FOR KIDS: Vitamin D-licious mushrooms

Over the past few years the sun has gotten a bad rap. Too much sunshine can put you at risk for skin cancer. And an overdose of sun can also lead to nasty sunburns, or even heatstroke.

But the sun isn’t always bad for the body. Scientists have known for years that the sun is a great source of vitamin D. This vitamin naturally boosts the immune system, your body’s defense against disease. Now mushrooms bathed in ultraviolet (UV) light — like that from the sun — can help you get some of this valuable vitamin.

Each year there are more and more studies released that suggest if you want to be healthy, vitamin D is where it’s at. Vitamin D strengthens your heart and bones, and can prevent asthma and some forms of cancer and diabetes.

Some foods, like fish and eggs, are naturally brimming with the vitamin. And others, like milk and some cereals, are fortified with vitamin D. But you would need to consume a lot of milk and cereal to get your daily dose of vitamin D. Sunlight still reigns king as the best source for vitamin D.

Recently scientists have shown that specially treated mushrooms could give people a vitamin D boost. U.S. Department of Agriculture researchers in California treated portabella mushrooms to suntanning sessions of up to 18 minutes. The mushrooms didn’t develop a bronze glow or complain of heat stroke though. Instead each mushroom produced nearly 4 micrograms of vitamin D per gram of tissue. When white mushrooms were given similar sun treatments, these fungi boasted extra vitamin D, too. Now both kinds of vitamin-infused ‘shrooms are on the market. So if you like mushrooms, you could munch your way to a higher daily dose of Vitamin D.

Depending on a person’s age, people should get between 5 and 15 micrograms (or 200 to 600 international units) of vitamin D each day. Without these amounts, people are prone to get diseases like rickets, which causes distorted, soft bones. These numbers, though, are really just a minimum. Now some scientists suggest it’s better to get as much as five times the recommended vitamin D dose each day.

Having more foods with Vitamin D is a good thing, since there are also several factors that make it hard to get enough of the vitamin from just the sun.

One factor influencing elderly people’s vitamin D intake is that they often spend less time outdoors. Therefore, they need more vitamin D in their diet. And if you spend a lot of your time indoors, playing video games or on the computer, you may need extra vitamin D from your food, too.

Skin color and weight also help determine a person’s vitamin D needs. Darker skin filters out more of the sun’s UV light, so people with darker skin need more sun exposure to make necessary amounts of vitamin D. For unknown reasons, heavier people also need a greater amount of UV light to enable vitamin D production.

And latitude — how far north or south you live — can play a major role in the sun’s ability to help you get adequate vitamin D amounts. As you get farther away from the equator, the amount of UV-filtering atmosphere increases. This means that at higher, more northern latitudes, people get less UV rays. So, if you live in a state like Alaska, most of the year you can’t get enough sun to trigger the vitamin’s production by your skin.

Eating foods enriched with vitamin D or taking a daily vitamin may not be as satisfying as breaking out your bathing suit and lying in the sun. But the right foods and supplements can help keep you healthy until summer’s rays are here again.

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Ailment

Ailment
Synonyms
Disease; Illness
Definition
Disease represents impairment of the normal state or
functioning of the body as a whole or of any of its
parts. Some diseases are acute, producing symptoms
that last short period of time, for example, flu, pneumonia.
There are also chronic disorders, such as, arthritis,
hypertension, etc. that last for a long time. Diseases
are usually classified according to cause. External
factors that produce disease are infectious agents,
including bacteria, viruses, fungi, but also disease may
occur as a consequence of different chemical and physical
agents such as drugs, poisons, radiation. Some diseases
are inherited and some of them acquired due to
environmental, infectious and various lifestyle factors.
Also, many diseases are attributed to emotional disturbances.
Most diseases occur as a result of an interaction
between the body and the environment. In ancient
times disease was ascribed to supernatural, spiritual,
and humoral factors.

