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Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Control Your Blood Pressure

Now is the perfect time to focus on something women don’t think about enough: heart disease.

You can’t go anywhere in February without seeing hearts on candy, cards, and balloons. No illness kills more women in the United States. And the latest research shows that one of the best ways to protect yourself is to control your blood pressure. Here’s how:

  • Get going. Daily activity like gardening and cleaning can lower your BP. Your target should be the normal zone (120/80 or below).
  • Move faster. Set aside 30 minutes a day for brisk walking, bicycling, or aerobics. Break sessions into shorter segments if necessary.
  • Shake the high-salt habit. How much salt do you need a day? Just 500 milligrams, or 1/10 teaspoon; this is about 200 mg of sodium. Most folks get 15 times their daily need from food and the salt shaker.
  • Don’t smoke. Yeah, we know you’ve heard this a million times. (It’s also best to limit alcohol to no more than two drinks per day.)
  • Fill up on vegetables, fruits, and low-fat dairy foods.
  • Monitor your numbers. Haven’t had your blood pressure checked in a while? On February 18, Wal-Mart and Sam’s Club will offer free BP and cholesterol screenings.
  • Control yourself. If you’re African-American, remember: Your hypertension risk is twice that of white people, so talk strategy with your doctor.
  • A Little High is Too High
    The Framingham Heart Study followed 5,000 people for 10 years and recently found that prehypertensives—people with blood-pressure readings between 120/80 and 140/90—are three times as likely to have a heart attack as those with lower levels. About 59 million Americans have prehypertension. If they could all get into the normal range, nearly half of all heart-related deaths could be prevented.

    Saturday, February 9, 2008

    The Plus Side of Going Without Sex

    Also, straight talk on circumcision, pain during lovemaking, and the problem with separate bedrooms.

    Question: My partner and I are both on the road a lot for work. Lately, I’ve been thinking about the old adage, “Absence makes the heart grow fonder.” If we have less sex, will we want it more?

    Your instinct for keeping the spark alive is right on, I’m happy to report.

    Resisting the urge to have sex can pay off in hotter action the next time you succumb to desire, even if it’s just your maddening travel schedules causing the resistance. And absence may even have benefits over expensive mate-wooing extras like beauty treatments or lingerie. One study shows that men who’ve spent time apart from their partners not only are more eager to get them in the sack, but find them more attractive, too. There’s also good news if you’re hoping to get pregnant after an extended run of sex-free days and nights: Your partner’s sperm count will be higher.

    To tip the quality-versus-quantity ratio further in your favor, send your honey occasional lusty e-mails or text messages to get him thinking about that next encounter, however far off it may be. And when you finally do hook up, special touches like champagne and strawberries make it even more worth the wait.

    Question: Is there any difference in having sex with men who are circumcised and those who aren’t?

    First, let’s talk visual effects. If you get amorous with an uncut guy, his erection will cause the foreskin to retract, leaving his penis bareheaded in all its glory, just like circumcised ones. Once he’s inside you, you shouldn’t feel any difference.

    Your partner, though, just might count himself lucky that he never got nipped. Some (but not all) studies suggest that the tip of an uncircumcised penis is more sensitive to stimulation because keeping it covered up preserves its fine texture. Regardless, that uncut foreskin can function as a sort of free sex toy during foreplay if you’re in the mood to experiment with it by pulling it up and down.

    Worried about a greater risk of infection? Some research suggests that circumcision decreases a man’s chances of contracting sexually transmitted infections (and passing these along to his partners). If you’re concerned about STIs, use condoms and have a frank chat with any new partner, cut or otherwise, about your sexual histories.

    Question: I feel pain around my navel after making love, and I’m getting worried. What’s wrong?

    I suspect you’re experiencing “referred pain”—you feel pain in one spot while its source lies elsewhere. Referred pain around your belly button could be caused by a problem originating elsewhere in your pelvic region, such as a muscle strain (which could be exacerbated during orgasm) or irritable bowel syndrome (which has other symptoms like diarrhea, cramps, and gas).

    If the pain’s steadily getting worse when you have sex, or you’ve experienced changes in your menstrual cycle, dial up your gynecologist right away. Otherwise, try logging the details in a pain journal for a few weeks before seeing your doctor. That way, she’ll have more evidence to help her get to the root of your problem. Keep track of how often you feel this pain, whether it’s dull or piercing, steady or brief, and what effect, if any, sex positions or orgasms have. You might also keep track of connections between the pain and how fatigued you are, or what you’ve eaten.

    If you do see a doctor, she may recommend tests such as colonoscopy or ultrasound.

    Question: I’ve been sleeping on the sofa with my 1-year-old, while my husband and our two sons (both under 5) sleep in our bedroom. We never have sex anymore. What can I do?

    When you have three kids under 5, tending to their nonstop needs is bound to lead to some neglect of your own. A sex drought isn’t fun, but it’s typical. What’s far from typical, however, is your bedtime arrangement—it’s estranging you and your husband, emotionally and physically. The first rule of order is to work on changing who sleeps where. If your youngest can’t sleep without you, and you really would like her to sleep in a crib in her own room, get help with that. Same with the boys in your bed. A chat with the pediatrician or a sleep expert might help you problem-solve ways to get the kids all in their own beds, if that’s your goal. It might take some time and effort, but getting back in bed with your spouse is worth it.

    Of course, other problems could be keeping you and your husband apart—you’re worried you’ll get pregnant again, you’re exhausted, or you’ve gained a lot of weight. Whatever’s going on, try to bring it up in a candid talk with your husband. If that’s hard, you might want to seek help from a sex therapist. Suffering isn’t worth it.


    Tuesday, February 5, 2008

    Rub it no more!

    Those lotions, creams, and gels you slather on a sore muscle, your legs before hair removal, that vaginal itch? Too much could hurt you. Here’s what you need to know.

    Lidocaine, methyl salicylate, hydrocortisone. You probably don’t think twice about using over-the-counter (OTC) creams with these ingredients when you need to soothe a sore muscle or bug bite, prep your legs before hair removal, or combat that vaginal itch. If the product’s available without a prescription, it can’t hurt you, right? Wrong.

    Take Arielle Newman, for instance, a New York City–area high school track star who died last year from a sports-cream overdose. She’d used large amounts of popular OTC pain-relieving ointments like Icy Hot and Ben-Gay on her sore muscles. The key ingredient in such products is methyl salicylate, which built up in Newman’s body, may have interacted with other aspirin-based meds she was using, and caused her to go into cardiac arrest.

