Wednesday, September 20, 2006

A Powerful Approach to Prostate Health

Most men hardly know they have a prostate until they reach middle age, when prostate health becomes a serious issue. Prostate enlargement is found in 50 percent of American men in their sixties, and up to 90 percent of men in their seventies and eighties.

Worse, prostate cancer is the second leading cause of death by cancer in men, with about 80 percent of all cases of prostate cancer occurring in men over sixty-five.

Even though the prostate seems to be an older man's health problem, these imbalances begin much earlier in life. The good news is that most prostate problems can be prevented by making simple lifestyle and dietary changes to restore balance. In this interview, our ayurvedic expert provides an in-depth analysis of prostate health from the perspective of Ayurveda, and gives practical and effective advice for keeping the prostate healthy throughout life.

Q: Let's start at the beginning. What exactly is the prostate gland, and what does it do?

A: The prostate is part of the male reproductive system. The interesting thing is that even though it is called a gland, it is actually an organ made up of 70 percent glandular and thirty percent fibro-muscular tissue. About the size and shape of a walnut, it is located directly beneath the bladder and surrounds part of the urethra, the tube that drains the bladder. The prostate secretes a thin, milky substance contained in semen that protects and nourishes the sperm and lubricates the urethra. In ayurvedic terms, the prostate's secretion supports the flow of Shukra Dhatu, the reproductive tissue.

Q: How would you know if you had a prostate problem?

A: One major symptom is prostate enlargement, which is caused by imbalances that accumulate over time but become manifest with age. The initial symptoms include excessive urination at night, a weak urine stream, stopping and starting while urinating, a feeling that the bladder is never empty, difficulty in starting to urinate, and dribbling at the end of urination.

If a man has these symptoms, he should consult his doctor immediately. Often, when the symptoms are mild, the physician will say, "Wait and watch. This is the ideal time to get help from Ayurveda, when the problem is mild to moderate. At this point, there is still an opportunity to correct the imbalance that has caused the problem. Of course aging is the main etiological factor, or cause of the problem, but Ayurveda also identifies the lifestyle or dietary factors that act as a trigger, and if unchecked, can turn a mild problem into a serious one.

Q: Every man would naturally want to keep the problem from becoming serious. What are some of the causes, or triggers, of prostate problems?

A: There are several. One is overuse of Shukra Dhatu, or overuse of the sexual organs. Another is lack of adequate fluids in the body, due to not drinking enough water during the day.

Habitually suppressing the natural urge to urinate also can, over time, cause the urine to become more concentrated and, in turn, irritates the prostate.

Drinking too much alcohol or caffeinated beverages can also cause an imbalance. Alcohol, for instance, creates an abnormal increase in urine production, which aggravates Pitta and Vata doshas.

Another cause is taking too many over-the-counter antihistamines and decongestants. These can cause the muscle that controls urine flow to tighten, making urination difficult.

Even your job can be a source of imbalance. If you have to sit for long periods of time without taking a break or stretching, this can create an imbalance in the reproductive area of the body. Not getting daily exercise, or eating a diet that creates impurities (ama) in the body, are other causes of prostate problem. If your diet does not contain spices that purify the urine daily (such as turmeric, cumin and fennel) that can also cause toxins to build up that lead to imbalances or infection.

Finally, if you don't have a healthy daily routine, for instance if you watch TV late at night or for other reasons don't sleep enough, or if you don't eat meals on time or your routine is very irregular, that can also cause ama to build up and disturb the immune system.

Q: It sounds like a wide number of factors can cause prostate problems.

A: Yes, they do sound like they are widely disparate on the surface, but actually there is an underlying principle that ties them all together.

One main factor is ama. Ama refers to the sticky impurities that are created when digestion is weak and food is not digested completely. Now, aging itself can create some weakening of the digestion, but most ama is created by poor dietary and lifestyle habits already mentioned -- eating foods that are old and heavy or eating meals at irregular times of the day.

If this kind of diet becomes a habit, then ama eventually mixes with the nutrient fluid (Rasa Dhatu) and even the blood (Rakta Dhatu). The urine, which is part of the body's purification system, also becomes overloaded with ama and thus more prone to infection. It becomes a fertile ground for bacteria, and can create additional problems of urinary tract infections, and that impacts the prostate. Weakened immunity also creates a problem for the prostate.

If the ama problem is not corrected, and ama reaches the muscle and fat tissue, then it creates an additional factor -- imbalance in cell production. This, compounded with testosterone levels declining due to age (or due to overuse of the sexual organs), is a major factor in prostate enlargement.

If the person also has an imbalance in Shleshaka Kapha (the subdosha of Kapha that governs lubrication of the joints, body fluids, and moisture balance in the skin), and ama is accumulating in the body fluids due to dietary mistakes, then Shleshaka Kapha and ama gets mixed with urine, creating a more irritated situation and further weakening the immune system.

Also, when Shleshaka Kapha is mixed with ama, it creates shleshma (a sticky, toxic mixture of Shleshaka Kapha and ama ). This condition is a common factor in imbalanced cell production. When combined with the problems of ama spreading to the tissues mentioned earlier, then the cell production becomes abnormal, and the prostate grows abnormally large.

Ayurveda tries to support health on all fronts: by balancing Apana Vata, the subdosha of Vata related to the downward flow of energy such as occurs with urination, stopping ama from being produced, strengthening the immune system, and cleansing the urine and nutrient fluid, and cleansing the blood, muscle and fat tissues of ama, and cleansing Shleshaka Kapha of amavisha.

Q: It certainly sounds like Ayurveda takes a holistic approach to prostate health and functioning. Can you tell us why age is such a critical factor in prostate health?

A: Again, this comes back to the doshas. Vata dosha increases as we age. The later part of life is actually known as the Vata Kala (or Vata time of life) in Ayurveda. Because Vata dosha is irregular, dry, and moving by nature, it can cause the digestion to become more irregular. This contributes to more ama being produced and spreading to the tissues.

Also, you have to consider that the prostate is located in the area of the body that is governed by Apana Vata, which includes the colon, lower abdomen, elimination and reproductive areas. Because the prostate is governed by Apana Vata, anything that aggravates Apana Vata creates pressure on the prostate.

Not everyone has to have problems with Apana Vata, of course, and some people will maintain balanced Vata even in old age. But if the person has been keeping an irregular routine, eating foods that are difficult to digest, and sitting for long periods of time at their job, the stage is already set. With the added factor of aging then the downward flow of energy in the body will become obstructed, affecting the organs in the reproductive system, including the prostate.

As the flow of energy and nutrients to the area gets blocked by ama, and the flow of impurities out of the area gets obstructed (as found in more concentrated urine), the prostate gets weaker and more and more imbalanced.

Q: So far we've only been talking about enlarged prostate. But is there a connection here to even more serious problems?

A: Yes. You see, initially, the imbalance in Shleshaka Kapha, called amavisha, causes enlargement of the prostate. But if the imbalance becomes more serious, and the person never adopts an ama -reducing diet or makes lifestyle changes to create more balance, then the common kind of amavisha becomes an even more toxic type of ama called amavisha.

Then the imbalance has become very serious. In other words, what if ama continues to be created, and mixes with Shleshaka Kapha, blood, muscle and fat tissue, and that occurs conjointly for a long period of time? If the person is not taking corrective measures to dissolve the ama, pacify Apana Vata, and restore balance to the entire area, then amavisha, the most toxic stage ama, spreads and really takes hold. Amavisha breeds free radicals and obstructs the natural flow of intelligence between cells, breaking down the connection between nature's intelligence and that area. This is how cancer tends to begin -- when the cell forgets its own nature and starts to grow uncontrollably.

Q: That is certainly a scenario we all want to avoid. So then an enlarged prostate or prostate imbalance could lead to cancer if the situation is not checked?

A: Yes, and that is why the doctor recommends that you keep checking, and keep testing on a yearly basis once you have an enlarged prostate. It's also why you should see a doctor immediately if you notice any of the symptoms that we mentioned earlier. But as you wait and watch, you can be using the Ayurveda approach, which is preventive and holistic in nature.
The role of Ayurveda is really prevention -- ideally to prevent a problem from starting in the first place, or to prevent a mild problem from becoming worse.

Q: What about stress, does stress play a role?

