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Blood Types

Posted by Blood Tests | Posted in Blood Info, Blood Test Results, Blood Tests | Posted on 25-04-2009

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There are four fundamental blood types: A, B, AB and O. Each types is associated with an RH factor, which is positive or negative. This gives rise to eight blood types: A+, B+, AB+, O+, A-, B-, AB-, O-. In the United States, the distribution of these is as follows:

* O+ = 38%
* A+ = 34%
* B+ = 9%
* O- = 7%
* A- = 6%
* AB+ = 3%
* B- = 2%
* AB- = 1%

There are certain antigenic substances like carbohydrates, proteins, glycolipids and glycoproteins on the surface of red blood cells. The presence of these substances depends on inheritance. The presence or absence of these antigenic substances gives rise to blood type.

Human blood types systems
The International Society of Blood Transfusion acknowledges 29 blood type systems.

1 – ABO blood type system
This is the most significant system in human blood transfusion. The associated anti-A and anti-B antibodies are called as the Immunoglobulin M or IgM antibodies. These are developed during the initial phase of life due to sensitization to environmental substances like viruses, bacteria and food.

2 – Rhesus blood type system
This is the second most significant system in human blood transfusion. RhD antigen is a most significant Rhesus antigen as it is the most immunogenic. RhD negative individuals do not have any anti-RhD IgG or IgM antibodies, but may have IgG anti-RhD antibodies due to a sensitizing occurrence.

3 – Other blood type systems
These are:

* MNS system
* Kell system
* Lewis system

These and other systems have been named according to the patients in whom the antibodies were detected.

Blood transfusion of the Blood types

* O+ can be given to patients with type O+, A+, B+, AB+ and can receive type O+, O-.
* A+ can be given to patients with type A+, AB+ and can receive type O+, A+, O-, A-.
* B+ can be given to patients with type B+, AB+ and can receive type O+, B+, O-, B-.
* AB+ can be given to patients with type AB+ and can receive type O+, A+, B+, AB+, O-, A-, B-, AB-
* O- can be given to patients with type O+, A+, B+, AB+, O-, A-, B-, AB- and can receive type O-
* A- can be given to patients with type A+, AB+, A-, AB- and can receive type O-, A-
* B- can be given to patients with type B+, AB+, B-, AB- and can receive type O-, B-
* AB- can be given to patients with type AB+, AB- and can receive type O-, A-, B-, AB-

Allele
An Allele is a form of genetic information that can be found in the DNA at a particular location and on a particular chromosome. Such co-dominant alleles decide the human blood types. These are of three types:

* IA called as A
* IB called as B
* i called as O

Every individual has a couple of ABO blood type alleles. One is inherited from the biological mother and the other from the biological father. A description of this pair in the offspring’s DNA is termed as a “genotype”. These genotypes are of six types:

* if one allele is A and other is A, the genotype of the offspring is AA and the blood type of the offspring is A
* if one allele is A and other is B, the genotype of the offspring is AB and the blood type of the offspring is AB
* if one allele is A and other is O, the genotype of the offspring is AO and the blood type of the offspring is A
* if one allele is B and other is B, the genotype of the offspring is BB and the blood type is B
* if one allele is B and other is O, the genotype of the offspring is BO and the blood type is B
* if one allele is O and other is O, the genotype of the offspring is OO and the blood type is O

Causes and Types of Cerebral Palsy

Posted by Blood Tests | Posted in Blood Info, Blood Test Results, Blood Tests | Posted on 24-04-2009

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In the case of Cerebral Palsy there is no one cause of this severe condition. There are many things that may increase the risk of this condition but will not cause cerebral palsy all the time. In the majority of cases and average of seventy percent, it results from brain injury before the child is even born this is known as congenital cerebral palsy this would be present from birth but may take months even years to diagnose depending on how severe it illness is. There is also a chance of acquired cerebral palsy which could happen through there being a case of meningitis or brain injuries.

Below are some factors that can increase the chances of cerebral palsy. None of the above will definitely lead to cerebral palsy. Before birth: Prematurely, long difficult labor, lack of oxygen to the child, Bacterial infection of the mother during birth, low birth weight, severe jaundice, viral, diseases in early pregnancy, attack of the child’s central nervous system, lack of oxygen / nutrients from the placenta to the fetus and incompatible blood types between the mother and child. After birth: Viral encephalitis, brain tumors, head injuries and Meningitis

Cerebral palsy is broken down into three main types: Ataxic cp, Athetoid cp, Spastic cp.

Ataxic CP – this is the rarest of the three and occurs when the cerebellum has been damaged this part of the brain controls balance. It will be difficult fop the child to coordinate their movements and they will have problems below with balancing.

Along with the three types of cp some children will have a combination of them all.

Athetiod CP – This type of cp occurs when the basal ganglion has been damaged and as a result causes involuntary, uncoordinated and uncontrolled movements of the muscles. This causing uncontrolled and jerky movements as well as twisting of the fingers and wrists may affect all limbs. When walking, it will tend to cause the child to stumble with poor coordination.

