Saturday, May 31, 2008

Neem

Ancient remedy for healthy skin in the new millennium

The neem tree has been grown and treasured by people for more than 4000 years. It has so many uses, it is sometimes called the Miracle Tree. Native to India, the neem tree can be grown as a tropical plant in our climate. Like all other tropicals, it does need to be kept indoors once the temperatures drop into the 40ºs. Botanically, the plant is Azadirachta indica and it is closely related to the mahogany tree.

As a tropical ornamental plant, Neem is prized for its overall appearance and its small, honey-scented blooms in spring. It has compound leaves made up of many narrow, deeply toothed leaves and the plant is very upright.

The ancients, as well as modern science acknowledge neem, also known as nimba or margosa, as a powerful healing herb with diverse applications. Described in Ayurvedic texts as sarva roga nirvarini – that which keeps all diseases at bay, or arishtha – reliever or disease – neem has been used in the Ayurvedic tradition for thousands of years to maintain health.

The roots, bark, gum, leaves, fruit, seed kernels and seed oil are all used in therapeutic preparations for both internal and topical use.

Neem and skin diseases

This remarkable tree has over 135 biological compounds – making it effective for a wide range of ailments. The neem leaf is reknowed for having an almost magical effect on the skin. It works as an antifungal, antiseptic and anti-inflammatory.

Like the leaves, the oil (obtained by crushing neem seeds) is used for skin problems.

Neem preparations are reportedly efficacious against a variety of skin diseases, septic sores, and infected burns. Neem is toxic to several fungi that attack humans, including the cause of athlete’s foot and ringworm. It can be used against candida, which cause yeast infections and thrush.

Experiments with smallpox, chicken pox, and fowl pox show that although neem does not cure these diseases, it is effective for purposes of prevention.

According to report from the National Research Council’s Ad Hoc panel of the Board on Science and Technology for International Development, neem preparations from the leaves or oils can be used as general antiseptics. Because neem contains antibacterial properties, it is highly effective in treating epidermal conditions such as acne, psoriasis and eczema and other persistent skin problems.

It is also used for treating septic sores, infected burns, scrofula, indolent ulcers and ringworm.

Even many medical practitioners believes that smallpox, chicken pox and warts can be treated with a paste of neem leaves – usually rubbed directly on the cleared up when a high-quality neem product is used. Unlike synthetic chemicals that often produce side effects such as rashes, allergic reactions, or redness, neem doesn’t seem to have any of these side-effects.

Early Ayurvedic practitioners believed high sugar levels in the body caused skin disease. Neem’s bitter quality was considered to counteract the sweetness.

Indians historically bathed in neem leaves steeped in hot water. This is still a common procedure for curing skin ailments or allergic reactions.

Neem oil can help with the symptoms of psoriasis. The oil moisturizes and protects the skin while healing the lesions, scaling and irritation.

Experiments have shown that patients with psorasis who have taken neem leaf orally, combined with topical treatment with neem extracts and neem seed oil, achieve results at least as positive as those who use coal tar and cortisone, the more traditional treatments. Coal products are messy and smelly and cortisone can thin the skin when used repeatedly. Neem has neither side effect.

It can be used for extended periods of time without any side effects, is easy to apply and is relatively inexpensive.

Article excerption from The Star 25 May 2008

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

兒童減肥運動無效注意飲食


兒童減肥運動無效注意飲食

最新研究發現,鼓勵體胖孩子運動,不會有減肥效果,應該鼓勵他們吃更健康飲食。

英國“每日電訊報”報導,最新研究認為,肥胖兒童因為體重過重而不好動,不是因為不好動而肥胖。

研究人員認為,要減少兒童肥胖疾病,應將重點擺在健康飲食,並降低卡路里攝取,而不是讓孩子運動或參加遊戲。

研究人員五年來針對三百名孩童進行研究,並在歐洲肥胖大會上提出這份研究報告。

研究發現,過重影響活動,而非活動影響過重,他們並認為,這就是為什麼想要藉由提倡運動來對抗兒童肥胖,最後卻失敗。

過重兒童很少運動,是因為他們常常跑的上氣不接下氣,所以他們比身材較瘦的兒童更不愛活動。研究說,預防兒童肥胖的焦點,應該轉移至控制卡路里攝取。

研究主持人英國普利茅斯半島醫學院學者麥卡夫說:“我們的解釋認為,胖孩子不好動是因為他們胖,而不是因為他們不好動而變胖。他們很難運動,因為他們會跑的上氣不接下氣,所以他們不運動。”

