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Monday, June 30, 2014

Your Guide To a Scorching Summer Body Review

By on 7:12 AM

YOUR GUIDE TO A SCORCHING SUMMER BODY REVIEW

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Wednesday, December 18, 2013

12 Low Calorie Fruits

By on 11:39 AM


low cal fruits

12 Low Calorie Fruits

Eating fruit everyday is a great way to get a wide variety of vitamins and minerals that our bodies need. The latest diet trends seem to advocate cutting out Fruit, as it is a major source of simple sugars.
Apparently sugar is the new fat and all sugar is evil (kidding), I have written previously about this here .
While cutting back on excess sugar and calories is a good thing when trying to lose weight, dropping the fruit is not always a great idea.
Like anything else in life you can over do it on fruit, just make sure that it’s not the only thing you’re eating (fruitarianism).
Getting a wide variety of fruits, vegetables, nuts/seeds, beans and legumes plus limited animal products is what we should all be eating, if weight loss is our goal anyway.
With that said, here are 12 fruits that are low in calories despite their sugar content.

12 Low Calorie Fruits

1. Peaches

Low-Calorie-Fruits-Peach
Peaches contain only 39 calories per 100 gram serving, making it one of the lowest calorie fruits available today. In fact 1 medium Peach has just 59 calories while also providing 10% of your daily Vitamin A requirements and 1 gram of protein.

2. Strawberries

Low-Calorie-Fruits-Strawberries
Did you know that 1 ripe medium sized strawberry only has 1 gram of sugar and just 4 calories? That means you can eat a dozen of these tasty berries for less than 50 total calories. Plus you’ll be getting more than 100% of your required vitamin C intake

3. Cantaloupe

Low-Calorie-Fruits-Cantaloupe
Whether you eat them diced (53 calories per cup) or in wedges (23 calories per wedge) Cantaloupes pack a nutritional punch. High in Vitamins A and C these melons are one of the few fruits that have more Omega 3′s than Omega 6 fatty acids.

4. Grapefruit

Low-Calorie-Fruits-Grapefruit
Grapefruit is an acquired taste and isn’t for everybody but at just 37 calories for one half, it warrants trying it at least. Like most fruit, it’s high water content make it a good choice for a snack and can help keep you feeling full without adding an excessive amount of calories.

5. Cranberries

Low-Calorie-Fruits-Cranberries
Mostly known for their powerful effects on urinary tract infections, cranberries are surprisingly low in calories. One cup contains just 46 calories and 5 grams of fiber. They are also a good source of Vitamin C and Manganese. More recently they have been shown to suppress Cancer.

6. Plums

Low-Calorie-Fruits-Plum
Plums are one of those fruits that we just don’t eat enough of. At only 30 calories each there is no reason not to add this to your diet, at least a few times a week. They provide 5% of your Vitamin K requirements and are low on the glycemic index.

7. Cucumber

Low-Calorie-Fruits-Cucumber
No this isn’t a mistake, Cucumbers are actually fruits. A favorite with kids, they are very low in calories with half a medium cucumber having just 23 calories. These are also a great source of Vitamin K and potassium. As with most fruits you should eat them with the skin on for maximum benefit.

8. Nectarine

Low-Calorie-Fruits-Nectarine
Nectarines are closely related to peaches in size and shape and not surprising, calories. A medium Nectarine has 62 calories, sightly more than a peach. They also give you 8% of your potassium needs and 2 grams of protein. Check out more fruits that are high in protein.

9. Peppers

Low-Calorie-Fruits-Green-Pepper
Another fruit mistaken for a vegetable, peppers are very low calorie and the sweet varieties make great snacks. One cup of sliced green peppers contains only 18 calories and more than 120% of your Vitamin C for the day. Red and yellow sweet peppers are also good anti inflammatory foods.

10. Honeydew Melon

Low-Calorie-Fruits-HoneyDew-Melon
Another favorite and often served as melon balls, Honeydews are sweet and make great snacks by themselves or as part of a fruit salad. One cup has only 60 calories and provides 11% of your potassium needs. Not bad for a fruit that is 90% water.

