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Tea, coffee linked to lower brain cancer risk

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Tea, coffee linked to lower brain cancer risk
Sunday, October 24, 2010

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LONDON: Researchers have discovered that coffee and tea might do more than boost your energy levels: Regular consumption of the world's two most popular beverages may also shield you against a form of brain cancer.

In fact, the latest research suggests that those who drink as little as a half cup or so of coffee per day may lower brain cancer risk by as much as 34 percent.[/U]

Lead researcher Dominique S. Michaud, of Brown University's department of community health in Providence, heads an international team that reports the finding in the November issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

The notion that coffee and tea might accrue an anti-cancer health benefit to regular drinkers builds on previous research that has indicated that the beverages may also lower the risk for both Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease.

The current effort explored the possibility that coffee and tea may also protect against brain cancer, specifically in the form of glioma, a cancer of the central nervous system that originates in the brain and/or spinal cord.

Data concerning the dietary habits of more than 410,000 men and women between the ages of 25 and 70 was drawn from the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition study, which included participants from France, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain, Great Britain, Greece, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Germany.

Participants were recruited between 1991 and 2000, and were tracked over the course of about 8.5 years. During that time, food surveys were completed to gauge, among other things, the amount of tea and coffee each participant consumed.

During the study, 343 new cases of glioma were diagnosed, as were 245 new cases of meningioma, another cancer that affects tissue surrounding the brain and spinal cord.

Decaffeinated coffee consumption was found to be very low overall, while regular coffee and tea drinking patterns varied greatly from country to country. For example, while the Danish (the biggest consumers of coffee) drank on average nearly 3.5 cups per day, Italians (the lowest consumers) averaged less than a half-cup daily. Tea consumption was highest in Great Britain, and lowest in Spain.

By stacking drinking patterns against brain cancer incidence, the research team found that drinking 100 mL (or 0.4 cups) per day and above lowered the risk of gliomas by 34 percent.

The protective effect appears to be slightly stronger among men, the authors observed, and seems to apply solely to gliomas.

Dr. Jonathan Friedman, director of the Texas Brain and Spine Institute at Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine in Bryan, described the findings as "surprising."

"However, the mechanism by which coffee is protective is completely unknown," he cautioned. "While the caffeine itself might be important, some of the other common components of coffee or tea might also be relevant, such as natural antioxidants," he noted.

"Additional studies will be required to confirm these findings," he stressed, "and to identify the basis for the correlation."

Dr. John S. Yu, director of the Brain Tumor Center of Excellence at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, said the finding was "striking."

"If we had a drug for any disease that could demonstrate a risk reduction of 34 percent, that would be considered a great drug. That degree of risk reduction is very strong," he said.

"And as for the specific protective impact of caffeine, this finding follows other recent research that demonstrated that coffee drinking is associated with a lower risk for breast cancer as well," Yu noted. "But even taken together, it has not yet been established whether or not this is directly causative -- [in other words, whether] drinking caffeine directly reduces disease risk -- or whether this is actually about an association between other factors concerning the type of people who drink a certain amount of coffee and risk reduction. More research is needed to figure that out."
 
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Experts call for early diagnosis of Alzheimers in Asia
Sunday, October 24, 2010

KUALA LUMPUR: Health authorities in Asia should diagnose Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients early so that drugs may be given to stabilize symptoms and relatives, or caregivers, can be better prepared, experts said on Friday.

AD is set to explode in Asia in coming decades with a fast-aging population, and dementia patients are forecast to reach 64.6 million by 2050, more than half the global estimate of 115 million in that year.

But diagnosis of this fatal brain-wasting disease that affects memory, thinking, behavior and ability to handle daily activities is almost always made so late that the few drugs that may stabilize symptoms are no longer effective.

"That brain region gets worse and worse linearly. By catching it earlier, it's easier to stop whatever is going on," said Professor Barry Reisberg of the Alzheimer's Disease Center at New York University School of Medicine, who spoke at a regional conference on Alzheimer's disease in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

[B]"There are a lot of ideas to stop progression, exercise for better cardiovascular health, mental (exercise). People need to be aware and make choices," he said later.[/B]

He presented a study published in early 2010 in "Alzheimer's & Dementia," where he and his colleagues monitored for 7 years 200 participants who complained of memory lapses, or "subjective cognitive impairment." Ninety went on to develop mild cognitive impairment, the stage before dementia.

"It is possible to detect as early as 22 years before AD symptoms show. This is something scientists can address."

AD not only affects patients but relatives and caregivers tending to the sufferers, who need 24-hour help in advanced stages of the illness. AD, the most common form of dementia, lasts for around 10 years and robs people of their memory and thought processes and eventually, bodily functions.

David Dai, a gerontologist and AD expert in Hong Kong, said: "There are drugs to stabilize symptoms. They are especially useful in early and middle stages so the person can be better managed at home. But it can't stop progression of the disease."

QOUTE:
A disease marked by the loss of cognitive ability, generally over a period of 10 to 15 years, and associated with the development of abnormal tissues and protein deposits in the cerebral cortex. The detail and symptoms of "Alzheimers" disease, are being mentioned hereunder for information:

Degenerative brain disorder. It occurs in middle to late adult life, destroying neurons and connections in the cerebral cortex and resulting in significant loss of brain mass. The most common form of dementia, Alzheimer disease progresses from short-term memory impairment to further memory loss; deterioration of language, perceptual, and motor skills; mood instability; and, in advanced stages, unresponsiveness, with loss of mobility and control of body functions; death typically ensues in 5 – 10 years. Originally described in 1906 by the German neuropathologist Alois Alzheimer (1864 – 1915) with reference to a 55-year-old person and regarded as a presenile dementia, Alzheimer disease is now recognized as accounting for much of the senile dementia once thought normal with aging. The 10% of cases that begin before age 60 result from an inherited mutation. Neuritic plaques and neurofibrillary tangles in the brain on autopsy are the primary features used for diagnosis. No cure has been found. Most treatment targets the depression, behavioral problems, and sleeplessness that often accompany the disease.
 
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There are many other things which are not good for humans
but still we are living with it
 
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You are absolutely right. There are many other things which are not good for humans.
 
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Chadar lay kay nehar kay paas charpaye daal kar
Yaar sardi mien nehar k pass kiya raat ko paye kha liye thy woh bhi gaye k..man Sialkot in late December and January boht thandh padti hey bawaji.. subha subha school college jatay tu daanth bajtey thy.
 
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