他說:“首先要確保他們不會透過其他方式獲得脂肪。”

他說:“透過健康且一生受用的飲食改變,比運動能讓他們瘦的更多。”

他說:“解決問題的最合乎成本效益方法,就是把所有錢全部花在阻止孩子吃垃圾食物上,而不是分配成一部分用來這麼做,一部分用來讓他們運動。”

他說:“讓孩子更好動的主意很吸引人,但卻無法產生預期效果。”

他說:“在法國,他們將販賣機撤出校園,並且禁止學生的午餐盒中提供巧克力棒。他們也禁止兒童電視節目播出垃圾食物廣告,他們發現的確有效。”(香港明報)

轉載自星洲互動.2008.05.28

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Fat Story And Cholesterol

A Consumer's Guide to Fats

Once upon a time, we didn't know anything about fat except that it made foods tastier. We cooked our food in lard or shortening. We spread butter on our breakfast toast and plopped sour cream on our baked potatoes. Farmers bred their animals to produce milk with high butterfat content and meat "marbled" with fat because that was what most people wanted to eat.
Energy in equals energy burned. And what it means, when it comes to the human body, is that the number of calories you take in each day should be balanced by the number of calories you use in walking, climbing stairs, playing outside and doing other activities.

But ever since word got out that diets high in fat are related to heart disease, things have become more complicated. Experts tell us there are several different kinds of fat, some of them worse for us than others. In addition to saturated, monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats, there are triglycerides, trans-fatty acids, and omega 3 and omega 6 fatty acids.

But if what goes in is a lot more than what goes out, you will start to gain weight. And in the US, since about 1980, kids have gained lots of weight.

Most people have learned something about cholesterol, and many of us have been to the doctor for a blood test to learn our cholesterol "number." Now, however, it turns out that there's more than one kind of cholesterol, too.

Almost every day there are newspaper reports of new studies or recommendations about what to eat or what not to eat: Lard is bad, olive oil is good, margarine is better for you than butter- then again, maybe it's not.

FDA regulations enable consumers to see clearly on a food product's label how much and what kind of fat the product contains. Understanding the terms used to discuss fat is crucial if you want to make sure your diet is within recommended guidelines.

The issue here isn’t whether boys and girls look good in shorts and swimsuits. And it’s not about being the fastest athlete on the team. It’s about whether you are healthy. Unfortunately, fat is really, really unhealthy. Researchers have discovered that fat cells produce hormones and other chemicals that can hurt your body when you’re young. The damage gets worse if the weight stays with you into adulthood.

This is scary, YES. But it will help you to understand why it’s so important to eat well and be active. You want to live a longer time, right? And, just as important, you don’t want be limited by painful and serious health problems when you aged, right?

Fats and Fatty Acids

Fats are a group of chemical compounds that contain fatty acids. Energy is stored in the body mostly in the form of fat. Fat is needed in the diet to supply essential fatty acids, substances essential for growth but not produced by the body itself.

There are three main types of fatty acids: saturated, monounsaturated and polyunsaturated. All fatty acids are molecules composed mostly of carbon and hydrogen atoms. A saturated fatty acid has the maximum possible number of hydrogen atoms attached to every carbon atom. It is therefore said to be "saturated" with hydrogen atoms.

Some fatty acids are missing one pair of hydrogen atoms in the middle of the molecule. This gap is called an "unsaturation" and the fatty acid is said to be "monounsaturated" because it has one gap. Fatty acids that are missing more than one pair of hydrogen atoms are called "polyunsaturated."
Saturated fatty acids are mostly found in foods of animal origin. Monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids are mostly found in foods of plant origin and some seafoods. Polyunsaturated fatty acids are of two kinds, omega-3 or omega-6. Scientists tell them apart by where in the molecule the "unsaturations," or missing hydrogen atoms, occur.

Recently a new term has been added to the fat lexicon: trans-fatty acids. These are by-products of partial hydrogenation, a process in which some of the missing hydrogen atoms are put back into polyunsaturated fats. Some of the hydrogenated fatty acids take on a "straighter" structure: these are the trans-fatty acids. "Hydrogenated vegetable oils," such as vegetable shortening and margarine, are solid at room temperature because straightening fatty acids allows them to pack more tightly.