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AIDS-Defining Symptoms

AIDS-Defining Symptoms
Synonyms
AIDS-defining diseases; AIDS-defining illnesses; Opportunistic
infections in AIDS
Definition
The term “AIDS-defining diseases” are the so-called
opportunistic infections, which do not appear in immunocompetent
individuals, and particular tumors. The
tumors are Kaposi’s sarcoma, a tumor of the connective
tissue, and non-Hodgkin’s malignant lymphoma.
Opportunistic infections can be caused by viruses, bacteria,
fungi or parasites. Typical AIDS-associated viral
infections are cytomegalovirus and herpes infections.
The bacterial infection, which most frequently occurs
in connection with HIV-infection, is tuberculosis (S.
tuberculosis and other mycobacterioses). Fungal diseases,
which have to be mentioned, are Candida-infections
and cryptococcoses.A parasitic disease typical for
AIDS is pneumonia caused by Pneumocystis carinii. In
1980 the so-called “wasting-syndrome” was identified;
it is characterized by a loss of body weight of more than
10%, tiredness, persisting diarrhea and fever.
Cross-References
 HIV-Infection and AIDS

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What is Flower Pollen Extract?

Flower pollen extract has an extremely rich history, first used in Sweden where it has shown tremendous health aid for both men and women. Flower pollen extract is entirely different from bee pollen. Flower pollen extract is made up of several strains of specific organic grass and flower plants, which is the reproductive fluid of the plant, which has spiky coating, dust, fungi, and other allergens removed. This liberates the potent nutritional portion that fertilizes grasses and plants, virtually eliminating any of the allergenic effects that are associated with raw pollen.

Flower pollen extracts are gathered directly from plants in the field, as the husks that contain bacteria, fungi, toxins, and pollutants that cause hay fever and other allergies are removed through an enzyme-based process. By using non-toxic methods, both the water and fat-soluble portions are obtained which are rich in vitamins, minerals, carotenoids, amino acids, enzymes, proteins, phytosterols, lipids, ribonucleic acids, peptides, and fatty acids. Surprisingly, flower pollen extract is unusually rich in all of these nutrients, as well as many others.

Flower pollen extract should not be confused with the bee pollen that is sold at health food stores, as flower pollen extract is harvested hours before the bees arrive and is collected from specific plants that are grown in specific greenhouses or fields. Bees go from plant to plant, making their pollen an eclectic mixture, so it is hard to create a therapeutic effect from a supplement of such uncertainty, but flower pollen uses very specific extracts.

Flower pollen has been suspected to be a non-hormone method of helping women who experience PMS, making it an important contribution to public health. In order to determine whether this assumption was true, first a small study was done for premenstrual syndrome. Although patients knew they were receiving an intended remedy, flower pollen extract showed a positive outcome. After these results, a second, much larger study was done on women with PMS. The results were very impressive. Thirty-two women aged 27 to 50 years old were studied after giving two months of active treatment. The results showed that overall symptoms were lowered significantly by about 27 to 57 percent. Premenstrual weight gain was also reduced by 50 percent compared to those women who were taking a placebo. These results show that using flower pollen extract as a herbal therapy can provide substantial symptomatic relief of PMS with minimal risk of adverse effects.

Another study followed researching the effects of flower pollen extracts on the symptoms of menopause, specifically hot flashes. The study was done on 64 menopausal women, each of whom were either given two tablets of flower pollen extract each morning, or two identical placebo tablets for three consecutive months. The study concluded that 65 percent of the patients in the active-treatment group showed a reduction in hot flashes, compared to 38 percent of the patients in the placebo group. These results concluded that flower pollen extract significantly reduces hot flushes along with certain other menopausal symptoms, as compared to a placebo.

If you are experiencing menopausal or PMS symptoms, Swedish pollen flower might be exactly what you are looking for to alleviate your symptoms so you can enjoy life more.
by Darrell Miller

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