Heartland Clinic of Chiropractic

We do a thorough examination to find the source of your pain. X-rays, Muscle scans, Heat scans ect. Check out our patients say at http://www.heartlandchiroclinic.com/ Our Chiropractic office is located at 2525 Demers ave, Grand Forks Nd. Our Phone number is 701-746-5977. If you would like to have new articles sent to your email go to http://www.heartlandchiroclinic.com/ and let us know you would like to subscribe to the email list.



Saturday, June 16, 2012

Chiropratic and Diabetes

What does your brain and nervous system have to do with your health? Everything! Here is a study showing how Chiropractic can help your body to function better! Enjoy, Dr. K
Chiropractic and diabetes - The connection between blood sugar and the spine Friday, April 13, 2012 by: Healthy Times Newspaper

(NaturalNews) The possibility for chiropractic care to help people with diabetes is an up and coming area of research, and it is an important one. Roughly one out of every three men and two out of every five women born in the year 2000 will suffer from diabetes in their lifetime.
Research points to evidence that chiropractic care may make a valuable contribution to a wellness protocol that helps those diagnosed with diabetes. Diabetes is the fifth deadliest disease in the United States and a growing epidemic worldwide, so help is desperately needed!
The average person may not recognize how diabetes and chiropractic are connected. What does the back have to do with blood sugar? Often, an electrician understands this faster than most people. Interfere with the current flowing through the wires and the appliances or areas of the house lose normal function or might even catch fire.
If the nerve supply from the upper neck or middle back (the two areas that supply the pancreas) are disturbed, pancreatic function suffers; maybe in it's ability to produce enzymes to digest proteins, fats and carbohydrates, or maybe insulin production, or both. Blood sugar and digestion become unbalanced, resulting in either in diabetes or hypoglycemia.

Studies suggest a chiropractic-spine-nerve-blood sugar connection

A study published in the Journal of Vertebral Subluxation Research illustrated the positive effects of chiropractic when used as part of an integrative treatment for adult onset diabetes diagnosed by a medical doctor. Along with chiropractic care, the patient also received nutritional and exercise guidance.
After one month of being on the program, the patient's glucose blood and urine levels normalized and remained stable. His medical doctor, who monitored his progress, said the patient would not need insulin if the condition remained stable.

Canada is currently leading the research effort
The National Post reported: "DIABETES BREAKTHROUGH: In a discovery that has stunned even those behind it, scientists at a Toronto hospital say they have proof the body's nervous system helps trigger diabetes, opening the door to a potential near-cure of the disease that affects millions of Canadians. Diabetic mice became healthy virtually overnight after researchers injected a substance to counteract the effect of malfunctioning pain neurons in the pancreas.
'I couldn't believe it,' said Dr. Michael Salter, a pain expert at the Hospital for Sick Children. 'Mice with diabetes suddenly didn't have diabetes any more.' The excitement of the team from Sick Kids, whose work is being published today in the journal Cell, is almost palpable.
A recent case study published in the November 2011 edition of the Journal of Pediatric, Maternal, & Family Health documents a case of a four-year-old child who had terrific results stabilizing her blood sugar through chiropractic care. The patient was diagnosed with spinal subluxation in the upper cervical region. She began chiropractic care and was seen a total of 24 times over a two-month period. During this two-month period, she experienced a decrease in hemoglobin A1C from 7.2 percent to 6..5 percent. She also decreased the amount of insulin used from 15 units to 11 units per day.
These results are quite remarkable because the literature states that intensive medical treatment of type I diabetes often does not succeed in lowering A1C levels under 7.0 percent. Chiropractic care works by optimizing the neural connections throughout the body. This enhanced brain-body connection works to better coordinate immunity and hormone function throughout the body.
Article contributed by Murray Galbraith, D.C., of Galbraith Chiropractic.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Foods That Fight Memory Loss


 None of us want to slowly lose our memory right? Wellness Chiropractic is focused the health of your on Central Nervous System which is the Brain and Spinal cord! Here's a great article that talks about foods that fight memory loss! Enjoy! Dr. K
 