Spastic CP – This type of CP is the most common of the three it occurs when there has been damage to the cortex, which is the part of the brain controlling thought movement and sensation. Causes mainly tightness of the muscles, in both the arms and legs of the inflicted. The arms will tend to be flat against the side of the body with the hands bent up against the forearm. Depending on the damage the legs will either be greatly effected or only mildly it may be only slightly obvious that there is a problem when the child walks or in worse cases both legs are affected and they will be crossed with the toes pointing. If the muscles are not exercised often enough this can cause the child to become wheelchair bound.

Manic-Depression and How To Beat It

Posted by Blood Tests | Posted in Blood Info, Blood Test Results, Blood Tests | Posted on 23-04-2009

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I started to have problems when in my teens, feeling upset about growing up without a father. I self-harmed, then attempted suicide when 16. After getting in trouble with the police at 16, I was isolated and felt my life to be futile. Although I was seeing a psychiatrist, he stopped the treatment, and feeling betrayed as well as cut off from my old friends and family, aged 18, I stood in front of a fast train.

However, when I saw the driver’s screaming face as the train neared me, I changed my mind and moved to the side, as I did not want to cause him trauma. The train, however, struck me and hurled me through the air and I landed on the platform. My pelvis was badly fractured and I had received substantial injuries but after extensive emergency surgery, I survived.

A slow and painful recovery lay ahead, with hope but also setbacks, until I finally left hospital after extensive reconstructive surgery. When I left, I soon decided a change of place might do me good and went to Devon to live and work in a cultural centre. Whilst there, I had problems with the people there, who it turned out were something of a cult, and they called the police to have me removed. I was placed in a psychiatric hospital but my brothers rescued me and brought me back to London.

However, I was homeless and suffering the stress of isolation, despite my brother having allowed me to stay with him. One night, I was admitted to hospital and whilst there, a doctor told me I was manic-depressive. I thought this to be false and hated the idea. When I was prescribed Lithium, mood stabilisers and anti-depressants, I refused them and was sectioned under The Mental Health Act.

Finally, I was discharged from the unit and vowed to stop taking the medication, which was destroying my future as a writer by preventing me from reading and writing, due to making my eyes water continuously. This I did, with the support of all my friends and family. Even though it was a rollercoaster—I went up and down whilst trying to come off the stuff—I did it and eventually even told my psychiatrist. As I told him I would fight him every inch of the way if he sectioned me or tried to force me to take the drugs, he let things stand.

I moved from a halfway house to a privately rented room in a house and started going to a weekly meditation group that helped a lot. I read self-help books and developed self-esteem, published poems and began to write my memoir. I trained as a therapist finally, in order to give back and help others; I am now a master of hypnotherapy, Time Line Therapy® and NLP.

In the year 2000, I was advised by several people to try Eat Right For Your Blood Type to help alleviate a stomach problem I had been having. I found out I was blood type O and a non-secretor, and that Type O non-secretors have a high risk factor for developing manic depression. Although, highly sceptical at first, my symptoms were so severe, I was willing to give anything a try.

I began a diet and lifestyle plan for my specific blood type and am on it to this day. I was brought up as a vegetarian but the advice for type O is to eat a high protein diet and I do, with spectacularly good results. Having spent the last seven years researching more about the link between our genetics, our blood type and health conditions, I am 100% convinced of it’s scientific validity and importance.

I eat a diet that minimises my risk of having dopamine dips or spikes and thus my moods are very stable and even my friends who have been sceptical have now started following the plan, with the same excellent results. I have also noted the correlation between the health conditions many thousands of people I meet have and their blood types and find that the accuracy of the complete blood type literature by Doctor Peter J. D’Adamo (Eat Right For Your Type, Live Right For Your Type, Cook Right For Your Type and The Complete Blood Type Encyclopaedia) is proven to my satisfaction every single time.

My conclusion is that manic-depression was falsely applied to me and that labelling someone is never a useful exercise; neither is medicating without fully exploring other options. Had I been offered the blood type literature from the start of my problems, I am certain all of them would have been helped dramatically, if not averted entirely. Diet plays a key role in mental illness yet how often do psychiatrists or medical doctors even ask or advise about someone’s diet?

The idea of people being different and thus needing different diets may be easy to dismiss by those who have not the scientific-minded curiosity to read the literature by Dr D’Adamo, and nevertheless, we are different and some swear by vegetarianism whereas others swear by meat being healthy, yet both are right, depending on your blood type.

Obesity – The Cause

Posted by Blood Tests | Posted in Blood Info, Blood Test Results, Blood Tests | Posted on 22-04-2009

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”I feel euphoric when I eat foods that have a lot of calories.” That awareness is the beginning of solving the mystery behind the cause of obesity. The mystery is in your mind and psyche.

Ask yourself these questions to shed light on why certain food makes you feel euphoric:

• Was this a food I ate for comfort as a child?

• Was I offered food as a child when I was unhappy to ‘feel’ better?

• Are there wonderful memories of happy times connected with eating this food?

• Are there people that I associate with the food?

• Was food the focal point for family gatherings?

• Do I eat the same things over and over, because they make me feel good, and remind me of happier times?