    Another case: In 2005, Shiri Berg, 22, of North Carolina died of a lidocaine overdose. Following the instructions she’d been given by the staff at a local hair-removal clinic, she generously applied a numbing gel to her legs, then covered them in plastic wrap. On her way to the clinic to get hair lasered from her legs, Berg passed out. She went into convulsions, then a coma. Eight days later, she was dead.

    Women dying in the name of hair removal? Athletes putting themselves at risk by using mentholated muscle soothers? Extreme situations, to be sure. But with all the stuff each of us slathers on our skin (one study estimates that women apply 175 chemicals a day from cosmetics, creams, and toiletries alone), it’s no surprise that potential hazards are lurking.

    Your skin is designed to protect you from countless insults: from air pollution to murky lake water, from dirty gasoline-pump handles to staph. Skin cells provide a physical barrier, sort of like bricks and mortar, to keep the bad stuff out—most of the time, says Francesca J. Fusco, MD, assistant clinical professor of dermatology at the Mt. Sinai School of Medicine. “The cells aren’t as tightly packed as real bricks, though, which means things can squeeze by and pentrate.” That’s good news if you want, say, an antiaging wrinkle cream to wage war against your crow’s-feet or an anti-itch product to tackle that exercise-induced rash on your inner thighs. Bad news when strong chemicals meet sensitive or thin skin, cause an allergic reaction, or dangerously flood your bloodstream. Here, we investigate 14 ingredients commonly found in products you may be using right now—and we tell you how to stay safe.

    Methyl salicylate
    Most OTC muscle creams (including Ben-Gay, Icy Hot, and Tiger Balm) contain one or more of three main ingredients: the cooling agents menthol and camphor, and the pain reliever methyl salicylate. The latter is similar to topical aspirin, says Matt Zirwas, MD, director of The Ohio State University Medical Center Contact Dermatitis Center. And what happened to track-star Newman is essentially the same thing that could happen with an aspirin overdose, he says.

    The safe way to use muscle creams? Rub a small amount (about the size of a quarter) into the painful muscle or joint area not more than three or four times a day to prevent accumulation. If you’re applying more than a four-ounce tube a week, that’s probably too much, Zirwas says. And watch your aspirin intake—too much can increase your risk of overdose (in addition to the creams, Newman may have been using a pain-relieving patch and taking aspirin), as can wrapping or using a heating pad on ointment-covered skin.

    Rubs with methyl salicylate may also interact with blood-thinning prescription drugs, such as Plavix or Coumadin, used to prevent blood from clotting, says Brian J. Krabak, MD, sports-medicine physician at the University of Washington’s department of rehabilitation medicine. Because of its toxicity, any product containing 5 percent or more of methyl salicylate (also called wintergreen oil) has to carry a warning label stating it must be used as directed and kept out of children’s reach.

    Lidocaine, benzocaine, tetracaine
    If you’ve ever numbed a mole before the doc removed it or undergone laser hair removal, you’ve probably used a topical anesthetic that contains one of the -caines—lido-caine, benzocaine, or tetracaine—which are commonly used in various strengths in medical and cosmetic situations. Most OTC types contain small amounts (less than 5 percent) of numbing ingredients and should be safe when used according to package instructions, experts say.

    There are dangers, however, if your skin is too numb to detect that it’s being harmed. If you have no feeling at all during a bikini wax or hair lasering, for instance, you won’t be able to tell if the wax is too hot or the laser is too strong.

    An allergy is also possible, particularly when using vaginal-itch treatments with benzocaine, Zirwas says. A benzocaine product may temporarily help the problem, he says, “but a half-hour or an hour later, the itching will return—often worse—so women apply more cream,” he says. “Sometimes we see patients who are using these creams 10 times a day.” The results can be a severe vaginal rash. Zirwas’s advice: “If the itch comes back an hour after you apply the cream or if you develop a rash, suspect that you have a benzocaine allergy and see a doctor.”

    When topical anesthetics are seriously overused, there can be big trouble. Shiri Berg applied a product called Lasergel Plus 10/10, a powerful anesthetic containing 10 percent lidocaine and 10 percent tetracaine. Experts have said the gel, a prescription-strength compound given to the 22-year-old without a prescription by a hair-removal spa, was too strong and applied over too large of an area for Berg’s system to handle. After her death, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) pointed out that risks rise when a topical anesthetic is left on the skin for extended periods of time or applied to broad portions of the body, especially if a bandage, plastic, or another type of dressing is used as a covering. This is exactly what Berg did, not knowing either the strength of the product she was using or that there was any danger. Even more surprising: Berg was not the first woman to die from the overzealous use of numbing cream. Blanca Bolanos, a 25-year-old from Tucson, Arizona, suffered a similar fate (convulsions, then a two-year coma ending in death) after using a cream of 6 percent each lidocaine and tetracaine prior to laser hair removal.

    The safe way to use numbing creams? Apply them spar-ingly—use as little as possible, most experts say. And always know the ingredients in and the strength of the product.

    Hydrocortisone
    An anti-inflammatory topical steroid that shrinks swollen tissue by constricting blood vessels, hydrocortisone is often used to stop the itching caused by chronic skin conditions like eczema and contact dermatitis, and it’s also an ingredient in vaginal and hemorrhoidal creams. OTC topical steroids can contain just 1 percent hydrocortisone, which should be safe, says Dina D. Strachan, MD, a dermatologist in private practice in New York City.

    Be careful, though, when applying the creams to sensitive spots such as the eyelids, armpits, and groin (all places where eczema, rashes, and allergic reactions are particularly common). In these locations, skin is thinner and more folds exist, so skin hits skin often, which can cause medications to penetrate more deeply. These areas are also prone to stretch marks, irritation, hypopigmentation (lightening), and “a crinkly, cigarette-paper appearance,” Strachan explains—a good reason to avoid that old beauty-queen trick of using hemorrhoidal cream to de-puff eye bags, experts say. In fact, last year the makers of Preparation H issued a warning cautioning consumers to avoid applying hemorrhoid cream to the face.