There’s a new way to potentially prevent Alzheimer’s—a disease that we know frustratingly little about—and it’s not some exotic, expensive or potentially dangerous drug. It’s actually an affordable, natural component that’s found in everyday foods. For the first time, there’s a human study that confirms an association between dietary choline, an amino acid found in eggs and some other foods, and better cognitive performance. The study, from Boston University School of Medicine, appeared in the November 2011 issue of theAmerican Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

BRAIN BOOSTER

Researchers investigated the dietary habits of 744 women and 647 men ranging from 36 to 83 years of age. None had dementia when the study started. In the early 1990s and then again between 1998 and 2001, participants filled out a questionnaire about their diets—they were asked how often they had eaten particular foods in the past year. After the second questionnaire was given, the researchers performed neuropsychological tests to evaluate the participants’ cognitive skills, including verbal memory (remembering a story) and visual memory (remembering images). They also did MRI brain scans to see if there were any tell-tale lesions in the white matter areas called white-matter hyperintensities (WMH). WMH in the brain is considered a marker of vascular disease and is strongly associated with cognitive impairments that precede Alzheimer’s disease.
The results: First, this study demonstrated that people who were currently eating the most choline performed better on tests of verbal and visual memory, compared with those who currently had the lowest choline intake. Researchers also found that those who had eaten the highest amounts of choline years earlier (as demonstrated by the first questionnaire) were more likely to have little or no WMH. In other words, eating lots of choline may make your memory sharper, and it also may reduce the risk for damage to the brain and even Alzheimer’s disease.

HOW THE NUTRIENT PROTECTS YOUR NOGGIN

To learn more, we go to study coauthor Rhoda Au, PhD, associate professor of neurology at Boston University. Dr. Au emphasized that this is an observational study, so it doesn’t prove cause and effect, but it does show a link between choline and memory. Why? Choline’s crucial contribution to cognition, said Dr. Au, may be as a building block for a neurotransmitter called acetylcholine, which is known to help transmit information between neurons faster.

DIET “DOs”

How much choline do you need each day? The recommendation from the Institute of Medicine for men is a daily intake of 550 mg and for women, 425 mg. The richest food sources are…
  • 3.5 ounces of beef liver—430 mg
  • One large egg—126 mg
  • 3.5 ounces of salmon—91 mg
  • 3.5 ounces (just under one-half cup) of broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower or navy beans—approximately 40 mg.
Other sources of choline include cod, almonds, tofu, milk and peanut butter.
Supplements of choline are available, but high doses (more than 3,500 mg per day for adults over age 18, according to Institute of Medicine) can cause symptoms like vomiting and excessive sweating. So if you want to take a supplement, talk to your doctor first—discuss how much you eat in your diet already so you can figure out whether (and what amount of) a supplement is necessary.
What’s so exciting about this research, in my view, is that while most studies concerning dementia are performed with people who already show signs of it, this study set out to investigate what people can do that might prevent dementia—and the choline connection seems promising. It’s so easy to get more choline in our diets—it’s in our refrigerators right now!
Source: Rhoda Au, PhD, associate professor of neurology, Boston University School of Medicine, and director of neuropsychology, Framingham Heart Study.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

SLEEP LATE TO RESTORE BRAIN POWER


Oh boy, do I have good news to share!

Evidence demonstrates that sleeping in on the weekend is a smart idea after a tough week at work (or anywhere else). I’ve been known to sleep late myself on occasion, but always with a twinge of guilt, since we’re told that it’s better to go to sleep and get up at the same time every day. But juggling my job, kids, household tasks and other requirements all week sometimes leaves me weary and sleep-deprived by Friday afternoon -- and I bet you know exactly how I feel.

Americans have a sleep debt that makes the national budget deficit look minor, warns Matthew Edlund, MD, MOH, an expert on rest, biological clocks, performance and sleep based in Sarasota, Florida, and author of the new book, The Power of Rest. Sleep is as important to health as food and water, and we should stop feeling guilty for allotting time for our bodies to rest, recharge and regenerate, he said.

Here’s Proof...

At the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, researchers conducted a study of the effect of sleep deprivation on the brain power of 159 healthy adults aged 22 to 45. A control group of 17 spent 12 consecutive days in the sleep lab -- 10 hours in bed each night for seven nights -- while the others spent 10 hours in bed for the first two nights, then were in bed only from 4 a.m. to 8 a.m. for five consecutive nights. Next, this group was assigned randomized amounts of recovery sleep, up to 10 hours per night.