11. Watermelon

Low-Calorie-Fruits-Watermelon
When it comes to water content you can’t beat a watermelon. With more than 91% water these melons not surprisingly have very few calories. In fact 1 cup of diced watermelon has just 46 calories, but still provides a decent amount of Vitamins A and C.

12. Raspberries

Low-Calorie-Fruits-raspberries
While not particularly high in any one vitamin or mineral raspberries are now being sought after for their high antioxidant levels and anti inflammatory properties. One the most overlooked health benefits of raspberries is their extremely low calorie content. In fact 1 average sized raspberry roughly has just a single calorie each.

Final Word

These are just a sampling of the variety of fruits that are out there. As I’ve said before most fruit is pretty low in calories and are packed with phytonutrients, plant phenols and antioxidants. Researchers are still uncovering the many benefits of fruit.
When is comes to losing weight, low calorie fruit should definitely be included as part of your healthy eating plan.
What’s your favorite? leave a comment and let me know which other low calorie fruits you’re eating.


 The original article: http://www.weightlossweapons.com/12-low-calorie-fruits/

Built By Science Chest

By on 11:36 AM
A lot of guys go to the gym to build a big, thick chest. It's not uncommon to see a novice hit the gym and knock out 20, 30, or 40 sets of bench press in one workout. Doing that many sets of bench in one workout can spell bad news for your shoulders, but it also neglects the many other effective chest exercises available.
I'm going to teach you how to train your chest more effectively, how to target specific chest muscles, and how to get the most from your hard work in the gym. It's time to harness the power of science and apply it to your best body.

Built By Science Chest

Muscular Anatomy To better target and more effectively train your chest, it's important to understand how the muscles are put together. Here's what you need to know about the muscles in your chest.

Pectoralis Major

This is the one you're probably most interested in training. Your pec major, which is your biggest chest muscle, actually has three sub-heads: the clavicular head, the sternal head, and the abdominal head. These heads are important to know because they can be specifically trained through particular movements.

Clavicular head

The clavicular head is the upper part of your pectoralis major. It runs from your clavicle—your collarbone—down and across the top part of your chest. It attaches to your humerus, or upper arm. Most guys struggle to build the top portion of their chest, so we'll pay special attention to this area.

Sternal Head

The sternal head is quite a bit larger than the clavicular head. It runs from your sternum, comes across your chest, and inserts at your humerus.

Abdominal Head

The abdominal head runs from your rectus sheath, which is a big piece of connective tissue that surrounds your abdominal muscles, continues up and across the bottom portion of your chest, and attaches to your humerus.

Pectoralis Minor

Your pec minor lies beneath the pec major. It's a really small muscle group that you're probably not going to spend too much time trying to develop.
The pec minor runs from a little boney prominence at the top of your scapula (called the coracoid process) and attaches to ribs three, four, and five. I want you to know that it's there, but you don't need to worry about it too much. It's mostly there to help you breathe.

Serratus Anterior

The serratus anterior starts from the inside of your shoulder blade, wraps around your side, and attaches onto the front of your ribcage. Really lean bodybuilders have great looking serratus muscles.
Although it's another muscle you probably won't spend a lot of time developing, it's crucial for a balanced physique and healthy shoulders.
Dumbbell Pullover

Skeletal Anatomy

Your bones and joints play a critical role in how your chest works and how you train it. You can't train your chest without also thinking about your shoulders, back, and elbows.

Scapula

Your scapula is an important part of your pressing movements. When you set up on a bench press, you want to pin the shoulders down and back to create a stable base from which to press. It might be on the posterior side of your body, but your scapula is definitely going to come into play during chest training.

Shoulder Joint

The scapula and humerus come together to form the glenohumeral joint. This joint is essential to chest training. It's also the most prone to injury. If you don't set up well for your presses, you could do some serious damage to your shoulders.