    Overuse of topical steroids containing hydrocortisone can cause the skin to develop a resistance (called tachyplaxis) to the medication, says Daniel Behroozan, MD, dermatologic surgeon and founder of the Dermatology Institute of Southern California, and clinical instructor at the University of California, Los Angeles, School of Medicine. As a result, “in order to have the desired medical effect, a stronger and more potent steroid may be needed, which may cause more potential side effects.”

    Estrogen
    Women experiencing vaginal itching and irritation due to menopausal changes sometimes turn to OTC products that contain estrogen, a practice that worries Wen Shen, MD, assistant professor of gynecologic specialties at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. “Such creams get absorbed through the skin and metabolized into estrogens in the body. That means they can cause the same side effects as estrogen pills, such as elevated blood pressure, breast tenderness, increased risk of breast cancer, abnormal vaginal bleeding, and endometrial hyperplasia, which can lead to uterine cancer,” she says. “If a woman is thinking about using anything with estrogen, she really needs to get it through her physician.”

    The same goes for OTC progesterone creams used to treat PMS and menopause symptoms, says Michael Krychman, MD, medical director of sexual medicine at Hoag Hospital in Newport Beach, California. “You have to be very careful. You don’t always know how much you’re getting or how much you’re absorbing with these products,” he says. “That makes it very easy to get too much.” A lot of women who are trying these OTC creams on their own may not even have lowered hormone levels, at all, he says. Consult your doctor before using.

    Hydroquinone
    Want to “fade away” those age spots? Be careful if you’re thinking of using hydroquinone, a popular ingredient in products claiming to lighten age spots, melasma (excessive pigmentation usually caused by the sun), or postinflammatory hyperpigmentation (a condition that can afflict darker-skinned women). Such products are often available over the counter but should only be used under a doctor’s supervision, Francesca J. Fusco, MD, says. Ironically, in certain skin types the opposite—ochronosis, or darkening of the skin—can occur. In many cases, this happens in darker-skinned individuals, she says, adding that hydroquinone has been under FDA investigation for discontinuation in OTC products because of possible cancer-causing activity in rats exposed to large amounts.

    Dihydroxyacetone (DHA)
    Wonder why self-tanners have such a distinctive scent? It’s the dihydroxyacetone (DHA), a sugar derived from plants like beets and sugarcane, that combines with your body’s chemistry to produce a “tan” and the smell. The odor won’t hurt you, but the tan might—if you’re thinking of getting hair lasered from your darkened skin.

    “Lasers work by detecting pigment,” Fusco says. That’s why laser hair removal works best on people with a good degree of contrast between their hair and skin, such as fair-skinned women with dark hair. “The stains in self-tanners can throw off the laser, leaving you with first- or second-degree burns or discolored skin,” she explains. As a caution, allow self-tanned skin about a week to fade before going in for a laser procedure.

    Vitamin A, glycolic acid
    Retin-A and other vitamin A–based products (such as glycolic acid) are often used to treat acne, as well as to reduce the appearance of wrinkles by boosting collagen production. The downside: They thin the very top layer of skin, which can make you more sensitive to sunlight and to procedures like chemical peels, phototherapy (light treatments), or even a simple eyebrow waxing. If you’re scheduled for, say, a waxing or a peel, it’s a good idea to stop using any vitamin A–based products one week prior; and don’t resume for another week. Also, avoid blackhead-removing strips like Bioré, which can remove a top layer of skin more easily while on such medications. And check in with your doctor to be on the safe side.

    Neomycin, bacitracin
    Strangely, one of the treatments most often recommended to help heal burns, stitches, and other wounds is now thought to cause an allergic reaction in up to 10 percent of users. For those people, neomycin or bacitracin, the active ingredients in products like Neosporin, may cause an inflammatory reaction, angering the wound and making it appear infected. The result: A minor cut can take even longer to heal and have a potentially adverse cosmetic outcome, Behroozan says. “For that reason, most dermatologists are now avoiding products with neomycin and recommending plain Vaseline or Aquaphor Healing Ointment for superficial wounds,” he says. “They promote a moist environment for better wound-healing without potentially causing allergic contact dermatitis.”

    Paraphenylanadiamine (PPD)
    Ever get a temporary tattoo on a beach vacation? Many of them are made with “black henna,” which contains paraphenylenediamine, or PPD, a strong allergen that’s also in hair dye. If you’ve had a product with this chemical applied to your skin directly, as is done with a tattoo, you’re at risk of developing a strong allergy later from hair dye. “You can have a horribly intense reaction,” Zirwas says. “I’ve seen people hospitalized for up to a week—eyes swollen shut, lips swollen, too.” Zirwas estimates that just 2 percent of women will develop an allergy to hair dye, but everyone should do a patch test when coloring hair at home and look for PPD-free dyes.

    Betaine
    Very gentle shampoos often contain a lathering agent called betaine, and they’re fine for about 99 percent of the U.S. population. But for the approximately 1 percent who develop a betaine allergy, even a product created for the most sensitive skins can cause a red rash around the eyes and along the neck, with flaking, peeling, and itching. If you have this kind of contact dermatitis that just won’t go away, try betaine-free products such as Free & Clear shampoo, Cetaphil soap, or Head & Shoulders shampoo, Zirwas says.

    Saturday, February 2, 2008

    Knowing CHOLESTEROL

    How’s your cholesterol? Here’s a guess: If you’re healthy, you probably have no idea. New surveys show women tend to be clueless about their risks of heart disease, especially when it comes to managing their cholesterol.

    But this kind of ignorance is anything but bliss. The reason: The artery clogging that makes heart disease the number-one killer of women late in life begins much earlier—in your 20s, 30s, and 40s—and that’s when your cholesterol numbers may be sounding alarms. So, are you ready to start paying attention? Here, the things all women need to know now.

    1. High cholesterol is surprisingly common.
    Researchers with the Framingham Heart Study recently delivered a nasty surprise: Nearly a quarter of women in the study who are in their early 30s have borderline-high levels of bad cholesterol, as do more than a third in their early 40s and more than half in their early 50s. A third of women in all three age groups have low levels of good cholesterol.

    Bad cholesterol, also known as low-density lipoprotein (LDL), contributes to heart disease by laying down artery-clogging plaque; good cholesterol, or high-density lipoprotein (HDL), helps clear it away. “The double whammy of high LDL and low HDL is particularly dangerous,” says Framingham researcher Vasan Ramachandran, MD, of the Boston University School of Medicine.

