Not exact matches
Those who mostly work in the
evenings — such as programmers — are at greater
risk for Type 2
diabetes, cancer, and heart disease.
You face a higher
risk of muscular skeletal disorders, obesity,
diabetes, cancer, heart disease and more,
even if you work out regularly.
We also know that intake of green peas is associated with lowered
risk of type 2
diabetes,
even though this association has traditionally been understood to involve the strong fiber and protein content of green peas.
My parents both have type 2
diabetes and I have PCOS which puts me at an
even greater
risk of developing it as well.
Rather, I got it from Dr. Joel Fuhrman's book Eat to Live, which describes a «nutritarian» eating plan that may help reduce
risk of — and
even reverse — certain chronic diseases, like
diabetes.
Coffee is likely effective at improving mental performance and alertness, and possibly effective at reducing the
risk of colorectal cancer,
diabetes, gallbladder disease and
even Parkinson's disease.
Coconut is (in moderation), but as soon as you extract the oil and leave behind all of the goodness, it can become a threat to your arteries, increase your
risk for
diabetes, and
even acne!
Offering her support for its health and holistic benefits, Dorit Adler, the chief clinical dietician of Hadassah University Medical Center, said: «The evidence - based research proves again and again that the [low - meat] Mediterranean diet lowers the
risks of most of the modern diseases from obesity through
diabetes, heart disease and
even cognitive impairment.
Some intermittent fasting methods
even claim that this on - and - off eating plan can help regulate blood sugar, prevent
diabetes, lower the
risk of heart disease and slow the aging process.
Eating butter has no effect on raising cardiovascular disease (CVD)
risk and may
even have protective effects against
diabetes, according to a review.
They are also very high in antioxidents and recent studies show that they may
even lower the
risk of heart disease and
diabetes.
You may have
even heard they spike blood sugar and insulin, potentially putting you at greater
risk for
diabetes.
Even something like medjool dates, in which 2 are equivalent to 12 ounces of Coca Cola in grams of sugar, they pose no
risks of
diabetes or disease.
The phytonutrients and antioxidants in apples may help reduce the
risk of developing cancer, hypertension,
diabetes, and
even heart disease!
When infants are not optimally breastfed they are at
risk for increased illness such as higher rates of gastrointestinal and respiratory infections, allergies, cancer, obesity, cardiovascular disease and
diabetes and
even death.
As more and more traits are attributed to epigenesis and inheritance, from
diabetes to cancer
risk to personality to homosexuality, mothers are increasingly being scrutinized for the way
even their smallest decisions affect their offspring.
Even more troubling, new Yale University research indicates that the regular consumption of artificial sweeteners may interfere with brain chemistry and the hormones regulating appetite and satiety, and may also pose in increased
risk of Type 2
diabetes and obesity.
In the long run, eating enough fiber will also lessen the
risk of
diabetes, weight gain, heart disease, and
even cancer.
Long - term benefits include reduced
risk for childhood and adult obesity,
diabetes, and
even childhood leukemia and lymphoma.
If you are at
risk for gestational
diabetes (
diabetes diagnosed during pregnancy that can affect the health of both baby and mom), giving in to high - sugar cravings could cause
even more problems.
When I have no
risk factors for gestational
diabetes and I want to know if I can have an alternative to flooding my body with sugar water to see how it deals and I hear what amounts to no reason or just doubt as to how fit of a mother I will be if I don't put the baby's good before all,
even though we have yet to establish that this is in the baby's interests, I lose faith in those people.
It is associated with high
risks of allergic disease, respiratory problems, ear infections, celiac ailments, type 1
diabetes and
even SIDs.
Even though you have a low
risk of hypertension and your
risk of developing gestational
diabetes is half that in your 40s, you do not have the luxury of feeling set in lifestyle like a woman in her 30s or 40s might.
Even more astonishing is that these women, who opted for VBAC, were more likely to report tobacco or alcohol use, have
diabetes, and be of black race — high
risk and still demonstrating improved outcomes upon repeat cesareans.
However, individual studies have been modest in size and lacking in statistical power to exclude
even quite large effects on
diabetes risk.
People with type 2
diabetes are at high
risk of cardiovascular - related events, such as heart attacks, stroke, and
even death, often because their levels of triglycerides are so high, and their high - density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol levels are low.
«We found it surprising that
even people whose thyroid function was in the low - normal range had an increased
risk of
diabetes,» Chaker said.