A: Stress can also create some problems. Because Vata dosha governs the nervous system, stress has a greater impact on Vata dosha, and therefore on anyone who is entering the Vata time of life. For instance, if you have a job that requires overuse of the mind, or jars the senses, this can aggravate Prana Vata, the subdosha of Vata that governs the brain, head, chest, respiration, sensory perception and the mind. When Prana Vata is out of balance, it easily brings the other aspects of Vata out of balance, including Apana Vata, creating disturbances in the prostate as well as other parts of the body.

Q: What are some dietary and behavioral recommendations to correct these problems?

A: First of all, it's important to understand that the right diet is very necessary to improve the health of the prostate.In choosing the right diet, there are several factors to consider. First of all, it's a good idea to eat Pitta pacifying foods, because the problem involves an imbalance in the blood tissue, which is governed by Pitta dosha. But at the same time, Kapha dosha must also be pacified, because Shleshaka Kapha is involved. And Vata dosha must also be brought into balance because this disease occurs during the Vata stage of life, and the prostate is located in the area governed by Apana Vata.

So prostate problems involve the combination of Pitta, Kapha, and Vata -- as without the Kapha imbalance there would be no abnormal growth, without the Pitta imbalance there would be no inflammation, and without the Vata imbalance there would be no discomfort. So all three doshas are involved, and therefore all the dietary and behavioral recommendations have to take all three doshas into account.

Q: What sort of diet would pacify all three doshas?

A: In balancing the three doshas simultaneously it's important to avoid any extremes. You don't want to eat anything that is too cold, too spicy, too dry, too bitter, too sweet, or too salty, as any taste taken in excess can create an imbalance in one of the doshas. You'll want to eat a diet that is moderate in every way.

To keep from aggravating Vata dosha, don't eat foods that are too dry and lack nourishment, such as too many crackers or dry cereals. Avoid long, leafy greens such as chard or spinach when they are cooked whole, as they are hard to digest and obstruct the natural movement of the intestine. If you chop the chard and spinach into small pieces and cook them well with spices, then they are easy to digest, help elimination and immunity, and do not aggravate Vata dosha. Avoid eating ice-cold drinks or cold foods such as cold salads, as these aggravate Vata dosha.

for Pitta, avoid extremely spicy foods that heat the blood tissue (such as hot chili peppers and cayenne found in some Mexican and Indian foods). Too much horseradish, garlic, onions and mustard seeds are other examples. Vinegar is another food that pollutes the blood tissue, and it is found in mustard, ketchup, salad dressings, and pickles.

To keep from aggravating Kapha dosha, avoid cold and heavy foods such as fried foods, ice cream, and other rich desserts. Aged cheeses and yogurt should also be avoided, as they are heavy and difficult to digest.

Q: That covers the extremes to be avoided. What are some foods to improve prostate health?
A: For prostate health, a diet of warm, cooked, easily digestible, light yet nourishing foods are best. Organic vegetables cooked in mild spices, whole grains, light proteins such as mung dhal soups, and sweet, juicy fruits will nourish the body and pacify all three doshas.

It's important to cook with mild spices that improve digestion, burn away ama, and pacify Vata dosha, but don't create heat in the blood tissue. Include a mixture of fennel, coriander, cumin, fenugreek, and small amounts of turmeric (see recipe in box). Small amounts of black pepper and small amounts of fresh ginger also are healthy for maintaining prostate health and balance.
You may think that just adding these spices to your diet may not be that significant, but they are very powerful. Let me just explain a small amount of research on these common spices.

Turmeric is strongly anti-inflammatory, and intensifies the anti-cancer activity of other phyto-nutrients. Ginger and turmeric both have been found to have cancer-preventing qualities.

Turmeric is one of nature's most powerful antioxidants, has more DNA protective qualities than Vitamin E and betacarotene. It helps clear away amavisha, the breeding ground of free radicals, thus supporting the liver in its effort to clear itself of free radicals. By stopping the production of ama and amavisha, it balances Ranjaka Pitta, thus purifying the blood and urine.

Black pepper is another common spice whose effects in the diet have been well documented.

Research published in Cancer Letter in the August 16, 1993 issue reported that 20 days after adding black pepper to the diet, the subjects' liver detoxification systems were strengthened, aiding in purification of the blood tissue and enhancing the overall immune system.

The mixture of black pepper, long pepper and ginger (trikatu) is famous in ayurveda, because it is the most effective combination of spices to prevent ama and amavisha, and to clear them away. You can add small amounts of black pepper and ginger to your foods to help clear the channels and micro-channels of the body, which carry away waste and supply oxygen and nutrients to the cells.

Q: That's fascinating, how helpful the right spices are for prostate health. What kinds of vegetables do you recommend?

A: Squashes cooked with these mild spices are excellent for prostate health. The best squashes for prostate health are the types that are white inside, such as zucchini or loki (for more information on buying and cooking loki, visit the recipe section of our web site). Avoid the dark yellow ones such as pumpkin; however, squashes with a mildly yellow color are fine.

Asparagus is another vegetable that is recommended, because it helps support balanced hormones. Daikon is a mild type of white radish root that purifies the urine. Because it is spicy, it should be cooked with other vegetables more as a seasoning than as the main vegetable. You could combine it with squashes such as zucchini or shred it and add it to mung dhal soup.

Light dairy products such as milk, lassi (a drink made with one part freshly-made yogurt and three parts water), and occasional fresh cheeses such as panir or cottage cheese should be included in the diet, but avoid the hard-to-digest aged cheeses, such as Monterey Jack, mozzarella, cheddar, brie, blue cheese, and Gruyere.As for grains, quinoa is best because it is rich in zinc. Zinc supports seminal health, and because seminal health and prostate health are connected, zinc also supports prostate health.

Recipes for mung dhal soup, lassi and many vegetables are available in the recipe section of our web site.

Q: That doesn't seem so complicated after all. It seems like the whole idea is to avoid extremes that can aggravate the doshas.

A: Yes, and to eat wholesome, fresh foods that won't create ama. It's important to avoid the foods that create ama or impurities in the body because they are lifeless and hard to digest.

These include canned, frozen, packaged and processed foods, as well as leftovers. Buy your fruits and vegetables fresh, and if possible, buy organic foods. Non-organic foods contain pesticide and chemical residues that can irritate the blood tissue and pollute the body with toxins. This, in turn, overloads the elimination systems such as the urine and irritates the prostate. Warm, cooked, light, and mildly spiced foods, on the other hand, are easy to digest and thus help cleanse the body of ama.

Q: What about lifestyle, doesn't that affect the doshas as well?

A: Absolutely. Here, it's the same principle: avoid extremes in lifestyle and routine. Moderate habits and daily routine help remove ama and pacify all three doshas.

Lifestyle habits that aggravate Vata dosha include eating at different times of the day from one day to the next. You'll want to eat your meals at the same time every day, and eat your largest meal at noon, when the sun is at its zenith, as that is when your digestive powers are also the strongest. Take time to eat nourishing, appetizing meals.

Avoid staying up late (past ten o'clock), as night wakefulness aggravates all the doshas, but especially Vata. Go to bed at the same time every night, before ten o'clock, and rise before six o'clock in the morning.

Sleep is necessary to pacify Apana Vata and all aspects of Vata. It is also important in enhancing the immune hormones, eliminates ama and creates more ojas, the product of good digestion that promotes lightness, bliss, immunity, health, and longevity.

Be sure to exercise regularly, and be sure that the exercise you choose is suitable for your age and body type. Daily ayurvedic massage, called abhyanga, is another important part of the daily routine. You can do it in the morning to help improve circulation and digestion, remove ama from the body, tone the muscles, and increase energy.

Avoid too much mental pressure, such as a job that requires you to work long hours. Take time to enjoy life, and to maintain healthy relationships with your family and friends. Practice a technique to reduce stress, such as the Transcendental Meditation® technique. Dozens of research studies show that it reduces stress, increases inner happiness and creates more balance in the mind, body, and emotions. It is an important part of the daily routine to eliminate mental and physical ama and to balance all three doshas.

Q: This is certainly a holistic plan for improving the health of the prostate. The beautiful thing about such a prevention program is that your overall health and vitality will improve, and you'll start feeling younger. Are there any specific recommendations for men who are already feeling some mild symptoms of prostate problems.