All participants completed 30-minute computerized tests to assess their levels of alertness and neurobehavior performance every two hours while awake -- and no one will be surprised to learn that in comparison with those who had adequate sleep, people with restricted sleep experienced:
  • Impaired alertness
  • Shortened attention span
  • Reduced reaction time.
Why You Need a Vacation

But here’s the happy finding: Normal function (alertness and performance, as above) was restored in sleep-deprived participants after just one solid night of recovery sleep -- 10 hours, or the equivalent of squeezing in extra shut-eye on Saturday morning after a long week. (The more recovery sleep, the higher the scores.) In contrast, participants whose sleep continued to be restricted to an average of four to six hours per night performed poorly on tests and continued to get worse as their restricted sleep continued. Researchers also warned that even 10 hours of sleep in one night is not enough to bounce back if you continually push yourself too hard and burn the candle at both ends. Dr. Edlund said that, in fact, many studies have shown that even a few weeks of normal sleep won’t make up for a longtime habit of sleep deprivation -- and he added that nowadays people rarely know what it’s like to feel fully rested. In that case, it is likely to take more than a day -- think many weeks, and that’s only if you don’t go back to your old ways -- to get back to par... which is why we need to take vacations!

These results were published in the August 2010 issue of the journal Sleep.

Just as we don’t expect our bodies to function without adequate nutrition, we can’t expect to feel fully fueled and alert without sufficient sleep, Dr. Edlund says. The best scenario, of course, is to not allow yourself to become sleep-deprived in the first place -- but this is not always possible. Most people require seven or eight hours a night to be at their best the next day. But when that doesn’t happen, we now know that you can get tremendous benefit from snoozing a little longer even for just one morning. It gives your brain time to recover and reboot -- you’ll be more focused, productive and energetic as a result.

Friday, January 13, 2012

How Water Cures What Ails You


We all know the benefits of drinking water and with New Years resolutions happening now I thought this article on the benefits of hydrotherapy may show you another way to be healthier using water besides drinking it! Watching your back, Dr. K

