Warung Bebas

Senin, 20 Juli 2009


Hindari Usilnya Batu Ginjal

By Republika Newsroom
Selasa, 21 Juli 2009 pukul 12:11:00

Pastikan air minum yang Anda konsumsi telah sterill dari virus dan bakteri. Rebus selama delapan jam atau jemur dibawah sinar matahari.

Benda padat yang terbentuk menyerupai batu pada ginjal bisa mengakibatkan rasa sakit serta infeksi yang membahayakan jika berada di saluran buang air kecil.

Tidak seimbangnya pola makan, kurang aktivitas fisik serta penyakit kronis yang menahun merupakan beberapa faktor yang mempertinggi risiko pembentukan batu ginjal.

Ada beberapa tips yang dapat Anda lakukan untuk menghindari terbentuknya batu ginjal tersebut, antara lain :

Minum banyak air setiap hari. Batu ginjal terbentuk dari garam dan mineral dalam urin yang bercampur. Cairan yang cukup dapat membantu urin kelancaran dan kejernihannya. Urin yang sehat berwarna kuning cerah. Jika urin berwarna kuning gelap, artinya Anda kuring minum. Usahakan untuk minum setiap beberapa jam, jangan hanya waktu-waktu tertentu.

Turunkan berat badan berlebih. Penelitian menunjukkan orang yang kelebihan berat badan secara signifikan lebih cenderung mengalami batu ginjal.

Kontrol diabetes yang Anda alami. Penyakit kronis biasanya mempengaruhi fungsi ginjal. Sebagai catatan, batu ginjal juga bisa menjadi tanda dari diabetes, juga tekanan darah tinggi dan osteoporosis. Jika Anda terbukti memiliki batu ginjal, konsultasikan lebih lanjut dengan dokter.

Variasikan konsumsi makanan. Pembentuk batu ginjal bisa berbagai macam, tergantung pola makan setiap orang. Sebaiknya, Anda mengganti pola makan yang bervariasi setiap hari. Konsultasi dengan dokter mengenai jenis makanan yang bisa Anda makan. Misalnya, sebagian orang sangat cocok dengan memfokuskan makanan yang mengandung cukup kalsium dan serat sekaligus mengurangi asupan protein dan menghindari garam.

Hindari jus grapefruit atau jeruk besar yang asam. Secara umum, buah sitrus membantu mengurangi asam pada urin. Pengecualian pada grapefruit yang menurut penelitian, justru dapat meningkatkan risiko batu ginjal. Waspada juga jangan sampai melebihi dosis rekomendasi asupan vitamin C dan D tambahan.

Berolahraga secara teratur. Orang yagn tidak aktif memiliki risiko lebih tinggi terhadap batu ginjal. Langkahkan kaki ke luar ruangan dan mulailah berjalan, meskipun sangat singkat setiap hari.

Jangan ragu bertanya mengenai obat-obatan yang diberikan kepada Anda. Tergantung dari zat apa batu ginjal yang Anda miliki, obat justru bisa mendorong pertumbuhannya. Hindari asupan obat tersebut untuk menghindarinya. (newsday/rin)http://republika.co.id/berita/63701/Hindari_Usilnya_Batu_Ginjal

Bila sudah didiagnosa dokter ada batu ginjal, bisa alternatif degnan ektrak herbal meniran dan tempyung, dosis 3x1 , berdasarkan pengalaman selama ini efektif utk menghancurkan batu ginjal tsb. Info lebih lanjut bs sms/tlp ke 081310343598 atau budiprakoso98@gmail.com

The Diet-Heart Hypothesis: Stuck at the Starting Gate?

The diet-heart hypothesis is the idea that (1) dietary saturated fat, and in some versions, dietary cholesterol, raise blood cholesterol in humans and (2) therefore contribute to the risk of heart attack.

I'm not going to spend a lot of time on the theory in relation to dietary cholesterol because the evidence that typical dietary amounts cause heart disease in humans is weak.  Here's a graph from the Framingham Heart study (via the book
Prevention of Coronary Heart Disease, by Dr. Harumi Okuyama et al.) to drive home the point. Eggs are the main source of cholesterol in the American diet. In this graph, the "low" group ate 0-2 eggs per week, the "medium" group ate 3-7, and the "high" group ate 7-14 eggs per week (click for larger image): The distribution of blood cholesterol levels between the three groups was virtually identical. The study also found no association between egg consumption and heart attack risk. Dietary cholesterol does not have a large impact on serum cholesterol in the long term, perhaps because humans are adapted to eating cholesterol. Most people are able to adjust their own cholesterol metabolism to compensate when the amount in the diet increases. Rabbits don't have that feedback mechanism because their natural diet doesn't include cholesterol, so feeding them dietary cholesterol increases blood cholesterol and causes vascular pathology.

The first half of the diet-heart hypothesis states that eating saturated fat raises blood cholesterol. This has been accepted without much challenge by diet-health authorities for nearly half a century. In 1957, Dr. Ancel Keys proposed a formula (Lancet 2:1959. 1957) to predict changes in total cholesterol based on the amount of saturated and polyunsaturated fat in the diet. This formula, based primarily on short-term trials from the 1950s, stated that saturated fat is the primary dietary influence on blood cholesterol.