A: Yes, here are some tips, which also summarizes what we just talked about:
Drink lots of water throughout the day, in between meals. This will keep the urine from becoming too concentrated. If you add some herbs to the water, it will flush out toxins, dissolve ama in the blood tissue and help purify the urine. Here's a recipe: Boil two quarts of water and put the water in a thermos flask. Add three leaves of holy basil, 1/3 t. fennel seed, 1/4 t.
coriander seed, and six white pumpkin seeds or six fresh cucumber seeds. Keep drinking this water throughout the day, but stop drinking it after 7:00 p.m. Stay away from fluids at night if you have a prostate problem, as a full bladder at night can cause pressure on the prostate and disturb your sleep with the need to get up frequently to urinate.

Each time you urinate, take the necessary time to empty your bladder completely. Because the urethra (the passageway through which the urine drains from the body) is already narrow, when there is some enlargement of the prostate, the urinary channel becomes even narrower. If you are in too much of a hurry, all of the urine might not be drained from the bladder. This is not a good thing, because the urine becomes more concentrated if it is not drained from the bladder each time you urinate. So take the time to empty the bladder completely.

Avoid drinking alcohol, because it creates imbalances in the blood tissue, as does caffeine. Both of these create abnormal urine production and irritate the bladder as well.

If you have to sit all day at your job, take short breaks frequently and try to stretch or take a short walk. This will restore the normal flow of energy, blood, and nutrient fluid to the prostate area.

When the weather is cold, take care to keep your head, neck, and body warm. If your body temperature drops, it leads to urine retention, which aggravates the prostate. So keep your body temperature in a moderate range.

Make sure that your bowel movements are regular. Constipation creates an obstruction in Apana Vata, in turn creating pressure on the prostate, increasing ama in the blood tissues, and creating excessive dryness in the whole area. To help with regular elimination, try having a stewed apple in the morning for breakfast with stewed figs, raisins, or prunes. You can also add more fiber and cooked vegetables to your diet, and have 2–4 teaspoons of psyllium seed husk with warm milk or water at night before going to bed. If these measures don't work, take 2–4 Herbal Cleanse tablets before bed with water.

Daily abhyanga or oil massage pacifies Apana Vata, and that is always good. Massage the hands and feet, in particular, as an effective preventative. Use Rejuvenation Oil for Men, which contains herbs and oils to rejuvenate the male physiology.

If you are having trouble sleeping at night, be sure to correct the underlying imbalance. If you are not able to fall asleep, take Blissful Sleep for Vata imbalance that causes this problem. If you wake up between 2:00 and 4:00 a.m. with lots of energy, this is a Pitta imbalance, and Deep Rest can help.

Eat foods that are tri-doshic, which means that they pacify all three doshas. These include soaked walnuts and soaked almonds. Avoid foods that aggravate any one of the doshas: food that is too dry, too oily, too greasy, too cold or too hot, too spicy or not spicy enough. Avoid extremes.

Include lots of sweet, juicy fruits in your diet, as these help nourish the Rasa Dhatu (the nutrient fluid), purify the urine and help maintain a healthy flow of urine. They also create ojas, improving immunity and enhancing cellular intelligence. If stewed or cooked until they are soft, they are not only pacifying to Apana Vata, but also to Pitta dosha. They make an ideal breakfast when combined with prunes, figs, and raisins. If you have a Kapha imbalance, you can eat sweet, juicy fruits raw, but even then you should avoid eating raw fruit after sunset, as the digestion is not as strong after the sun goes down.

Q: That's quite a list. The man who adoptss these recommendations will be taking a giant step for his overall health, not just for his prostate. You had mentioned earlier that Ayurveda is really for prevention of disease. What would a man do if he didn't have any symptoms of prostate irregularity, but just wanted to avoid having any problems?

A: He should follow the same recommendations. In fact, this list of tips is really is more for prevention of prostate problems, but it can also help if the man is noticing some mild symptoms of prostate imbalance. But even if there are no symptoms there, I think that any man from 40 on up, especially if he has a body type that is Vata predominant, could benefit from this plan, as it is holistic and will create more good health, vitality, and balance when entering the Vata stage of life.

If a man has noticed some imbalance and tries this regimen, he should not expect a change overnight. He should give himself some time to make these dietary and lifestyle changes, and then give his body a chance to respond. It will take some time. That's why it's better to start out with a healthy diet and habits and in that way avoid the problem from starting in the first place.
Q: Ayurveda has formulated an herbal compound called Prostate Protection, based on the ayurvedic texts, to enhance prostate health. Can you tell us about its ingredients and benefits?

A: There are two main herbal ingredients in the Prostate Protection formula. These are Kachnar (Bauhinia variegata) and Guggul (Indian Bedellium). Kachnar is a famous herb for maintaining prostate health and function in Ayurveda. Both have a specific effect in clearing ama from the blood, muscle, and fat tissue, and help maintain the normal size of the prostate gland by supporting balanced cell production.

Other herbs enhance the flow of urine, and ease irritation and burning. White Sandalwood, Small Caltrops, Heart-leaved Moonseed (Guduchi), and Spreading Hogweed (Punarnava) are the herbs that support and balance the healthy flow of urine and reduce irritation.To enhance immunity in the prostate area is the role of Heart-leaved Moonseed, Turmeric, and Zinc Bhasma. The combination of Guggul and Zinc Bhasma is a traditional ayurvedic remedy for balancing the size and health of the prostate. Turmeric and Guggul are both effective anti-inflammatory herbs.

Mineral Pitch (Shilajit) and Barley Ash also help in maintaining the purity of the urine. Guduchi, Zinc Bhasma and Turmeric enhance immunity in the genito-urinary tract.

Another group of herbs supports the Shukra Dhatu and maintains testosterone production, including Small Caltrops, Country Mallow (Bala), and Shilajit. Bala, and Zinc Bhasma help balance the amount of testosterone and improve sexual desire. Research has shown that Small Caltrops has the overall effect of supporting the man's testosterone level.

The overall impact of this nutritional supplement is to prevent imbalances in the prostate, and to support the body's natural intelligence in maintaining prostate health and enhance overall functioning in that area. It helps break the cycle of pathogenesis for prostate imbalance.

Q: That is an amazingly well-rounded formula, with all aspects of prostate health being supported. It seems like this holistic, balanced herbal compound provides a lot more healing power than if you took one single herb. Could you tell us how Prostate Protection compares with a single herb such as Saw-toothed Palmetto in restoring prostate health?

A: That is a good question, and it is important to understand the distinction. Prescribing just one isolated herb to treat the prostate is a fragmented rather than holistic approach, and reflects a limited vision of the body and nature's intelligence. Saw-toothed palmetto is prescribed to enhance or modulate testosterone production, but as we've seen, that is only one small element in a rather complex physiological structure and function. It does not take into account the underlying imbalances of the doshas, tissues, and ama, and does not remove the underlying cause of the problem by recommending changes in diet, lifestyle, and stress management. You could say that such an approach does not take the whole picture into account.

Prostate Protection includes a sophisticated combination of herbs to not only balance testosterone production, but also to maintain the size and health of the prostate purify the urine, reduce inflammation and irritation, enhance immunity, and normalize cell production.

Prostate Protection also contains zinc, which is an important mineral for prostate health. The prostate needs ten times more zinc than any other organ. In fact, one of the reasons that American men suffer from prostate enlargement in such great numbers is because the food they eat is over-processed and lacking in essential minerals such as zinc. That is why Ayurveda recommends organic vegetables, and also why I mentioned quinoa in the dietary recommendations. A half-cup of cooked quinoa, for instance, contains three milligrams of zinc.

Yet important as zinc is, the recommendation is not that you take high doses of zinc, as that would be a simplistic, isolated approach that would only create further imbalance. Zinc is included in Prostate Protection, but it is combined with other herbs to help support the body's normal healing response.

As in every Ayurveda formula, Prostate Protection also includes secondary herbs to balance the primary herbs that are targeted for the prostate. Thus, there is no possibility that the formula targets one problem but creates an imbalance elsewhere. Everything is carefully balanced to create only a positive effect.Also, the entire herb is contained in every formula, not just the active ingredient. This is because nature packaged all the necessary elements to create balance, whereas if you extract the active ingredient, you can create an imbalance elsewhere in the body.
Q: The Ayurveda approach appears to be quite unique, in a time when most herbal formulas contain the active ingredient of one plant, which can create harmful side effects. Are there any other safe but effective herbal formulas that might be useful to men who wish to improve their prostate health?

