City Cycling May Save the Planet, but Not Your Lungs

Urban cycling, while good for the environment, may pose a risk your health, a new Dublin study has found.
 
Cycling in congested cities could do more harm than good to your heart and lungs, due to the breathing in of dangerous pollutants in the air, the study found. While pedestrians are exposed as well, cyclists exert themselves more and breathe more heavily, which increases their risk, The Australian reports. Problems include breathing in exhaust fumes as well as tiny particles generated by vehicle brakes and tires.

The study, led by Marguerite Nyhan of Trinity College, recruited 32 fit, healthy cyclers who opted for mostly traffic-free routes.

A separate 2011 UK study also found that urban cyclists may be inhaling high levels of black soot. The University of London study found that urbanites who cycled to work had 2.3 times more black carbon in their lungs than pedestrians. Previous research has shown that black carbon is linked to a wide range of serious health issues, including reduced lung function and a higher risk of respiratory diseases and heart attacks.

What's an avid city cyclist to do? Consider using a facemask, which experts told the BBC could be an effective way of reducing exposure, as long as the mask fits correctly. Previous studies carried out in Beijing have found that wearing a well-fitted face mask could reduce risks of exposure to particulate pollution, the report said.

Also, opt for roads with less traffic, or travel during times of day when there is less congestion, and avoid riding behind diesel-powered buses or trucks.
 
(Relaxnews)

Knowing cholesterol better

Good, bad, high density, low density? What is cholesterol exactly and why is it such a health issue?
 
What is cholesterol?
Cholesterol is a soft, waxy, fatty substance made naturally in the body, and we need a certain amount because it's vital for the formation of cell structures, hormones and substances that aid digestion.
The body makes most of the cholesterol it needs. But cholesterol is also found in some animal food products, and consuming too many can contribute to blood cholesterol becoming dangerously high.
Some people have a heriditary condition where their bodies make too much cholesterol.
 
“Good” and “bad” cholesterol
There are basically two kinds of cholesterol:
  • “Good” or HDL cholesterol (the full term is High Density Lipoprotein cholesterol). HDL cholesterol is sometimes called “good” because it helps remove cholesterol from the arteries, the blood vessels that carry oxygen-rich blood from your heart to the body’s cells.
  • “Bad” or LDL cholesterol (Low Density Lipoprotein cholesterol). LDL cholesterol is sometimes called “bad” because high levels are linked to build-up in your arteries.
A helpful way to remember the difference between HDL and LDL:
  • You want HDL cholesterol levels to be HIGH.
  • You want LDL cholesterol levels to be LOW.
Total cholesterol is a measure of the total amount of cholesterol in your blood, including both LDL and HDL cholesterol.
 
What is high cholesterol?
High cholesterol is when you have too much cholesterol in your blood. It may also be called high blood cholesterol, hypercholesterolemia or hyperlipidemia.
 
Your total cholesterol or LDL cholesterol may be too high, or your HDL cholesterol too low.
The most important effect of high cholesterol is that it can cause narrowing and blockages in the arteries.
 
Excess cholesterol, and other substances normally found in the blood like calcium and fat, can start to build up just under the lining of artery walls.
 
The areas of the artery wall where cholesterol and other matter collects are called “plaques”.
The formation of plaques in the arteries is a condition called atherosclerosis, arteriosclerosis or “hardening of the arteries”.
 
How arteriosclerosis progresses
Over time, the plaques get harder and narrow the arteries further, limiting blood flow and damaging the artery wall. The rougher the plaques make the artery lining, the more likely substances like platelets, which make the blood sticky and promote clotting, will also get trapped there.
 
If narrowing occurs in the coronary arteries, which carry oxygen-rich blood to the heart muscle itself, the condition is called coronary artery disease or coronary heart disease, which raises risk for heart attack.
 
Coronary artery disease may cause angina: pain or a sensation of pressure in your chest. You may also feel angina pain in your arms, shoulders, neck, jaw or back; it may even feel like indigestion.
 