There is a chemical affect that the food is giving you. Certain foods cause your brain to secrete endorphins (“happy juice”) that make you feel euphoric. Chocolate is one of them. You can also create extra endorphins by doing other things, like exercising, getting hugs, making love, playing with animals, engaging in a hobby, stimulating conversation, etc. None of these are fattening!

Research on body types reveals Sweet Crunchy foods are appealing to more people than Crunchy Pungent foods. And if you check the majority of processed food, crunchy or otherwise you will note there is a plethora of sweetners in the majority of products—Corn syrup, Glucose, Glucose syrup, Sucrose, Dextrose, Maltose are the most frequently used, as well as artificial sweetners—aspartame, saccharine, acesulfame k and sorbitol.

Armed with the research that Sweet Crunchy foods are appealing to more people than pungent foods, food manufacturers have teams of psychologists and researchers to create food that is esthetically enticing. For example: The red juice from beef is not the natural blood of cattle. The majority of blood is drained from the meat during processing and is replaced with red dyed water. Why? Because the actual color of beef is considered an unappealing blue/gray color. Look at the veins in the back of your hand or pulse point. It appears to be blue, which is the same effect with beef. Red dye is toxic, however, meat processors are compelled to use the red dye to satisfy consumers’ preference to have beef appear ‘blood red.’ Red dye in meat is seldom used in other countries.

McDonald’s spent considerable time and money researching the content of their French fry ‘mixture’—they are not whole cut potatoes. McDonald’s French fries are made from mashed potatoes extruded through a press. By using the pre-cooked potatoes many additives are used to create the flavor the majority of people’s taste buds like. Research on body types indicates Sweet Crunchy foods are appealing to more people than Crunchy Pungent foods. And if you check the majority of processed food, crunchy or otherwise you will note there is a plethora of sweetners in the majority of products—Corn syrup, Glucose, Glucose syrup, Sucrose, Dextrose, Maltose are the most frequently used, as well as artificial sweetners—aspartame, saccharine, acesulfame k and sorbitol.

Thus, eating high calorie foods begins at 6 months when solid baby foods with sweetners are introduced. The child soon learns sweet high calorie foods satisfy hunger feelings and a feeling of comfort.

Fortunately, humans are born with the most important effective food management tool—a hypothalamus, which helps to regulate the amount of food required for maintaining optimum health and weight. The main function of the hypothalamus is homeostasis, or maintaining the body’s status quo. Factors such as blood pressure, body temperature, fluid and electrolyte balance, and body weight are held to a precise value called the set-point. Although this set-point can migrate over time, from day to day it is remarkably fixed.

Unfortunately, well-meaning parent(s) encourage children to ‘override’ this homeostasis mechanism, by insisting, threatening, bribery, begging, number of tries, if you eat one bite, “You can have dessert (something sweet),” to eat everything on their plate. Thus, by age 5 or 6 the hypothalamus is rendered inoperative and the child is no longer listening to their body signals regarding the appropriate intake of food.

You can retrain your mind and psyche to create a hypothalamus driven eating habit by knowing your blood and body type. Each blood type is better fueled by certain foods. And each body type has a unique like or dislike to certain textures and tastes. Deepak Chopra, MD author of “Perfect Health: Complete Mind/Body Guide” identifies three body types: The thin, restless Vata; enterprising, efficient Pitta; tranquil, steady Kapha; or any combination of these three. These body types become the basis for a specific Ayurvedic food plan for optimum health, stress reduction, neuromuscular integration, exercise and daily routines. The result is a total plan, tailor-made for each individual, to reestablish the body’s essential balance with nature; to strengthen the mind body connection; and to use the power of quantum healing to transcend the ordinary limitations of disease and aging—in short, for achieving Perfect health.

Coupled with “Eat Right for Your Type” by Peter D’Adamo there is a clear, simple food plan for each blood type that anyone can follow. For example there is a direct connection between stress, autoimmune disorders and red meat in the Type B system. I can attest to this research. Long before “Eat Right for Your Type” was published, I discovered red meat caused me to feel stressful due to pain in my stomach and nerve endings. It felt like my stomach lining and nerve endings had been scraped until they were raw. I discovered this pain was prevalent after eating red meat, thus, I stopped eating red meat and the pain in my stomach and nerve endings ceased. Many years later without knowing my blood type, I read “Eat Right for Your Type” and wondered if my blood type was B. After checking my blood type, I was not surprised to discover my blood type is B positive.

The process of changing your eating habits might seem insurmountable. However, consider the end result and the effort is worth any falsely perceived difficulty.

Useful Information about Fad Diets

Posted by Blood Tests | Posted in Blood Info, Blood Test Results, Blood Tests | Posted on 21-04-2009

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If you aren’t happy with what you see in the mirror but don’t want to harm your health with some crazy fad diet, try these tips that might help you take off a few pounds in a healthy way:

- Why not consult a physician? A dietician can have a good background of your health and thus advise you of a fitted diet for your health condition.

- Water as have been said, remains to be a good cleansing element for the body. Water theraphy is a good treatment that’s also good for your skin. Drink lots of water and get rid of those toxins!