A: If a man feels that he needs extra help in maintaining Shukra Dhatu and enhancing semen production, he could take Rejuvenation for Men, one tablet twice a day after eating. If you need extra help for the flow and purity of the urine, you could take Genitrac in addition to Prostate Protection. Take one tablet morning and evening. If you need an additional antioxidant to fight free radicals, take one tablet of ReGen Vitality with each tablet of Genitrac.

As mentioned earlier, ongoing stress can be an important factor in prostate health, and especially mental stress -- in the form of overuse or misuse of the mind -- can disturb the immune system and aggravate Apana Vata. For this, you could take Worry Free tablets and Tea along with Prostate Protection.

But if you feel that you need more than three of these products, you should consult a physician trained in Ayurveda, to make sure that you need that many products. The ayurvedic physician will also guide you in a personal dietary and lifestyle program to restore balance to the prostate and your mind, body and emotions.

© Maharishi Ayurveda Products International, Inc.

Sunday, September 17, 2006

What is Morphea Scleroderma?

What is the Definition of Morphea Scleroderma?
The word "scleroderma" means "hardening of the skin" and refers to one of the possible physical effects of the disease.

Localized scleroderma is referred to as morphea or linear scleroderma and does not affect the internal organs. People who develop localized scleroderma usually do not develop generalized scleroderma

Approximately 300,000 people in the United States have scleroderma. Women are affected three times as often as men. Although the disease can develop at any age, it most frequently begins past middle age. It is most frequently a chronic and often progressive illness.

In someone suffering with scleroderma, collagen (a protein manufactured by the connective tissues of the body) is produced in excess. This over-production of collagen can be likened to the process of scarring, which is the way the body heals a wound. For persons with scleroderma, the scarring gets out of hand. The production of collagen is unregulated and therefore, abnormal. Consequently, excess collagen is deposited in various organs and/or tissues of the body, especially in layers of the skin.

It is important to stress that the symptoms of scleroderma vary greatly from person to person. It is as though each person with scleroderma has his or her own version of the disease. Although scleroderma can indeed be serious, most people are able to live a normal life span with varying degrees of discomfort and/or disability.

There are two forms of scleroderma: localized and generalized (also called systemic sclerosis).
Localized scleroderma affects mainly the skin. It can affect skin in different areas of the body. It may also affect muscles and bone, but it does not affect internal organs. This form is usually not as severe as generalized scleroderma. People who develop localized scleroderma usually do not develop generalized scleroderma.

There are two types of localized scleroderma: morphea and linear. Early morphea scleroderma has an inflammatory stage, followed by one or more slowly enlarging patches or plaques. These plaques are most commonly oval in shape and vary in size. They have an ivory/yellow center and are surrounded by a violet colored area. The violet color signifies that the scleroderma is in a state of activity. The plaques feel firm and hard, but are not deeply bound down. They may be depressed or slightly elevated and are seen more often on the trunk, but may also occur on the face and extremities.

Generalized morphea may involve almost the entire skin surface.
An uncommon form of morphea is the guttate variety. It is characterized by multiple, small, chalk-white spots which vary in size from 1 to 10mm in diameter. The violet-colored line may surround all or some of the spots and in cases of long duration the line may be brown or grayish. Guttate morphea primarily involves the chest, neck and shoulders, and only occasionally other parts of the body. Localized morphea may last from a few months to many years. However, a large proportion of morphea patients improve spontaneously.

The cause of scleroderma is unknown. It is not contagious. It is not inherited or passed on from one generation to the next, except in rare circumstances. We do know that in scleroderma, the body produces too much of a protein called collagen. This excess collagen is deposited in the skin and in body organs, which causes thickening and hardening of the skin and affects the function of internal organs.

What Questions to ask Your Doctor About Morphea Scleroderma?
  • What tests are used to diagnose which types of Scleroderma?
    · What type of Scleroderma do I have?
    · What medications will you prescribe? What are the side effects?
    · How long after medication is initiated will there be relief or see a decrease in the Scleroderma?
    · Is there anything that aggravates the condition?
    · Is there anything that suppresses or stimulates the production of collagen?
    · Are there any signs or symptoms that may appear in the future that need to be reported immediately?
    · What is recommended to protect the skin? The hands?
    · What exercise program will be recommended?
    · Is there a support group in the area that could help cope with this condition?

Saturday, September 16, 2006

Simple Ways to Minimize Acid Indigestion

Individuals with a Pitta imbalance are susceptible to hyperacidity, peptic ulcers, and some types of inflammatory disorders. Stress, anger, impatience, extra-hot spicy foods, and environmental factors such as extreme heat can aggravate pitta. A few simple changes in lifestyle and diet can help bring pitta into balance for smoother, more effective digestion and greater calm and contentment.
Pitta is the heat energy within every cell but it is mainly located in the stomach area. Excess intake of heat producing foods can mean that the digestive tract overreacts with an increase in acid production. Pitta aggravating foods such as vinegar, tomatoes, sour citrus fruits, orange juice, salsa, yogurt (except lassi) onions, garlic, chili peppers, salty fried foods, and alcohol all aggravate the digestion when too much acid is present. These foods should be completely avoided until the acid level is brought into complete balance. And if there is a sensitivity to these foods they should be avoided in general.
It is important to not skip meals if you suffer from acid indigestion. Eating breakfast is especially crucial. Even if you are not especially hungry in the morning, it is important to at least take something light like stewed fruit, warm milk, or a date shake. Skipping breakfast has the effect of aggravating a subdosha of pitta called sadhaka pitta which governs the emotional heart. It is responsible for contentment and bliss. As lunch time approaches, with agni (the digestive fire) increasing and so also stomach acid, an empty stomach is not ideal from the ayurvedic viewpoint. It may result in irritability, anger, impatience and a feeling of being over hungry so that when lunch time comes you tend to overeat.
Try to avoid high-stress situations and practice stress management techniques. Enjoy natural beauty. The appreciation of natural beauty helps to balance sadhaka pitta and reduces stress. Favor cooling foods and drinks such as fresh coconut juice. Use an electric drill to make a hole in the coconut and use a straw to sip on the coconut juice. Use the fresh coconut meat in your vegetables, rice dishes, or chutneys. If you feel discomfort during the day, take a few sips of cool milk on an empty stomach.
Pomegranate juice and pomegranate chutney also help balance the acid in the stomach. It tastes sour but it is actually both astringent and bitter, which help balance pitta.
Fresh aloe vera gel straight from the leaf is balancing. Avoid the store bought juice as citric acid is used as a preservative and it is too acidic if you suffer from acid indigestion.
Baked fennel seeds are also recommended to help settle the stomach and balance digestion. Eat 1/4 teaspoon of baked fennel seeds 3 times a day between meals.
Rose water or mint lassi is good to drink with a meal as they are cooling and sweet to taste. Favor astringent, bitter, and sweet tastes in your diet. Split mung dahl, green leafy vegetables, grains, watermelon, honeydew melon, lettuce, mangos, and spices such as fenugreek seeds, coriander, cardamom, and mint should be included in your daily diet.
The Herbal Aci-Balance formula from Ayurveda helps balance stomach acid and digestion. It contains turpeth root, a special herb that both cleanses and balances the digestion. The Mind Plus formula helps balance the mind, especially in stressful situations.

I suggest her loughing, smile at least 5 times daily.

