Archive for February, 2008

Upper Body Exercises

Most upper body exercises have as their goal to build strength. In order to maximize the beneficial effect of the routine, you’ll want to mix in some good cardiovascular workouts - spinning, jogging, etc - and alternate the activities with lower body work.

Before starting any routine, be sure to spend at least 10 minutes warming up, including good stretching exercises. Warm, loose muscles are much less likely to tear themselves or attached tendons. Also, you’ll want to get the circulatory system activated and muscle temperature increased for good blood flow.

How much weight to use, how many reps to perform and other variables are determined by your overall goals. Do you want to build muscle mass or just tone? For more mass, use more weight. For better tone, use less weight and do more reps. Do you want to increase flexibility and overall fitness or prepare for specific events?

In any case, these traditional exercises will help you get started down that road. Some can be performed without equipment, others require only a very simple set of free weights or resistance equipment. Resistance equipment includes rubber straps with handles, springs and others that work primarily by offering resistance to tension. Weights work primarily by providing compression and/or tension due to gravity.

Warning: Never exercise ‘through the pain’. Mild discomfort - especially after a prolonged period of inactivity - is normal. But intense pain is a sign of trouble. Consult your physician.

Push-Ups

Even with all the contemporary sports science around, traditional push-ups remain an excellent upper body exercise. Start on your stomach, back straight, feet together, hands under the shoulders. Press against the floor, keeping your back and legs straight, then lower yourself back to the floor. For a little extra effort push-up, slow the action down and both raise and lower more slowly.

Try to do 20, then build up to 40, then to 80 push-ups.

More Chest Work

Start with 10 lb (4.5 kg) hand-held dumbbells. Flat on your back on a comfortable surface, such as a carpet or mat, hold the weights in each hand, palms up, arms extended perpendicular from the body. Lift slowly and bring the hands together.

To vary the action, and get the biceps a good workout, too, try bending at the elbow when the arms are raised about 20 degrees, then straighten and continue.

Lats

Stand up straight, arms at your side, grasping the dumbbells. Maintain good balance and breathe normally. At the maximum point of inhalation, thrust the arms away from the body, palms inward. Exhale as you raise your arms to shoulder height, then lower your hands slowly back to the starting position.

To vary the exercise, and get the biceps and triceps involved, rotate the weights and curl your arms up at the top of the swing. Straighten the arm, then lower as described above.

Do 10 reps.

(Note: The ‘lats’ or latissiumus dorsi’ are the large, side muscles that make men triangle-shaped.)

Biceps and Triceps

Move the weights in front of the body, with your arms hanging above the front of your thighs. Without swinging or pushing off the thighs, lift the weights toward your chest. Alternate using one arm, then the other.

Do 10 reps for each arm. If you experience lower back pain during the exercise, stop immediately. Put off the exercise until another day, or see your physician.

Exercises for the lats or biceps can be done with free weights or using a long, elastic resistance strap. Hook one end with the foot and grab the other with your hand. Proceed as described above.

Pull-ups/Chin-ups

If you have access to a sturdy bar, either in the gym or at a playground, or at home in a doorway, you can perform chin-ups and pull-ups. Chins ups are done with the fingers toward you, pull-ups with the fingers facing away, while your hands grasp the bar above your head.

This low-tech exercise remains one of the best ways to build biceps, triceps, lats and pectorals all at once.

No matter what routine you choose, don’t overdo it. Build up your strength gradually. One of the most common reasons people don’t continue workouts is pain produced from incorrect technique or excessive effort exerted too early in the process.

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Newly Developed Osteoarthritis Diagnosis Method

A non-invasive imaging method - chemical exchange saturation method (gagCEST) - that will be useful in the diagnosis and monitoring of some diseases such as osteoarthritis (OA) and inter-vertebral disc degeneration, has been developed by researchers at New York and Tel Aviv Universities.

The said procedure can detect OA and inter-vertebral disc degeneration in their early stages based on the glycosaminogycans (GAGs) concentration.

The research team examined glycosaminogycans (GAGs), which are molecules that serve as the building blocks of cartilage and are involved in numerous vital functions in the human body.

The NYU-Tel Aviv team developed the procedure that will directly measure GAGs.

In this study, they employed the exchangeable protons of GAG to directly measure GAG concentration in vivo.