- When you’re hungry; there’s a greater tendency to indulge on overeating on a latter time so please, don’t skip meals.

- Exercise! Try to jog or brisk walk at least 30 minutes every single day. This is also good for your heart.

- Do no go into crash diet; slowly aim in losing 2 or less pounds a week. Sticking into a faster but harder diet can get you depressed and thus intend you to give up easily; the result? You will gain more weight.

- Learn while dieting! Read good books on how to count your calories; how to choose or make of delicious but nutritious foods that do not overdo your weight; etc.

- Learn the value of discipline. Obesity may also be aggravated by people who do not monitor their diet.

When all your efforts have been wasted and you finally decided to go with the flow; there are numerous fad diets available today. Fad diets are food selections which you will have to follow in a regular pattern. Select the best way to loose these calories! Here is a list of the latest fad-diet:

1. Atkin diet suggests you to lessen your carb intake. So you’ll say, this is quite easy; all you have to do is eat milk, cookies or ice cream with low carbohydrate! Well, think again, with atkin diet, there are surprisingly 2 dieters who already died due to health problems such as kidney stones, constipation, increase of blood acidity, etc.

2. Blood type diet is quite interesting too! If you’re Blood Type is O, you require meat in your diet; Blood type B needs dairy products whereas those under type A need vegetables. Most people do not know their blood types leading to poor diet; but on the other hand, a balance diet is vital for a healthy body. So consider this, will the blood type diet be effective if you’ll loose some foods needed for nourishment?

3. You can also try the South Beach diet. This diet will not limit your intake of food; however, it will discourage you to eat those processed foods with saturated or high fat components. As a replacement, having large servings of vegetables and whole grains in your meals are highly recommended.

4. Soup Diet. As the name implies, your meals will be composed heavily of soups! It can be chicken and cabbage soups which can be accompanied by little servings of steamed vegetables, fruits or brown sugar.

5. The Chocolate Diet sounds tempting isn’t it?! Included in the menus are the well-loved chocolates, popcorn and pasta. Just make sure that pasta sauces have low fat ingredients and that fruits are included in the recipes. Excluded are sodas or alcoholic beverages, oily or fried foods, caffeine, foods with high calories and high sugar content etc.

6. You can also choose the Fruit juice Diet; the well-known is the Grapefruit Diet. You will have to follow the prescribed diet with fruit juices, some low-carb meals and a good amount of water for 18 weeks. A recent survey shows that many patients who undertook this diet lost more than 10 pounds in a 12-week average diet plan.

So now that you have a list of pretty good dietary programs, which is well-known nowadays, the moral will all lay in your hands. Good amount of discipline is necessary; and precautious moves should always be on a top priority.

There are a lot of ways to stay fit, it is your choice on whether to stay obese and unhealthy or be happy and strong! You owe yourself and your future family a longer life span and sustainable health which can be useful for you and the society.

Different Types Of Low Blood Sugar Treatment

Posted by Blood Tests | Posted in Blood Info, Blood Test Results, Blood Tests | Posted on 20-04-2009

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Low blood sugar treatment is needed by people suffering from hypoglycemia (low blood sugar). Hypoglycemia isn’t really a disease but is a condition that is a result of different causes. Low blood sugar is commonly caused by complications brought about by diabetes treatment or better known as diabetic hypoglycemia. This condition can be developed due to excessive intake of insulin and other diabetic medications.

Low blood sugar may also result from least common causes like simple medications such as aspirin to medications for diseases that affect the kidneys, pancreas, liver and other vital organs in the body and or inherited metabolism problems.

Hypoglycemia is a highly manageable and curable condition. There are several different types of low blood sugar treatment that you can try including the following:

1. Low blood sugar treatment kit – To be able to determine your level of blood sugar it is a must to perform a blood glucose check. This is basically the first treatment needed for hypoglycemia. You can perform this test at the comfort of your home. It works by piercing your fingertip using a lancet and putting a small drop of blood onto a strip. Afterwards the strip will be placed inside the meter to check the results. The results come in numeric reading that corresponds to your blood sugar level.

2. Medications – Another type of low blood sugar treatment is by taking oral and intravenous solutions like dextrose. Adrenal deficiency is normally treated by intake of Cortisol tablets or as an IV infusion. For young children with growth hormone insufficiency, growth hormone injections are used as treatment. Your doctor may also prescribe drugs that make the pancreas produce lesser insulin.

3. Surgery – This is the most complicated low blood sugar treatment for people suffering from hypoglycemia. Hypoglycemia can be brought about by pancreatic tumors called “insulinomas” that may be benign or malignant. Surgery is considered the most effective option for this kind of growth. If in case the tumor is malignant or inoperable, there are specific medications that allow the pancreas to produce lesser insulin.

4. Proper meal planning – This type of low blood sugar treatment is the most convenient and most practical among the treatments that were already discussed. You can ask a physician or dietitian to prepare you a diet to help increase your blood sugar level. The dietitian may advise you to eat sweets like candies, chocolate bars or drink sodas that can balance your blood glucose level.

