatively consistent with what’s known as the Paleolithic diet — that is, ancient eating habits that some scientists consider the ideal diet.

Loren Cordain, PhD, a professor in the department of health and exercise science at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, says that ancient peoples typically ate a diet rich in lean protein, fish and vegetables, with carbohydrates coming largely from root vegetables. Even though the meats contained saturated fat and cholesterol, Paleolithic diets were devoid of any kind of processed carbohydrate and sugar, with the occasional exception of honey.

“Given our ancestral diet, meal plans fairly high in quality proteins and low in processed carbohydrates would seem to be what most people are best suited to,” says Cordain. “Our genes are virtually identical to those in people living 20,000 years ago, and we evolved eating lean proteins and vegetables. Eating a lot of processed grains and sugars is a total mismatch for our genetic heritage.”

That doesn’t mean you have to give up carbs altogether, or load up on saturated fats, to avoid a heart attack. As with most dietary issues, it’s a matter of finding a good balance. (See the sidebar, “A Bountiful Balance,” for some simple tips on healthful eating.)

Hunninghake generally concurs with this approach, but suggests that people tailor their carb intake to their weight, blood sugar and activity level. “If they’re good on all three counts, they can probably consume a little more in the way of carbs,” he says. “But if they’re overweight, have high blood sugar and are couch potatoes, they should be getting their carbs from high-fiber vegetables, not grains.”

Many people may find all this a bit disconcerting and confusing. And Krauss and Hunninghake’s advice does fly in the face of largely vegetarian diets recommended by some other physicians, including cardiovascular bigwigs like Dean Ornish, MD. In clinical trials, Ornish has had success reducing cardiovascular disease in subjects who adhere to a whole-foods, plant-based diet very low in saturated fat. But that doesn’t necessarily prove that avoiding saturated fat is a heart-healthy strategy.

“While these diets did reduce CVD, it’s not clear that reducing the saturated fat was what did it — most likely it was eating less junk food and more veggies,” says Hunninghake. “Nutrition isn’t religion. It should be based on science. And the evidence for scientific assumptions can and does change from time to time.”

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Health and Wellness: Cholesterol-Lowering Coconuts