Elbow

A lot of people don't think about this, but every time you do a pressing exercise, you extend your elbow. Your elbows have to function smoothly and pain-free for your chest training to be at its best.

Muscular Function

Let's put all the pieces together and see how your muscles and bones work together in real-world, functional movements that you do every day.

Pectoralis Major

All three heads of your pec major work together to create internal rotation. If you put your arm out to the side and rotate it down and forward, you're rotating your arm internally. Your arm can't do that without the help of your pecs.
A lot of us aren't too worried about how functionally our chest can rotate our arm. Instead, we want to see striations and learn how to get big and lean. One of the best exercises to do this is the incline flye. This movement is called horizontal adduction—you pull across your body.
As you do the movement, those pec fibers elongate and then shorten and get tight. All the heads must work together to perform horizontal adduction.

Clavicular Head

Your clavicular head is responsible for shoulder flexion, or raising your arm over your head. Incline presses, when your arms go overhead, are going to hit that top portion of your chest.

Sternal and Abdominal Heads

To best hit the bottom portion of your chest, decline presses and dumbbell pull-overs are best. Your torso position and the position of your shoulders make a huge difference in which portion of your chest you train.

Serratus Anterior

Your serratus anterior is most noticeable when you do something which protracts your shoulder. When you reach forward like you're doing a row, you protract your shoulder. The top part of a push-up really works the serratus anterior. Push-ups may not make your chest massive, but they definitely train that serratus.
The serratus is also one of three muscles which allow your shoulder blade to rotate upward so you can put your arms over your head. Your serratus, lower traps, and upper traps work together to create upward rotation. Visible serratus muscles look cool, but their function is critically important to your shoulder health.

Key Exercises

These are the movements you'll see throughout Built by Science. They're some of the best options for developing a strong, powerful chest.

EXERCISE 1 Dumbbell Incline Bench

Dumbbell Incline Bench
Keep your legs and abs tight for this exercise. As you move the dumbbells overhead, tuck your elbows down and in. Flared elbows put a lot of stress and torque on your shoulders.
Although you use all three heads of your pec major for this movement, putting your arms overhead will especially tax your clavicular head. If you're having trouble filling out the top part of your chest, make sure you add the incline bench or flye to your program.
If this movement bothers your shoulders, move to a neutral grip with your palms facing each other. Having your hands this way will give your shoulders a little more breathing room and should make you feel better.

EXERCISE 2 Dumbbell Flye

Dumbbell Flye
To hit the pecs and get that great horizontal adduction, dumbbell flyes are the way to go. Get a stable base: abs tight, back tight, and legs tight. Keep your elbows soft and stretch through your pecs.
As you bring your hands together, those fibers will pull together and shorten. This movement hits all three of your pec major heads evenly.

EXERCISE 3 Push-up

Pushup
I know, you've probably been doing push-ups for years and haven't noticed how they've trained your chest. I want to give you a few subtle cues to and tricks to make your push-ups more effective.
This total-body lift connects your upper and lower body. Keep your abs tight, tuck your elbows on the way down and then, to hit the serratus, exaggerate trying to push your body as far away from the floor as possible. The upward squeeze will engage the serratus at the top of the push-up.

Better Chest, Built By Science

A good understanding of how the bones, joints, and muscles work together will help you build a program to develop unbelievable pecs. Mixing up your movements, adding incline and decline presses to your regular flat bench program, and swapping barbells for dumbbells influence how your muscles work. The better you understand this, the better your physique is going to look.

Follow the Built By Science Program

Look for the exercises and techniques discussed above in the weekly chest workouts of the six-week Built by Science program. Watch all the overview videos before attacking the gym. Remember, you need to combine mind and muscle to build your best possible body.