Hydrotherapy can help with everything from easing the symptoms of arthritis and side effects of chemotherapy. These treatments are best performed under the watchful eye of an expert. However, individuals can use hydrotherapy to help with fevers, stress relief and detoxification.
HOW IT WORKS
Hydrotherapy has been used in all cultures since the beginning of civilization. Sometimes warm or hot water is used in hydrotherapy, other times cold... while alternating hot and cold has an especially intense impact on the body internally.
Heat calms and soothes, quieting the body, explains Dr. Kruzel. When you are anxious and your muscles are tense and tight, a hot shower or bath (I like to add Epsom salts and lavender) is just what the doctor ordered. This technique has worked wonders. In contrast, cold energizes and stimulates. When you are overtired and dragging, try a warm shower or bath followed by a short, cold rinse for a quick burst of energy.
According to Dr. Kruzel, hydrotherapy has a number of specific physiological effects on the body, depending on the type of therapy. It can...
  • Stimulate circulation, ease digestion problems and thyroid function.
  • Increase blood and oxygen flow.
  • Boost white blood cell count and enhance immunity.
  • Calm the central nervous system, easing anxiety, tension and insomnia.
  • Loosen tight muscles.
  • Kick temperature up a half degree or more.
HOW IT'S USED
Hydrotherapy comes in many forms. We're all familiar with hot baths and cold showers, but there are also sitz baths (baths taken in a sitting position that cover the hips and buttocks), foot baths, hot and cold compresses, steam inhalation, whirlpools, saunas and more. Here are Dr. Kruzel's favorite do-it-yourself techniques...
  • Reduce congestion associated with colds and flu. Try a home steam treatment. Inhaling steam helps loosen secretions, thus reducing congestion. Simply fill a third of a bowl with hot water, pull a towel over your head and inhale the steam for several minutes. (Some people like to add a drop or two of an essential oil such as eucalyptus to the water.) Warm compresses with Epsom salts can also help sinuses drain.
  • Melt away stress. Soak in a hot bath, or better yet a whirlpool, which has a massage-like effect. You might want to add soothing herbs to your bath, including lavender and chamomile.
  • Sooth sore feet. Add a tablespoon of Epsom salts and three to five drops of your favorite essential oil to a bowl of hot water. Soak feet for five to 15 minutes.
  • Sweat out metabolic wastes. After your workout at the gym, visit the sauna or steam room for 15 to 20 minutes. To prevent overheating, wipe your face and neck frequently with a cold, wet washcloth. Also: See precautions below.
For upper respiratory infections (URIs) and fever: Wet a T-shirt and socks with cold water, and wring as much water out of them as possible. Next take a warm shower, and afterward don the T-shirt and socks. Cover with a dry, warm sweat shirt and a dry pair of sweat socks, and climb into bed. Sounds uncomfortable, but Dr. Kruzel assures me that it calms the nervous system, and causes the fever to spike and then break. Note: This treatment should be supervised initially by a health-care professional.
More fever relief: Wet a towel with cold water, and wring it out. Wrap the towel around the base of the skull and neck. This cools blood going to the brain. Try dunking your feet in ice water for only a minute and toweling dry. This can draw circulation down away from the head. Alternatively, just take a cool bath.
A FEW SIMPLE PRECAUTIONS
If you want to utilize hydrotherapy as part of a regular treatment plan and want specific guidance, Dr. Kruzel recommends that you seek the care of a naturopathic doctor (ND). Other simple precautions to follow are...
  • If you are pregnant or have abnormal blood pressure or heart disease, do not use saunas or steam baths.
  • If you have diabetes, do not apply hot applications to the legs or feet as you may not be able to have accurate temperature sensation in the limbs.
  • Do not use cold applications if you suffer from Raynaud's syndrome (a condition that causes parts of the body -- such as the fingers and toes -- to feel numb in response to cool temperatures or stress).
  • The very young and the very old should avoid extended hot treatments. And -- those with heart problems, MS and pregnant people should do these treatments under the care of a physician.
Anyone who has ever luxuriated in a hot bath or soaked in a whirlpool is already aware of the symptomatic benefits of water therapy!

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Make your own Vitamin Water!


Here's one you might like! How to make your own Vitamin Water! - Dr. K.