Cholesterol-Lowering Coconuts

posted by Megan, selected from Experience Life Jul 19, 2011 4:30 pm

Who can resist a coconut, with its creamy, tropical flavor? For too long, many Americans have done just that.
Thankfully, that misguided coconut era is over. The coconut is receiving long-overdue accolades as a highly nutritious food. In fact, research has shown that it’s the saturated fat in coconuts that not only helps our bodies absorb nutrients and fight viruses, but also reduce cholesterol levels. Traditional American uses of coconut are sugar-laden affairs — think baked goods like pies, cakes and macaroons — that mask its health-promoting properties. But now cooks everywhere are incorporating coconut into a wide range of flavorful recipes that support good health. (For more on why saturated fat is good for you, search for “A Big Fat Mistake.”) And many people are going even further, using coconut milk as a wholesale replacement for dairy.
When coconut is fresh, it has a sweet, rich aroma. Before it reaches the grocery store, the coconut’s smooth outer shell has usually been removed, revealing a rough husk with three indented “eyes” at one end. Inside is the seed; it consists of a layer of creamy, white meat surrounding a center filled with refreshing, mildly flavored coconut water.
Whatever form of coconut you choose — shredded coconut; or coconut milk, cream and oil — it is sure to add an exotic twist of flavor to an otherwise ordinary meal.
Quick and Easy
Intimidated by coconuts? Don’t be. Here are easy ways to integrate coconut meat, milk and water into everyday snacks and meals.
Mix shaved or shredded coconut with nuts, seeds and berries in a bowl as a healthy alternative to breakfast cereal (just add your choice of yogurt or milk and a spoon). Thanks to the healthy fats and fiber, you’ll feel satisfied longer.
• Make coconut mango salsa by combining chopped mango, chopped red chili, coconut chunks, fresh mint and lime juice in a bowl. Use it to top grilled fish, chicken or tempeh. Or simply serve it with some whole-grain chips.
• When cooking rice, substitute half of the water with coconut milk. When rice is cooked, sprinkle in some sliced green onions, sesame seeds or toasted nuts, if desired. Coconut milk can also be used in place of milk in many recipes.
• Use coconut water in place of water in your favorite smoothie recipe. You’ll get a hint of tropical flavor and a boost of extra electrolytes. Coconut water also makes a nice beverage or midworkout refresher all on its own.
Nutrition Know-How
• Nearly 90 percent of the fats in coconut oil are saturated — and they are healthy! In the 1970s and ’80s, manufacturers of processed foods replaced coconut oil with partially hydrogenated oils. We now know that those oils contain very unhealthy trans fatty acids. The saturated fat found in coconut is, by contrast, very good for us — particularly when part of a diverse, mostly plant-based diet.
• Fifty-five to 65 percent of the saturated fats in coconut oil are medium-chain fatty acids (MCFAs), which have been used as dietary supplements to improve nutrient absorption and sports performance.
• Coconut oil is rich in lauric acid. Preliminary studies have shown that lauric acid may help the body fight viruses.
• As the result of eating coconut oil, the human body steps up its production of ketone bodies — beneficial compounds produced when fatty acids are broken down for energy. Because these compounds are used to advantage by the brain, researchers are currently studying coconut oil as a possible treatment for people with diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, Huntington’s, Lou Gehrig’s and multiple sclerosis, as well as type 1 and type 2 diabetes.
• Coconut meat is rich in phytosterols, cholesterol-like compounds found primarily in nuts and legumes. Phytosterols have been shown to naturally reduce cholesterol levels in the blood.
• Fresh coconut meat is an excellent source of fiber. A 1-cup serving provides about 29 percent of the daily recommended amount of dietary fiber. Note that nutrient levels drop slightly when coconut is dried.
• Both raw coconut water and freshly squeezed coconut milk are rich in a host of minerals, including potassium, manganese and magnesium.
• For classic movie-theater flavor (without the mystery ingredients), try kettle-popped popcorn in a few tablespoons of coconut oil (enough to cover the bottom of the pan). Or top air-popped popcorn with equal parts melted coconut oil, olive oil and butter.
Kitchen Tricks
• Do not boil coconut milk when cooking, because it can curdle, separating the oil from the liquid. Instead, stir constantly on low heat. When making curries, for example, you might add coconut milk at the end of the cooking process, and heat just to a simmer.
• To make your own naturally sweetened dried coconut, place about 3 cups unsweetened shredded or grated coconut on a baking sheet and toss with ¼ cup maple syrup. Bake at 150 degrees F for about 11 hours to dry out the coconut.
• For toasted coconut, place freshly grated coconut in a thin layer on a baking sheet. Bake at 300 degrees F for about five minutes — stirring every minute to prevent burning — until golden brown.
Shopping and Storage Tips
• Look for whole, unopened coconuts that are firm, heavy for their size and free of dampness around the “eyes.” Small black spots can be an early sign of mold. When you shake the coconut you should hear lots of water slosh around inside.
• Use within a few weeks to ensure freshness and reduce the risk of spoilage. If a coconut smells “off,” don’t eat it.
• Once opened, store fresh coconut meat in the refrigerator for up to one week or freeze for up to six months.
• Most prebagged shredded coconut is sweetened. Look for unsweetened shaved or shredded coconut in the bulk section at natural markets.
How to Open a Coconut
You’ll need a hammer and screwdriver (optional: heavy gloves to protect your hands). Carefully puncture the eyes of the coconut by using hammer to drive the screwdriver into the coconut shell. Turn the coconut over and drain the coconut water into a clean dish.
Next hammer firmly around the coconut in circles until the shell cracks slightly. Wedge the screwdriver into the crack and tap sharply with the hammer; the coconut should break apart into two halves
Use a sharp-edge utensil to pry or scrape the meat away from the shell. Trim the brown skin off the white meat with a paring knife.

Enjoy!

For more info about other best herbs you may open this website Health and Wellness

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Energy Thieves and How to Avoid Them