According to Keys' interpretation of the trials, saturated fat raised, and to a lesser extent polyunsaturated fat lowered, blood cholesterol.
But there were significant flaws in the data from the very beginning, which were pointed out in this critical 1973 literature review in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition (free full text).

The main problem is that the controlled trials typically compared saturated fats to omega-6 linoleic acid (LA)-rich vegetable oils, and when serum cholesterol was higher in the saturated fat group, this was most often attributed to the saturated fat raising blood cholesterol rather than the LA lowering it. When a diet high in saturated fat was compared to the basal diet without changing LA, often no significant increase in blood cholesterol was observed. Studies claiming to show a cholesterol-raising effect of saturated fat often introduced it after an induction period rich in LA. Thus, the effect sometimes had more to do with LA lowering blood cholesterol than saturated fat raising it. This is not at all what I was expecting to find when I began looking through these trials.


Reading through the short-term controlled trials, I was surprised by the variability and lack of agreement between them. Some of this was probably due to a lack of control over variables and non-optimal study design. But if saturated fat has a dominant effect on serum cholesterol in the short term, it should be readily and consistently demonstrable.  

The long-term data are not kind to the diet-heart hypothesis. Reducing saturated fat while greatly increasing LA certainly does lower blood cholesterol substantially. This was the finding in the well-controlled Minnesota Coronary Survey trial, for example (14% reduction). But in other cases where LA intake changed less, such as MRFIT, the Women's Health Initiative Diet Modification trial and the Lyon Diet-Heart trial, reducing saturated fat intake had little or no effect on total cholesterol or LDL (0-3% reduction).  The small changes that did occur could have been due to other factors, such as increased fiber and phytosterols, since these were multiple-factor interventions.

Another blow to the idea that saturated fat raises cholesterol in the long term comes from observational studies. Here's a graph of data from the Health Professionals Follow-up study, which followed 43,757 health professionals for 6 years (via the book
Prevention of Coronary Heart Disease by Dr. Harumi Okuyama et al.): What this graph shows is that at a relatively constant LA intake, neither saturated fat intake nor the ratio of LA to saturated fat were related to blood cholesterol in freely living subjects. This was true across a wide range of saturated fat intakes (7-15%). 

There's more. If saturated fat were important in determining the amount of blood cholesterol in the long term, you'd expect populations who eat the most saturated fat to have high blood cholesterol levels. But that's not the case. The Masai traditionally get a high proportion of their calories from milk fat, half of which is saturated. In 1964, Dr. George V. Mann published a paper showing that traditional Masai warriors eating practically nothing but very fatty milk, blood and meat had an average cholesterol of 115 mg/dL in the 20-24 year age group. For comparison, he published values for American men in the same age range: 198 mg/dL (J. Atherosclerosis Res. 4:289. 1964). Apparently, eating three times the saturated animal fat and several times the cholesterol of the average American wasn't enough to elevate their blood cholesterol. What does elevate the cholesterol of a Masai man?
Junk food.

Now let's swim over to the island of Tokelau, where the traditional diet includes nearly 50% of calories from saturated fat from coconut. This is the highest saturated fat intake of any population I'm aware of. How's their cholesterol? Men in the age group 20-24 had a concentration of 168 mg/dL in 1976, which was lower than Americans in the same age group despite a four-fold higher saturated fat intake.
Tokelauans who migrated to New Zealand, eating half the saturated fat of their island relatives, had a total cholesterol of 191 mg/dL in the same age group and time period, and substantially higher LDL (J. Chron. Dis. 34:45. 1981). Sucrose consumption was 2% on Tokelau and 13% in New Zealand. Saturated fat seems to take a backseat to some other diet/lifestyle factor(s).  Body fatness and excess calorie intake are good candidates, since they influence circulating lipoproteins.

Does dietary saturated fat influence total cholesterol and LDL over the long term?  I don't have the answers, but I do think it's interesting that the evidence is much less consistent than it's made out to be.  It may be that if dietary saturated fat influences total cholesterol or LDL concentration in the long term, the effect is is secondary to other factors.  That being said, it's clear that linoleic acid, in large amount, reduces circulating total cholesterol and LDL.

Kamis, 09 Juli 2009

The Finnish Mental Hospital Trial

This diet trial was conducted between 1959 and 1971 in two psychiatric hospitals near Helsinki, Finland. One hospital served typical fare, including full-fat milk and butter, while the other served "filled milk", margarine and polyunsaturated vegetable oils. Filled milk has had its fat removed and replaced by an emulsion of vegetable oil. As a result, the diet of the patients in the latter hospital was low in saturated fat and cholesterol, and high in polyunsaturated fat compared to the former hospital. At the end of six years, the hospitals switched diets. This is known as a "crossover" design.