The Easiest, Cheapest, Safest Flu Fighter: Vitamin C

This year, there’s even more fretting than usual about how best to fight flu, thanks to the questions and concerns surrounding H1N1. But there’s one time-tested approach that seems to be overlooked... a sure-fire flu-fighting strategy that has long been embraced by both the natural and mainstream medical communities as an effective immune booster. It’s safe and inexpensive and even tastes good enough that children don’t object. What is it? Good old vitamin C. let us go to Daily Health News contributing medical editor Andrew Rubman, ND, to tell us why this simple and classic strategy can be so effective at fighting off flu.
Strengthen Immunity the Natural Way
In understanding how flu spreads, it’s critical to remember that most people will be exposed to a flu virus this season, observes Dr. Rubman. Whether or not you succumb depends in large part on the integrity of your immune system. If you are in robust health -- if you eat well, get a proper balance of rest and exercise, manage stress in a positive fashion and practice good hygiene -- the odds are better that you will successfully stave off microbial invaders. Where does vitamin C fit in? It provides some extra-strength protection, particularly important this worrisome season. According to Dr. Rubman, this nutrient is one of the most important for human function, and it’s also one of the most thoroughly studied. He believes it protects the body from cold and flu viruses more effectively than other supplements and medications because of its ability to build immunity, attack disease-causing organisms, reduce congestion, and strengthen cells and tissue. It does all this by fortifying two particular functions...
  • Collagen construction and maintenance. Vitamin C supports collagen, a vital protein that strengthens the cell walls of the body’s circulatory system. Intact collagen protects the resiliency of tissue in the respiratory and digestive tract, repelling infiltration by dangerous germs. Healthier tissue is less likely to be vulnerable to infection.
  • Antioxidant protection. Vitamin C also is a powerful antioxidant that quenches reactive oxygen species and prevents cell damage from free radical molecules. Vitamin C renders mucous membranes and underlying tissue less vulnerable to penetration and replication of the virus. Some research suggests that it reduces the duration and severity of colds.
How Much to Take?
Generally speaking, the more debilitated you are, the more vitamin C you need, notes Dr. Rubman. Cautioning that this should never be done without a physician’s oversight, he told me that he sometimes prescribes 3,500 mg to 4,000 mg vitamin C daily to his patients for prevention. (Ask your health care provider about the most effective course for you.)
For those who already have chills, aches, fever or other telltale signs of the flu, a physician trained in the use of nutritional supplements may go even further, and prescribe doses as high as 7,000 mg to 8,000 mg a day until symptoms abate. Be aware though that doses over 2,000 mg/day can cause stomach upset, diarrhea or other acute symptoms. Dr. Rubman says this is one of the reasons it is so important to take this and other supplements under medical supervision. Also if you are taking large doses, ask your doctor whether it’s best to taper off gradually when you feel better, rather than stop all at once.
Make Your Own Vitamin Water
To make it easy to get your vitamin C, Dr. Rubman suggests that you make your own "vitamin water." What you make at home is far superior to most products available commercially, which are often adulterated with sugar or other additives. Buy vitamin C as ascorbic acid (not mineral ascorbate or ester C) in bulk powder form, which is as effective as, but less expensive than, tablets. Depending on whether your objective is prevention or treatment, dissolve the appropriate amount of vitamin C in one quart of a 50/50 juice/water mix. This will retain its potency a week or more if refrigerated. Dr. Rubman told me that his favorite recipe is to use four teaspoons per quart of Eclectic Institute’s Nutrigenomic Berry Powder. That, he says, "sweetens and strengthens the value of the vitamin C." If you like, you can make it sweeter yet by drizzling in honey or maple syrup to taste. Vitamin C tends to neutralize stomach acid, so it’s best to drink this in divided doses away from mealtime -- for instance, take a few swigs of your vitamin water every hour or so between meals.
While many experts consider vitamin C nothing less than miraculous, Dr. Rubman warns that it’s not magical. It won’t undo poor health habits, nor will it be helpful if you pair it with a poor diet. Instead, eat lots of flavonoid-rich fruits and vegetables (citrus fruits, strawberries, cabbage, turnip greens, etc.), which help the body absorb and utilize vitamin C more efficiently. Also, consider taking vitamin C with synergistic supplements that support its use while adding in their own healing benefits. For example, pair vitamin C (which protects the watery parts of cells) with vitamin E (which defends their fatty parts). Vitamin D, selenium and zinc are likewise beneficial.
Source(s): Andrew Rubman, ND, medical director, Southbury Clinic for Traditional Medicines, Southbury, Connecticut.www.naturopath.org.

Friday, November 4, 2011

11 Ways to Live to 100

We all want to live longer right! But remember it's not just quanity of life, it's quality as well! Were here to keep you health so you can enjoy your longer life! Here are very good suggestion! Dr. K