Energy Thieves and How to Avoid Them

posted by Ann Pietrangelo Jul 18, 2011 1:03 pm

There are thieves among us, stealing our energy and harming our health. What are these energy thieves, and what can we do about them?
Everything we do, from what we eat and drink to what we wear has an impact on our energy levels. Our health is affected by our energy and our energy is affected by our health.
Energy Health Specialist Debra Greene, PhD, author of Endless Energy: The Essential Guide to Energy Health, says that in addition to a physical body, we also have an energy body, otherwise known as a biofield. This energy body plays a vital role in our overall health and well-being.
Dr. Greene agreed to unmask some of these every day energy thieves for us, and to offer some tips on how we can avoid them.
5 Energy Thieves and How to Avoid Them
Thief #1: Depleted Food
Depleted food refers to food that has been microwaved, treated with chemicals, or genetically altered (GMOs). Sadly, that’s the bulk of many an American diet. According to Dr. Greene, those things rob food of its life force, and we end up eating what she calls “hungry food.” Rather than giving you energy, such food actually robsyou of energy. And guess what? That makes you eat even more!
“Every living thing, including plants, animals, and humans, has an energy body. When that energy is intact, the food is vitalizing and nourishing. When the energy is depleted, the food can steal your energy.”
To avoid this:
Trust in nature. Avoid processed, enhanced, laboratory engineered food, and food loaded with additives and preservatives. Overcooking can also rob food of precious nutrients. Choose foods that are fresh and organically grown. “Mother nature is very intelligent and produces food that is compatible with life,” says Dr. Greene.

Thief #2: Dead Water
Ah, there’s nothing quite like fresh, clean water. It cools, refreshes, and revitalizes. According to Dr. Greene, water can take on the energy imprint of other substances. It is an essential medium through which energy flows throughout the system.
By the time we reach for a glass of water from the kitchen tap, it has passed through a treatment system and processing that effectively “deadens” the water. Bottled water also has its problems. Trapped in plastic bottles, stored in dark warehouses, and sitting on store shelves under fluorescent lighting takes a toll. Dead water doesn’t sound particularly refreshing or revitalizing.
To avoid this:
Natural spring water is best. Urban living and modern life in general makes that a bit of a problem, acknowledges Dr. Greene. But we’re not powerless.
“You can take control of your water by using a home water system. This way you know what you’re getting in terms of purity and need not rely on the claims of an unregulated bottled water industry. You’ll also avoid the proliferation of plastic bottles. Check specifications before buying a filtration unit to make sure the filter removes a long list of known toxins and not just superficial impurities. In addition to filtration, ionization units that restructure the water are anti-oxidizing and allow you to adjust the pH of the water. This is important because alkalinizing your body through water and food choices appears to have significant health benefits.”

Thief #3:
 Blocker Fabrics
As you might expect, clothing also has an effect on our energy health. We generally feel better when wearing natural fabrics, but did you know that they are conducive to energy flow, while synthetics block energy flow?
Dr. Greene explains. “If the energy body is covered with energy-blocking clothing, it cannot breathe, so to speak. This taxes it and can lead to a devitalized state. In general, natural fibers allow energy to flow. Fabrics that are plant and animal derived allow energy to travel through them without blocking it because, like humans, living plants and animals are energy based (they also have an energy body).”
To avoid this:
Stay away from chemically derived synthetics like nylon, microfibers, polyester, acrylic, spandex, acetate, olefin, and modacrylic. Also be on the lookout for the ever increasing list of trademarked fabrics that are made up of man-made synthetics.
Cotton, wool, hemp, cashmere, ramie, silk, linen, rayon/modal, and bamboo allow energy flow. As Dr. Greene puts it, “You can’t trademark mother nature!”

Thief #4: Unnatural Light
So many of us spend our days under artificial light sources, but the sun produces a nutrient-rich energy that simply cannot be replicated. To maintain energy health, says Dr. Greene, we need natural sunlight. “Winter depression, or seasonal affective disorder (SAD), and the lack of vitamin D evident in people who do not get enough natural sunlight are just the tip of the iceberg. Natural sunlight contains all the colors of the spectrum in uniform frequency patterns. Artificial light is substandard and often lacking in many of the essential nutrients of the sun. Fluorescent light contains drastically inconsistent frequencies such as large energy peaks in the yellow, green and violet ranges; it also emits more electromagnetic radiation than incandescent light.”
To avoid this:
Ten minutes of afternoon sun on your skin every day should do it. The incandescent light bulb comes closest to replicating the balanced frequency spectrum of natural sunlight.
“Do your best to avoid fluorescent lighting, including compact fluorescent bulbs, which not only are bad for energy health (they emit dirty electricity) but are also bad for the environment (they contain toxic mercury).”

