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" HSI - Jenny Thompson " <HSIResearch

 

 

Blue Winter

Mon, 03 Jan 2005 11:02:18 -0500

Blue Winter

 

Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

 

January 03, 2005

 

 

****************************************************

 

 

Dear Reader,

 

With the holidays finished up and most of the winter still ahead, many

of us (who are not fortunate enough to spend the season in sunny

places where palm trees grow) will experience wintertime blues.

 

But there's a fine line between the blues and depression. And as a new

study demonstrates, prolonged depression may sharply increase the risk

of stroke. Fortunately, there are natural ways to address this problem.

 

---------------------------

Risks on the rise

---------------------------

 

To examine depression as a risk factor for death due to cardiovascular

disease, a research team headed by scientists at the State University

of New York (SUNY) collected data from the Multiple Risk Factor

Intervention Trial (MRFIT); a trial designed to examine the

association between three risk factors (cigarette smoking, high blood

pressure and high cholesterol) and coronary heart disease mortality in

middle- aged men.

 

As reported in the journal Stroke, toward the end of the seven-year

MRFIT trial, more than 11,000 subjects completed a questionnaire used

to identify and categorize symptoms of depression. Then for an 18-year

follow up period, deaths and causes of death were recorded.

 

The SUNY team divided the subjects into five groups, or quintiles,

that sorted the men according to the severity of depression symptoms,

with the top quintile representing the most pronounced symptoms.

 

When mortality data was compared to the five quintiles, researchers

found that men in the top quintile were at 15 percent greater risk of

death by all causes and 21 percent greater risk of death due to

cardiovascular disease. But the most dramatic result involved stroke

risk: Men in the top quintile had more than DOUBLE the risk of death

due to stroke compared to men in the lowest quintile.

 

In an American Heart Association press release, a co-author of the

study, Karen A. Matthews, Ph.D., noted that even mild symptoms of

depression were associated with an increased risk of stroke death when

compared to subjects in the lowest quintile. Men described as only

" slightly depressed " had nearly 25 percent elevated risk of a fatal

stroke.

 

---------------------------

Apply the oil

---------------------------

 

Depression is a difficult health problem that can have a variety of

complicating factors. But as we've seen in previous e-Alerts, omega-3

intake has been shown to alleviate symptoms of depression for many people.

 

For instance, researchers in the Netherlands conducted a study of more

than 260 elderly and depressed subjects to examine how the ratio of

omega-6 and omega-3 fatty acids might be associated with depression.

 

Blood samples revealing omega-6 and omega-3 levels from all of these

subjects were measured against a control group of 461 randomly

selected subjects. Researchers found what they called a " direct effect

of fatty acid composition on mood. " Subjects with depressive disorders

had a significantly higher ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acids.

This confirms several previous studies that show how a low intake of

omega-3 fatty acids may trigger depression, especially among older people.

 

One of the best sources of omega-3 is cod liver oil, which is also a

good source of another key nutrient that's been shown to help prevent

depression: vitamin D. During the autumn and winter months, and in

northern and southern latitudes, the body's vitamin D production from

sunshine is diminished. So this excellent source of both omega-3 and

vitamin D may be an invaluable tool in avoiding the winter blues,

depression and possibly even a stroke.

 

Just the thing for those of us who can't spend the next three months

in a hammock strung between palm trees.

 

 

****************************************************

 

....and another thing

 

Some love it, some hate it, but there's no denying the benefits of

broccoli.

 

More than seven years ago HSI first reported on research being done at

the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine that showed how the

natural compound called sulforaphane (found in cruciferous vegetables

such as cabbage and Brussels sprouts, but especially broccoli) acts as

a cancer-preventive agent.

 

That initial research has been confirmed with several studies,

including the most recent from the National Cancer Institute (NCI).

 

NCI researchers used a dietary questionnaire to examine the link

between fruit and vegetable intake and the potential prevention of

non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL), a type of lymph cancer. More than 450

subjects with NHL were surveyed, in addition to 400 control subjects

who were cancer-free and matched to the cancer patients by age, sex,

race and geographical region.

 

Results showed that NHL risk was reduced by 40 percent among subjects

who ate three or more servings of vegetables each day, when compared

to subjects who ate less than one serving each day. But HHL prevention

was stronger among those subjects who ate one or more servings of

green leafy vegetables, and stronger still among those who ate a

single daily serving of broccoli, cabbage, Brussels sprouts or

cauliflower.

 

Intake of Zinc and selenium was also found to decrease the risk of NHL.

 

Broccoli contains the highest concentrations of sulforaphane. But if

you have " broccoli issues " (as I do - even a small helping can trigger

a killer migraine), then you can also get sulforaphane from broccoli

sprouts, which actually contain higher levels of sulforaphane than

broccoli stalks and flowerets.

 

From past correspondence I know that some HSI members are apprehensive

about bacteria that can grow in poorly handled sprouts. If that's a

concern for you, a broccoli sprout extract (available at many health

food stores) will alleviate the bacteria problem. Not to mention

non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.

 

To Your Good Health,

 

Jenny Thompson

Health Sciences Institute

 

****************************************************

 

Sources:

 

" Depressive Symptoms and Mortality in Men – Results From the Multiple

Risk Factor Intervention Trial " Stroke: Journal of the American Heart

Association, Vol. 36, No. 1, January 2005, stroke.ahajournals.org

" Depression Linked With Higher Risk of Stroke Death " American Heart

Association, 11/29/04, intelihealth.com

" Broccoli Warfare To Cut Cancer Risk " NutraIngredients.com, 10/19/04,

nutraingredients.com

 

****************************************************

 

Copyright ©1997-2004 by www.hsibaltimore.com, L.L.C. The e-Alert may

not be posted on commercial sites without written permission.

 

*******

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