The results were originally published in 1972 in the Lancet (ref), and a subset of the data were re-published in 1979 in the International Journal of Epidemiology (ref). They found that during the periods that patients were eating the diet low in saturated fat and cholesterol, and high in vegetable oil, male participants (but not females) had roughly half the incidence of heart attack deaths. There were no significant differences in total mortality in either men or women. The female data were omitted in the 1979 report.

This study is often cited as support for the idea that saturated fat increases the risk of heart attack. The reason it's cited so often is it's one of a minority of trials that came to that conclusion. The only other controlled trial I'm aware of that replaced animal fat with polyunsaturated vegetable oil (without changing other variables at the same time) and found a statistically significant decrease in cardiovascular deaths was the Los Angeles Veterans' Administration study. However, there was no difference in total mortality, and there were significantly more heavy smokers in the control group. The difference in heart attack deaths in the V.A. trial was 18%, far less than the difference seen in the Finnish trial.

I can cite three controlled trials that came to the opposite conclusion, that switching saturated fat for vegetable oil increases cardiovascular mortality and/or total mortality: the Anti-Coronary Club Trial (4 years), the Rose et al. corn oil trial (2 years), and the Sydney Diet-Heart trial (5 years). Other controlled trials found no difference in total mortality or heart attack mortality from this intervention, including the National Diet-Heart Study (2 years) and the Medical Research Council study (7 years). Thus, the Finnish trial is an outlier whose findings have never been replicated by better-conducted trials.

I have three main bones to pick with the Finnish trial. The first two are pretty bad, but the third is simply fatal to its use as support for the idea that saturated fat contributes to cardiovascular risk:

1) A "crossover" study design is not an appropriate way to study a disease with a long incubation period. How do you know that the heart attacks you're observing came from the present diet and not the one the patients were eating for the six years before that? The Finnish trial was the only trial of its nature ever to use a crossover design.

2) The study wasn't blinded. When one wants to eliminate bias in diagnosis for these types of studies, one designs the study so that the physician doesn't know which group the patients came from. That way he can't influence the results, consciously or unconsciously. Obviously there was no way to blind the physicians in this study, because they knew what the patients in each hospital were eating. I think it's interesting that the only outcome not susceptible to diagnostic bias, total mortality, showed no significant changes in either men or women.

3) The Finnish Mental Hospital trial was not actually a controlled trial. In an editorial in the November 1972 issue of the Lancet, Drs. John Rivers and John Yudkin pointed out, among other things, that the amount of sugar varied by almost 50% between diet periods. In the December 30th issue, the lead author of the study responded:
In view of the design of the experiment the variations in sugar intake were, of course, regrettable. They were due to the fact that, aside from the fatty-acid composition and the cholesterol content of the diets, the hospitals, for practical reasons, had to be granted certain freedom in dietary matters.
In other words, the diets of the two hospitals differed significantly in ways other than their fat composition. Sugar was one difference. Carbohydrate intake varied by as much as 17% and total fat intake by as much as 26% between diet periods (on average, carbohydrate was lower and total fat was higher in the polyunsaturated fat group). The use of psychiatric drugs with known cardiovascular side effects differed substantially between groups and could have accounted for some of the difference in cardiovascular events.  

The definition of a controlled trial is an experiment in which all variables are kept reasonably constant except the one being evaluated. Therefore, the Finnish trial cannot rightfully be called a controlled trial. The fact that the result has never been replicated casts further doubt on the study.
I could continue listing other problems with the study, such as the fact that the hospital population included in the analysis had a high turnover rate (variable, but as high as 40%), and patients were included in the analysis even if they were at the hospital for as little as 50% of the time between first admission and final discharge (i.e., they came and went). But what's the use in beating a dead horse?


Click here for a map to all trails




July 11th
Gibbons Park Trail

July 18th
Killaly Trail

July 25th
Komoka Trail

August 1st
Fanshawe Trail


August 8th
Kains Woods
or
Dirty Girls 6 & 12 hr Trail Races www.ouser.org/



August 15th
Meadowlilly Trail



August 22nd
Westminster Ponds
or ITT 32k http://www.ouser.org/


August 29th
Gibbons Park



September 5th
Medway Trail



September 12th
Komoka Trail
or
Haliburton Forest 25/50/100/160 km Trail Races
http://www.ouser.org/



September 19th
Kains Woods Trail


September 26th
Meadowlilly Trail



October 3rd
Medway Trail


October 10th
Fanshawe Trail



October 12th
Turkey Trot in Springbank Park (points for running or volunteering)



October 17th
VULTURE BAIT 25 & 50 Km TRAIL RACES
*did you see the write up in the August issue, page 12, of Trail Runner Magazine?
www.vulturebaitrace.com



October 24th
Kains Woods Trail



October 31
Season Ender @ Komoka Trail
Champagne & Mars Bars





Selasa, 07 Juli 2009

Who let me have a Camcorder anyhow?

Betty, win's / loses the Black Ball Challenge.

 

ZOOM UNIK::UNIK DAN UNIK Copyright © 2012 Fast Loading -- Powered by Blogger