Low blood sugar or hypoglycemia is a condition that can be managed and treated with the proper guidance from your physician.

Structure and Function of Blood and Bone Marrow

Posted by Blood Tests | Posted in Blood Info, Blood Test Results, Blood Tests | Posted on 19-04-2009

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Your blood circulates throughout your whole body. It supplies food, oxygen, hormones and other chemicals to all the body’s cells. It also helps to remove waste products and is important in fighting infection and in controlling bleeding. Blood consists of 60% plasma (fluid) and 40% blood cells. The three most important types of cells are red blood cells, white blood cells and platelets. Although we think of blood as a fluid, it is actually made up of both fluid and cells. These can be seen under a microscope.

Bone Marrow is the “blood cell factory” which is found filling up the cavities of bones. All blood cells originate and are produced from a single “stem cell” whose progeny grow and mature into different types of blood cells. This stem cell can and does renew itself as required by our body.

Red blood cells (erythrocytes) carry oxygen from your lungs to all parts of your body. If you don’t have enough red blood cells you have anemia.

Anemia can make you look pale and may make you feel tired, dizzy, irritable and short of breath. Red blood cells also pick up wastes on their way around the body, carrying them to the lungs to be breathed out as carbon dioxide.

White blood cells (leucocytes) are the body’s infection fighters. There are three main groups of white blood cells: granulocytes, lymphocytes and monocytes. Their job is to rid your body of disease-causing bacteria, viruses, fungi and to destroy the body’s dead or defective cells. If we do not have enough white blood cells we are at risk of catching all types of infections.

Platelets are small cells that prevent bleeding and makes blood clot following an injury. When a blood vessel is damaged or cut, platelets rush to the area and clump together to plug the bleeding site. If we do not have enough platelets easy bruising, nose bleeds, prolonged bleeding from cuts, or internal bleeding from the bowel or bladder may occur.

When the body is healthy, the numbers of red cells, white cells and platelets in the blood are kept in balance.

6 Tips on How to Lower Blood Sugar Level

Posted by Blood Tests | Posted in Blood Info, Blood Test Results, Blood Tests | Posted on 18-04-2009

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What is blood sugar?

Before listing out the tips on how to lower Blood Sugar, one must be acquainted with what actually High Blood Sugar means. It is precisely defined as an elevated level of the sugar glucose in blood otherwise phrased as ‘the spillage of glucose into the urine (glucosuria) converting the urine sugary.

Your blood sugar is regulated by your body but it cannot do the job without some help from you. The types of foods you eat play a big part in the level of your blood sugar. Some foods help to lower the levels. Others enter the bloodstream faster, thus raising sugar levels. The pancreas produces insulin and high-gylcemic foods make it have to work harder to produce the insulin your body needs.

The following tips should help you to maintain a normal sugar level and cut down on the threat of developing diabetes.

1) The number one way you can lower your blood sugar is by eating the right foods. The types that are digested slower help to maintain good sugar levels such as fruits – apples, oranges, pears – vegetables such as – peas, zucchini – and grains such as – oatmeal, barley, granola.

Even if you already have diabetes, these foods can help you to keep it under control. Because diabetes, when uncontrolled can cause circulation problems as well as other problems, there should be an ongoing regimen to stay as healthy as possible.

2) Exercise is another way you can control blood sugar levels. If you exercise in the morning before eating this can lower your glucose just about as well as medication. The alternative to medicines to regulate blood sugar can be exercise is it is maintained on a regular basis. Not only is it beneficial in this way but losing weight and keeping a healthy weight can reduce the incidence of diabetes.

3) Eating four to five small meals a day rather than three large meals will also help to lower your blood sugar.

4) Avoid drinking a lot of soft drinks because they are high in sugar and carbohydrates. Many people drink six and eight soft drinks a day. One 12 ounce soft drink contains 11 teaspoons of sugar. This is eventually going to cause a problem.

5) Before taking over the counter drugs always read the ingredients and what effects they may have on you. Many times these types of drugs can cause an increase in blood sugar levels.

6) Find out why your blood sugar levels are high. This can differ from individual to individual and you need to know the specific reasons for your high levels. This can help you to know what to do to lower them. Stress is one situation that can cause higher levels. If your blood sugar level is high due to stress you need to make some changes in your lifestyle.

As well as eating healthy, there are certain foods that you should not eat. Foods such as potatoes, pasta , and foods that are high in carbohydrates should be avoided. Because the body turns carbohydrates to sugar this will add more sugar to your diet. Lowering the intake of carbohydrates will help you to lower your blood sugar. This is not to say you cannot have carbohydrates at all. But you should eat foods that are low in carbohydrates such as chicken, seafood, and turkey. Certain vegetables are also low such as broccoli, asparagus, and greens. Salad ingredients are also another way of getting the vitamins you need while still eating a low carbohydrate diet.