Cholesterol

Cholesterol is sort of a "cousin" of fat. Both fat and cholesterol belong to a larger family of chemical compounds called lipids. All the cholesterol the body needs is made by the liver. It is used to build cell membranes and brain and nerve tissues. Cholesterol also helps the body produce steroid hormones needed for body regulation, including processing food, and bile acids needed for digestion.
People don't need to consume dietary cholesterol because the body can make enough cholesterol for its needs. But the typical Western diet contains substantial amounts of cholesterol, found in foods such as egg yolks, liver, meats, some shellfish, and whole-milk dairy products. Only foods of animal origin contain cholesterol.

Cholesterol is transported in the bloodstream in large molecules of fat and protein called lipoproteins. Cholesterol carried in low-density lipoproteins is called LDL-cholesterol; most cholesterol is of this type. Cholesterol carried in high-density lipoproteins is called HDL-cholesterol.

A person's cholesterol "number" refers to the total amount of cholesterol in the blood. Cholesterol is measured in milligrams per deciliter (mg/dl) of blood. (A deciliter is a tenth of a liter.) Doctors recommend that total blood cholesterol be kept below 200 mg/dl. Studies in the United States and other countries have consistently shown that total cholesterol levels above 200 to 220 mg/dl are linked with an increased risk of coronary heart disease.

LDL-cholesterol and HDL-cholesterol act differently in the body. A high level of LDL-cholesterol in the blood increases the risk of fatty deposits forming in the arteries, which in turn increases the risk of a heart attack. Thus, LDL-cholesterol has been dubbed "bad" cholesterol. On the other hand, an elevated level of HDL-cholesterol seems to have a protective effect against heart disease. For this reason, HDL-cholesterol is often called "good" cholesterol. In 1992, a panel of medical experts convened by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) recommended that individuals should have their level of HDL-cholesterol checked along with their total cholesterol.

According to the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), a component of NIH, a healthy person who is not at high risk for heart disease and whose total cholesterol level is in the normal range (around 200 mg/dl) should have an HDL-cholesterol level of more than 35 mg/dl. NHLBI also says that an LDL-cholesterol level of less than 130 mg/dl is "desirable" to minimize the risk of heart disease.


Triglycerides

Triglyceride is another form in which fat is transported through the blood to the body tissues. Most of the body's stored fat is in the form of triglycerides. It is not clear whether high levels of triglycerides alone increase an individual's risk of heart disease. However, they may be an important clue that someone is at risk of heart disease for other reasons. Many people who have elevated triglycerides also have high LDL-cholesterol or low HDL-cholesterol. People with diabetes or kidney disease--two conditions that increase the risk of heart disease--are also prone to high triglycerides.

Dietary Fat

Many people are confused about the effect of dietary fats on cholesterol levels. At first glance, it seems reasonable to think that eating less cholesterol would reduce a person's cholesterol level. In fact, eating less cholesterol has less effect on blood cholesterol levels than eating less saturated fat. However, some studies have found that eating cholesterol increases the risk of heart disease even if it doesn't increase blood cholesterol levels. Another misconception is that people can improve their cholesterol numbers by eating "good" cholesterol. In food, all cholesterol is the same. In the blood, whether cholesterol is "good" or "bad" depends on the type of lipoprotein that's carrying it.

Polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats do not promote the formation of artery-clogging fatty deposits the way saturated fats do. Some studies show that eating foods that contain these fats can reduce levels of LDL-cholesterol in the blood. Polyunsaturated fats, such as safflower and corn oil, tend to lower both HDL- and LDL-cholesterol. Edible oils rich in monounsaturated fats, such as olive and canola oil, however, tend to lower LDL-cholesterol without affecting HDL levels.

How Do We Know Fat Is a Problem?

In 1908, scientists first observed that rabbits fed a diet of meat, whole milk, and eggs developed fatty deposits on the walls of their arteries that constricted the flow of blood. Narrowing of the arteries by these fatty deposits is called atherosclerosis. It is a slowly progressing disease that can begin early in life but not show symptoms for many years. In 1913, scientists identified the substance responsible for the fatty deposits in the rabbits' arteries as cholesterol.

In 1916, Cornelius de Langen, a Dutch physician working in Java, Indonesia, noticed that native Indonesians had much lower rates of heart disease than Dutch colonists living on the island. He reported this finding to a medical journal, speculating that the Indonesians' healthy hearts were linked with their low levels of blood cholesterol.

De Langen also noticed that both blood cholesterol levels and rates of heart disease soared among Indonesians who abandoned their native diet of mostly plant foods and ate a typical Dutch diet containing a lot of meat and dairy products. This was the first recorded suggestion that diet, cholesterol levels, and heart disease were related in humans. But de Langen's observations lay unnoticed in an obscure medical journal for more than 40 years.

