Tag Archives: healthy life

A “Smart” Way of Eating

You may know that it is a good idea to eat fruits and vegetables to keep healthy; you may know that we can lose weight by controlling the calories input. But do you know that we can simply stay healthy and lose weight by having a “smart” eating pattern while not changing what we eat? What does the eating pattern mean in this case?

Different eating patterns including a regular way and a non-traditional way –TRF, which stands for time-restricted feeding. TRF simply means we restrict the total amount of time of food consumption every day. The time spread of the regular eating pattern is usually 16 hours. But if we eat the same amount of food but reduce the total time spread to less than 16 hours, we can easily stay healthy and even lose weight by maintaining a relatively stable heartbeat.

The figure below can better explain different eating patterns.

[source: http://www.pnas.org/content/pnas/111/47/16647/F3.large.jpg]

As the five figures are shown above: the blue area of the circle represents the daytime and the black area represents the night time. The regular eating pattern is shown as the pattern A. It includes three large meals plus snacks during a 16-hour period of wakefulness. Pattern B, C, and D illustrate the concept of TRF, which is what we recommend in this article. The common idea shared among the TRF eating patterns is the limited eating time — the total time spread of food consumption is less than 16 hours.

To be more specific, eliminating midnight snack and limiting eating to 12 hours is the “smart” eating pattern that we are encouraged to have. A research conducted by Tina Hesman Saef found that fruit flies with only 12-hour spread had steadier heartbeats in old age than flies with unrestricted eating time.

[source: www.sciencenews.org/sites/default/files/main/articles/ti_fly_feeding_graph.png]

The experiment was designed to have two groups of flies. One group ate a cornmeal diet anytime they want; another group had access to same food for 12 hours only. Both groups ate about the same amount of food and had similar amounts of activity. The result of the research shows that after 5 weeks, the group with TRF had the steadier heartbeat. Stable heartbeat can help maintain fat metabolism by adjusting the tolerance of glucose and adjusting blood pressure. Therefore, TRF helps weight loss due to its effect on the heartbeat and metabolism.

However, does this eating pattern mean we only need to consider the time sprints of food consumption without thinking about the frequency or time of food taken? The answer is no. If we do not stick to the same eating schedule every day, our body clock will be in a mess. This will cause unstable heartbeat and harm our immune system. In general, the recommended frequency of food intake should be three times a day. A research on female participants with different meal frequency supports this by analyzing the level of energy intake and expenditure.

Does this sound great? We can easily lose weight by limiting our meal time while eating the same things! Try to eat within 12 hours every day and don’t eat the midnight snack. Let’s see how easy and comfortable it is to live a healthy life!

by Qingyue Wang

Effect of Sleep Deprivation on Health

Recently, there has been increasing interest in the effect of sleep time on the life quality. Some researches show that sleep deprivation costs the UK economy £40 billion a year, due to the reduced productivity and health. And by the recent research in 2015, it indicate that the sleep-deprived human brain has problem in both focusing and remembering. These evidences definitely show us that we need high-quality adequate sleep. So how to make our sleep more efficient had become a mystery that beset scientists for the past 20 years.

Because while the light bulb and advanced technology brought about a world of 24 hours work and productivity. It has come at a cost of our naturally biological clock and our brain’s need for sleep.The evidence shows that nurses who work more than 12.5 hours are significantly decreased vigilance, suffering an occupational injury, or making a medical error. Comparing with the normal physician, the 24-hr on-call physician has twice as many working faults during the night shift and trigger 36% more serious medical errors.

Effects of Sleep Deprivation

Last year, the scientists in Italian concluded that sleep deprivation will cause some cells to consume other parts of our brain’s synapses such as astrocytes. They are kind of star-shaped cells that able to remove worn-out cells. The result concludes that the astrocytes went into overdrive in sleep-deprived mice will cause more broken of the brain’s connections, and may lead to Alzheimer’s disease. Also, the research by Surrey University concluded that over 700 of the body’s genes, including those that govern the immune system, are altered when someone has sleep less than 6 hours.

Synapse

As a result, the weight of evidence suggests that sleep deprivation highly increase fatigue and threaten our safety. For the long-term perspective, it really has a significant effect on our health and well-being. Thus, I hope we can all have high-quality adequate sleep every day.

Rhinitis-small problem, big risk!

Have you ever been disturbed by a runny nose, endless sneezing, or nasal congestion? If you have these symptoms more than one week, be careful you may have rhinitis! Rhinitis is a nasal disease that inside nose gets inflammation after irritated by environmental conditions.  Not only outside conditions, such as pollen, smoke or chemicals, but also inside conditions, like hormonal changes, may provoke the disease. There are three kinds of rhinitis: allergic, nonallergic, and mixed.  Generally, rhinitis just lasts a few days but allergic rhinitis can reoccur frequently.

A short animation of allergic rhinitis.

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Rhinitis is not new to us. World Health Organization declared that between 10% and 30% population have allergic rhinitis in the worldwide. According to Summary Health Statistics for U.S. Adults: National Health Interview Survey, approximately 7.8% teenagers in U.S. have hay fever – allergic rhinitis. It seems that rhinitis has similar symptoms as cold; people dislike it, but also ignore it. However, untreated rhinitis can cause many serious consequences!

          

 

Being careless to rhinitis may lead to poor quality of life. Uncontrolled rhinitis may contribute to sleep loss, learning impairment, and decreased long-term productivity. Additionally, poorly controlled allergic rhinitis may also contribute to the development of other related diseases including acute and chronic sinusitis, recurrence of nasal polyps, hearing impairment, abnormal craniofacial development, sleep disorder and asthma.

Apart from above consequent diseases, what’s worse is that chronic rhinitis is discovered to be associated with atrophic rhinitis! Atrophic rhinitis is a disease where the nose tissues, especially nasal mucosa, permanently atrophy. Nasal mucosa, also called mucous membrane, lines over the nasal cavity. Mucosa consists of tiny blood veins, glands, and nerves. The major functionality of mucosa includes secreting mucus to trap external particles, humidifying the entire cavity, and warming air entering the respiratory passage.

Here is a video explaining the functionality of nasal mucosa.

YouTube Preview Image

Because of the loss of mucosa, patients lose the primary barrier between the external world and the interior of the body. Atrophic rhinitis can be a crippling disease. Without the protection, patients will suffer unrelenting dryness, loss of sense of airflow, and even pain breathiness. Furthermore, the disease is irreversible; patients have to suffer the pain throughout their lives.

Fortunately, there are some measurements that people can take to prevent atrophic rhinitis.

  • Nasal irrigation with saline solution – recurrent inflammation is one of the most triggers. Rinsing nose daily with salt water can kill bacteria and avoid infection.
  • Ingesting food that riches in iron and vitamin A/D – Bernat I. stated in “Ozaena and iron deficiency” that many patients showed a nutritional deficiency, especially of iron, fat-soluble vitamins and proteins.
  • Exercise! – cliché, but always the most effective. For many people who have allergic rhinitis, it is impossible to eliminate the problem. However, doing exercise can improve the immune system and reduce the frequency of rhinitis.
  • See a doctor when the disease is at the early stage!

Overall, even though rhinitis is not life-threatening at the early stage, we need to be aware of its risk and take it carefully. Don’t risk our health!

By Xinyue Tang