Blood Cancer – Acute Leukemia – Type of Blood Cancer

Posted by Blood Tests | Posted in Blood Info, Blood Test Results, Blood Tests | Posted on 17-04-2009

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Blood has several components like-red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets and plasma -and the cells of the blood are produced at the bone marrow. When the cells of the blood grow abnormally, it is called blood cancer or leukaemia. The whole system of production of blood cells is a controlled activity and when cancer occurs in the bone marrow, it affects the process of regulation of cell production. The abnormal growth of the blood cells weakens the body’s defence mechanism. There are two types of blood cancer-acute leukaemia and chronic leukaemia.

Acute leukemia:

Acute leukemia is a type of blood cancer in which the cells develop rapidly. The immature white blood cells gather in and consequently enter the other different parts of the body. Depending on the affection of white blood cell type, in clinical terms acute leukaemia is called either acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) or acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). The symptoms of acute leukaemia are

Generalized weakness and fatigue (this may be due to anaemia)
Fever
Weight loss
Frequent infections
Excessive bruising
Bleeding (of the gums or nose)
Blood in the urine or stools
Pain in the bones and joints
Breathlessness (can be due to anaemia)
Enlarged lymph glands, liver and/or spleen.

Chronic leukemia:

In chronic leukemia, the white blood cells of cancer develop slowly than acute leukaemia and they gradually could not do their function well. An increased number of lymphocytes, which make up one of the main sub-groups of white cells in the blood, are seen in chronic leukaemia. This blood cancer has a slow process of development of cancer cells. Depending on the affection of white blood cells, chronic leukaemia is called either chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) or chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML). The peak age for CLL is 65 and it is rare in people under the age of 45.
The following signs may oocur due to chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) or chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL):

Abdominal discomfort (this could be the result of an enlarged spleen)
Infections caused by not having enough healthy white blood cells
Fever
Night sweats
Swollen lymph glands
Bone pain
Weight loss
Headaches and vision problems
Tiredness
Anaemia

Our medical team will guide one to quality blood cancer treatments in Apollo Hospitals. We offer quality treatments at an affordable price with free consultation and no waiting periods. Blood cancer treatment in India for foreign clientele will become easy under the guidance of our medical team. Present scenario of medical treatments in India attracts a good number of health tourists from all over the world.

“Picky Eater” Syndrome

Posted by Blood Tests | Posted in Blood Info, Blood Test Results, Blood Tests | Posted on 16-04-2009

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‘Picky Eater’ is a label coined to describe the phenomenon that someone has discerning taste preferences different from their parents or others. These discerning taste preferences are dictated by their blood and body type. It is important for parents to accept and model the ‘real’ purpose of food. Quite simply, food serves two purposes-growth/repair of worn tissue and fuel for the body to run on. The number of calories needed per day is based on body structure, height and level of activity.

If a child is fed on demand from birth and then offered solid foods on demand consistent for their blood and body type, the child will in time eat all the foods that are nutritionally healthy, if they are offered food consistent with their types and in a ‘take-it or leave-it’ style.

The ‘picky eater’ struggle comes to the fore because children begin to assert their independence simultaneously with the onset of solid food consumption. If the parent uses bribery, enticement, cajoling, and begging, the child quickly learns, NOT eating is a way to maintain control of their life-albeit-a tiny slice. But at 6 months old, what seems like a tiny slice to an adult is huge to a child. As you will notice babies seldom are bribed, enticed, cajoled or begged to drink milk-it is ‘offered’ to them. Yet, when the child is introduced to solid food, parents seem compelled to cajole or beg the child to eat ‘at least one bite.’ Given the time to learn the new tastes and textures, children will eat the food their blood and body type requires or prefers, if it is offered in a ‘take-it or leave-it’ style.

The ‘at least one bite’ rule sets up a power struggle between parent/caretaker and child. More often then not, the ‘at least one bite’ includes a bribe. “You can have dessert (something sweet) if you eat one bite.” The number of tries, threats, bribery, and begging all set up a power struggle between parent and child. In the long-term, both parent and child, lose. The parent loses because the child learns they are in control and can extract a price or leverage something by eating. The child loses because they learn manipulative behavior and controlling vs the parent(s) being in charge of managing a healthy food plan and healthy interactions. In the long-term the child also loses because it sets up a life-long internal battle with food.

Disguising food also sets up a power struggle in a different way–the child usually suspects the deception at the out-set and will more often than not refuse to eat it. When the child asks, “Is this ___?,” the parent is faced with a dilemma. “Do I tell the truth or lie for a greater good?”-enticing my child to eat what I think they need to eat. A child will sooner than later discover what has been done. This form of dishonesty with the child is a betrayal of trust and the parent(s) loses integrity with their child. The question is: Is disguising the food in a foolhardy attempt to cajole your child to eat what they don’t want to eat worth compromising your integrity and betraying their trust?

Humans are born with the most important effective food management tool-a hypothalamus, which helps to regulate the amount of food required for maintaining optimum health and weight. The main function of the hypothalamus is homeostasis, or maintaining the body’s status quo. Factors such as blood pressure, body temperature, fluid and electrolyte balance, and body weight are held to a precise value called the set-point. Although this set-point can migrate over time, from day to day it is remarkably fixed.