A section of plaque can break open, causing a blood clot to form: this can suddenly and dramatically block blood flow to a vital organ. Blood clots can also break free and travel in the body to cause blockages elsewhere.
 
A heart attack occurs if blood flow to part of the heart muscle suddenly becomes blocked. If you don't have emergency treatment to quickly get the blood flowing again, the section of heart muscle starved of oxygen-rich blood can die. A heart attack may be fatal.
 
Blockages in the arteries that supply the brain can lead to stroke, which damages the section of brain tissue deprived of oxygen-rich blood. Strokes are also sometimes fatal.
 
- Olivia Rose-Innes, December 2012, Health24

Angry outbursts raise heart attack risk.

 
Learning how to channel rage won’t help just your emotional state, it can also help your heart. Harvard University researchers say the risk of heart attack, stroke and other cardiovascular conditions increases two hours after an initial outburst of rage.
 
Published in the European Heart Journal, the research focused on the relationship between anger and cardiovascular complications, reviewing studies between January 1966 and June 2013. Using this information, the researchers analyzed 5,000 heart attacks, 800 strokes, and 300 cases of arrhythmia.
 
The researchers determined that the risk of heart attack increases five times and the risk of stroke increases three times within two hours after an anger outburst, compared to when a person is not angry. The risk of abnormal heartbeat also increases.
 
The more heart issues or history someone already has, the greater the risk becomes. If someone with few risk factors loses their cool once a month, the risk is very small. However, someone with several risk factors who is often angry increases their risk, especially over time. For example, the researchers estimated the annual rate of heart attack per 10,000 people with low risk factors who are angry once a month increases by only one. But this number jumps to four in people with high cardiovascular risk.
 
The researchers did acknowledge that they did not establish a cause and effect. So it remains if anger actually triggers the cardiovascular problems.
 
Sourced from: Heart attack risk rises after anger outbursts, medicalnewstoday.com
 

Why Mozzies Love You

Whether you live in a malaria area or not, mosquitoes can make your life hell - especially at night. Here's what you can do to get rid of these pests.
 
People attract mosquitoes through the heat and chemical substances produced by their bodies. The carbon dioxide we breathe out is the biggest attraction.
 
Drink me!

No preventive medicines are 100% effective against malaria but it would be unwise not to take them. Chloroquine can be used only in areas that don't have chloroquine-resistant malaria. Use Malarone, doxycycline or primaquine in these areas. Another common drug, mefloquine (Lariam), has an unpleasant side-effect: it sometimes makes people think they're going mad.
 
What's more, the malaria parasite is becoming resistant to it. Some medicines aren't suitable for small children, pregnant women and porphyria sufferers so ask your pharmacist.

10 natural mosquito repellents
  • cinnamon oil
  • citronella oil
  • eucalyptus oil
  • castor oil
  • rosemary oil
  • citron grass
  • cedar oil
  • oil of cloves
  • geranium oil
  • peppermint oil
What attracts mosquitoes?

Have you ever wondered why mosquitoes seem to single you out?
Research has shown mosquitoes have strong likes and dislikes. Here are a few indicators - some scientifically proven and others just conjecture - as to what these pesky insects prefer. Mosquitoes . . .
  • prefer blondes to brunettes.
  • like kids better than adults.
  • zone in on women who're ovulating.
  • adore smelly feet.
  • like sweet-smelling perfume.
  • are attracted by lactic acid, which your body releases naturally after exercise.
  • like you if you use certain medications such as ones for heart disease, blood pressure and high cholesterol.
The natural products above will keep mosquitoes away but they must be applied every two hours, About.com reports. Natural products aren't necessarily safer or as effective as chemical products and manufacturers' directions should be followed at all times.
 