    2. Your doctor may miss the problem.
    Though women are better than men about seeing a doctor regularly, the care they receive isn’t as good when it comes to preventing and treating cardiovascular disease, according to new studies. “Perhaps doctors still haven’t gotten the message that women need to control cholesterol,” says Chloe Bird, PhD, author of one of these studies and a senior sociologist at the nonprofit RAND Corporation. Bird found that doctors are less likely to monitor and control cholesterol in women than in men, even when the women are at superhigh risk of heart attack.

    Part of the problem, she says, may be that many women see only a gynecologist. This isn’t to say that OB-GYNs can’t be good primary care doctors, but you have to make sure the doc is willing to monitor your heart health, especially if you already have diabetes or a heart issue. That means she should order cholesterol checks as part of your regular blood work and discuss the results with you. What does “regular” mean? See “How Often Do I Need a Checkup?”

    3. Your numbers may trick you.
    Many people misunderstand the roles of so-called good and bad cholesterols, according to cardiologist and lipidologist Pamela Morris, MD, of the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston. “What we’ve learned is that HDL and LDL are independent predictors of a woman’s heart attack risk,” she explains. “We see women with high HDLs having heart attacks when their LDL is also high, and we also see heart attacks in women with very low LDL but also low HDL.”

    What that means to you: It’s important to keep track of both. A woman wants to keep her HDL above 60 (the level at which HDL helps prevent disease) and her LDL below 100. If your HDL drops below 50 or LDL rises above 160, you need to take immediate action. That may include an LDL-lowering drug such as a statin, and it definitely includes a commitment to a heart-healthy diet and lifestyle.

    4. You may need an “inflammation” test.
    The math used to estimate your heart disease risk is a little misleading. If your LDL rises above the danger line of 160 or your HDL drops below 50, the math says you have an elevated risk of a heart attack within 10 years. But that warning may actually underestimate your risks beyond 10 years, Morris says. So when she has a female patient with cholesterol numbers in the intermediate range—LDL above 130 or HDL under 60—she often takes a close look at the woman’s whole-body inflammation level.

    You can’t see this kind of inflammation, but it’s actually an independent measure of heart attack risk. You measure it by adding a test for high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) to the usual cholesterol blood work. CRP, essentially a body chemical, usually rises anytime your body becomes inflamed. And since artery clogging is associated with inflammation, high CRP is viewed as a marker for clogged arteries. That means your C-reactive protein levels may help you and your doctor decide how aggressively you need to control borderline-high-cholesterol levels with drugs, diet, and exercise.

    5. These foods are your best friends.
    Certain classes of food chemicals can actively and powerfully lower a person’s bad cholesterol. Two—soluble fiber and phytosterols—have so much science behind them that they’ve become part of standard medical prescriptions for treating high cholesterol. But dietitian Janet Brill, PhD, RD, author of Cholesterol Down, also recommends regularly eating almonds, ground flaxseed, apples, soy protein, and olive oil. Preliminary research suggests they all have cholesterol-lowering powers. “Each one works in a slightly different way,” Brill says. “So together, you get a synergy that can dramatically lower cholesterol.”

    Almonds and olive oil are high in monounsaturated fats, which are thought to blend with LDL molecules in a way that speeds LDL’s clearance from the blood by the liver. Flax is high in both soluble fiber, which lowers LDL by absorbing cholesterol from both food and bile inside the intestines, and omega-3 fatty acids, which studies show have anti-inflammatory effects. Other foods especially high in soluble fiber include oat bran, oatmeal, and apples. (Soluble fiber is different from insoluble fiber, the kind found in whole-grain bread and bran cereal. That’s good for you, too, but it won’t affect your cholesterol.) Soy may mimic natural estrogens in their LDL-clearing effects. Phytosterols are the plant version of animal sterols (a.k.a. cholesterol) and lower LDL by competing with it for absorption into the body. They’re found in supplements or phytosterol-enhanced margarine such as Benecol.

    You don’t need any of these foods if your LDL is low, but experts still recommend them for everyone. What about steak, eggs, and cheese? They sure won’t help your cholesterol, because they all contain a lot of it. But it’s more important to focus on foods that lower your numbers rather than simply avoiding the bad stuff, experts say.

    6. Good cholesterol may have a bad side.
    The higher your HDL, the better, right? That’s been the current thinking, due to HDL’s protective effect. But here’s a surprise you may have read about in some news reports: Studies are showing that HDL may actually have harmful proteins capable of boosting heart disease risks. A test to determine if your HDL has the harmful proteins may be available in a few years. In the meantime, if your HDL is lower than 60, it’s still OK to raise it a little as long as you don’t go overboard. How? Try getting a lot of omega-3s from fish or fish oil, exercising regularly, controlling your weight, and avoiding smoking.

    7. Your heart loves long walks.
    Walking 10 miles a week brings lasting improvements in your heart health, according to researchers at Duke University Medical Center. The funny thing is, if you jog those 10 miles, you won’t get quite as much benefit. “Duration appears to be key,” says Duke’s Cris Slentz, PhD, an exercise physiologist. “Jogging or walking 10 miles both burned around 1,200 calories, but in our studies, one took about two hours and the other, three.”

    Longer stints of exercise, even moderate exercise, may burn more belly fat—the little rolls of skin near your navel and the fat deep inside your abdomen. The latter is linked to metabolic syndrome, a condition associated with a host of cardiovascular risk factors including low HDL, high blood pressure, and high triglycerides (a kind of blood fat that contributes to heart disease).

    Should you aim for weight loss as well as long walks? If you’re overweight, absolutely. But understand that shedding a few pounds will make only a small dent in your cholesterol. Canadian researchers recently found that overweight women who lost about 25 pounds—no easy task—saw their LDL drop about 10 percent and their HDL rise by the same amount.

    Sunday, January 27, 2008

    Conquer Your Stomach Pooch: PART ONE

    Try These Gut-Busting Foods

    Eating the right foods can actually help you lose weight.

    Eat more. Yes, really. But you have to nosh on the good stuff, according to the Framingham Nutrition Study. This ongoing resarch has found that women who consume 400 more calories per day and eat healthier foods are two-and-a-half times less likely to develop abdominal obesity than women who take in fewer calories but consume more saturated fat and less fiber.