Knowing that GAG molecules have proton groups that are not tethered tightly, the researchers investigated whether proton exchange in GAGs could allow concentrations of the molecule to be measured by the MRI.

By separating out the GAG protons from those of water, they can be used as a sort of inherent contrast agent. Testing the idea in tissue samples, the researchers found that the available GAG protons provided an effective type of contrast enhancement, allowing them to readily monitor GAGs through a clinical MRI scanner.

The in vivo application of this method showed that this technique can be readily implemented in a clinical setting.

We all know why catching any condition in its earliest stage is beneficial because, in this case, may help indicate early interventions for degenerative disc disease and maybe osteoarthritis.

Currently, how is OA diagnosed? According to Medicinenet:

There is no blood test for the diagnosis of osteoarthritis. Blood tests are performed to exclude diseases that can cause secondary osteoarthritis, as well as to exclude other arthritis conditions that can mimic osteoarthritis.

X-rays of the affected joints can suggest osteoarthritis. The common x-ray findings of osteoarthritis include loss of joint cartilage, narrowing of the joint space between adjacent bones, and bone spur formation.

I bet the x-ray is not an adequate way to at all to catch OA in it tracks.

Find out more about osteoarthritis from Medicinenet.

Research finding have been reported in PNAS.

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Diabetes Cookbook Giveaway!

The Big Book of Diabetic DessertsNot long ago I blogged about The Big Book of Diabetic Desserts, written by Jackie Mills MS, RD. This month I am giving away a copy to one Battling The Monster reader. I was given two books, one for myself and one just for this contest!

So, you may be wondering how you can win this copy. It is very easy, really. If you have a blog, whether it is diabetes related or not, just post an entry about this contest then comment here. If you do not have a blog, just post about this contest either A.) In a forum you frequent and leave a link to it here (your signature counts) or B.) Post about it on one of your social accounts like Myspace, Twitter, or Facebook.

You must leave a comment with a link to your post so I can verify it and so you do not miss out! The winner will be chosen at random from all comments left on March 3rd.

For more information on the book, take a peek at The Big Book of Diabetic Desserts on Amazon.

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Understanding and Living With Color Deficiency

A color deficiency is what most people mistakenly refer to as color blindness. Labeling an individual as color blind is inaccurate because overall a person’s eyes function properly. The individual is able to detect, focus on and process images. Except for the condition called monochromacy, an affected person is not blind to color.

An individual with a color defect has difficulty distinguishing hues. Such a problem stems from the specialized cell receptors in the eyes called cones. Three different cones contain pigments that absorb various amounts of light. Wavelengths determine the amount of pigmentation the cones absorb and the absorption determines how the eye detects and blends the primary colors of red, green, blue and yellow.

Types of color deficiency

The hereditary forms of color deficiency fall into 3 categories: monochromacy, dichromacy and anomalous trichromacy.

* Monochromacy means that a person is not capable of seeing any hue. It is the truest example of color blindness. An affected individual sees the world around him in black and white and shades of gray. This results from an absence or deficiency in the eye’s cone receptor.

* A person with dichromacy can distinguish hues so the defect is not quite as significant. Hues result as the eye’s receptors react to the various wavelengths they continually receive. There are 3 forms of dichromacy and the differences between each involve the colors that can be detected.

For example, protonopia and dueteranopia mean that a person has difficulty distinguishing red/green/yellow but can see blue and yellow. The defect referred to as tritanopia is opposite: blues and yellows cannot be distinguished however reds and greens can. This latter condition is rarer and those with tritanopia find it easier to adjust to the world around them.

* Those with anomalous trichromacy can distinguish hues, and can do this better than those with dichromacy. In fact some individuals are barely aware they have a color defect. The two categories of trichromacy include protanomaly and deuteranomaly.

The only type of color defect that is not hereditary is tritanomaly.

Living with a Color Defect

The majority of individuals affected by a color defect are affected from the moment they are born. Early detection is crucial so that accommodations can be made to ensure that impacts to a child’s learning and development, in particular his perception of color, are limited. Adults with color defects find that some career paths are unattainable.