Preventing malaria

Are you planning a trip to northeastern Limpopo, KwaZulu-Natal, Mpumalanga, the Kruger Park, other countries in Africa south of the Sahara, Central or South America or any tropical region in Asia? In that case see your doctor or pharmacist to find out about antimalarial drugs at least six weeks before you leave.
  • Spray mosquito repellent aerosol on your skin, sleep under a mosquito net and between sheets treated with mosquito repellent and wear long-sleeved shirts and long pants in the early mornings and at dusk when mosquitoes are most active.
  • Plug-in devices with pads or small bottles of mosquito repellant work very well.
  • Consult your doctor if you have any flu-like symptoms after a trip to a malaria area and after you've stopped taking antimalarial drugs.
Did you know?
Only the female mosquito bites- it uses the protein in our blood to produce eggs.

(YOU Pulse; Summer, December 2007)

Too Much Sitting After 60 May Lead to Disability

For each extra sedentary hour per day, researchers found a 50 percent increased risk.

Too much sitting has been linked to increased risk for health problems such as heart failure and earlier death. Now, a new study finds older adults who sit too much are more likely to be disabled -- regardless of their exercise habits.

"Sedentary behavior is its own separate risk factor [for disability]," said study researcher Dorothy Dunlop, a professor of medicine at the Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine. She evaluated the exercise habits of more than 2,000 men and women, aged 60 and above, and their ability to perform normal everyday activities.

"Regardless of how much time they spent in moderate physical activity, the more time they spent being sedentary, the more likely they were to be disabled," Dunlop said.
However, another expert wonders if the relationship may occur in the opposite way -- that the more disabled people are, the more sedentary they are due to inability to exercise.

The study was supported in part by the U.S. National Institute for Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Diseases. It was published online Feb. 19 in the Journal of Physical Activity & Health.

Dunlop and her colleagues evaluated responses given to the U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. The men and women answering the survey wore accelerometer devices to measure their activity on at least four different days between 2002 and 2005.

Few met the guidelines of getting moderate activity for 2.5 hours a week, Dunlop said. Only about 6 percent met that goal, and the other 94 percent did not, the study found.

On average, the men and women spent nine hours a day being sedentary during waking hours. About 4 percent reported being disabled. Disability was defined as having much difficulty (or inability) in performing activities of daily living, such as getting out of bed, dressing and walking.

For each additional daily hour of being sedentary, the odds of disability rose about 50 percent, Dunlop said. For instance, a woman aged 65 who was sedentary for 13 hours a day was 50 percent more likely to be disabled than a woman who was sedentary for 12 hours, she explained.

What is it about sitting? Dunlop can't say for sure, but said experts think that sitting for an extended period causes muscles to burn less fat and blood to flow more sluggishly. Idle muscles and sluggish blood flow can contribute to high blood pressure, heart disease, swollen ankles and diabetes.

Dunlop's study found a link, not a cause-and-effect relationship.

The connection may actually go the other way, said Andrea LaCroix, a professor of epidemiology in family and preventive medicine and director of the Women's Health Center of Excellence at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine. She recently found a link in her own study between higher amounts of sedentary time and higher risk of death in older women.

In the new study, however, the disability may be driving the inactivity, she said. "The more disabled people are, the more sedentary, because they are unable to exercise," LaCroix said.

Among the study's limitations, she noted, was that it looks only at a snapshot in time -- four days of tracking over a few years. A better approach would be to follow people over time and see if being sedentary leads to disability, said LaCroix, who is also an affiliate investigator at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, in Seattle.

The take-home message, study author Dunlop said, is that older adults, regardless of how much they exercise, should decrease their sedentary behaviors. So, she's still encouraging exercise. But if that's difficult, decreasing sitting time is another goal.

How to do that? Stand up when you talk on the phone, she suggested. Park in a far-away space at the mall or market when you shop. At work or home, walk around a bit when you get up for coffee or water, she advised. Walk to nearby errands instead of taking the car. If you're able, take stairs, not elevators. You can use a pedometer to track your activity.

WebMD News from HealthDay
By Kathleen Doheny
HealthDay Reporter