Our modern day version of the search for a fountain of youth takes place in Big Pharma's research and development labs, as they vie to make the pill or potion that will stave off the ravages of age. Is there a better, more natural way? We have been seeing lots of great research focusing on secrets to longer life. Here are some of the best that I've found. These very simple and low-tech steps can make enormous impact on your health and longevity.
1. Run for Your Life
People who run in midlife and beyond live longer, report researchers in the August 11, 2008, issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine. The authors concluded that vigorous exercise such as running at middle and older ages was associated with reduced disability in later life and a higher survival rate. Older runners (50 years and over) remained more fit than older people who did not run, and were about twice as likely to be alive after 20 years. Especially as we grow older, exercise is essential to keeping the body strong and supple, boosting blood supply to the brain, maintaining bone density and controlling stress and anxiety. Of course, any physical activity is better than none -- and the more, the better. Try to fit in at least 30 minutes of moderate to vigorous exercise -- brisk walking, bicycling, swimming, dancing -- most days of the week.
2. Daily Brain Training
It's not just physical exercise that pays dividends over time -- successful aging requires a commitment to brain fitness as well. To stay sharp and stave off cognitive decline, challenge your mind as well as your muscles, urges Robert N. Butler, MD, president and CEO of the International Longevity Center and author of The Longevity Revolution: The Benefits and Challenges of Living a Long Life. His suggestions for good brain workouts include learning a new language or playing a musical instrument. Other ideas include doing daily puzzles, such as crossword or Sudoku, and joining discussion groups on books, current events, religion or other topics you find stimulating. Also useful -- a growing number of electronic programs, ranging from a Nintendo game system called Brain Age (www.brainage.com) to a computer program by Posit Science called Brain Fitness Program Classic (www.positscience.com).
3. Food for Thought
Specific substances shown to help fight aging include resveratrol (in grapes, grape juice and red wine) and other similar polyphenols (in blueberries, raspberries and cranberries). These help discourage inflammation, which is believed to lie at the root of cognitive decline, cardiovascular disease, rheumatoid arthritis, cancer and more. Other youth-enhancing foods and beverages include walnuts, strawberries, pomegranate juice, green tea, sweet potatoes and spinach. These will fortify wellness and longevity.
4. Flaxseed, Fish and Other Sources of Omega-3 Fatty Acids
Omega-3 fatty acids support heart, brain, joint and skin health and more. One of them -- docosahexaenoic acid or DHA -- may help prevent cognitive decline, and in animal studies shows promise in limiting development of the amyloid plaques in the brain that are associated with Alzheimer's disease. Good food sources of omega-3 fatty acids are fish (salmon, tuna, herring, etc.), flaxseeds and walnuts. Supplements are another way to go -- . 
5. Turn to Turmeric
Like omega-3 fatty acids, turmeric confers cognitive benefits -- its main biologically active phytochemical component is antioxidant-rich curcumin, which has been shown to reduce inflammation and oxidative damage and improve learning and memory. Interestingly, Alzheimer's disease is rarer in India, where curry is frequently consumed, than in other cultures.
6. Cut Calories
Research indicates staying slim may add years of healthy living to your life. Excess weight has been shown time and time again to lead to all sorts of life-threatening diseases. In contrast, calorie restriction has been known to slow aging in animals, and a new study in the June 2008 issue of Rejuvenation Research suggests that it may have the same impact on humans. According to researchers at Washington University, reducing your intake by just 300 to 500 calories a day (skip the extra slice of pepperoni pizza for lunch or forego the chocolate cake for dessert) may slow the aging process by lowering levels of the thyroid hormone triiodothyronine. Learn more about this approach at the Web site of the Calorie Restriction Society (www.calorierestriction.org).
7. Let the Sunshine Vitamin In
Vitamin D plays an ever more important role in our health as we age -- yet an increasing number of Americans are deficient in it, says Daily Health News contributing medical editor Andrew L. Rubman, ND. It's a phenomenon he blames on the sun avoidance urged by dermatologists and sunscreen marketers, which has the unintended result of blocking our ability to synthesize vitamin D from the sun. Lack of the sunshine vitamin may not only harm the bones, it may influence your risk of heart disease and certain cancers. One study in the June 9, 2008, issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine linked low levels of vitamin D to increased heart attack risk, and another in the June 23 edition found that a vitamin D deficiency more than doubled the risk of death from any cause. For protection against vitamin D deficiency, Dr. Rubman suggests 15 minutes of sunshine daily (hold the sunscreen). Dietary sources of vitamin D include salmon, tuna, eggs and enriched dairy products. If your doctor orders a vitamin D test and your levels are still low, he/she may also prescribe up to 2,000 IU/ daily.
8. Attack Anxiety
Anxiety is the enemy of longevity. In one study, conducted in part at Purdue University, and which included more than 1,600 men aged 43 to 91, researchers used personality tests to identify "neurotic" individuals -- those who worried too much and reacted to stress negatively. After 12 years, only half the men who measured "high" or "increasing" (meaning their anxiety levels were going up, not down, as they aged) on the neuroticism scale were still alive, as compared with about 80% of the others. These results were published in the May 2008 edition of Psychological Science.
9. Work for Living
Purpose and passion are essential. Older people need to define goals, keep busy and continue to give themselves a good reason to get out of bed each morning, Dr. Butler emphasizes. In his view, people who like their work would most likely enjoy happier and healthier lives if they postponed retirement, or perhaps just cut back to part-time. Alternatively, there are ways to keep your hand in, even after retirement. For example, retired journalists can teach classes at city colleges and bankers may volunteer to help people with their finances at public libraries.
10. Friends for Life
Socializing, including staying in touch with your friends and family, as well as being part of some kind of community, grows more important as you age. In fact, social isolation in seniors is a risk factor for stress, health problems and even early death. The stress hormone cortisol contributes to damage of the hippocampus (the part of the brain essential to the formation of memories, and the region most impacted by cognitive decline).
11. Take Time to Play
While work is important, so is play. There's truth in that old saying: It's important to stop and smell the roses. Throughout life, make time to take vacations, enjoy lazy weekends, laugh with friends, play with grandchildren and continue to build the memories that go into making a long life a good one.