You know it is difficult to make children eat when they are not hungry-and it is almost impossible to deal with them when they are hungry. Toddlers in perpetual motion sometimes eat only small amounts of food, but they eat frequently enough to meet their needs, because at this juncture their natural food management tool has not been overridden or indoctrinated with poor nutrition habits and poor eating practices. You have probably noticed that during periods of rapid growth, particularly the teen years, children may be hungry all the time. When their caloric requirements decrease, they lose interest in food-thus they avoid eating more than their body needs.

Each blood type is better fueled by certain foods. And each body type has a unique like or dislike to certain textures and tastes. Deepak Chopra, MD author of “Perfect Health: Complete Mind/Body Guide” identifies three body types: The thin, restless Vata; enterprising, efficient Pitta; tranquil, steady Kapha; or any combination of these three. These body types become the basis for a specific Ayurvedic food plan for optimum health, stress reduction, neuromuscular integration, exercise and daily routines. The result is a total plan, tailor-made for each individual, to reestablish the body’s essential balance with nature; to strengthen the mind body connection; and to use the power of quantum healing to transcend the ordinary limitations of disease and aging-in short, for achieving Perfect health.

For example Vata body types prefer: Warm food (not hot), moderately heavy textures, added butter or fat, Salt, sour, and sweet tastes; soothing and satisfying foods. All soothing foods are good for settling disturbed Vata. Use foods such as: Warm drinks, cream, butter, warm soups, stews, hot cereals, fresh baked bread. Since vata is a cold dry dosha, warm, nourishing foods such as these are good for stabilizing vata types. On the other hand cold foods such as cold salads, iced drinks, raw vegetables and greens are not very good for persons with vata imbalance. Use hot cereals such as: Cream of wheat or rice-provided there is no sensitivity to wheat or rice. Type B blood types need to avoid Wheat and Corn.

Coupled with “Eat Right for Your Type” by Peter D’Adamo there is a clear, simple food plan for each blood type that anyone can follow. For example there is a direct connection between stress, autoimmune disorders and red meat in the Type B system. I can attest to this research. Long before “Eat Right for Your Type” was published, I discovered red meat caused me to feel stressful due to pain in my stomach and nerve endings. It felt like my stomach lining and nerve endings had been scraped until they were raw. I discovered this pain was prevalent after eating red meat, thus, I stopped eating red meat and the pain in my stomach and nerve endings ceased. Many years later without knowing my blood type, I read “Eat Right for Your Type” and wondered if my blood type was B. After checking my blood type, I was not surprised to discover my blood type is B positive.

Encouraging a child to eat different food for the sake of eating different foods is counterproductive. Providing the food consistent with their blood and body type their nutritional requirements will be met. It is a common phenomenon for children to want to eat the same thing at every meal for varying periods of time. Avoid the temptation to talk them into eating something different. It will merely set up a power struggle. Offer your child a choice of two things which supports their food requirements for blood and body type. If they consistently chose the same food what harm is being done?

There is a psychology to eating. Food manufacturers have teams of psychologists and researchers to create food that is esthetically enticing. For example: The red juice from beef is not the natural blood of cattle. The majority of blood is drained from the meat during processing and is replaced with red dyed water. Why? Because the actual color of beef is considered an unappealing blue/gray color. Look at the veins in the back of your hand or pulse point. It appears to be blue, which is the same effect with beef. Red dye is toxic, however, meat processors are compelled to use the red dye to satisfy consumers’ preference to have beef appear ‘blood red.’ Red dye in meat is seldom used in other countries.

McDonald’s spent considerable time and money researching the content of their French fry ‘mixture’-they are not whole cut potatoes. McDonald’s French fries are made from mashed potatoes extruded through a press. By using the pre-cooked potatoes many additives are used to create the flavor the majority of people’s taste buds like. Research on body types indicates Sweet Crunchy foods are appealing to more people than Crunchy Pungent foods. And if you check the majority of processed food, crunchy or otherwise you will note there is a plethora of sweetners in the majority of products-Corn syrup, Glucose, Glucose syrup, Sucrose, Dextrose, Maltose are the most frequently used, as well as artificial sweetners-aspartame, saccharine, acesulfame k and sorbitol.

A preference for food presentation only becomes an issue when the child discovers they can use it to control. Notice a child doesn’t turn up his/her nose at McDonald’s hamburgers loaded with unhealthy additives and wrapped in paper. McDonald’s marketing strategy of a ‘toy’ with every meal and making meal time fun for the kids and easy for the parents is the key to enticing both parents and children to eat their low-quality high cholesterol product.

Frequent Questions:

-Is peer pressure a factor in your child’s food preference? Peers can influence a child’s curiosity about food, but not their long-term preferences. If a child has an allergy to a food most parents are surprised how easily a child will accept the food restriction even though their friends eat it. With only a few reminders that ‘wheat’ causes your tummy to hurt, so you can’t eat hamburger buns, the child readily tell their friends, “I can’t eat hamburger buns, they make my tummy hurt.”

