Archive for January, 2012

Living Together A Better Option Than Marriage

Posted by admin On January - 31 - 2012

Living Together A Better Option Than MarriageA new study has disclosed that marriage offers few well-being advantages compared to living together.

It was found by the study that marriage benefits diminish over time, while unmarried couples who live together experience greater happiness and self-esteem.

“We found that differences between marriage and cohabitation tend to be small and dissipate after a honeymoon period. Also while married couples experienced health gains — likely linked to the formal benefits of marriage such as shared health care plans — cohabiting couples experienced greater gains in happiness and self-esteem,” said study author Kelly Musick, an associate professor of policy analysis and management at Cornell University’s College of Human Ecology, in a journal news release. “For some, cohabitation may come with fewer unwanted obligations than marriage and allow for more flexibility, autonomy and personal growth.”

The study appeared in the February issue of the Journal of Marriage and Family.

Brain Changes Of Dyslexia May Occur Before Kids Learn To Read

Posted by admin On January - 27 - 2012

Brain Changes Of Dyslexia May Occur Before Kids Learn To ReadA new imaging research has demonstrated that the reduced brain activity associated with the onset of dyslexia appears to develop before, not after, a child starts to read.

The finding may help clinicians screen for at-risk children at an early pre-reading age.

“We already knew that children and adults with a diagnosis of dyslexia show brain alterations within the left posterior — back — part of the brain,” said study co-author Nadine Gaab, an assistant professor of pediatrics in the neuroscience program at Harvard Medical School and Children’s Hospital Boston. “However, it was unclear whether these alterations are a result of dyslexia [that] show up after years of reading failure or whether they predate the reading onset,” she noted.

“[Here] we could show that they predate reading onset,” Gaab said. “This suggests that children are either born with it or that it develops within the first few years of life.”

The study was published in the Jan. 23 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Knee Arthritis May Speed Up Cell Aging Process

Posted by admin On January - 20 - 2012

According to Danish researchers, a process linked to natural cell aging has now also been associated with knee osteoarthritis.

Knee Arthritis May Speed Up Cell Aging Process

The researchers used new technology for closely evaluating the telomeres (lengths of DNA on the ends of chromosomes) of cells taken from the knees of osteoarthritis patients who had joint replacement surgery.

According to the findings published in the Jan. 16 online edition of the journal Arthritis Research & Therapy, the cells had abnormally shorted telomeres and the percentage of cells with ultra-short telomeres increased with proximity to the damaged area in the knee joint.

“The telomere story shows us that there are, in theory, two processes going on in osteoarthritis. Age-related shortening of telomeres, which leads to the inability of cells to continue dividing and so to cell senescence [deterioration], and ultra-short telomeres, probably caused by compression stress during use, which lead to senescence and failure of the joint to repair itself,” study leader Maria Harbo said in a journal news release.

“We believe the second situation to be the most important in osteoarthritis. The damaged cartilage could add to the mechanical stress within the joint and so cause a feedback cycle driving the progression of the disease,” she added.

Pill Use To Ease Period Pain Boosted By Study

Posted by admin On January - 18 - 2012

According to a study published on Wednesday, an exceptionally long-running investigation has backed use of the Pill to ease menstruation pain.

Pill Use To Ease Period Pain Boosted By Study

The findings come from health research spanning 30 years and indicated that more than 1,400 Swedish women born in 1962, 1972 and 1982 and who took oral contraceptives reported significant drops in two acknowledged measurements of pain.

The investigation was led by gynecologist Ingela Lindh at Gothenburg University’s Institute of Clinical Sciences and is published online by the European journal Human Reproduction.

Menstrual pain, known as dysmenorrhoea, is believed to account for 600 million lost working hours and two billion dollars in lost productivity annually in the United States alone.

Cancer Rates In U.S. Continue To Fall

Posted by admin On January - 14 - 2012

Cancer Rates In U.S. Continue To FallAccording to the American Cancer Society’s annual report on cancer statistics released on Wednesday, cancer death rates are continuing to fall and have dropped by 1.8 percent per year in men and 1.6 percent per year in women between 2004 and 2008.

The report suggested that cancer screening and treatment advances have prevented more than a million total deaths from cancer since the early 1990s.

“The big news this year is that cancer deaths are still going down,” said Dr. Raymond DuBois, provost and executive vice president at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. “It’s not hitting the ball out of the park, but it had been going up several years prior to that. It’s sign now that it is on the decline,” DuBois said in a telephone interview.

Memory May Be Modestly Boosted By B Vitamins

Posted by admin On January - 13 - 2012

Memory May Be Modestly Boosted By B VitaminsAccording to the results of a new study from Australia, older adults who took vitamin B12 and folic acid supplements for two years had greater improvements on short- and long-term memory tests than adults who did not take the vitamins.

Janine Walker, the lead author of the study and a researcher at Australian National University, said the benefits were modest but encouraging and indicated that the vitamins “may have an important role in promoting healthy ageing and mental wellbeing, as well as sustaining good cognitive functioning for longer on a community-wide scale.” “We felt that older people with elevated depressive symptoms were an important cohort to target given evidence that late-life depression is associated with increased risk of cognitive impairment,” Walker said.

Better School Performance Linked To Exercise

Posted by admin On January - 6 - 2012

A new analysis of past studies published this week has suggested that children who get more exercise also tend to do better in school.

Better School Performance Linked To Exercise

The finding “just helps to continue to show the importance of exposing kids to physical activity,” said Sandy Slater, who has studied recess and physical education at the University of Illinois at Chicago but wasn’t involved in the new research.

“There’s obviously the long-term links between physical activity and health, but this is another reason to try to continue to keep some dedicated amount of time for physical education or recess or some other types of physical activity in the school day,” she told Reuters Health.

“It might mean going to school by bike… Any kind of physical activity you can think of. It doesn’t mean only the physical education standard class,” said Amika Singh, who worked on the new study.

Fitness Usually Not A Priority For College Students

Posted by admin On January - 4 - 2012

Most young adults do not understand the importance of regular exercise just as they do not bother much about mother’s cooking.

Fitness Usually Not A Priority For College Students

“The transition from late adolescence to early adulthood represents the most dramatic declines in physical activity across a person’s life,” according to Dr. Matthew Kwan, a researcher at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada.

“Team sports, varsity activities tend to decrease or drop off entirely,” he explained. “For those who go to college, studies become more important. Then there’s the social aspect that eats up their disposable time as well.”

The research appeared in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.

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