May 22, 2012

Vitamin A For Better Eczema Control

Vitamin A For Better Eczema Control

Article by Lee Dobbins









We’ve all seen the scaly itchy skin associated with eczema. Perhaps you’ve even had eczema at some point or suffer from it chronically. This condition, thought to be hereditary attacks about three out of every hundred people and can manifest itself as a rash with scaly, dry, itchy and/or red skin. Either way, you’ll want to do something to relive it fast!

You can get eczema medication from your doctor and if your symptoms are severe you should follow his instructions and use it as recommended. You might notice that some of this medication has Vitamin A in it. Vitamin A is a powerful antioxidant that can help to alleviate symptoms of eczema and has many health benefits for your body including its ability to fight against heart disease and other cardiovascular problems as well as cancer and many other chronic diseases.

Most importantly for eczema sufferers is the vitamins ability to boost and develop the immune system. Dietary and supplemental sources of this vitamin seem to help your body produce antibodies and lymphocytes. These are essential to a healthy immune system. In a recent study, for example, diets lacking Vitamin A were compared to ones rich in vitamin A, beta-carotene, and lycopene and the Vitamin A rich diets has better results on the immune systems of mice.

Foods that are high in Vitamin A include many of your favorite fruits and vegetables! Look for veggies and fruits that are orange in color like carrots, cantaloupe, mango, aprictos and sweet potato to get the most bang for your buck. Other foods that are good sources of Vitamin A include broccoli, turnip greens, spinach and yellow squash.

Taking a Vitamin A supplement can be a good idea for control of eczema, but if you are also taking fish oil supplements, you may want to add more vitamin A to compensate. Vitamin A is fat soluble and the fish oils are, of course, fat so the presence of fish oils can deplete the amount of vitamin A your body gets.

Good supplements, however, will provide the right combination of Vitamin A and fish oils so you can take both in one pill, provided it is a quality vitamin. Fish oil also has added benefits which stem from the omega-3 fatty acids. Along with skin problems, omega-3 is thought to help with depression, dementia, heart disease, Alzheimer’s and many other conditions.

If you suffer from eczema, think about asking your doctor if adding Vitamin A to your regime might help. It’s easy to take and can help protect you from a host of other illnesses and disease as well.



About the Author

Lee Dobbins writes for http://www.acne-articles.com where you can learn more about acne, skin problems and caring for your skin.










Dementia and Obesity

Dementia and Obesity

Obesity condition  is caused by many factors and effects. Some of these are self-induced phenomena, mainly through fat-rich and carbohydrate- rich food consumption abuse.  These are often temporary effects, being reversible through self control and healthy food consumption, and,accompanied by directive physical exercise at regular intervals.

The slimming action may take a bit of a while and effort, and will be slow, which requires continual endeavors and persistence. Other factors are either hereditary or temporary disruption of endocrine bodily functions. In this case an appropriate medication for the cause may bring about a positive effect.

The present article discusses the relation between obesity and dementia in older to middle aged  people, as a possible effect.

The brain regions that are responsible for recognition are smaller in older people who are obese compared with their leaner peers, making their brains look up to 16 year older than their true age. The brain shrinkage is linked to dementia; this adds weight to the suspicion that piling on the pounds may increase the person’s risk of the brain condition.

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Previous studies suggested that the obesity in middle age increased the risk of dementia decades later, which is accompanied by increased in brain shrinkage compared with leaner people. Now brain scans of older people have revealed the areas that are hardest it, as well as the full extent of brain size differences between obese people and those of average weight.

From the brain scans initially carried out for a different study, and excluding people with disorders, people with higher body mass indexes had smaller brains on average, with the frontal and temporal lobes-important for planning and memory respectively are particularly affected. Though it is not knowledgeable  at present, whether that these people are more likely to develop dementia; a smaller brain is indicative of destructive processes that can develop into dementia. It is found among 51 overweight people that there were 6% smaller than those of their normal weight counterparts on average, and those of the 14 obese  people l and type 2 diabetes were 8% smaller.. Overweight women had less brain tissue than their leaner counterparts indicating brain obesity.

High insulin levels and type 2 diabetes are risk factors for brain tissue loss and dementia. The body fat levels may be linked directly to brain shrinkage. i.e. the increased body fat increase the chances of clogging arteries, which will reduce the blood and oxygen flow to the brain cells, thus reducing metabolism and hence  induce brain cell death and shrinkage.

Physical non-strenuous exercise(s) improve(s) cardiovascular health and blood flow, and protects the very brain regions that had shrunk; in other words, it is the blood flow that drives brain health. It is worthy to note that brain atrophy in the frontal and temporal lobes, which also control eating behavior and metabolism, could cause weight gain as well.

 

Name: George M IskanderBorne in Khartoum (Sudan), 1942. Atained the following qualifications:BSc(1964), MSc (1966), PhD(1970) Univ of Khartoum//Liverpool (England)Affiliates:  FRSC(CChem) England, MRACI (Australia), MSCS(Switzerland)

http://www.slimmingactionimproved.com