Source(s): Robert N. Butler, MD, president and CEO of the International Longevity Center and author of The Longevity Revolution: The Benefits and Challenges of Living a Long Life (PublicAffairs). Dr. Butler was the founding director of the National Institute on Aging of the National Institutes of Health, which he directed from 1976 to 1982.

Tendon Rupture, a Little-Known Side Effect of Antibiotics

Here's an article that will make you think! It's scary to find out what some of these so called "safe" drugs have as side effects! Watching your back, Dr. K

Tendon Rupture, a Little-Known Side Effect of Antibiotics
Here's one more for the long list of tales about how the drugs we take to heal us can end up causing harm: The FDA has announced that it will now require a "boxed warning" (its strongest warning on a label) about the risk of tendonitis and tendon rupture associated with use of fluoroquinolone antibiotics -- such as ciprofloxacin (Cipro) -- along with mandated distribution of a newly detailed medication guide to be dispensed by pharmacies with the drug.
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
Fluoroquinolones such as ciprofloxacin (Cipro and Proquin XR), gemifloxacin (Factive), levofloxacin (Levaquin), moxifloxacin (Avelox), norfloxacin (Noroxin), and ofloxacin (Floxin) are commonly prescribed for upper respiratory, gastrointestinal and urinary tract infections (UTIs). FDA-approved labeling for these drugs mention the risk of tendonitis, but clearly public awareness is not widespread as the FDA continues to receive reports of tendon-related adverse events related to them. The FDA has received more than 400 reports of tendon rupture plus more than 1,200 of tendon problems, and, it's possible this represents only the tip of the iceberg since it's suspected that just a small fraction of cases are reported to the FDA.
In going to Sidney Wolfe, MD, director of The Health Research Group at Public Citizen, an advocacy group based in Washington, DC, which has been pushing the FDA on this point since 2006. In his view, these requirements are better than none, but far from complete. "This accomplishes two of the three steps we've urged," he said. "We've also requested that the FDA require drug companies to send a warning letter to physicians, clearly describing possible adverse reactions, such as tendon pain, so patients can be switched to alternative treatments before tendons rupture." Many doctors remain unaware of drug warnings like these until they receive such letters, Dr. Wolfe said. He advises consumers to be aware of the risks and attentive to early signs of trouble in order to protect themselves from serious repercussions.
WHO'S AT RISK?
Although anyone who takes fluoroquinolone drugs is at risk, the likelihood of having tendon problems is higher if you are over 60, taking steroids (corticosteroids), or are a kidney, heart or lung transplant recipient. Symptoms of tendonitis include pain, swelling, inflammation and tearing, all found most commonly in the Achilles tendon, shoulder or hand. Ruptures can occur without warning (some patients report feeling a "snap" or "pop" soon after starting treatment), but more typically patients feel pain or inflammation for days or weeks before the tendon actually ruptures. Another symptom is easy bruising right after an injury in a tendon area. These problems can occur during or after taking fluoroquinolones -- even months later, according to the FDA.
If you develop tenderness or other such problems, avoid exercising or overuse of the area. Any such symptoms should be immediately reported to your doctor in conjunction with your request to be switched to another antibiotic of a different class. Most serious problems may be avoided if you pay attention to the first signs of trouble. Source(s): Sidney Wolfe, MD, Director of The Health Research Group at Public Citizen and editor of www.worstpills.org, in Washington, DC.