The original article:http://www.bodybuilding.com/fun/built-by-science-chest.html

In men with sleep apnea, CPAP therapy improves golf performance

By on 11:31 AM
A new study suggests that treating obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy improves golf performance in middle-aged men.
Results show that up to six months of treatment with CPAP therapy was associated with significant improvements in self-reported excessive daytime sleepiness and sleep-related quality of life. Participants treated with CPAP therapy also experienced a significant drop of 11 percent in their average handicap index, a standardized formula that estimates a golfer's skill level. Among the more skilled golfers who had a baseline handicap index of 12 or less, the average handicap index dropped by 31.5 percent. Participants attributed their enhanced performance to factors such as improved concentration, endurance and decision making.
"The degree of improvement was most substantial in the better golfers who have done a superior job of managing the technical and mechanical aspects of golf," said principal investigator and lead author Dr. Marc Benton, senior partner at Atlantic Sleep & Pulmonary Associates and medical director of SleepWell Centers of NJ in Madison, N.J. "With the cognitive enhancement afforded by successful treatment of their sleep apnea, they saw measurable improvement early and more significantly than those who were less skilled."
The study results appear in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine, which is published by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine.
Objective data reporting shows that average utilization of CPAP therapy by participants in the treatment group was 6.3 hours per night for 91.4 percent of the nights, which is a much higher compliance rate than is typically reported. The results suggest that the potential for improved golf performance may have played a motivational role in increasing treatment compliance.
"An important aspect of providing high quality, patient-centered care is to identify the unique factors that motivate individual patients to comply with treatment," said American Academy of Sleep Medicine President Dr. M. Safwan Badr. "Effectively treating sleep apnea with CPAP therapy can yield numerous physical, cognitive and emotional benefits, all of which can be great motivators for patients when they begin treatment."
Benton and colleague Neil Friedman studied 12 men with moderate to severe obstructive sleep apnea who had a mean age of 55 years. A control group comprised 12 men without sleep apnea who were matched for age and handicap index. Participants had to maintain a handicap with the Golf Handicap and Information Network (GHIN), which is a service of the Unites States Golf Association (USGA). Their handicap index was recalculated after completion of 20 rounds of golf during the study period.
According to the authors, most avid golfers in the U.S. are adult males between 40 and 70 years of age, which is a demographic that has a high prevalence of obstructive sleep apnea. The AASM reports that OSA is a common sleep illness affecting up to seven percent of men and five percent of women. It involves repetitive episodes of complete or partial upper airway obstruction occurring during sleep despite an ongoing effort to breathe. The most effective treatment option for OSA is CPAP therapy, which helps keep the airway open by providing a stream of air through a mask that is worn during sleep.

The original article:http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/270223.php

Study Analyzes Diabetes Drug Metformin as Obesity Treatment for Children

By on 11:28 AM
Treatment with the diabetes drug metformin appears to be associated with a modest reduction in body mass index (BMI) in obese children when combined with lifestyle interventions such as diet and exercise, according to a study by Marian S. McDonagh, Pharm. D., of the Oregon Health & Science University, and colleagues.
Childhood obesity is a health problem in the United States, with nearly 17 percent of children being obese. Metformin is approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat type 2 diabetes in adults and children over 10 years old, but it has been used off-label in recent years to treat childhood obesity.
Researchers assessed the safety and effectiveness of metformin to treat obesity in children (ages 18 and younger) without a diagnosis of diabetes by reviewing results from 14 clinical trials. The trials included 946 children and adolescents, who ranged in age from 10 to 16 years, and had baseline BMIs from 26 to 41.
The results indicated that while metformin helped obese children reduce their BMI (a reduction of -1.38 from baseline) and weight compared with lifestyle interventions alone, the change was small compared to what is needed for long-term health benefits. Researchers noted no serious adverse events were reported.
"While our results indicate that some obese children and adolescents may benefit from short-term treatment with metformin combined with lifestyle interventions, these benefits were very modest, not achieving a 5 percent reduction in BMI," the study concludes.