After World War II, medical researchers in Scandinavia noticed that deaths from heart disease had declined dramatically during the war, when food was rationed and meat, dairy products, and eggs were scarce. At about the same time, other researchers found that people who suffered heart attacks had higher levels of blood cholesterol than people who did not have heart attacks.

Since then, a large body of scientific evidence has been gathered linking high blood cholesterol and a diet high in animal fats with an elevated risk of heart attack. In countries where the average person's blood cholesterol level is less than 180 mg/dl, very few people develop atherosclerosis or have heart attacks. In many countries where a lot of people have blood cholesterol levels above 220 mg/dl, such as the United States, heart disease is the leading cause of death.

High rates of heart disease are commonly found in countries where the diet is heavy with meat and dairy products containing a lot of saturated fats. However, high-fat diets and high rates of heart disease don't inevitably go hand-in-hand.

Learning from Other Cultures

People living on the Greek island of Crete have very low rates of heart disease even though their diet is high in fat. Most of their dietary fat comes from olive oil, a monounsaturated fat that tends to lower levels of "bad" LDL-cholesterol and maintain levels of "good" HDL-cholesterol.
The Inuit, or Eskimo, people of Alaska and Greenland also are relatively free of heart disease despite a high-fat, high-cholesterol diet. The staple food in their diet is fish rich in omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids.

Some research has shown that omega-3 fatty acids, found in fish such as salmon and mackerel as well as in soybean and canola oil, lower both LDL-cholesterol and triglyceride levels in the blood. Some nutrition experts recommend eating fish once or twice a week to reduce heart disease risk. However, dietary supplements containing concentrated fish oil are not recommended because there is insufficient evidence that they are beneficial and little is known about their long-term effects.

Omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids have also been found in some studies to reduce both LDL- and HDL-cholesterol levels in the blood. Linoleic acid, an essential nutrient (one that the body cannot make for itself) and a component of corn, soybean and safflower oil, is an omega-6 fatty acid.

At one time, many nutrition experts recommended increasing consumption of monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats because of their cholesterol-lowering effects. Now, however, the advice is simply to reduce dietary intake of all types of fat. (Infants and young children, however, should not restrict dietary fat.)

The available information on fats may be voluminous and is sometimes confusing. But sorting through the information becomes easier once you know the terms and some of the history.

The "bottom line" is actually quite simple, according to John E. Vanderveen, Ph.D., director of the Office of Plant and Dairy Foods and Beverages in FDA's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition. "What we should be doing is removing as much of the saturated fat from our diet as we can. We need to select foods that are lower in total fat and especially in saturated fat." In a nutshell, that means eating fewer foods of animal origin, such as meat and whole-milk dairy products, and more plant foods such as vegetables and grains.

Article excerption from Eleanor Mayfield, a writer in Silver Spring, Md.

Blood Sugar In Pregnancy


Might blood-sugar level at the high end of the normal range pose a risk to pregnant woman and their babies? A study followed through childbirth 23,316 women who’d had their blood sugar tested when they were about 28 weeks pregnant. All participants had blood-sugar levels below the threshold for diabetes. About 26% of the women with the highest level gave birth to abnormally large babies, compared with 5% of women with the lowest levels.

Also, the higher a woman’s blood-sugar level, the more likely she was to have a child with high insulin levels and low blood-sugar levels at birth, and greater the chance that she would deliver prematurely or have a Caesarean delivery.

Who may be affected? Pregnant women. In the US, about 5% of the pregnant women develop diabetes for the first during pregnancy.

Caveats: The study did not determine at what point pregnant women with bllod-sugar levels below diabetic should receive treatment. Analysis did not include data on weight gain and the women’s diets.