A color defect cannot be ‘cured’ therefore lifestyle modifications are necessary. Individuals learn to cope in a color-coded world by learning which colors belong where. A color deficiency doesn’t prevent a person from operating a motor vehicle, however, an affected individual needs to learn and recognize roadways signs and their respective meanings. For example, he must memorize that the light at the top of traffic signal is always red, that green is on bottom and yellow is in the middle.

Those with a color deficiency can benefit from having others help rearrange and organize their clothing. Doing so can eliminate the sometimes embarrassing situation of wearing mismatched colors of clothing.

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WEIGH-IN: February 8, 2008

Day 39 - Friday Morning Weigh In.

Weigh In

Today’s Weight: February 8, 2008 - 279.5 lbs
Last Week’s Weight: February 1, 2008 - 279.0 lbs

Starting Weight: January 1, 2008 - 287.5 lbs

>> I GAINED 0.5 lbs during this period
>> YTD LOSS 8.0 lbs since January 1, 2008

Reflection

I don’t get it. I was over my weekly flex points last week, and lost .. this week I was under my weekly flex point alotment and gained weight … // oh yes - that’s right .. Mongolian Stirfy at 9pm on the night before a weigh-in is not a good idea .. too much water in the vegetables I guess! Now I get it.

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THE HART-SERIES: February 1-7, 2008

Day 31 to Day 38, still trying to lose weight (Fri, Sat, Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, Thur)

Friday February 1, 2008

Coffee, Oranges, Pita Pocket Sandwich with lettuce and vegetables, Pita Pocket Sandwich with 100g turkey breast and lite Mayo, Strawberry Milk (Quik), Melba Toast

- Total 30 points
- Still have 35 weekly flex points available
- No picture available

Saturday February 2, 2008

Coffee, Toasted Blueberry Bagel, Dinner at Sister-In-Law’s Birthday Party, including Meatballs and soup, and Robins Donuts

- Total 41 points
- over by 9 points, 26 flex points remain
- No picture available

Sunday February 3, 2008

Coffee, Puffed Wheat Cereal, with 2% milk, orange, Pita Pocket with 100g turkey breast, dry puffed wheat cereal, toasted blueberry bagel

- total 22 points
- under, still have 26 flext points remaining
- picture of my brunch

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Monday February 4, 2008

Coffee, Orange, Pita Pocket with 50g Turkey, Chicken Fingers and Fries, Frozen Yogurt Ice Cream, with Syrop

-Total 52 points
- over by 20 points, 6 flex points remain
- Picture of my lunch

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- Picture of my dinner

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Tuesday February 5, 2008

Coffee, Weight Watchers toast, Oranges, Toasted Blueberry Bagel with Peanut Butter, Dry puffed wheat Cereal, Thinsation Peanut Butter Snaps, and rice cakes

- total 28 points
- under, still have 6 flex points left
- picture of my dinner

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Wednesday February 6, 2008

Coffee, Toasted Blueberry Bagel with peanut butter, Dry Puffed Wheat cereal, Sundried Tomato Pita with 100g Turkey and lite mayo, Thinsation Chips Ahoy, President Choice Sweet & Salty Almond Bar, Reeses Puff Cereal with 2% milk

- Total 36 points
- over by 4 points, 2 flex points remain
- Picture of my dinner

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Thursday February 7, 2008

Coffee, Reeses Puffs Cereal with 2% milk, Palatel Mongolian Stir Fry, Robins Donut Coffee, Soda Pop

- 28 points
- under - Week ended with 2 remaining flex points!
- No picture available today.

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WEIGH-IN: February 1, 2008

Day Thirty-One - Friday Morning Weigh In.

Weigh In

Today’s Weight: February 1, 2008 - 279.0 lbs
Last Week’s Weight: January 25, 2008 - 280.5 lbs

Starting Weight: January 1, 2008 - 287.5 lbs

>> I LOST 1.5 lbs during this period
>> YTD LOSS 8.5 lbs since January 1, 2008

Reflection

I’ll take the 1.5 lb loss! I didn’t sleep that much last night (adrenalin) after working offline catching up with my online stuff .. and maybe got another 4 hours sleep. I’ve been averaging 2-3 hour power snoozes maybe 2-3 times a day this past week.

