Archive for October, 2010

Diabetes and wound healing are like two enemies who will not make peace with one another.  People living with diabetes are usually living with wounds that refuse to heal. 

 There are several factors that contribute to poor wound healing including the following:

  1. Blood circulation to the extremities
  2. Elevated blood glucose levels
  3. Less than optimal immune function
  4. Protein-calorie malnutrition

Medical nutritional therapy aims to have the blood glucose levels maintained in the normal range for a diabetes patient.  Improved glycemic control will play a significant role in lowering the risk of wound healing complications.  Diabetes patients should seek the advice of a nutrition professional for education and implementation of a therapeutic diet.  This will minimize future complications of the disease while helping to control hyperglycemia which impedes wound healing.

The skin of a diabetic person is often itchy, dry and easily injured.  This type of skin easily cracks opening the way for bacteria and germs which feed on the elevated glucose in the body.  This leads to infection.  Diabetes and wound healing can often be slow and may lead to chronic infections or gangrenated skin.  The fear, of course, is amputation or worst case scenarios; death.  Preventing infections and taking proper care of the wounds is critical.

Are you already on a proper diabetic diet? Have you already done all you can to prevent infection?  Are your diabetic sores and ulcers chronic even in the face of the strongest antibiotics? 

8 minute video explains simple, inexpensive Diabetic Ulcer remedy

Diabetic Ulcers Healed
Diabetic Ulcers Healed 

Hospitals and diabetic patients are now faced with a growing prevalence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria which can lead to serious consequences for diabetics and wound healing. Antibiotics have been used so widely and for so long now that the infectious organisms they are designed to kill have adapted to them making them less effective.  Standing by while your diabetic sores and ulcers refuse to heal is nothing less than terrifying.  

In the case of diabetes and wound healing this cannot be accepted.  Another solution is the only option.  We found that solution.  We were so impressed with this solution that we wrote an Ebook to help you overcome this serious problem.  Find out how to start healing within 7 to 10 days with no harmful side effects.  Visit The Breakthrough Secret and remember this solution is Doctor, Pharmacist and Health Expert recommended.

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15
Oct

Healthy Coffee – Pour Us a Cup

   Posted by: Lita    in Nutrition

I came across the most delicious, organic, healthy coffee completely by accident.

My friend told me about a package of coffee that was left behind at her house by her “extremely health conscious cousin”.  She decided to try it and was pleasantly surprised at how much it tasted like regular coffee while being a healthy beverage.  She told me the name was Gano.

Later on I sent a twitter message out asking if anyone had heard of Gano coffee.  Not long after, I got a reply from Parrish and Tammi Strozier of Winstrowellness.  After some communication they were kind enough to send me some samples to try.

They sent me a sample of each of the beverages including gourmet black coffee, gourmet latte, gourmet mocha, gourmet organic green tea and gourmet hot chocolate.  I have to say I immensely enjoyed each one of these beverages and I have been thinking about the Gano black coffee ever since. 

Regular coffee is acidic and toxic, can raise your blood pressure, cause dehydration, increase stress levels in the body and can cause jitters and a caffeine crash. 

Gano coffee and Gano green tea contain Ganoderma – an ancient Chinese herb that has been used for more than 4,000 years to enhance wellness.   In Cantonese, “Lingzhi or Reishi”, is the name for one form of the mushroom Ganoderma Lucidum. It enjoys an honorable place in Asia, where it has been used as a medicinal mushroom in traditional Chinese medicine for more than 4,000 years. In China it’s known as the “Miraculous King of Herbs”.

Gano coffee is a healthy, nutrient rich gourmet coffee with the following features:

  • Certified organic Ganoderma eliminates the jitters and the caffeine crash
  • Balances your PH levels
  • Contains natural antioxidants
  • Boosts the immune system
  • Provides energy
  • Oxygenates the body
  • Great gourmet taste minus the negative side effects

The Gano green tea is a blend of Ganoderma and organic green tea which makes it a powerful antioxidant.

Contact Parrish & Tammi to order some Gano coffee and Gano green tea and while you are contemplating your new and healthy lifestyle choices enjoy a cup of this Organo Gold.

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1
Oct

Be A Man – Just Do It!

   Posted by: Sonny Patel, MPH    in Men's Health

  • How many men were following Michael Jordan, before twitter was ever invented, and living actively like the Nike’s slogan, “Just Do It!”? Probably millions.
  • How many men get regularly checked or decide, on their own, to schedule an annual doctor visit? Probably not even close to a million.
  • Why, you ask? Could it be because men are too “macho” for a preventive screening or too “tough” to let a “small flesh wound” be treated? Perhaps.
  • Or is it because seeking help or accepting injury seems to make a man look “weak”? Maybe.

Either way, the blame must lie with each man. Though the blame can be passed on to everyone around him and to the environment in which he lives, let’s stay focused on how the sports and media culture further propagates this masculinity crisis in young and old men. The attitude and beliefs of being an inferior man, by accepting a sports injury during an “important” match, are instilled to young men as they grow up, especially by sports heroes.

For decades, sportscasters and the media exploited the story line of “injured athlete carrying team to victory” in order to create drama and tension for the audience and fans. The direct outcome of this effect creates remarkable and legendary moments. More importantly, sports heroes are put on a higher pedestal in the eyes of many youth. Typically, the youth, especially young men, only understand what they see from TV. For example, Michael Jordan played a championship game in 1997 with feverish symptoms and what seems to be a stomach flu. Young men all around the world (including myself) were in awe and bewilderment on how such a man was able to play under such physical duress while lifting his team to victory.  As seen in the image below (credit to ESPN), he needed help from his teammates to leave the court.

Michael Jordan

What’s the message to young men watching this match? Be like Mike and play through anything to win.  What is it that young men everywhere didn’t notice? Mike, like most serious athletes, trains rigorously in the off-season and has practiced for years. In addition, he is conditioned and monitored by professional health trainers who control almost all activities conducted by him.  From daily food intake to gym time, athletes build their phenomenal physique by proper supervision and, of course, self-will. To be like Mike does not mean to play when you are hurt or to risk injuring yourself further, but to practice and train yourself to be better and healthy.

One way to be better and healthy is to have yearly doctor checkups. You don’t think Mike gets a physical examination yearly? It’s a simple phenomenon that can prevent serious damages, yet most men still can’t get with the program. Why do you think NBA teams and other professional sports teams made physicals or doctor check-ups a standard protocol before playing?

In short, we as a society, and as a culture, propagate this superior identity of masculinity – the essence of being a man.  From the time men are little boys, we are expected to shake off bruises or “walk it off” as commonly heard in youth baseball leagues. Growing up, men are supposed to be crafty like Ferris Bueller or handle their liquor as seen in Animal House.  And when men have aged, they are supposed to be like Rocky or the Terminator.  Men are supposed to be able to withstand inhumane pain and never flinch at anything. Come on world, really? This is what a man is supposed to be? No wonder women, in the majority of countries around the world, live longer than men.  We are structured to die young.

Before becoming the Editor-in-Chief for HealthyMenToday.com, Sonny was the Chief Editor for Talkingaboutmenshealth.com (TAMH Blog) and the Southern California State Coordinator for the Men’s Health Network. Sonny can be found regularly at Healthy Men Today or you follow him on twitter @sonnypatel.

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