You can find this study in the May 8 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

Friday, May 23, 2008

吳永志 - 不一樣的自然養生法


吳永志生機飲食 戰勝肺癌

年近70的吳永志醫 師 (Dr. Tom Wu),30年前被診斷罹患3期肺癌,開刀時發現腫瘤已轉移,被宣告只剩幾個月生命,篤信基督的他轉而採用生機飲食及自然療法,他每天喝6大杯蔬果汁,1天排 便3次,改變飲食及生活作息才半年,腫瘤即消失無蹤,吳永志昨天在《不一樣的自然養生法》新書發表會中公開見證,因為「只要改變不良飲食和生活習慣,就能 扭轉乾坤。」

 癌症位居台灣10大死因榜首,曾獲美國癌症協會頒發醫療貢獻獎的吳永志表示,癌症主因壓力過大、不正確的飲食與缺乏運動造成,尤其是當飲食中缺乏植物生化素時,即無法維持身體免疫正常運作。

 原本學西醫的吳永志,罹癌後轉向研究自然醫學,他是在被宣布只有短暫生命時,決心吃神教導的食譜,天天吃蔬果和喝乾淨水,陽光浴30分鐘,或快步走路 30分鐘,也練氣功和吐納調息,生活上多休息,早睡早起,尤其午睡半小時。6個月後,體力恢復,每天排便3至4次,9個月體檢報告樣樣都正常,癌細胞已無 蹤!

 到現在,吳永志仍然維持吃90%全生和10%煮熟的食物。他設計了兩道適合大眾飲用的蔬果汁,民眾不妨在家DIY:

 強身健體蔬果汁

 材料:中型甜菜根1/2個、胡蘿蔔1條、檸檬1/2個、中型番茄2個、草莓6粒、蘋果1/2個、鳳梨1/4個。

 配料:蒸餾水2又1/2杯、老薑5片、亞麻子1/2茶匙、海鹽1/4茶匙、白芝麻1大匙。

 作法:食材洗淨切塊,檸檬削去綠皮白色纖維及果肉;將水和所有材料一起打成汁即可。

 功效:幫助降血糖血壓,增強心臟和胰臟功能、清肝醒腦。

 消化美膚蔬果汁

 材料:胡蘿蔔1條、玉米1根、番茄1個、鳳梨1/2個、奇異果1個、木瓜1/3個。蒸餾水2杯、枸杞3大匙。

 作法:玉米削下玉米粒;鳳梨奇異果木瓜去皮,食材打汁。

 功效:幫助消化、明目、美膚、健胃、補腎,預防腸癌。

作者簡介
吳永志醫生(Dr. Tom Wu)

  出生於中國,曾跟隨一位隱居氣功醫療師學習氣功和醫療秘方; 後來學習西方醫學,並繼續深造另類醫學,榮獲博士學位。三十年前不幸患了肺癌三期,用傳統西醫治療,依舊被宣告放棄,轉用生機飲食及自然療法,癌症才得康復。
   吳醫生於是毅然放棄傳統醫學,轉向自然醫學及營養學領域,在美國獲得博士學位,經常被邀請至世界各地演說,自然醫學與生機飲食學員遍布全球,造就人才數 十萬計。並且經常被各國政要邀診並為他們制定食譜,對各種慢性病──腸胃病、膽固醇、肥胖、糖尿病、高血壓、心臟病、痛風、癌症等,改善效果顯著,在美國 及世界各地都享有盛名。

吳醫生獲獎無數,獲頒獎項有:
★美國癌症協會醫療顯著貢獻獎
★阿伯特吏懷哲醫學獎
★世界和平基金會世界環保醫療獎
★聯合國世界傑出醫生獎
★印度世界保健開放大學自然療法突出貢獻獎
★巴基斯坦醫學針灸協會服務人類優越獎。
★美國自然醫學協會自然醫學貢獻獎。

【中國時報 張翠芬/台北報導】 2008.04.17
http://health.chinatimes.com/contents.aspx?cid=6,72&id=945


Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Save Your Liver Now!


When compared to other health conditions, it is striking how little attention is given to diseases of the liver, particularly considering the rising level of concern about health and health-related environmental issues. Hepatoprotection (or protection of the liver) is a subject that should be of intense interest because the liver plays a critical role in all aspects of metabolism and overall health.

What is the Liver?

The liver is the largest glandular organ of the body. It weighs about 3 lb (1.36 kg). It is reddish brown in color and is divided into four lobes of unequal size and shape. The liver lies on the right side of the abdominal cavity beneath the diaphragm. Blood is carried to the liver via two large vessels called the hepatic artery and the portal vein. The heptic artery carries oxygen-rich blood from the aorta (a major vessel in the heart). The portal vein carries blood containing digested food from the small intestine. These blood vessels subdivide in the liver repeatedly, terminating in very small capillaries. Each capillary leads to a lobule. Liver tissue is composed of thousands of lobules, and each lobule is made up of hepatic cells, the basic metabolic cells of the liver.

What is its major function?