I still haven’t started any exercise and it’s been cold as hell here in Winnipeg (that dry cold and -31c temperatures with wind chills in the -40c’s!) I sit at the desk and work on the computer all day. However, if I can keep up 8.5 lbs loss each month x 12 = 102 lbs for the calendar! Is that even possible? That woud be nice.

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THE HART-SERIES: January 25-31, 2008

Days Twenty-four to Thirty, still trying to lose weight (Fri, Sat, Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, Thur)

Sorry for delays … I am quite busy at the month-end time, and mid-month (for my offline work) and I accidentally uploaded my pictures to my laptop and deleted the pictures from my camera .. On my laptop, I deleted the pictures again, because I thought they were still in the camera. I assure everybody that I am still following my “diet” (at least counting the points), despite the slow posting in here and lack of pictures

Friday January 25, 2008

Coffee, Dry Puffed Wheat Cereal, oranges, Pasta Salad, Garden Salad with 100g turkey, red peppers, low fat Creamy poppyseed dressing, croutons, bacon bits, sunflower seeds, Flax cereal and Lucky Charms Cereal with 2% milk

- Total 29 points
- 35 Weekly flex points left
- No Picture Available

Saturday January 26, 2008

Coffee, and Tim Horton’s Coffee, Pizza Hut for dinner
>> We had stuffed crust Tuscani Pizza, and I calculated it to be 11 points per 1/12 of a Large Pizza .. I basically wolved down half that pizza (We moved my father-in-law out of his apartment to the Personal Care Home today)

- Total 68 points
- Over by 36 points - it wiped my weekly flex points .. -1 over weekly alotment
- No Picture available

Sunday January 27, 2008

Coffee, the last of HART’s Famous Pasta Salad, and then 73rd Birthday Dinner Party for my dad … we had Sobey’s Homemade Pizza, garlic toast and ice cream cake … Thanks to yesterday’s Pizza Hut for me eating in moderation, sort of!

- Total 46 points
- over by 14 points, now I’m -15 over weekly alotment
- No Picture available

Monday January 28, 2008

Coffee, Weight Watcher toast, Oranges, A&W Double Mozza Burger and Coffee, Thinsation Oreo cookies

- 33 Points today
- Over by 1 point, -16 points over alotment
- No picture available

Tuesday January 29, 2008

Coffee, Weight Watchers Toast with Peanut butter, Chunky Chicken Soup, Melba Toast, Quaker Rice Cake, Toasted Wheat Bagels with Peant Butter, Salad with red peppers, parmesan cheese, cheddar cheese, sunflower seeds, bacon bits, croutons and Caesor lo-cal dressing

-26 points today
- under daily limit, but still -16 over weekly alotment
- picture of my lunch

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Wednesday January 30, 2008

Coffee, whole wheat homemade pancakes, oranges, dry cereal, toast with peanut butter - that’s it.

- Total 24 points
- under daily limit, but still -16 over weekly alotment
- No Picture available

Thursday January 31, 2008

Coffee, weight watchers toast, oranges, Chunky Chicken Soup, Melba Toast, 2 pita pocket sandwiches with 100g turkey breast with lite mayonaisse

- Total 29 points
- under daily limit, but still -16 over weekly alotment
- No picture available

Advertisement: @ HART Market We have combined many of our marketplace blogs into this one consolidated site.

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Alzheimer’s Disease in the Blogosphere, 2/18/08

We don’t call Alzheimer’s disease “the Monster” for nothing. As recent blog posts suggest, Alzheimer’s terrifies many people. For some, any possible advance in research and treatment is grasped like a straw, or a lifeline. For others, Alzheimer’s disease is a daily, grinding burden as they care for a loved one, or sometimes, face it themselves. For still others, dementia causes them to look at life and their own health in a new way.

We think of Alzheimer’s disease as something that causes people to forget, but for the Memory Bridge project, it’s a call to remember and to bring generations closer. They’ve developed interview questions that are used for the Library of Congress’s Veterans History Project, a school curriculum, and a highly-recommended documentary.

Robert DeMarco at I Am an Alzheimer’s Caregiver regards the value of exercise so highly in the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease, he’s signed up his 91-year-old mother to join Gold’s Gym. Doesn’t it pump you up just to hear that?

Jeannot at Life lessons coping with Alzheimer says her son has installed door alarms, but her husband took one off and said “the people” did it. Well, if he can’t remember doing something, obviously somebody else did it. You’ve got to make sense of your life somehow.