Laughter heals. It reduces pain. It protects the heart. But despite hundreds of studies on the healing power of laughter, researchers still haven't answered a vital
Does making an effort to laugh stop disease, or do people who are naturally happier enjoy better immunity? Ayurveda answers that question by taking the concept of medicinal laughter to a deeper level, to the level of bliss. Laughter is healing when it is a spontaneous expression of bliss.
The Council points out that bliss is a state of unshakable inner happiness, not dependent on outer expressions such as laughter. Not all laughter is happy, nor all tears sorrowful. For instance, Halle Berry cried when she became the first African American woman to receive an Oscar for best actress, and that wasn't because she was sad. On the other hand, a person could fake a laugh and not feel happy inside at all. The real question, then, is how to create bliss. Bliss supports the immune system, the endocrine system and balances the heart and mind. If you sustain a permanent state of bliss, then you will always enjoy the healing benefits of laughter.
What is Bliss?
Bliss (ananda) is a quality of pure consciousness. In a famous definition of health from the ayurvedic text Charaka Samhitå, a healthy person is defined as someone whose mind is full of bliss. Bliss results from a state of balance in mind and body. All of the treatments of Ayurveda are aimed at this one thing: to cultivate bliss. That's why we never prescribe anything with harmful side effects, because that would take an individual away from bliss. Every herbal formula contributes to overall well-being and bliss as well as targeting the specific cause of symptoms. The Council of Ayurveda Physicians describes five components of bliss mentioned in the ayurvedic texts.
Become Established in Ahimsa, Nonviolence
Ahimsa means to be nonviolent in thought, speech and action.
Anger, suspicion, frustration--these negative emotions destroy bliss. They disturb the balance of Sadhaka Pitta, the subdosha of Pitta that governs the emotions and their effect on your heart. Nonviolence is one of the Behavioral Rasayanas, or behaviors that create bliss and longevity in the same way as the most refined ayurvedic herbal compounds, known as Rasayanas. Behavioral Rasayanas include a wide range of behaviors, from respecting elders to cleanliness to sweet, truthful speech. Of course, these behaviors are spontaneously expressed by those established in higher states of consciousness. But for anyone who wishes to cultivate a blissful, spiritual mind, it's wise to observe them as best we can.
Eat Foods that Create Bliss
Foods that contain more intelligence of nature convert most easily into ojas. And ojas is the material equivalent of bliss. Ojas is the finest product of healthy digestion. It gives a sparkle to the eyes, glow to the skin, and immunity to the cells. Examples of ojas-producing foods are milk; ghee; whole grains; fresh, organic vegetables and fresh, sweet, juicy fruits. Examples of foods that destroy bliss from the ayurvedic perspective are leftovers, red meat, "junk" food, and canned, processed, packaged or frozen foods. These types of foods are difficult to digest and create ama, the toxic waste product of incomplete digestion that underlies most disease, dullness and negative emotions. You want to eat foods that are alive, not dead. Rather than looking at the caloric content of food, first make sure it is lively with nature's intelligence.
Know the Ayurvedic Daily RoutineKnowledge (vidya) of how to manage your day-to-day life brings bliss. When to go to sleep, when to wake up, when to eat--this practical knowledge helps you become attuned with nature. If you stay awake at night and sleep during the day, for instance, you may get the same amount of sleep, but you'll feel duller and less blissful. For sleep to rejuvenate, you need to fall asleep when all of nature settles down, before 10:00 at night. It's easier to fall asleep then and your sleep will be of a deeper quality. Waking up before 6:00 is also healthiest, because body and mind become infused with the energy of the early morning. Sleeping during the day causes the shrotas (microchannels) of the body to clog up, resulting in a dull, depressed feeling.
Control the Senses"here is a phrase in Sanskrit, 'indriya jaya,' which means 'winning over the senses. For deep inner happiness, your senses can't be ruling your mind. Rather, your mind should be governing them. After all, it's usually the desire to indulge in one of the senses that causes people to make mistakes (pragya apradha) that cause ill-health. For example, if you have a Pitta imbalance, and thus have too much heat in your body, you will feel healthier if you eat sweeter, more cooling foods to counteract the heat. But if you crave the taste of hot chilies, and eat them on a regular basis, you will intensify your Pitta imbalance, which in time could lead to problems such as anger, frustration, peptic ulcers or hemorrhoids. Your sense of taste in this case is driving your mind to make decisions that create ill-health and destroy bliss. Staying up late watching TV is another example of being overshadowed by the sense of sight, leading to an overactive mind, the destruction of ojas, and disturbed sleep. Allowing your mind to be overshadowed by the senses destroys bliss. Paradoxically, the only way to break the grip of the senses is to fill the mind with bliss, so that its own nature becomes more charming than the objects of the senses.
Infuse Your Mind with BlissTattvagyan, or transcendental knowledge of life, is the most important component of bliss. The Vedic texts teach us that when you know the transcendent, then bliss comes spontaneously, because the transcendent is a field of pure bliss. The Council of Ayurveda Physicians recommends Meditation, which takes only twenty minutes twice a day. Many studies conducted in major research institutions all over the world have demonstrated that people who practice Transcendental Meditation experience increased happiness, better health, more harmonious relationships and an overall sense of well-being. The interesting thing is that once you start experiencing the bliss of the transcendent, you naturally find it easier to act in harmony with natural law. In other words, it becomes easier to observe nonviolence, to choose foods that bring bliss, and to keep a healthy ayurvedic routine. And as your mind becomes more blissful, your mind will no longer be driven by the senses.
Finally, The Council of Ayurveda Physicians recommends two bliss-producing groups of herbs, mentioned in the ayurvedic texts. If you follow these simple guidelines, you'll find that your laughter will reflect a spontaneous state of bliss. That is the healthiest state of all.

You have to always increase tempreture special in the winter time and try to reduce stress:

Imagine that last night you were working so hard on a project report that you could not sleep till 2 a.m.
This morning, you did not hear the alarm, and woke up to find that you're running terribly late for the meeting where you were supposed to present your report.
On your way, pouring rain, heavy traffic, and construction work on the highway slowed you down.
By the time you reached work, the meeting was halfway through; without you, of course. In the cold stillness of the office, you heard your heart thump loud and dangerous.
Notice something about the above scenario? Most of the things that happened were beyond your control.
What you do now, however, is totally within your control. Don't try to calm your nerves by grabbing a cup of coffee. That will only give you a false adrenaline rush, and within no time, you'll feel worse than ever.
What is this "adrenaline rush" anyway? To put it very simply, adrenaline is nature's way of helping you deal with an emergency. When stress levels climb, like rivers spilling out of their banks in a flood, your nervous system kicks in, secreting hormones that help you gear up for a "fight or flight" response.
But nature intended this mechanism as an emergency measure. The problem today is that we experience stress so often that our body's neuro-transmission mechanism is having to kick in many times a day. In other words, our adrenal glands are fatigued and overworked. Result: millions of us are suffering from problems like high or low blood-sugar levels, digestion problems, irritability, weight gain or weight loss, heart disease, lowered immune function, and just plain exhaustion.
This is how modern science analyzes stress. Now let's see what ayurveda has to say about it.
How Ayurveda Explains Stress
Stress, in ayurvedic terms, is intimately related to the balance of our three vital energies or doshas--Vata, Pitta, and Kapha. To a very great extent, our daily habits determine how harmoniously these doshas function. Maintaining them in good balance, especially in the face of everyday stresses, is like constantly fine-tuning a radio in bad weather to be able to get a clear signal.
Stress and its related problems crop up when we fail to "tune" our radios. But this "tuning" is easy--and more fun--to do, if we think about the instant and ample benefits it yields. For instance, if you stay warm in cold weather, you will make your Vata dosha feel balanced. If you avoid eating rice everyday, you will make your Kapha dosha calmer. If you drink water throughout the day, your Pitta dosha will be happy. If take the time to eat a good lunch, you will calm down all your doshas.
What to Do About Everyday Stress
Besides reading more about your doshas, there are some simple things you can do to sweep away daily stress. To begin with, take a good look at where your stresses are originating. Are the factors more external or internal?
External factors include things such as work pressures, financial problems, too small or too big a home, a nagging spouse or interfering in-laws.
Internal factors such as lack of sleep, loss of appetite, bad digestion, low self-esteem, a pessimistic attitude to life are no less stress-generating.
Good news. All of these factors are perfectly controllable. Nature offers us two basic options: fight, or flight. For most of us, flight is not really an option.
The challenge is to stay and play. Here is how you can do it:
Communicate: A great deal of stress piles up when we refuse to talk about it--even to ourselves. Each time we suppress stress, it piles up like a toxin inside our minds, and slowly seeps into our psyche. The deeper it filters into our consciousness, the more difficult it seems to get rid of.
But even if you have so far been unwilling to admit to your stresses, you can improve the situation. Talk to someone you can confide in. Or take the time to write a journal and pour out your feelings to yourself. Learn Meditation class. Sign up for yoga. Being among other people who are trying to find similar answers will make you feel you are not alone. You'll start thinking and feeling more positive.
Make a Check-list: At any time during your day, there are little jobs that require attention. When you are swamped with other, more important work, the little "things-to-do" start gnawing at your mind, often sub-consciously. You would feel much better if you went ahead and did those things--for example, calling up your dentist to fix an appointment, sending off an e-mail you've been meaning to write for three days, renewing a library book.
Each time you complete a small task, check it off your list. There's something very comforting about checking a "DONE" box! Break larger projects into smaller ones so they're not so overwhelming. Each time you do this, you will free up your mind so it can relax for a while.
Turn to Nature: Bring more herbs into your life. Grow them on your windowsill, or start an herb garden--most herbs grow wonderfully well in containers. Brew herbal beverages, or try Ayurveda's range of gourmet mind-body teas such as Be-Trim Tea, Worry-Free Tea, and Sniffle-Free Tea. Made from the purest, most healing herbs available today, these teas are not only flavorful but also wonderfully calming. Take a bath using such relaxation-inducing essential oils as lavender, chamomile or jasmine.
Eat meals that are high in fresh, natural ingredients. It's amazing what a big difference your choice of food can make in helping you cope with stress. A morning cup of coffee may be a habit you cannot seem to give up, but caffeine stimulates the adrenal glands to release the stress neurotransmitters, which, over time, tires them. Also, those refined carbs you eat for breakfast--bagel, donut, rolls--and the sugar in your coffee affect your blood-sugar levels, which can cause your emotions to swing like a pendulum.
Therefore, don't start your day with coffee. Start with a stewed apple. Replace store-bought ready-to-eat pasta with whole grains. Eat less of yeast-based bread; make more fresh bread. Avoid hard, aged cheeses--eat fresh home-made cottage cheese or paneer. Don't buy pre-sliced or canned fruit and veggies. Buy them from a local farmer's market, process them fresh, and cook them the same day. Don't buy vegetable oil; bring home a jar of ghee or cook in sunflower oil. Give your health a boost with Chavanprash, the star Ayurveda herbal supplement made from 44 rare herbs and fruits. Chavanprash strengthens the immune system, soothes the nerves, and increases ojas--or essential energy.
In these simple ways, you will slowly throw out stress and bring more bliss into your life.