The liver has many functions. Some of the functions are:

  • produces and secretes bile (stored in the gallbladder), that is needed to break down and digest fatty acids, and produces blood protein and hundreds of enzymes needed for digestion and other bodily functions.
  • converts glucose to glycogen and stores it until the muscles need energy (some glucose is also converted into fat and stored, the released glycogen becomes glucose in the bloodstream),
  • as the liver breaks down proteins, it produces urea which it synthesizes from carbon dioxide and ammonia. (Urea is the primary solid component of urine, and it is eventually excreted by the kidneys.) Essential trace elements (minerals) such as iron and copper as well as vitamins A, D, K and B12 are also stored in the liver.
  • makes certain amino acids (the building blocks of proteins)
  • filters harmful substances from the blood (such as alcohol) and
  • maintains a proper level or glucose in the blood. The liver is also responsible for producing cholesterol. It produces about 80% of the cholesterol in your body.

Basically, it does an extraordinary job of keeping us alive and healthy by metabolizing the food we eat, that is, breaking it down into useful parts, and by having detoxifying abilities that protect us from the damaging effects of numerous toxic compounds that we are exposed to on a daily basis. Several times each day, our entire blood supply passes through the liver. At any given time, about a pint of blood is in the liver (or 10% of the total blood volume of an adult). In addition, the liver has impressive restorative capabilities and is the only organ in the body that is capable of regenerating itself when part of it has been damaged.

Other important functions of the liver include production of prothrombin and fibrinogen (two blood-clotting factors) and heparin (a mucopolysaccharide sulfuric acid ester that helps prevent blood from clotting within the circulatory system).

Conditions leading to liver damage

  • Cholestasis
  • Wilson's Disease
  • Autoimmune Hepatitis
  • Hepatitis B
  • Hepatitis C
  • Hemochromatosis
  • Steatosis, Steatohepatitis, and Cirrhosis
  • Toxic Damage to the Liver

Hepatitis is inflammation of the liver. The liver has many functions, among them the secretion of bile, a solution critical to fat emulsion and absorption. The liver also removes excess glucose from circulation and stores it until it is needed. It converts excess amino acids into useful forms and filters drugs and poisons from the bloodstream, neutralizing them and excreting them in bile. Hepatitis affects the liver’s ability to perform these life-preserving functions.

Medications that negatively affects the liver

Medications have side effects that may harm your liver. Some of the medications that can damage your liver are: serzone, anti-cancer drugs (tagfur, MTX, and cytoxan), and medications used to treat diabetes.

Serzone is a prescription drug manufactured by Bristol-Myers Squibb for the treatment of depression.

The possible side effects of Serzone® are: agitation, dizziness, clumsiness or unsteadiness, difficulty concentrating, memory problems, confusion, severe nausea, gastroenteritis, abdominal pain, unusually dark urine, difficult or frequent urination, fainting, skin rash or hives yellowing of the skin or whites of the eyes (jaundice) or a prolonged loss of weight or loss of appetite.

How the Liver Detoxifies?

The detoxifying function is an essential part of human body metabolism, with the liver playing a key role in the process. Toxic chemicals, of both internal and external origin, constantly bombard the liver. Even our normal everyday metabolic processes produce a wide range of toxins that are neutralized in the liver.

The liver has three main detoxification pathways:

  • Filtering the blood to remove large toxins.
  • Enzymatically breaking down unwanted chemicals. This usually occurs in two steps, with Phase I modifying the chemicals to make them an easier target for the Phase II enzyme systems.
  • Synthesizing and secreting bile for excretion of fat-soluble toxins and cholesterol.

Filtering the blood is an essential detoxifying function of the liver. As noted earlier, our total blood supply passes through the liver several times a day and at any given time, about a pint of blood is in the liver undergoing detoxification. Blood detoxification is critical because the blood is loaded with bacteria, endotoxins, antigen-antibody complexes, and other toxic substances from the intestines. A healthy liver clears almost 100% of bacteria and toxins from the blood before the blood enters the general circulation.

The second essential detoxifying role of the liver involves a two-step enzymatic process for the neutralization of unwanted chemical compounds, such as drugs, pesticides, and enterotoxins from the intestines. Even normal body compounds such as hormones are eliminated in this way. Phase I enzymes directly neutralize some of these chemicals, but many others are converted to intermediate forms that are then processed by Phase II enzymes. These intermediate forms are often much more chemically active and therefore more toxic than the original substances. Therefore, if the Phase II detoxification system is not working properly, the intermediates linger and cause damage.