Having too little thyroid hormone in the blood —
even in the low - normal range — raises the
risk of developing Type 2
diabetes, especially in people with prediabetes, a new study in nearly 8,500 people finds.
In the new study, the
risk of developing Type 2
diabetes over long - term follow - up increased by 13 percent for people with low thyroid function — often called underactive thyroid gland or hypothyroidism — or
even those with low - normal thyroid function.
Even if high levels of these amino acids are not causing
diabetes, evidence suggests they are useful biomarkers for predicting who is at
risk, enabling such people to adjust their lifestyle before they get sick.
A high waist - to - hip ratio portends a greater
risk of heart disease, stroke,
diabetes, metabolic syndrome and
even certain cancers — for both men and women.
Bariatric surgery and subsequent weight loss reduces the
risk of heart disease,
diabetes and
even some forms of cancer.
The association between the two conditions remained significant
even when researchers adjusted for other
risk factors, including age, gender, race, body mass index, physical activity, history of alcohol use and smoking, and history of other conditions like myocardial infarction, stroke and
diabetes mellitus.
It has long been accepted that exercise cuts the
risk of getting heart disease, and recent studies suggest a raft of more general benefits, such as reducing the
risk of certain types of cancer and
even preventing the onset of type II
diabetes.
Mounting evidence indicates that if we don't get enough of it, we could leave ourselves more susceptible to infections, increase our
risk of autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis and type 1
diabetes, and
even raise the
risk of certain cancers.
Researchers are now finding that more than the lungs are at
risk, as dirty air may in fact be an accomplice to some of the greatest threats to public health, including
diabetes, obesity and
even dementia.
Previous studies have shown links between human gut bacteria and increased
risk of a wide variety of diseases including
diabetes, autism, heart disease, and
even some forms of cancer.
Diabetes is linked to an increased
risk of developing cancer, and now researchers have performed a unique meta - analysis that excludes all other causes of death and found that diabetic patients not only have an increased
risk of developing breast and colon cancer but an
even higher
risk of dying from them.
«Losing
even this small amount of weight,» Hamdy says, «5 to 7 percent, substantially reduces the
risk of getting
diabetes.»
Indeed, said Heaney, a system within a black person's body that protects bones
even when calcium intake is low may actually increase that individual's
risk of obesity, heart disease, and
diabetes
New findings from large - scale studies of more than 3.6 million people who underwent screening for cardiovascular disease reveals that a person's age and gender affects the prevalence of certain types of peripheral vascular diseases (PVD), and that
diabetes is a major
risk factor for developing these diseases,
even in patients without heart disease.
«
Even if you don't have
diabetes yet, if you have one auto - antibody linked to
diabetes in your blood, you are at significant
risk; with multiple auto - antibodies, it's more than 90 percent
risk.»
A leading expert on reproductive health says young women with Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) have a startlingly higher
risk of developing type 2
diabetes,
even if young and not overweight.
Researchers led by Dr. Sirimon Reutrakul, associate professor of endocrinology,
diabetes and metabolism in the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine, wanted to determine if morning or
evening preference among people with Type 2
diabetes was associated with an increased
risk for higher BMI and if so, what specific factors about
evening preference contributed to the increased
risk.
Reutrakul and her co-investigators wanted to study people with type 2
diabetes, who have an increased
risk of depression, to learn whether a later chronotype, or preference for
evening activity, was independently associated with greater depression symptoms.
«If you improve other lifestyle factors you reduce your
risk for type 2
diabetes even more, but improving diet quality alone has significant benefits.
The results showed that normal physical fitness,
even up to 20 % below the population average, is sufficient to have a preventive effect on five of the eight
risk factors affecting people with cardiovascular disease — abdominal circumference,
diabetes, hypertension, obesity, and excess weight.
Additionally,
even with heightened
risk, a heart healthy lifestyle — maintaining a normal body weight, regular exercise and controlling other
risk factors such as high blood pressure,
diabetes and high cholesterol — can help lower the
risk of heart disease and heart failure.
«
Diabetes, perhaps more so than any other chronic disease, requires people to significantly modify their behaviors — sometimes in ways that are contrary to their cultural norms and backgrounds —
even when they don't «feel» sick or experience symptoms of the disease,» said John G. Ryan, Dr.PH., Topic Editor for Endocrinology and
Diabetes, and guest editor for the April 2014
Diabetes Update, entitled Race,
Risk and Behaviors.
The virtues of exercise are myriad: better cardiovascular health, decreased
risk for
diabetes, boosted mood, and
even perhaps a leaner physique.