Archive for February, 2007
Eat To Live: Garlic, antioxidants in doubt - United Press International
| Eat To Live: Garlic, antioxidants in doubt United Press International - It may just be that the health benefits of diets that freely use garlic come more from their richness in olive oil, fish, nuts, grains and fruits. ... |
Peter Marinello, NARCer - Gothamist
![]() Gothamist | Peter Marinello, NARCer Gothamist, NY - The current trend (supplement "de jour" if you will) is the green tea/hoodia supplements that have flooded the market, promising everything from greater ... |
Eye on the prize - Thread
![]() Thread | Eye on the prize Thread, New Zealand - PREVAGE⢠Eye anti-aging moisturizing treatment 15 ml $165.00 PREVAGE⢠anti-aging treatment 50 ml $270.00 Green Tea Blend (Green Tea, Yellow Tea, White Tea) ... |
Sox17 required for transformation of embryonic stem cell to heart muscle cell
An important choreographer of the complicated dance of signals, enzymes and proteins that takes embryonic stem cells through the steps to becoming a beating heart muscle cell is the gene Sox17, said researchers from Baylor College of Medicine in a report in the current issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. To be precise, Sox17 is critical in transforming primitive mesoderm (an early layer of tissue in the embryo) into the more specialized cardiac mesoderm from which heart muscle develops, said Dr. Michael Schneider, senior researcher of the report. "Heart muscle formation by embryonic stem cells is a complex, multi-step process," said Schneider, professor of medicine, molecular and cellular biology, and molecular physiology and biophysics at Baylor College of Medicine. "We have succeeded in uncoupling the formation of cardiac mesoderm from its antecedent steps. That discovery provides immediate insight into how one might …
Little league health risks anything but minor
Before letting young athletes play like the pros, know the risks – both physical and mental – of putting undeveloped muscles and bones to the test. Dr. Joseph Chorley, assistant professor of pediatrics at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, suggests parents wait for indicators of physical maturity before allowing their children to engage in intense, physically demanding activities and year-round sports. Indicators for boys include needing to shave and for girls, the beginning of menstruation, said Chorley, who is also a sports medicine specialist at Texas Children's Hospital. "It is difficult to set an age at which kids should be allowed to throw a curveball (which puts undue stress on the shoulder and elbow) or play their sport of choice year-round," he said. "At 14, kids are at such different developmental stages than one another that the decision needs to be individualized." Exposing a body too soon to intense physical …

