SuperHealth Challenge Tip!

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Posted on 1st March 2012 by admin in Super Health

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Sarcopenia, or muscle catabolism (loss), is a major but largely ignored health issue until it becomes critical (usually in the aging population, but the same process happens to everyone to some degree). Maintaining and increasing lean muscle mass is vital to health and is key to successful weight optimization and maintenance. People generally lose muscle mass as they age with poor nutrition, lower protein intake, and decreased physical activity. In an ever-increasing spiral, lean body mass is replaced with body fat, which in turn produces inflammatory cytokines (small cell-signaling protein molecules) and aromatase, which converts testosterone to estrogen, leading to low testosterone levels, particularly in men. This leads to increased body fat, decreased levels of testosterone, reduced hormone production, low energy levels, and numerous diseases of aging.

KC Craichy
Author
The Super Health Diet


SuperHealth Challenge Tip!

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Posted on 9th January 2012 by admin in Super Health

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Body systems and organs that were once capable of cleaning out unwanted substances are now completely overloaded to the point where toxic material remains inside our tissues, causing a cascade of issues that includes weight gain. Our bodies try to protect us from these hazardous toxins by storing them in various places, particularly in fat cells and in the colon, often coating them with mucus and fat in an attempt to correct the imbalance or prevent an immune response. This excess mucus can cause significant weight gain that will not come off until the hazardous substances are detoxified from the body through detoxification diets or herbal cleansing programs.

The human body has several systems for detoxifying the wide array of pesticides and other foreign compounds that are found in our environment as well as eliminating the toxic end products of naturally occurring metabolic processes produced within the body. Provided the systems are functioning well, the detoxification process will occur quickly and without undue damage to the body. However, as with many bodily processes, the efficiency of these systems may be diminished with declines in general health as we age. This highlights the importance of Superfood Nutrition, combining the most powerfully known nutrients with superfoods and maintaining ample supplies of antioxidants and other liver-protective nutrients in the body.

KC Craichy
Author
The Super Health Diet


LivingFuel HealthAlert: New Study – Vitamin Combo May Delay Aging

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Posted on 2nd March 2010 by admin in Health Alerts

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A cocktail of vitamins, minerals and herbals may delay the major aspects of the aging process and extend lifespan by 10 per cent, according to a new study from Canada.

Mice fed a supplement containing 30 dietary ingredients did not experience a 50 per cent loss in daily movement like other non-supplemented animals, according to findings published in the current issue of Experimental Biology and Medicine.

Researchers say the benefits were linked to increases in the activity of mitochondria, the power plants of the cells, as well as by reducing levels of free radicals produced by the mitochondria.

Lead researcher David Rollo of McMaster University said these findings could help people live better longer.

“This study obtained a truly remarkable extension of physical function in old mice, far greater than the respectable extension of longevity that we previously documented. This holds great promise for extending the quality of life of ‘health span’ of humans,” Rollo added.

Read more here.


LivingFuel HealthAlert: Saving Physiques From Muscle Loss

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Posted on 19th February 2010 by admin in Health Alerts

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(UPI) A U.S. researcher says future generations may slow sarcopenia — muscle loss due to aging. Study leader Holly Van Remmen of the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio found muscle cells die when oxidative stress impairs the cells’ energy centers — mitochondria. Understanding how to help mitochondria function may lead to new treatments for muscle disorders, Van Remmen says.

Read more here.