Should Blood Type Guide Your Food Choices?

While searching for relief from migraines and general malaise, a friend recently consulted a nutritionist who told her, matter-of-factly, that because she has Type O blood, she should be eating lots of meat and eliminating gluten, dairy and many grains. A Chinese medicine doctor she consulted confirmed the advice, saying, basically: Duh.

For someone who had hoped to go vegetarian — and who is among the 45 percent of people in the U. S. with Type O blood— the news was surprising.

But was it true?

The idea of eating according to your blood type became popular with the 1996 book “Eat Right 4 Your Type” (Putnam Adult) by Peter D’Adamo, a naturopath physician. The theory is that the genes behind blood type also are behind the expression of other proteins in our body, which relate to how we digest foods. [Read more...]

Pomegranate Juice Beneficial For Kidney Disease Patients

Pomegranate juice, which is rich in antioxidants, offers a wide variety of health benefits to kidney disease patients including managing blood pressure and lowering cholesterol, a new study has claimed.

Lilach Shema and her colleagues from the Western Galilee Medical Center in Israel investigated the long-term effects of drinking pomegranate juice on heart disease risk factors like high cholesterol and blood pressure in kidney disease patients.

They randomised 101 dialysis patients to receive about three-and-a-half ounces of pomegranate juice or placebo, three times a week. [Read more...]

Fibre Rich Diet Reduces Heart Disease, Diabetes Risk In Teens

Teenagers who consume a diet packed with fibres are more likely to keep away from risk factors for diabetes and heart disease, a new study has suggested.

Due to low intakes of fruits, vegetables, whole grains and beans, the total dietary fibre intake in teens is about 13 grams per day, well below the recommendation of 26 grams and 38 grams for female and male adolescents, respectively.

A study led by Joseph Carlson of Michigan State University has revealed that to reduce metabolic syndrome – a collection of risk factors including high blood pressure and a large waistline – it is more important to emphasize on diets that are fibre-rich, nutrient-dense, plant-based foods than focussing on restricting foods high in cholesterol or saturated fat. [Read more...]

South Asians Need To Revisit Obesity Cut-Offs

Substantially lower obesity cut-off points are needed in South Asians to detect an equivalent level of cardiovascular risk as observed in white Europeans.

A new study says the conventional definition of obesity – a body mass index or BMI of 30 kg/m2 – should not be applied for South Asians for whom the count should be between 23-28 kg/m2.

BMI, calculated as weight (kg) divided by height, is the most common method of assessing adiposity.

Based on epidemiological evidence investigating associations with mortality and morbidity, BMI cut-off points of 25 kg/m2 and 30 kg/m2 are conventionally used to classify overweight and obesity, respectively. [Read more...]

Pregnancy Safe for Most Women With Lupus: Study

Pregnancy is safe for most women with stable lupus, a new study indicates.

Lupus is a chronic inflammatory disease that can affect many organs of the body and cause arthritis, fatigue and rashes. Lupus has been known to cause complications for pregnant women. The disease occurs mostly in women, often emerging in their 20s and 30s when many women want to have children.

In this study, researchers identified a few predictors of lupus-related pregnancy complications, but also found that most women with stable lupus had successful pregnancies. [Read more...]

Study: As Few As 3 Drinks A Week Can Increase Breast Cancer Risk

Whether sipping beer, wine or whiskey, women who drink just three alcoholic beverages a week face slightly higher chances for developing breast cancer compared with teetotalers, a study of more than 100,000 U.S. nurses found.

The link between alcohol and breast cancer isn’t new, but most previous studies found no increased risk for breast cancer among light drinkers. The new research provides compelling evidence because it followed so many women for up to almost 30 years, experts said.

Still, the study only shows an association between alcohol and breast cancer; it doesn’t prove that drinking causes the disease. There could be some other reason light drinkers appeared to be at higher risk — maybe they were less active than nondrinkers or had unhealthy diets, said Dr. Susan Love, a breast cancer expert and author who runs a Santa Monica, Calif.-based research foundation. [Read more...]

Watermelon Reduces Hardening Of Arteries

Watermelon is good in the case of atherosclerosis or hardening of arteries.

The model used for a study involved mice with diet-induced high cholesterol. One group was just given water to drink while the experimental group was given watermelon juice.

By week eight of the study conducted by the University of Kentucky, mice given watermelon juice had lower body weight than the other group due to decrease of fat mass, according to a varsity statement.

Atherosclerosis occurs when fat, cholesterol and other substances build up in the walls of arteries and form hard structures called plaques. They experienced no decrease in lean mass. [Read more...]