    “What this means is that healthy women whose habitual diets are higher in fat and lower in fiber, protective nutrients, and desirable carbohydrates are at a higher long-term risk of developing abdominal obesity,” says Barbara E. Millen, a registered dietitian and director of nutrition research for the Framingham Study.

    Get your C. Foods rich in vitamin C help fight ab flab, says Debi Silber, a registered dietitian from Dix Hills, New York. “Although it’s true that citrus fruits and juices are highest in vitamin C,” she says, “you can also get a boost from broccoli, tomatoes, or red peppers.”

    Go ahead and have a little steak. Eating a small amount of protein (of any kind) makes you feel fuller and leads to overall weight loss, especially in the abdominal region, according to a recent study out of Skidmore College. “Our findings suggest that consuming a higher-protein diet in six smaller meals a day significantly reduces total body weight, as well as abdominal-fat mass in overweight men and women,” explains Paul J. Arciero, DPE, associate professor of exercise science at Skidmore College.

    Stick to olive oil. You already know that a diet rich in this Mediterranean staple is good for your heart. But you may not realize that it helps prevent belly-fat accumulation, too, according to researchers at the Reina Sofía University Hospital in Spain. Add more heart-healthy olive oil to your diet by substituting it for butter in recipes and on bread, and by switching from your usual dressing to a mixture of olive oil and vinegar.

    Increase your omega-3s. Eating foods like walnuts or seafood will help reduce the production of adrenaline, a stress hormone that contributes to an increase in belly fat.

    Drink for a better waistline

    Water with lemon
    You know you need to drink lots of H2O. It aids in digestion, curbs hunger, and ramps up fat-burning. Add a few slices of lemon or lime, and you’ll get a dose of vitamin C, which can help blast off ab fat.

    Wine
    Here’s why you may want to sip a little vino (about four ounces a day): Women who consume moderate amounts of alcohol have less central-abdominal and total-body fat than abstainers, says a study in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism.

    Tuesday, January 22, 2008

    Diabetes and Exercise

    Thinking about adding exercise to your diabetes treatment plan? Good for you! Diabetes and exercise go hand in hand. Regular physical activity can help you improve your blood sugar control, as well as boost your overall fitness and reduce your risk of heart disease and nerve damage.

    Learn more about how exercise affects your diabetes. Assess possible limitations, and keep your blood sugar on track as you increase your activity level.

    Buy into the hype

    Besides boosting your mood and energy levels, exercise leads to:

    • Improved blood sugar control. When you exercise, your muscles use sugar (glucose) for energy. This reduces your blood sugar. The more strenuous your workout, the longer the effect lasts. And there's more. If you have type 2 diabetes, exercise can increase your insulin sensitivity. That means your body requires less insulin to escort sugar into your cells. Along with a healthy-eating plan, exercise may even reduce — or eliminate — your need for glucose-lowering medication.
    • Improved heart health. Diabetes increases your risk of high blood pressure, heart attack, stroke and other cardiovascular diseases. Exercise counteracts the risk by improving blood flow, increasing your heart's pumping power and improving your cholesterol levels.
    • Improved weight control. Exercise can help you lose weight — and keep it off.

    Get the green light

    Before jumping into a fitness program, get your doctor's OK to exercise — especially if you've been inactive. Discuss with your doctor which activities you're contemplating and any limitations you may have.

    For example, if you have diabetic retinopathy — abnormal growth of blood vessels on your retina — strenuous activity could lead to bleeding or retinal detachment. You may need to avoid certain activities, such as weightlifting or jogging. If you have reduced sensation in your feet, your doctor may recommend non-weight-bearing activities, such as swimming or biking.

    Also discuss with your doctor the best time to exercise. If you take insulin, you might need to adjust your insulin dose before exercising or wait a few hours to exercise after injecting insulin.

    Exercise good judgment

    When you're ready to exercise, start slowly. Work your way up to 30 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise most days of the week. While you're working out, remember to take good care of yourself.

    • Monitor your blood sugar. Check your blood sugar before, during and after exercise — especially if you take insulin or medications that can cause low blood sugar (hypoglycemia). Carry glucose tablets or hard candy in case your blood sugar drops too low or you feel shaky, nervous or confused.
    • Pay attention to your feet. Wear smooth-fitting socks and comfortable athletic shoes. Examine your feet before and after exercise for any signs of potential damage, such as cuts or blisters.
    • Drink up. Drink plenty of fluids while you exercise, especially when it's hot. Dehydration can increase your blood sugar. If you exercise for more than an hour, drink carbohydrate-containing beverages rather than plain water.
    • Identify yourself. Wear a diabetes identification bracelet or shoe tag while exercising, in case of an emergency.
    • Know when to stop. If you experience any warning signs — severe shortness of breath, dizziness, faintness, nausea, chest pain, heart palpitations, or pain in an arm or in your jaw — stop exercising. If you don't feel better within 15 minutes, seek immediate medical help.

    Keep your eye on the prize

    Try not to get discouraged if exercise causes significant changes in your blood sugar and upsets your normal management routine. Continue to test your blood sugar frequently until you begin to notice a pattern and can adjust your meals and medications accordingly. Your health care team can help, too. Once you understand how your body responds to exercise, you'll be even closer to a healthier you.

    Tuesday, January 15, 2008

    Office + Exercise?


    Sure, you know you can park at the far end of the parking lot and take the stairs instead of the elevator. These are great ideas, but there's even more you can do to burn calories during your workday — especially if you sit at a desk most of the day. Consider 10 creative ways to make office exercise part of your routine:

    1. Make the most of your commute. Walk or bike to work. If you ride the bus, get off a few blocks early and walk the rest of the way.
    2. Look for opportunities to stand. You'll burn more calories standing than sitting. Try a standing desk, or improvise with a high table or counter. Eat lunch standing up. Trade instant messaging and phone calls for walks to other desks or offices.
    3. Take fitness breaks. Rather than hanging out in the lounge with coffee or a snack, take a brisk walk or do some gentle stretching. Pull your chin toward your chest until you feel a stretch along the back of your neck, or slowly bring your shoulders up toward your ears.
    4. Trade your office chair for a fitness ball. A firmly inflated fitness ball can make a good chair. You'll improve your balance and tone your core muscles while sitting at your desk. You can even use the fitness ball for wall squats or other exercises during the day.
    5. Keep exercise equipment in your work area. Store resistance bands — stretchy cords or tubes that offer weight-like resistance when you pull on them — or small hand weights in a desk drawer or cabinet. Do arm curls between meetings or tasks.
    6. Get social. Organize a lunchtime walking group. You might be surrounded by people who are ready to lace up their walking shoes — and hold each other accountable for regular exercise. Enjoy the camaraderie, and offer encouragement to one another when the going gets tough.
    7. Conduct meetings on the go. When it's practical, schedule walking meetings or brainstorming sessions. Do laps inside your building or, if the weather cooperates, take your walking meetings outdoors.
    8. Pick up the pace. If your job involves walking, do it faster. Take long, easy strides, and remember to breathe freely while you walk.
    9. If you travel for work, plan ahead. Exercise doesn't need to go by the wayside when you're traveling. If you're stuck in an airport waiting for a plane, grab your bags and take a brisk walk. Choose a hotel that has fitness facilities — such as treadmills, weight machines or a pool — or bring your equipment with you. Jump-ropes and resistance bands are easy to sneak into a suitcase. Of course, you can do jumping jacks, crunches and other simple exercises without any equipment at all.
    10. Try a treadmill desk. If you're ready to take office exercise to the next level, consider a more focused walk-and-work approach. If you can comfortably position your work surface above a treadmill — with a computer screen on a stand, a keyboard on a table or a specialized treadmill-ready vertical desk — you may be able to walk while you work. In fact, Mayo Clinic researchers estimate that overweight office workers who replace sitting computer time with walking computer time by two to three hours a day could lose 44 to 66 pounds (20 to 30 kilograms) in a year. The pace doesn't need to be brisk, nor do you need to break a sweat. The faster you walk, however, the more calories you'll burn.

    Want more ideas for office exercise? Schedule a walking meeting to brainstorm ideas with your supervisors or co-workers. Remember, any physical activity counts!

    Sunday, January 13, 2008

    Red Wine and more...

    Red wine and something in red wine called resveratrol might be heart healthy. Learn the facts, and hype, regarding red wine and its impact on your heart.

    Red wine has long been touted as heart healthy. Some have suggested that the apparent health benefits of red wine, namely reducing your risk of heart disease, are behind the so-called French paradox. The French are regular drinkers of red wine and have relatively high amounts of saturated fat in their diet. Despite this fat intake, the French have lower rates of heart disease.

    While the news about red wine might sound great if you enjoy a glass of red wine with your evening meal, doctors are wary of encouraging anyone to drink alcohol because too much alcohol can have a host of harmful effects on your body.

    But despite the caution, doctors do agree that something in red wine appears to help your heart, though it's unclear just exactly what that "something" is. Recent research has indicated a substance called resveratrol, which is found in the skin and seeds of grapes used to make wine, has promising heart-healthy benefits.

    Resveratrol isn't the only substance in red wine that looks promising. The alcohol in red wine also appears to be heart healthy. Understand what's known — and not known — about red wine and its possible heart-health benefits.

    How does alcohol help the heart?

    Various studies have indicated that moderate amounts of all types of alcohol benefit your heart, not just alcohol found in red wine. Some heart-healthy benefits of alcohol include:

    • Raises high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, the "good" cholesterol
    • Lowers blood pressure
    • Inhibits the formation of blood clots
    • Helps prevent artery damage caused by high levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, the "bad" cholesterol

    Is red wine better?

    Red wine in particular seems to have even more heart-health benefits than other types of alcohol, according to a large Danish study from 2000. The study, known as the Copenhagen City Heart Study, found that those who drank red wine had about half the risk of dying of heart disease as those who didn't.

    Additional studies have given mixed results — some confirming the Danish finding, others showing red wine isn't any better than beer, white wine or liquor for heart health. As a result, the American Heart Association says there's no clear evidence yet that red wine is superior to other forms of alcohol when it comes to possible heart-health benefits.

    The pro-red wine studies suggest antioxidants in red wine called polyphenols help protect the lining of blood vessels in your heart. These antioxidants come in two main forms: flavonoids and nonflavonoids.

    • Flavonoids. These antioxidants are found in a variety of foods, including oranges, apples, onions, tea and cocoa. Other types of alcohol, such as white wine and beer, contain small amounts, too, but red wine has higher levels.
    • Nonflavonoids. These antioxidants found in red wine have recently been of particular interest because they appear to help prevent arteries from becoming clogged with fatty blockages. However, these studies mostly involved mice — not humans. Resveratrol is the nonflavonoid that researchers are most interested in.

    Resveratrol in red wine

    Some researchers believe that resveratrol might be the key ingredient in red wine that helps prevent damage to blood vessels, reduces "bad" cholesterol and prevents blood clots.

    Research in mice given resveratrol has indicated that the antioxidant might also help protect them from obesity and diabetes, both of which are strong risk factors for heart disease. However, those findings were reported only in mice, not in people. In addition, to achieve the dose of resveratrol used in the mice studies, a person would have to consume 100 to 1,000 bottles of red wine a day.

    Some companies sell supplements containing resveratrol. However, doctors caution that not enough is known about resveratrol's effects to endorse resveratrol supplements. Research into the potential heart-health benefits of resveratrol is continuing.

    Resveratrol in grapes and other foods

    The resveratrol in red wine comes from the skin of grapes used to make wine. Because red wine is fermented with grape skins longer than is white wine, red wine contains more resveratrol. Simply eating grapes, or drinking grape juice, has been suggested as one way to get resveratrol without drinking alcohol. Some studies have suggested that red and purple grape juices have some of the same heart-healthy benefits of red wine.

    Other foods that contain some resveratrol include peanuts, blueberries and cranberries. It's not yet known how beneficial eating grapes or other foods might be compared with drinking red wine when it comes to promoting heart health. The amount of resveratrol in food and red wine can vary widely.

    Drink in moderation — or not at all

    Red wine's potential heart-health benefits look promising. Those who drink moderate amounts of alcohol, including red wine, seem to have a lower risk of heart disease. However, more research is needed before we know whether red wine is better for your heart than are other forms of alcohol, such as beer or spirits.

    The American Heart Association doesn't recommend that you start drinking alcohol just to prevent heart disease. Alcohol can be addictive. Too much increases your risk of high blood pressure, high triglycerides, liver damage, obesity, certain types of cancer, accidents and other problems. In addition, even small amounts of alcohol can cause cardiomyopathy — weakened heart muscle — and heart failure in some people. If you have heart failure or a weak heart you should avoid alcohol completely.