Monday, September 11, 2006

Too Old to Build Muscle?

Too Old to Build Muscle?
Q: Is heavy weight lifting a good exercise for someone who is 60 years old? -- Steve Hershman

A: Weight lifting in the context of strength training (also called resistance training) is an important part of an overall fitness program regardless of age. In fact, research shows that even people in their 90s can improve their strength and walking speed through weight training.

I discussed your question about "heavy" weight lifting with my personal trainer Dan Bornstein.

He explained that he defines "heavy" as enough weight to prevent an individual from completing eight repetitions of an exercise because of muscle fatigue or failure. For example, if you were working with a 10-pound weight and could not successfully repeat a move eight times, the 10-pound weight would be too heavy for you. Ideally, to build strength, you should be able to do two or three sets of eight to 12 repetitions with good form before the muscle that you are working tires and "fails." Once you can do three sets of eight easily with perfect form, you generally can handle a bit more weight.

If you’re new to strength training, I urge you to work with a trainer or coach if possible. They will help you learn proper form in order to avoid injury and to perform the exercises properly for the effect you want. Look for a trainer certified by the American College of Sports Medicine or the National Strength and Conditioning Association. If you can’t afford a trainer, you can learn strength training exercises from the many books on the subject. One that I recommend is "The Whartons’ Strength Book" by Jim and Phil Wharton and Bev Browning (Times Books, 1999). Dan Bornstein makes the point that as long as you learn correct form, age has little to do with the amount of weight you should be able to lift in a program aimed at building muscle and increasing your strength.

I applaud your interest in strength training. It can help prevent osteoporosis, maintain mobility and prevent falls and is equally important for men and women.

Andrew Weil, M.D.

–Author of:
Eight Weeks to Optimum Health
Spontaneous Healing
The Natural Mind
The Marriage of the Sun and Moon
Health and Healing
Natural Health, Natural Medicine
From Chocolate to Morphine (with Winifred Rosen)

Exercise, Eating to Enhance Memory?

Exercise, Eating to Enhance Memory?

Q: What kind of nutrition or exercises help mitigate memory loss in aging adults? Is it true that the shrinking hippocampus is to blame? -- Veek Tostia

A: Nutrition and exercise can help stop or slow age-related memory loss and even help prevent Alzheimer's disease. We know that the incidence of Alzheimer's is higher than normal among people whose diets are high in saturated fat, which causes free radical damage leading to inflammation of the brain. On the other hand, omega-3 fatty acids found in salmon, sardines and flax seeds appear to be protective. Blueberries are another food that seems to help. The active component is the anthocyanin pigments they contain. These are the protective compounds that make the berries blue and are responsible for their antioxidant potency - one half cup of blueberries packs as much antioxidant power as five servings of peas, carrots, apples, squash, or broccoli. Dharma Singh Khalsa, MD, President/Medical Director of Alzheimer's Prevention Foundation here in Tucson, recommends eating one-half cup of fresh or frozen blueberries daily. Vitamins C and E are also protective.
Research in rates suggests that the yellow spice turmeric, a major ingredient in American mustard and Indian curry can reduce the risk of Alzheimer's disease. This may help explain the unusually low incidence of Alzheimer's in India, where people consume significant amounts of turmeric every day.
You can also slow memory loss with regular aerobic exercise, but keeping your mind active is important, too. Dr. Khalsa also explains that cognitive exercise such as doing puzzles or discussing current events can increase crucial connections between brain cells. He recommends combining physical and mental exercise by singing familiar songs while walking or reading the newspaper while riding a stationary exercise bike.
You're correct that the hippocampus, the area of the brain where information is stored temporarily before transfer to the cerebral cortex, is involved in age-related memory problems. Dr. Khalsa explains that in addition to age, chronic stress can harm the hippocampus via the release of high levels of the hormone cortisol from the adrenal gland. Cortisol is directly toxic to neurons, it actually destroys hippocampal cells resulting in loss of the ability to voluntarily recall previously learned information. You can lower cortisol levels with meditation and other relaxation techniques.

Andrew Weil, M.D.
–Author of:
Eight Weeks to Optimum Health
Spontaneous Healing
The Natural Mind
The Marriage of the Sun and Moon
Health and Healing
Natural Health, Natural Medicine
From Chocolate to Morphine (with Winifred Rosen)

An Indian Spice for Alzheimer's?

An Indian Spice for Alzheimer's?

Q: British are investigating the possible connection between curcumin and treatment for Alzheimer's disease. Anything to this? -- Richard Bray

A: Brits aren't alone in this effort. Researchers here in the United States have been pursuing clues to the effects of curcumin, a compound found in the spice turmeric that is responsible for the yellow color of Indian curry and American mustard. Studies show that elderly villagers in India appear to have the lowest rate of Alzheimer's disease in the world. Researchers speculate that curcumin, which has powerful antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties might play a role, because Indians eat turmeric with almost every meal.

In a study at the University of California at Los Angeles, scientists fed curcumin to rats prone to accumulate beta-amyloid plaque in their brains – the abnormality associated with Alzheimer's disease in humans. Curcumin blocked the accumulation of beta-amaloid plaque and also appeared to reduce inflammation related to Alzheimer's disease in neurologic tissue. The rats fed curcumin also performed better on memory tests than rats on normal diets.

The UCLA study isn't the only one that suggests that curcumin might prove helpful for treatment and prevention of Alzheimer's. Researchers at the University of Illinois have also found that it helps prevent plaque formation. And preliminary studies at Vanderbilt University suggest that curcumin may block the progression of multiple sclerosis (MS). Mice with an MS-like illness showed little or no signs of disease after being injected with curcumin, while their untreated counter parts went on to severe paralysis. Research from Japan also suggests that turmeric may help prevent colitis, an inflammation of the colon.

My friend, Paul Schulick of New Chapter, Inc., brought me up to speed on curcumin research. He tells me that only low dose curcumin reduced plaque in the Alzheimer's disease studies. This is good news since it suggests that curcumin is most effective at doses well below pharmaceutical strength. Schulick also emphasizes that turmeric contains many other compounds besides curcumin and points out that people in India consume the whole spice not an isolated element. Turmeric appears to have significant anti-inflammatory and cancer-protective effects as well, so I think it is good to find ways to include it in our diets.