Thief #5:
 Cell Phones
Far too many people allow cell phones to hijack their time and attention. Cell phones can also deplete the system through the electromagnetic radiation they emit. Cell phones, along with all wireless devices, advises Dr. Greene, expose you to low-level radiation through the electricity that runs them, plus high-level radio frequency radiation from the carrier signals. Electronic devices cause artificial stimulation that interrupts sleep cycles and natural body rhythms in some people. Wireless signals have also been shown to affect brain cell activity.
To avoid this:
Don’t carry your cell phone on your body and limit its use. Use a hollow-tube headset (the hollow tube interrupts the radiation flow). Make it a practice to forward your cell phone to a land line with a cord (cordless phones are even worse than cell phones in terms of radiation). Text when possible. Don’t use your cell phone in the car (the metal from the car traps the signals inside the car).
With so many thieves attempting to rob our energy body, we would be wise to pay attention. Life is energy and energy is life.

Source: Dr. Debra Greene, PhD, Energy Health Specialist and author of Endless Energy: The Essential Guide to Energy Health.
To energize our body drink purely natural food supplements. Some of these herbs can be found in this page  Best Herbs

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Things You Should Know About Arthritis

Things You Should Know About Arthritis

Researches in Nursing and other fields

The first thing you should know about arthritis is I have it. Lol! That’s true. I have acquired it because of my diet since young. I love beans and legumes – the types of food that will really trigger the development of arthritis because of their high uric acid content. I was also an active athlete (basketball, soccer and sepak takraw) until college and the strain caused by playing those sports must have taken their toll on my knees, now I have to suffer the consequences. It might sound shameful but my arthritis attacks started when I was only 23 years old.
For those of you suffering from arthritis, here are some things that you should know about this condition:
Wikipedia defines arthritis as a group of conditions involving damage to the joints of the body. Arthritis is the leading cause of disability in people older than fifty-five years.

There are different forms of arthritis; each has a different cause. The most common form of arthritis, osteoarthritis (degenerative joint disease) is a result of trauma to the joint, infection of the joint, or age. Emerging evidence suggests that abnormal anatomy might contribute to the early development of osteoarthritis. Other arthritis forms are rheumatoid arthritis and psoriatic arthritis, autoimmune diseases in which the body attacks itself. Septic arthritis is caused by joint infection. Gouty arthritis is caused by deposition of uric acid crystals in the joint, causing inflammation. There is also an uncommon form of gout caused by the formation of rhomboid crystals of calcium pyrophosphate. This gout is known as pseudogout.
All arthritides feature pain. Pain patterns may differ depending on the arthritides and the location. Rheumatoid arthritis is generally worse in the morning and associated with stiffness; in the early stages, patients often have no symptoms after a morning shower. In the aged and children, pain might not be the main feature; the aged patient simply moves less, the infantile patient refuses to use the affected limb.
Elements of the history of the disorder guide diagnosis. Important features are speed and time of onset, pattern of joint involvement, symmetry of symptoms, early morning stiffness, tenderness, gelling or locking with inactivity, aggravating and relieving factors, and other systemic symptoms. Physical examination may confirm the diagnosis, or may indicate systemic disease. Radiographs are often used to follow progression or assess severity in a more quantitative manner.
Primary forms of arthritis are:
Primary forms of arthritis:
  1. Osteoarthritis
  2. Rheumatoid arthritis
  3. Septic arthritis
  4. Gout and pseudogout
  5. Juvenile idiopathic arthritis
  6. Still’s disease
  7. Ankylosing spondylitis
Treatment options vary depending on the type of arthritis and include physical and occupational therapy, lifestyle changes (including exercise and weight control), medications and dietary supplements (symptomatic or targeted at the disease process causing the arthritis). Arthroplasty (joint replacement surgery) may be required in eroding forms of arthritis.
In general, studies have shown that physical exercising of the affected joint can have noticeable improvement in terms of long-term pain relief. Furthermore, exercising of the arthritic joint is encouraged to maintain the health of the particular joint and the overall body of the person.
Another form of non-drug treatment that does have a body of proper research to support its efficacy is marine oil, from both fish and the New Zealand green-lipped mussel (Perna canaliculus). Diets high in marine oils from cold-water fish such as salmon, mackerel, and tuna have been shown to reduce the inflammation of joint conditions such as arthritis.
For Filipinos, the incidence of arthritis is high primarily because of our diet here in the Philippines. Pinoys are fond of eating “laman-loob” (internal organs of animals) used as ingredients in native recipes like adobo and paksiw. Among the internal organs, a separate study conducted reveal that “atay” (liver) has the highest amount of uric acid. Now, if you want to avoid developing arthritis, you have to regulate eating these types of food (high in uric acid) which also include beans and legumes, as stated in the first paragraph.

To learn more about other causes of illness and its prevention open this website; Health and Wellness