Phase I detoxification involves a group of 50-100 enzymes that has been named the cytochrome P450 system. These enzymes play a central role in the detoxification of both exogenous (beginning outside the body, such as drugs and pesticides) and endogenous (coming from inside the body, such as hormones) compounds and in the synthesis of steroid hormones and bile acids.

A side effect of this metabolic activity is the production of free radicals that are highly reactive molecules that will bind to cellular components and cause damage. The most important antioxidant for neutralizing these free radicals is glutathione, which is needed for Phase I and Phase II detoxification. When exposure to high levels of toxin produces so many free radicals from Phase I detoxification that glutathione is depleted, Phase II processes that are dependent on glutathione cease. This causes an imbalance between Phase I and Phase II activity, causing severe toxic reactions as a result of the build-up of toxic intermediate forms.

Phase II detoxification involves conjugation, meaning a protective compound becomes bound to a toxin. Besides glutathione conjugation, the other pathways are amino acid conjugation, methylation, sulfation, sulfoxidation, acetylation, and glucuronidation. These enzyme systems need nutrients and metabolic energy to function. As noted earlier, if liver cells do not function properly, Phase II detoxification slows down and increases the toxic load of toxic intermediates.

The third essential detoxifying role of the liver is synthesis and secretion of bile. The liver manufactures approximately a quart of bile every day. Bile serves as a carrier to effectively eliminate toxic substances from the body. In addition, bile emulsifies fats and fat-soluble vitamins in the intestine, improving their absorption. When the excretion of bile is inhibited (cholestasis), toxins stay in the liver longer and subject the liver to damage.

Regenerating or Survival of Liver?

The regenerating capacity of the liver is one of the most intriguing survival mechanisms of the body. The liver is an incredibly resilient organ. Up to 75% of its cells can be surgically removed or destroyed by disease before it ceases to function. As with some other organs, the liver has been designed with an excess of tissue to protect it from damage or loss of function. The healthy parts of the liver have an amazing capacity to regenerate new, healthy liver tissue to replace damaged liver tissue. We are very fortunate that the liver has a regeneration capacity because our health depends on a well-functioning liver. However, it is always too late to realize the damage of liver (until 70% damage) until it is too late to cure if not taken care properly.

reference http://www.mamashealth.com/

Friday, May 16, 2008

Golden Sea Cucumber 生物金海参


Increases metabolism, cares for the vitality of blood cells and strengthens the joints

Golden Sea Cucumber is extracted from high quality sea cucumber through biotechnology and thus has high contain of 50 kinds constructive nutrient ,include carbohydrate, 18 amino acid, vitamin A,B1,B2,D,E minerals like calcium, vanadium, zinc, iron, manganese, magnesium, selenium, iodine, phosphorous, DHA and EPA. Moreover, the active ingredient like collagen, chondroitin, glucosamine, saponins and mucopolysaccharide further enables Golden Sea Cucumber to improve metabolism, protect cell and joint and enhances the elasticity as well as smoothness of skin.

Sea cucumber Unique Active ingredients:

Collagen: 70% of our skin component is consist of collagen, therefore collagen is important nutrient to maintain its elasticity and smoothness and provide protein for healthy joint. As we are ageing, collagen inside our body will be reducing, skin will be ageing and less elastic, joint movement become difficult. Golden Sea Cucumber contains high collagen, therefore able to maintain skin smoothness and elasticity, slow down ageing process, nurture joint’s health. In addition, collagen manage to unite calcium and bone cells, helps to prevent osteoporosis.


Chondoitin and glucosamine: As we are ageing, water content inside cartilage will reduce, leads to stiffness, attrition and inflammation of cartilage, even joint swell and pain and incapable. Chondroitin and glucosamine provide nutrient that is essential for healthy joint. Chondroitin with its super stickiness and high water content to supplement and lock joint’s water substance effectively. On the other hand, glucosamine can repair broken cartilage cell and anti-inflammation. Therefore, golden sea cucumber can reduce redness, swell, hotness and pain symptoms of arthritis. Moreover, chondroitin also enhance immunity and human growth.

Saponins: Also knowns as triterpene glycosides, its scientific structure is similar with ginsenosides. Saponins has strong anti-bacterial and anti-oxidation, control the growth of bacterial, cancer cell or tumor. Saponins also improve immunity and reduce fatigue , at the same time stimulate the growth of bone marrow cell, produce blood and prevent anemia.