The original article:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/12/131216183851.htm?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+sciencedaily%2Fhealth_medicine%2Ffitness+%28ScienceDaily%3A+Health+%26+Medicine+News+--+Fitness%29

Ear Acupuncture Can Help Shed Pounds

By on 11:25 AM

Ear Acupuncture Can Help Shed Pounds


Ear Acupuncture Can Help Shed Pounds
Ear Acupuncture Can Help Shed Pounds

Using continuous stimulation of five acupuncture points may be better at reducing abdominal fat (the midriff bulge) than single point stimulation, the findings suggest.
Auricular acupuncture therapy is based on the understanding that the outer ear represents all parts of the body. It was first used in France in 1956 by Dr Paul Nogier who noticed that a patient's back-ache was cured after s/he sustained a burn on the ear.
Since then the approach has been used to treat drug addiction and help people give up smoking and lose weight.
The Korean researchers compared acupuncture of five points on the outer ear -- shen-men (divine gate); spleen, stomach, hunger, and endocrine -- and one point (hunger) -- with sham treatment on 91 overweight adults (BMI of 23 or more).
Participants were asked to follow a restrictive (although not weight loss) diet and not to take any extra exercise during the eight week period of their treatment.
Thirty one people were randomly assigned to the five point treatment, which involved the insertion of acupuncture needles 2mm deep into the outer ear. These were kept in place with surgical tape for a week, after which the same treatment was applied to the other ear, with the process repeated over eight weeks.
Another 30 people were assigned to the same treatment process, but at just the one hunger point. And a further 30 were given sham treatment -- with the same process and timescales, but with the removal of the needles immediately after insertion.
All participants were weighed and measured at the start and end of treatment, and four weeks in, to include BMI, waist circumference, body fat mass, percentage body fat, and blood pressure to see what impact acupuncture might have.
Twenty four people dropped out before the eight weeks were up, 15 of whom were in the sham treatment group, suggesting that perhaps they found it harder to regulate their desire to eat and cope with the restrictive diet, say the authors.
But among those who kept going for the entire period, significant differences were apparent after four weeks, with the active treatment groups showing a 6.1% (5-point treatment) and 5.7% (1-point treatment) reduction, respectively, in BMI compared with the sham treatment group among whom there was no reduction in BMI.
Weight also differed significantly after four weeks in both active treatment groups compared with the sham treatment group.
Waist circumference fell, with the largest drop seen in the group on the 5-point treatment compared with the sham groups, although this difference disappeared after taking account of age.
Measures of body fat also fell after eight weeks, but only in those receiving the 5-point treatment. There were no significant differences in blood pressure among the groups.
The authors conclude that both five and one point approaches can help treat overweight, but that the five point approach may be more appropriate for tackling abdominal fat

 The original article:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/12/131216204023.htm?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+sciencedaily%2Fhealth_medicine%2Ffitness+%28ScienceDaily%3A+Health+%26+Medicine+News+--+Fitness%29

Mega Millions Jackpot Nears Record Just in Time for Christmas

By on 3:39 AM
Dollar bills
Getty Images

At more than half-a-billion dollars and counting, Tuesday’s Mega Millions jackpot is nearing its all-time high, and a billion-dollar jackpot by Christmas isn’t that far-fetched.Updated: 12:05 p.m.
By Tuesday morning, the jackpot had already hit $586 million, the fourth-largest prize ever. And just hours later, lottery officials reported that the pot had grown to $636 million.
Virginia’s lottery director Paula Otto told Reuters that 70 percent of tickets are usually bought the day of the drawing. Officials will gauge sales, estimated to go at a rate of 11 million an hour in 43 states, throughout the day to determine how much the jackpot should increase. The drawing will happen at 11 p.m. Eastern time on Tuesday night.
The current U.S. jackpot record is $656 million, but Otto said that, “If it doesn’t surpass the record we’ll be close. It’s growing a little faster than we thought.”
Someone could have a very merry early Christmas.
This post has been updated to reflect the rising jackpot.


Read more: Mega Millions Lottery Jackpot Nears Record Just in Time for Christmas | TIME.com http://nation.time.com/2013/12/17/mega-millions-jackpot-nears-record-just-in-time-for-christmas/#ixzz2npFDItHe