Andrew Weil, M.D.–Author of:
Eight Weeks to Optimum Health
Spontaneous Healing
The Natural Mind
The Marriage of the Sun and Moon
Health and Healing
Natural Health, Natural Medicine
From Chocolate to Morphine (with Winifred Rosen)

Eating to Prevent Alzheimer's?

Eating to Prevent Alzheimer's?

Q: I heard on the news that Alzheimer's disease may be caused by eating too much animal protein and might be prevented by taking B vitamins. Is this true? -- Anonymous
A: probably heard about results of a study published in the February 14, 2002 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine which showed that people with high blood levels of homocysteine have twice the normal risk of developing Alzheimer's disease. Homocysteine is a toxic amino acid, a breakdown product of protein metabolism,that has been linked to heart attacks and strokes. Blood levels of homocysteine tend to be higher in people whose diets are high in animal protein and low in fruits and leafy vegetables. Fruits and leafy vegetables provide folic acid and other B vitamins that help the body get rid of homocysteine.
This study is interesting: it doesn't prove that diet causes Alzheimer's disease, but it amplifies earlier knowledge that people with the disease have high homocysteine levels. The earlier studies didn't reveal whether the disease was responsible for the high homocysteine levels or whether the high levels were there first and might, therefore, be a cause of the disease. This study looked at 1,092 men and women whose homocysteine levels were monitored for eight years. All were healthy at the outset but by the year 2000, 111 had dementia including 83 with Alzheimer's disease. Those study participants whose homocysteine levels were highest – above 14 micromoles per liter of blood – had nearly twice the risk of Alzheimer's than those with lower homocysteine levels.
The researchers, a team from Boston University and Tufts University, aren't advising people to take B vitamins to prevent Alzheimer's because there haven't yet been studies proving that this strategy works. But we know for sure that a diet high in fruits and vegetables helps keep homocysteine levels low and thus protects against heart disease and strokes. I personally recommend taking a multivitamin that gives you 400 micrograms of folic acid in addition to what you might get from your diet (Some people might absorb this vitamin better in supplement form, and I consider this good insurance.)
Incidentally, results of another study reported that the more often you challenge your mind, the lower your risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease. The study, published in the February 13, 2002 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association found that people who participate daily in such activities as reading, listening to the radio, watching television, playing cards, checkers and other games were at lower risk. More research is needed to determine which types of mental activities are most protective.
Andrew Weil, M.D.

–Author of:
Eight Weeks to Optimum Health
Spontaneous Healing
The Natural Mind
The Marriage of the Sun and Moon
Health and Healing
Natural Health, Natural Medicine
From Chocolate to Morphine (with Winifred Rosen)

Sunday, September 10, 2006

Spinal Injections May Ease Rheumatoid Arthritis

(HealthDay News) -- Drugs to treat rheumatoid arthritis were more effective when they were delivered into the central nervous system of rats, a new study finds.

Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, used the drugs to block a protein called p38, which is involved in a number of cellular processes associated with the development of RA. It's believed that p38 is activated in the central nervous system in response to peripheral pain and inflammation.

Several substances that block the action of p38 have been shown to be effective in animal models of arthritis and are currently undergoing clinical trials in people with rheumatoid arthritis.

In this study, p38-blocking drugs were injected directly into the spinal cords of rats with arthritis. Compared to arthritic rats that received no active drug, the treated rats had substantially less inflammation, arthritis, and joint damage.

Rats that received the same amount of drugs through injections under the skin did not show any beneficial effect on the joints. This systemic treatment approach is currently being tested in human patients, but with much higher drug doses.

The researchers said their findings suggest that direct delivery into the spinal cord may reduce the side effects and possibly the costs of p38 inhibitors without reducing the benefits to patients.
The study was published in the September issue of PLoS Medicine.

Health Tip: Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease

(HealthDay News) -- Hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD) is common in babies and children under age 10, but it can also affect adults.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says it is not at all related to foot-and-mouth disease that occurs in farm animals. The condition in people is caused by a virus, and can be passed from person to person via direct contact with contaminated saliva, feces or nasal discharge.
Symptoms usually include fever, rash on the palms of the hands and soles of the feet, and mouth sores. The first signs are usually red, painful sores on the tongue, cheeks or gums that blister. The skin rash appears as blisters or flat red bumps, but they typically aren't itchy. HFMD can be diagnosed with a throat culture or fecal sample, but doctors also can diagnose the disease without those tests.
Since HFMD is caused by a virus, there is no treatment. The CDC recommends preventing its spread by thoroughly washing hands after coming into contact with an exposed child, particularly after changing a diaper. As the disease is easily spread in child care settings, the CDC also suggests regularly washing shared toys in a disinfecting solution.

Stem Cells Improve Child Brain Cancer Outcomes

(HealthDay News) -- A highly targeted treatment that relies on the patient's own stem cells improves outcomes for children with brain tumors called medulloblastomas, U.S. researchers report.
Children with high-risk medulloblastoma have a 30 percent to 40 percent chance of surviving to five years, and chemotherapy usually lasts for about 12 months.
However, "not only can we now cure about 70 percent of children with high-risk medulloblastoma, we can also cure more than 80 percent of those with standard-risk disease with a shorter, and therefore more convenient, chemotherapy approach," lead researcher Dr. Amar Gajjar, from St Jude's Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, said in a prepared statement.
In this new treatment regimen, radiation therapy is tailored to the severity of the disease and is then followed by a shorter course of chemotherapy than used by doctors in the past. The new regimen resulted in substantially improved survival, say researchers reporting in the Sept. 7 online edition of The Lancet Oncology.
The shorter course of chemotherapy is made possible because stem cells taken from the child before chemotherapy are implanted after each round of chemotherapy, essentially allowing the child's body to recover from the damage caused by chemotherapy before the next round begins.
In their study, Gajjar's team treated 134 children with medulloblastoma. The researchers adjusted doses of radiation therapy depending on how severe the disease was. Children were classified as "standard-risk" cases if any tumors remaining after surgery were small and there was no evidence that cancer had spread to the rest of the body. Children were classified as high risk if they had larger tumors, or any evidence of metastasis.
During treatment, children in the high-risk group were given higher doses of radiation than the children in the standard-risk group. Both groups were given a shortened course of chemotherapy and a re-infusion of bone marrow stem cells after each cycle of chemotherapy, the researchers said.
By using their risk-adapted approach to radiotherapy, Gajjar's group was able to increase the survival rate of affected children to about 70 percent.
"By reducing the amount of [chemotherapy drug] cisplatin from eight doses to four doses, and the amount of vincristine from 32 doses to just eight doses, we could alleviate a lot of the neurotoxicity associated with the higher dose of vincristine without reducing survival," Gajjar said.
He believes the findings could mark a real advance in neuro-oncology.
"Our research focused on understanding the biology of medulloblastoma," Gajjar explained. "We now need to develop a biological system of staging that works in conjunction with the current clinical staging system, to further refine treatment for this disease."
Until then, "investigators should consider adopting a similar therapeutic strategy to ours for their high-risk patients," Gajjar said. "This approach should be feasible in most pediatric oncology units at academic medical centers, but meticulous staging and careful attention to detail during radiotherapy planning and treatment are essential to obtaining similar outcomes," he added.
However, another expert said the findings won't change her current practice.
"What the researchers have shown is that, with comparable doses we have used in the past, you can treat children with medulloblastoma with intense chemotherapy and stem cell rescue and get results pretty close to what has been reported in the past with other intensive treatments," said Dr. Anna J. Janss, co-director of the Neuro-Oncology Program at the Aflac Cancer Center of Children's Healthcare of Atlanta.
Moreover, the groups' survival statistics are not very different from what has been published for the two risk groups in the past, Janss said.
"This study doesn't make me say: 'Oh, I want to treat all my patients this way,'" Janss said. "It makes me say this is an approach that is as good as what has been done before, but it doesn't make me want to harvest stem cells from every child I take care of," she said.
For standard medulloblastoma, Janss said she wouldn't use short-course chemotherapy. "The survival statistics aren't sufficiently impressive for the standard-risk group to justify the cost of this intensive treatment," she said. "The last results published showed five-year survival at 79 percent, which is statistically no different than this study."
"When you look at the high-risk group, the survival statistics are not a whole lot different from what's been published," Janss said. "At five years, survival is as high as 67 percent. I'm not sure that's a real difference."
Janss also noted the researchers didn't comment on the long-term effects of their treatment.
"The disease is horrible, and the treatment has significant consequences on the child's brain function, learning ability, memory and hormone function," she noted.