Mucopolysaccharide: Belongs to amino polysaccharide, it is multi-functional, able to enhance immune system and prevent of cancer. Experiments show that mucopolysaccharide can decrease the content of blood sugar, blood viscocity, cholesterol and triglyceride. Besides that, mucopolysaccharide also reduces symptoms of inflammation and helps in wound recovery, without the side effect of anti inflammation medicine.

Who needs Golden Sea Cucumber?

  1. Those concerning about health
  2. Those weak, especially old folks and children
  3. Those before and after surgery, before and after delivery, just recovered from illness etc.
  4. Those facing skin sensitivity or having skin problems.
  5. Those suffering from chronic diseases such as anemia, constipation, arthritis, osteoporosis, diabetes, dementia, hypertension, hyperlipidemics and heart disease etc.
  6. Those concerning about skin care.

Functions
- Helps to produce blood, anti-inflammation, anti cell-oxidation
- Decreases cholesterol level, thrombosis and diminishes the growth of atherosclerosis
- Aids to improve the regeneration of cells.
- Improves immunity, prevent cancer, delay aging and relieve arthritis.

- High contain of collagen that able to speed up wound recovery, maintain the suppleness and elasticity of skin, promotes healthy joints and prevents osteoporosis.
- Contain DHA that will improve learning ability, memory and prevent dementia

促进新陈代谢、活化血液细胞以及强化关节

生物金海参是利用生物科技所萃取的高品质海参,能提高您的免疫力、照顾您身体内在与外在的健康。生物金海参的营养价值极高,能提供多种身体必须的营养素, 生物金海参活性精华能促进新陈代谢、照顾细胞的健康与关节的健壮;而海参胶原蛋白对于维持您肌肤的弹性与光滑更有着神奇的功效。


生物金海参独特的活性成分

原蛋白:胶原蛋白占了皮肤成分的百分之七十,是维持皮肤光滑有弹性的重要营养素,同时也是健康关节不可或缺的蛋白质。随着年龄增长,体内胶原蛋白不断流 失,导致皮肤老化,缺少弹性,关节移动困难。生物金海参里含有很高的海参胶原蛋白,能保持肌肤光滑、富有弹性、延缓机体的衰老过程,并能保持关节健康。此 外,生物金海参胶原蛋白还能促使钙质与骨细胞结合,有助于预防骨骼疏松症的发生。

骨素与葡萄糖胺:随着年龄的增长,软骨组织里的水分相续减少,导致骨骼僵硬,容易磨损、发炎,甚至关节肿痛、行动不良的情形。生物金海参中的软骨素与葡萄 糖胺,是保持关节健康所必需的营养素。软骨素具有超强粘性,含水多,能迅速补充及留住关节的水分,葡萄糖胺能修补受损的软骨细胞,并能抗炎 。所以生物金海参对于减轻关节炎的红、肿、热、痛的症状很有帮助。此外,软骨素也可增强免疫力和促进人体生长发育。

海参素:又称海参皂甙,其化学结构与人参皂甙相似。海参素有很强的抗菌及抗细胞氧化作用,对于抑制细菌、癌细胞或肿瘤的生长很有帮助。海参素也能提高免疫力,改善容易疲劳的问题,同时也能刺激骨髓红细胞的生长,帮助造血、预防贫血症。

参粘多糖:属于氨基多糖,拥有多种作用,能增强免疫力及预防癌症的发生。实验显示海参粘多糖具有降低血、降低血粘度、降低胆固醇和三酸甘油酯的功效。海参 粘多糖有效改善发炎症状,对于消炎止痛有非常显著的帮助,而且能加速伤口的愈合,更重要的是不会产生消炎药物的副作用。

谁需要生物金海参

1. 注重保健的人士

2. 体弱病虚的人士

3. 手术前后、生产后、生病初愈等的人士。

4. 皮肤敏感或肌肤有问题者。

5. 慢性疾病患者,如贫血、便秘、关节炎、骨骼疏松症、糖尿病、老人痴呆症、高血症、高血脂和心脏疾病等。

6. 养颜美容之人。

功效
- 增进血液生产、抗炎、防止细胞氧化
- 降低胆固醇、防止血栓以及动脉硬化
- 帮助增进再生细胞
- 增强免疫力、防癌、延缓老化以及促进关节健康
- 胶原蛋白能够迅速促进伤口愈合、保持肌肤的柔嫩弹性、增进关节的健康以及预防骨骼疏松症
- 富含可增进学习能力的DHA、增进记忆力以及防止痴呆症