-Does food color and texture play a part in food preference? Based on body type research certain body types prefer one texture over another. See “Perfect Health: Complete Mind/Body Guide” By Deepak Chopra. Color has been thoroughly researched regarding what color evokes what response-red and orange for example attracts attention, but also repels after a short period of time. As you will note: Fast food restaurants predominantly use red, orange and a bright yellow-thus, the color draws people in, but also it repels within a short period-as we become over stimulated by the colors. Thus, the fast food restaurant’s needs are met. They draw us in, but repel us in a short period. Food colors have long ago been integrated into the human psyche as the color of food and children quickly learn that the color of food is simply the color of food.

-”How do I convince my child to eat healthy food?” Isn’t it ironic parents wonder how they can convince children to eat health foods? When all parents need to do is buy only those foods which are healthy and be a role model. After all, children don’t do the grocery shopping. So, the issue of children eating healthy is easily solved-don’t have unhealthy foods in the house.

[When I sent my first born off to college, I held my breath, fearing she would become a junk food junky like the majority of college students. I breathed a sigh of relief when she casually commented that the cupboards in her apartment looked like the cupboards at home. The acorn doesn't fall far from the tree.]

-”If I offer my children dinner, and they refuse to eat it, will they get sick from lack of nutrition?” Generally, children will eat when their body-the hypothalamus-tells them to eat. If you discover your child has lost weight, recognize this as their body’s signal that something needs to be addressed. Unless your child has been ill, weight loss is due to emotional distress and if your child has been ill it is due to emotional distress. All physical illness is directly related to mental causes. What has your child experienced recently that might have created their inability to listen to their body’s signals to consume adequate nutrition? Has there been a death in the family? Is someone close to your child sick or injured? Is there discord in the family? Is there a new baby in the family? Is there any significant change in your child’s routine–such as a new caretaker, starting pre-school, kindergarten, or a new grade? Has your child started a new sport? Is your child showing signs of emotional distress in other ways besides losing weight? If your child’s body weight is within range for their height and has lost two pounds or more, it is time to seek a professional to help you discern what has created your child to stop taking in adequate nutrition.

-”Is it a mistake to make a separate meal for the ‘picky eater’ if you know they won’t like what everyone else likes?” Based on eating right for your blood and body type, it is imperative to make a separate meal for your child. A separate meal may mean only your child’s main course is unique.

-”Does diet affect behavior? Will too much sugar make them too hyper? Will something specific calm them down, etc?” Yes, diet impacts behavior. “Perfect Health: Complete Mind/Body Guide” by Deepak Chopra regarding body types, you can discern what foods will support your child’s emotional needs most effectively.

“What do you think about school lunches?” For the most part school lunches have improved–however, they are too many junk food items-Potato chips, Corn Chips, French fries, processed foods, etc-and too few choices of healthy foods. The only recourse is to explain fully and thoroughly why eating the ‘junk food items’ are unhealthy. Naturally, children will sometimes eat some, not only at school, but their friends’ homes. However, remember their consumption is minimal since you only offer healthy foods at home.

-”Will kids just grow out of being a ‘picky eater’?” Being labeled a ‘picky eater’ is simply a label, therefore, there is nothing for them to ‘grow out of.’

-”What resources can you recommend for parents/kids?” The books “Eat Right for Your Type” by Peter O’Adama and “Perfect Health: Complete Mind/Body Guide” by Deepak Chopra are the Bible for healthy eating.

Some Important Dos:

-Do become a relaxed and open parent.

-Do respect your child’s food preferences provided it is nutritionally healthy based on blood and body type.

-Do give your child a choice within the foods that meet their body and blood type needs and preferences while being mindful of any food allergies/sensitivities.

-Do allow your child to discern when and how much to eat.

-Do present healthy food for your child’s blood and body type in a ‘take it or leave it’ style.

-Do avoid junk foods.

-Do stock your refrigerator and cabinets with the foods which are healthy for your child’s blood and body type.

-Do have a ready supply of fresh fruits and vegetables for eating raw and cooking.

Writing about the strategies for a healthy food plan for life is more complicated than it is to practice it.

And last, but not least, a ray of hope: The next season’s Sesame Street program theme is advocating eating healthy. There’s even a new song – “A Cookie Is a Sometimes Food,” where Cookie Monster learns there are “anytime” foods and “sometimes” foods. Cookie Monster will be featured eating only one plate of cookies instead of two.

In summary:

• The parents’ primary responsibility is to provide good, nutritious food at mealtime. It is your child’s responsibility to eat it and when they are hungry they will, if it is on their list of acquired healthy favorites.

• Serve meals “buffet” style and let them choose what and how much they want. This eliminates the power struggle.

• Joke about what they don’t like within their healthy foods based on body and blood type. Children love parents to be silly! They can identify with you more readily and it creates a relaxed atmosphere.

• Put your children’s favorite foods on a shelf that they can reach in both the fridge and cupboard, in a space reserved just for them. When they want something to eat, they can get it themselves.

• Let your child help prepare the meals. They love to feel included! Forget the need to have everything perfectly arranged, chopped or prepared. Foster their self-confidence and feed their bodies while giving their soul emotional sustenance by fostering a stress free environment.