    If you already drink red wine, do so in moderation. Moderate drinking is defined as an average of two drinks a day for men and one drink a day for women.

    • A drink is defined as 12 ounces (oz.) of beer, 5 oz. of wine or 1.5 oz. of 80-proof distilled spirits.

    The limit for men is higher because men generally weigh more and have more of an enzyme that metabolizes alcohol than women do.

    Saturday, January 12, 2008

    How works invade your personal life


    There was a time when employees showed up for work Monday through Friday and worked eight to nine hours. The boundaries between work and home were fairly clear then. But the world has changed and, unfortunately, the boundaries have blurred for many workers. Here's why:
    • Global economy. As more skilled workers enter the global labor market and companies outsource or move more jobs to reduce labor costs, people feel pressured to work longer and produce more to protect their jobs.
    • International business. Work continues around the world 24 hours a day for some people. If you work in an international organization, you might be on call around the clock for troubleshooting or consulting.
    • Advanced communication technology. People now have the ability to work anywhere — from their home, from their car and even on vacation. And some managers expect that.
    • Longer hours. Employers commonly ask employees to work longer hours than they're scheduled. Often, overtime is mandatory. If you hope to move up the career ladder, you may find yourself regularly working more than 40 hours a week to achieve and exceed expectations.
    • Changes in family roles. Today's married worker is typically part of a dual-career couple, which makes it difficult to find time to meet commitments to family, friends and community.


    If you've experienced any of these challenges, you understand how easy it is for work to invade your personal life.

    Friday, January 11, 2008

    Vegetarian Meals

    It is easy to have a different vegetarian meal every day of the month with little or no cooking.

    1. Potlucks-- Many local vegetarian groups sponsor potluck dinners in homes or at parks. You can bring juice and have a wonderful meal full of variety. There is always plenty for those who don't use animal products.
    2. Organize your own potluck at your house one day a month -- Let your friends know about the potlucks and put a note in a local vegetarian group's newsletter or your community newsletter. 3. You can supply juice, the plates, etc. Let others bring delicious dishes. There are members of other environmental and animal groups whom you could invite to the potluck.
    4. Purchase Vegetarian Journal's Guide to Natural Foods Restaurants in the US. and Canada -- This way when you travel you will always be able to find places offering vegetarian meals. Send $16 to VRG, P0 Box 1463, Baltimore, MD 21203.
    5. Purchase Meatless Meat for Working People from The Vegetarian Resource Group -- You can find out which foods are vegetarian in fast food chains. Send $12 to VRG, P0 Box 1463, Baltimore, MD 21203.
    6. Purchase a vegetable pot pie from a natural foods store or supermarket.
    7. Attend vegetarian and animal rights activities, and get invited to a friend's home for a vegetarian dinner.
    8. Lightlife's Smart Dogs or other veggie "hot dogs" and vegetarian baked beans -- Warm up these items that are readily available in health food stores and many mainstream supermarkets.
    9. Legume brand stuffed tofu manicotti -- a quick frozen TV dinner without cheese, available in your local health food store. (Other types of entrees also available.) Add a tossed salad and 10. 10. Italian bread and you've got yourself a terrific meal.
    11. Supermarket salad bar--A good source of a meal. If you had this once or twice a month, you wouldn't get bored with it. Try to choose low-fat dressings.
    12. Gourmet takeout-- For one or more days, gourmet markets make a great takeout. Today there are more choices than you could imagine for a complete vegetarian meal.
    13. Ethiopian food -- Relatively inexpensive and luckily there are usually several Ethiopian restaurants in urban areas. Eat there or takeout delicious vegetarian stews (consisting of legumes and vegetables) with Injera (Ethiopian bread).
    14. Vegetable lo mein and steamed mixed vegetables from a local Chinese restaurant -- Request brown rice instead of white rice. Spicy eggplant with vegetables or other such dish from a Szechuan-style Chinese restaurant -- Choose different items from the menu for variety.
    Moo Shu Vegetable--A great vegetarian version of Moo Shoo Pork found in Chinese restaurants.
    15. Middle Eastern food-- Order hummus, falafel, baba ghanuj, tabouli, and much more. Good variety and may contain high-calcium tahini. You almost never see dairy in Chinese or Middle Eastern restaurants since they generally obtain their calcium from vegetable sources.
    16. A quick meal -- Open a can of chickpeas, mash them lightly, and prepare it like you would tuna salad. Put on bread, and you're ready to eat. If you don't like the salt, you can rinse the chickpeas. Try eggless mayonnaise from a natural foods store.
    17. Indonesian Restaurants -- They sometimes offer vegetarian tempeh dishes.
    Thai Food-- It's sort of like Chinese cuisine, but slightly different. You can get spicy food if you wish. Thai restaurants will usually substitute tofu for meat. Specify that you do not want oyster sauce and that they can substitute garlic sauce. The curry dishes are especially delicious.
    18. Vegetable chow fon in Chinese restaurants -- A wide noodle made out of rice flour. This is almost always on the menu in New York, and several other cities. You may have to ask for it.
    Sometimes the staff eats it in an authentic Chinese vegetarian restaurant.
    19. Indian food -- Many many vegetarian dishes are found in Indian restaurants. If you don't like spicy food, ask them to make it mild. Usually served with rice. I like masala dosa, which is an eggless crepe made out of lentil flour wrapped around potatoes.
    20. Appalachian Trail Stew -- I ate this mostly while hiking on the Appalachian Trail. It's easy to prepare: put all into one pot and boil until done -- lentils, a little macaroni, barley, and maybe a cut-up potato. For flavoring you can add garlic powder or tomato sauce for a different dish. For a little more variety add some cut-up broccoli or frozen vegetables.
    21. Vegetable mixture -- Frozen corn, peas, Brussels sprouts, and whatever veggies you like. Add to cooked pasta or serve over rice. This is a quick meal.
    22. Purchase quick vegetarian cup of soups in a supermarket or natural foods store -- Serve with a whole-grain bread and perhaps a salad.
    23. Mexican food -- Try a veggie taco, burrito, tostada, etc. You can get take out or frozen or packaged. Most Mexican restaurants and fast food chains no longer put lard in their beans, but you should always ask to make sure.
    24. From your frozen food case -- Purchase potato pancakes, potato blintzes or pierogis, and frozen vegetables.
    25. Vegetable burgers -- Archer Daniels Midland, one of the largest food companies in the world, is now making a veggie burger that is called the Harvest Burger and is packaged under the Pillsbury Green Giant label. There are plenty of other packaged varieties in natural foods stores.
    26. Tempeh-- Get some from a health foods store. Fry in non-stick pan. Make a sandwich with tempeh, bread, and any veggies you like. There are also tempeh burgers.
    27. Gluten or seitan -- This is made from wheat and has the texture of meat. You can buy it from a health food store or in a can from an Asian grocery store (less expensive.) Cook it with a starch and some green veggies (for example, macaroni, seitan, and peas and corn). The gluten or seitan is already cooked, so it is a matter of adding it in with the other ingredients and heating it up.
    28. Take-out pizza without the cheese -- Try a variety of veggies on top.
    Vegetarian chili -- Prepare your own quickly from cans or get take out. You don't need to cook beans from scratch.