More information
For more on medullablastoma, head to the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

Health Tip: Preventing Birth Defects

(HealthDay News) -- While many birth defects are caused by genetic, environmental or unknown factors, a mother-to-be's behaviors also can heighten the risk of birth abnormalities.
Here are suggestions for pregnant women on improving the chances for a healthy birth, courtesy of the Nemours Foundation:
· Even before you're pregnant or when you're trying to conceive, take folic acid supplements, and make sure you've had all the necessary vaccinations and that you've tested negative for any sexually transmitted diseases.
· Once you are pregnant, talk to your doctor about any prescription or over-the-counter medications you take.
· Don't drink any alcohol, take drugs or smoke cigarettes, and stay clear of secondhand smoke.
· Take vitamins and have regular prenatal visits with your doctor to be sure your baby is healthy.
· Maintain a healthy diet, and get regular exercise as recommended by your doctor.

Saturday, September 02, 2006

The Himalayan Health Secret Goes To Thailand Himalayan GojiTM Juice Creates Worldwide Momentum!

Our Thailand Grand Opening Event is scheduled for September 16, 2006 at the Landmark Hotel in Bangkok.
Few people are ever at the right place at the right time. If you are reading this, you could be one of the people who are. It is every Direct Sales marketer’s dream, getting involved in a ground-floor opportunity with tremendous upside potential, but avoiding the significant risks of start-up opportunities. To put it another way, joining a rock-solid, debt-free company with unmatched credibility that is entering momentum and expanding internationally. That is what Leaders from around the world are saying about FreeLife International.
FreeLife International is a 11-year-old, debt-free, Inc. 500 company aligned in a long-term, exclusive relationship with the world’s foremost authority on nutrition, Dr. Earl Mindell. FreeLife has built a solid reputation of trust with its distributor base. It has never missed, or been late, on a check. Additionally, CEO and Co-Founder Ray Faltinsky, a Yale Law School graduate, was asked to join the industry’s top Leaders by sitting on the Board of Directors for the Direct Selling Association (DSA).
What more could you ask for? How about the fact that FreeLife International has burst onto the Direct Sales radar screen with the launch of what Dr. Mindell calls "the most important product for health and wellness that I have seen in the last 40 years."
With double-digit growth every single month for over 2 years, FreeLife has entered the first phases of momentum. And with rapid international expansion, FreeLife expects that momentum to continue for many years to come.

BUILT TO LAST
Ray Faltinsky explained, "Kevin Fournier and I began FreeLife with a handshake, and a mutual promise. We agreed to keep the promises we made to our Marketing Executives. We realized people would bring to us their time, their hopes, and their dreams, and that we must do everything in our power to always be worthy of their trust."
After that handshake and promise, Ray and Kevin worked from 1991 through 1995 planning the launch of FreeLife. Their efforts included raising capital from 20 investors including famed investment guru, Anson Beard of Morgan Stanley/Dean Witter. They were also able to attract leading nutritionist, and author of the greatest selling nutritional book in history, The Vitamin Bible, Dr. Earl Mindell to the FreeLife team in an exclusive relationship. A few short years later, FreeLife was ranked by Inc. magazine as one of the fastest-growing, privately held companies in America. Ray and Kevin believed that together they could build a company that would make a positive difference. "We had seen so many people hurt and disillusioned by Direct Sales," President and Co-Founder Kevin Fournier recalled. "Ray and I wanted to build a company that was a safe harbor for people who were looking for a permanent home. We wanted FreeLife to be the last company where they would ever need to build
a business."

THE HIMALAYAN HEALTH SECRET
In October 2003, after 7 years of development, FreeLife launched Himalayan GojiTM Juice. FreeLife’s staggering growth is a result of this proprietary juice product patterned after the ancient recipes of the Himalayan people – the traditional health practitioners who discovered its powerful benefits thousands of years ago. Today, the goji berry is considered by many to be the most nutient-dense food on the planet.
Himalayan Goji Juice is truly unique, combining ancient history, modern science, and an incredibly delicious taste into one product.
According to Faltinsky, "It was a natural choice for Dr. Mindell to capture goji’s goodness; standardize its nutritional properties; and combine it into a beverage that tastes absolutely incredible. We believe Himalayan Goji Juice will become a billion-dollar brand over the next several years. We feel blessed to have the opportunity to help so many people improve their lives."

WHAT’S GOJI
While the goji berry has occupied an important place in tradtional Asian medicine for countless generations, the secrets of its nutritional benefits have remained a mystery to most of the world. But, since its discovery in the Himalayas, those who know of the remarkable goji berry are awed by its unmatched health-promoting powers. This tiny red fruit may just be the world’s most powerful food.
According to Dr. Mindell, "What is so facinating about the goji berry is that it seems to benefit nearly every aspect of the human body. I have been involved in the nutritional industry for a long time, and I have never seen a nutrient so universally beneficial for improving health."
Scientific research from major universities around the world has validated the remarkable health benefits of the goji berry claimed by the Himalayan Healers thousands of years ago. Over 70 studies have already been published in prestigious health journals, including: European Journal of Pharmacology; Journal of Chinese and Herbal Medicine; Journal of Ethnopharmacology; Chinese Oncology Magazine; Chinese Stomatology Magazine; Chinese Journal of Biotechnology; Journal of Asian Natural Products Research; British Journal of Nutrition; and International Immunopharmacology.

DESTINY STRIKES AGAIN!
It was in 1996 when Dr. Mindell met a prominent Asian healer who introduced him to the miraculous goji berry. He dedicated the next 7 years to unlocking the secret of this ancient Himalayan remedy, vowing to his Chinese friend that he would find a way to share its benefits with the world.
True to his word, Dr. Mindell and his research team did indeed uncover the secret of this fascinating berry. Goji’s 4 unique polysaccharides (LBP-1, LBP-2, LBP-3, LBP-4) act as Master Molecules in the body. Synergized together, they serve as directors and carriers of the instructions that cells use to communicate with each other. As a result, they are of great importance to the smooth functioning of virtually every cell in the entire body.
Dr. Mindell also discovered the ‘Fingerprint’ of the goji that originated in the Himalayas – its unique Spectral Signature. Thus, FreeLife became the only company to be able to identify, isolate, and harvest only those special goji berries with the active principles in exact balance for the most potent and powerful goji product.
After 7 years of exhaustive research, Dr. Earl Mindell, together with FreeLife, launched Himalayan Goji Juice, becoming the first and only company to perfect a difficult and demanding proprietary extraction process to create the only standardized form of this incredible plant available in the world today!

SEAMLESS INTERNATIONAL EXPANSION
Now that FreeLife’s international expansion is accelerating, the opportunity to build a worldwide business in FreeLife is a reality. It has e-system software that helps make the FreeLife compensation plan seamless across international borders. This will increase the already huge potential for creating financial wealth.

COMPENSATION for PART-TIME beginners and FULL-TIME pros
First, a compensation plan is only as good as the quality of the products backing it up. That was FreeLife’s belief from day one when they teamed up with Dr. Earl Mindell. With 75 percent of FreeLife orders coming from customers not building a business and well over a 90 percent reorder rate month to month, this provides a strong foundation for long-term residual income based on real product consumption.
Second, the 10-level TriMax plan, with low cost of entry and a lucrative fast start program without front loading or expensive starter packages, has something for everyone. It provides fast-start income coupled with significant long-term residual income. It has achieved that delicate balance between providing excellent income for the part-timer while at the same time providing enormous long-term residual income for the full-time leader.

FOR MORE INFORMATION ON HOW TO JOIN THE GOJI-TEAM TO SHARE THE OUTSTANDING HIMALAYAN HEALTH BENEFITS AND EARN INCOME WITH UNLIMITED UPSIDE POTENTIAL!

www.RedBerry.GojiTeam.com (for a 10 Minute Movie Presentation) www.TinyRedBerry.FreeLife.com (for Himalayan Goji Juice product info)

Kamaraja