Filmmaker Gene Burns in Austin is looking for a film crew (including a director) for his short Alzheimer’s disease film called Ruth’s Locket. Having a storyboard would help him get funding for it. Liz at Alzheimer’s Notes mentioned the film on her blog. Production is scheduled for Summer 2008.

David Perlmutter, the Renegade Neurologist, reports that other doctors have treated several women whose inability to concentrate and to find the right words disappeared when they stopped taking the cholesterol-lowering drug Lipitor. The maker of the drug insists that it’s tested and safe, while the University of California at San Diego is conducted a large study on the effects of statin drugs. After all, one of the building blocks of the brain is cholesterol…

Mike at Fading from Memory has two parents with Alzheimer’s disease. His mother recently entered a nursing home, while his father has left dozens of phone messages asking about her. His family is considering placing his father in the same home. If they do, they’ll have a few weeks to pay a lump sum of $250,000 for his care. But that’s Australian dollars. It would only be $227,000 US or Canadian dollars, according to XE.com. Well, that’s better, isn’t it?

Most people agree that diet can help prevent the symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease. Whether it’s fish oil or mangosteen, we’re always enthusiastic to try something new (though maybe we have less enthusiasm for the fish oil). According to About Alzheimer’s, researchers at Cornell University have discovered some new foods that may lower your risk of getting Alzheimer’s disease. And those foods are… apples, oranges, and bananas. Are you eating 5-10 servings of fruit and vegetables every day, like you’re supposed to? Well then, don’t complain if your memory starts to fail.

Deb at The Yellow Wallpaper talks about how her relationship with her mother has changed since she put her into a nursing home. For many of us, we don’t have deep relationships with our parents anymore, which makes a decision like that much harder - or easier. Deb loves her mother, but her mother is mad at her for putting her there. She says that with her mother, she has “to learn her new language, a language that has no past tenses… Her truth is in the present and has to do with what she is losing right now.”

Experts say that when people are first diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, their loved ones recall that their memories were never very good. The Nun Study at the University of Kentucky has also identified factors that can help predict Alzheimer’s disease, such as whether the person could juggle multiple ideas at once when they were young. OurAlzheimer’s.com quotes the Archives of Neurology as reporting that some people with primary progressive aphasia, a rare language disability, report that they have always had trouble with spelling or foreign languages.

Trisha at Every Patient’s Advocate describes the nocebo effect. The placebo effect causes people to feel better because they’re taking prescriptions, even if they are sugar pills. The nocebo effect causes people to feel worse because the doctor told them they would. Trisha says she never believed them when they told her she had cancer, and it turned out she didn’t. The nocebo effect is described in the current issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

If medical costs have to rise, then why does Dr. Benjamin Brewer say that he can provide primary health care for $20 per month per patient? (Actually, he’s doing it for $2 a month, but that’s under a government “health home” program.) He says, “Primary care is cheap.” What makes health insurance so expensive is its coverage of catastrophic events such as hospitalization. My guess is that fewer people would be in the hospital if they had better preventative care.

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A Lazy Weekend Can Sometimes Suck…

…if you have osteoarthritis!!

Especially if you cannot go outside because it has been raining day and night this weekend.  Believe it or not, it has been raining cats and dogs out here for the last 3-4-5 days now. I cannot really remember how long because it now feels like forever.

I hate it like this because I often walk around the (our) house, from the back yard to the front, and back again and again, as long as my legs wouldn’t hurt yet. Sometimes in the morning or in the afternoon. I love stretching my legs sometimes, more on weekends because I really need a good break from online and computer stuff (that I do sitting down) and more so because I really need the exercise.

But if it is like this, I hate stepping out on the mud and the rain. I love taking a walk outside on weekends, even if I am talking to somebody on my cellphone.

These are stuff I can do without pressure on weekends. It is almost sacred, like my friend says. Particularly because I will not be able to stand not going outside, even if it is just to smell the flowers, so to speak!

Well, it is already Monday and looks like the rain has no plans of stopping. I cannot have it all, can I?

But is a decent, sunshine-y day to much to ask? The ever-gray skies and this non-stopping rain is make me sad and low.

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