A R T I C L E |
D A T E |
| A Heart of Gold | 12-16-2009 |
| The Battle of a Different Bulge Pelvic Organ Prolapse |
11-04-2009 |
| Single Incision Surgery Twice as easy on the patient, Twice as challenging for the surgeon |
10-01-2009 |
| Oh, Baby! Bariatric surgery can help women lose weight and gain a baby |
07-22-2009 |
| ByPassing Diabetes New evidence shows weight-loss surgery improves or resolves insulin resistance |
07-15-2009 |
| Girl Interrupted: A husband's unconditional love and a doctor's compassion and skill help one woman regain a part of herself that she didn't even know was missing... until her wedding night. |
05-08-2008 |
| Abscessed Teeth: One Painful Reminder |
02-20-2008 |
| From Scratch Nine months after a devastating wreck, Dan Ryder’s pelvis was still in pieces. His new surgeon had a plan: start all over. |
08-29-2007 |
| Brain Drain Two lucky patients can hold their heads high (and one can even fly!) thanks to advances in treating hydrocephalus |
08-22-2007 |
| Car Wrecks: Saving Life and Limb |
06-27-2007 |
| Male Breasts Gynecomastia: When nature gets confused |
04-04-2007 |
| The Pork Taco, The Tapeworm and The Brain | 10-25-2006 |
| Inflammatory: The Other Breast Cancer |
10-18-2006 |
| Bathroom Break An array of treatments gives the restroom a rest |
07-26-2006 |
| Short Cut: Through the Nose When it comes to removing some skull-base tumors, the shortest distance between two points beats the old-fashioned way...by a nose. |
06-21-2006 |
| Propped Open: Pancreatic cancer patients can eat again, thanks to the small bowel stent |
10-05-2005 |
| More than a Headache | 08-29-2005 |
| Two Thumbs Up New Wrist Fix |
08-01-2005 |
| Straight from the hip: Joint replacements may provide relief to teens with arthritis |
06-24-2005 |
| Finè....
Kaput....
The End. A final goodbye to hemorrhoids |
03-18-2005 |
| NPH:
The Great Pretender It looks like Parkinson’s, acts like Alzheimer’s, seems like dementia. The difference? It’s treatable. |
03-11-2005 |
| A
Chance for Abigail Even before birth, she was dying. But Abigail and her surgeon had other plans for her future. |
01-07-2005 |
| Beat Headaches (By a Nose) | 12-02-2004 |
| Cosmetic Surgery on Persons of Color | 06-21-2004 |
| Flying Without a Net! A new surgery for women with stress incontinence restores freedom from shame, fear (and diapers). |
05-20-2004 |
| A Recipe for Healing: A new orthopedic frame helps surgeons mend broken bones more precisely |
03-22-2004 |
| Pumped Up Stroke patients gain mobility, calm spasms with new device |
01-15-2004 |
| Happy Endings: New surgical option for hemorrhoid sufferers |
11-20-2003 |
| A Burning Desire to Stop Heartburn Surgery may fix the reflux for good |
09-18-2003 |
| What's Afoot? | 08-14-2003 |
| Cool New 3-D Computer Games Nahhh, Just the Surgery of the Future |
07-17-2003 |
| Bending at the Knee: Alternative to Total Knee Replacement |
06-16-2003 |
| Ankle Arthritis | 05-15-2003 |
| Putting Metal to Metal Next Generation Hip Replacement Adds Years to Your Stride |
03-06-2003 |
Eating healthy
reverses metabolic syndrome
Dr. Tasnime Akbaraly of University College London and her colleagues were interested if healthy eating could actually turn-the-tide and reverse metabolic syndrome, which is having 3 or more of the following risk factors: excess abdominal fat; high triglycerides, hypertension, low levels of HDL the “good” cholesterol, or type 2 diabetes. Having metabolic syndrome doubles a persons’ risk of heart disease and greatly increases the odds of developing type 2 diabetes.
The researchers studied 339 British civil servants with metabolic syndrome, and how closely the adhered to the Alternative Healthy Eating Index (AHEI) to see if it could help reverse metabolic syndrome. The AHEI is a set of published nutritional guidelines by the Harvard School of Public Health in 2002 that emphasizes whole grains, fruits, vegetables and decreased red meat consumption.
Five years into the study, nearly 50% no longer had metabolic syndrome. People who followed the AHEI guidelines the closest were nearly twice as likely to have reversed their metabolic syndrome. The results of the study were published in Diabetes Care, online July 29, 2010.
Dr. Alice Lichtenstein, an expert on diet and heart health from Tufts University in Boston who was not involved in the study said, "It's not about focusing on individual components of the diet, it's really the whole package, and that becomes important because it means that if one of the components of a healthy diet is to eat more fruits and vegetables, just buying a pill saying that there's a concentrated extract of fruits and vegetables is probably not what's going to help you."
Call and make an appointment with Wellness Coach Sam Hester, CWC, CPT, LWMC, at 713-500-3327. It's confidential and free. For more information on the wellness services provided, visit UT Counseling and WorkLife Services.