    Saturday, January 5, 2008

    Tips for Life!

    How much do you know about what makes up a healthy lifestyle? Here's a pop quiz. ]

    1. How do you define working out?
    a. Going to the gym. b. Turning the jump-rope for the neighbor's kid.c. Playing Frisbee with your dog.
    2. How do you define good nutrition?
    a. Eating a vegetable at every meal. b. Eating two vegetables at every meal.c. Drinking a fruit smoothie for breakfast.
    3. Which of these is a healthy activity?
    a. Push-ups, sit-ups, or running the track.b. Walking the dog after dinner.c. Spending Saturday afternoon snoozing on the sofa.

    Believe it or not, the correct answer to every question is A, B, and C -- even that Saturday afternoon snooze! According to the growing "Stealth Health" movement, sneaking healthy habits into our daily living is easier than we think.

    "You can infuse your life with the power of prevention incrementally and fairly painlessly, and yes, doing something, no matter how small, is infinitely better for you than doing nothing," says David Katz, MD, MPH, director of Yale University's Prevention Research Center and of the Yale Preventive Medicine Center. Katz is also co-author of the book Stealth Health: How to Sneak Age-Defying, Disease-Fighting Habits into Your Life without Really Trying.
    From your morning shower to the evening news, from your work commute to your household chores, Katz says, there are at least 2,400 ways to sneak healthy activities into daily living.
    "If you let yourself make small changes, they will add up to meaningful changes in the quality of your diet, your physical activity pattern, your capacity to deal with stress, and in your sleep quality -- and those four things comprise an enormously powerful health promotion that can change your life," says Katz.
    And yes, he says, a nap on the couch can be a health-giving opportunity -- particularly if you aren't getting enough sleep at night.
    Nutritionist and diabetes educator Fran Grossman, RD, CDE, agrees. "You don't have to belong to a gym or live on wheat grass just to be healthy," says Grossman, a nutrition counselor at the Mt. Sinai School of Medicine in New York. "There are dozens of small things you can do every day that make a difference, and you don't always have to do a lot to gain a lot."

    Do a Little, Get a Lot

    The notion that good health can come in small tidbits is not really new. Research showing that making small changes can add up to a big difference has been quietly accumulating for a while.
    For example, a study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine in 2004 found that adding just 30 minutes of walking per day was enough to prevent weight gain and encourage moderate weight loss.
    And if 30 minutes is still too big a bite? Another study, published in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, found that three brisk 10-minute walks per day were as effective as a daily 30-minute walk in decreasing risk factors for heart disease.
    "Just the act of going from sedentary to moderately active gives you the greatest reduction in your risks," says Helene Glassberg, MD, director of the Preventive Cardiology and Lipid Center at the Temple University School of Medicine in Philadelphia.
    But it's not only in fitness where small changes can make a difference. The same principles apply at the kitchen table (and the office snack bar).
    "Reducing fat intake, cutting down on sugar, eating a piece of fruit instead of a candy bar -- over time, these things can make a difference," says Grossman.
    As long as the changes are moving you toward your goal -- be it weight loss, a reduction in cholesterol or blood pressure, or better blood sugar control -- you can get there by taking baby steps, she says.
    Moreover, Grossman tells WebMD, making small changes can help give us the motivation to make bigger ones.
    "A lot of bad eating habits are about not taking charge of your life, and that attitude is often reflected in other areas," says Grossman. On the other hand, she says, when you make small changes at the kitchen table, the rewards may show up in other areas of your life.
    "It's the act of taking control that makes the difference in motivating you," says Grossman. "An inner confidence and power begins to develop that can be seen in other areas of life."

    Tripping Over Baby Steps
    Of course, not everyone is certain that baby steps can walk you all the way to good health. Marc Siegel, MD, a clinical associate professor at the NYU School of Medicine, says that while doing something is certainly better than doing nothing, making such small changes is like using a Band-aid to stop a hemorrhage.
    "It's a small, gimmicky idea to target people with very unhealthy lifestyles, and for some it may be useful," says Siegel, author of False Alarm: the Truth about the Epidemic of Fear. But he fears that for most people, it's sending the wrong message.
    "In some ways it's a resignation, an admission that things can't be changed -- and that's certainly not the long-term answer," Siegel tells WebMD.
    Katz concedes that the Stealth Health approach may not be right for everybody.
    "There is a trade-off because if you try to make the pursuit of health easier for people, you run the risk of leading them to believe they don't need to do very much -- and that would be the wrong message," he says.
    At the same time, Katz believes that for those who find making health changes a daunting task, Stealth Health techniques can make a difference.
    "If you want the really big gains, there has to be some pain," says Katz. "But there is a lot to be said for the idea that you can make some gains with little or no pain, and that's infinitely better than no gains."

    Try the Stealth Health Approach

    Tempted to give "Stealth Health" a try? Katz recommends picking any three of the following 12 changes and incorporating them into your life for four days. When you feel comfortable with those changes, pick three others. Once you've incorporate all dozen changes, you should start to feel a difference within a couple of weeks, he says.
    To Improve Nutrition:
    1. Buy whole foods -- whether canned, frozen, or fresh from the farm -- and use them in place of processed foods whenever possible.2. Reject foods and drinks made with corn syrup, a calorie-dense, nutritionally empty sweetener that many believe is worse for the body than sugar, says Katz.3. Start each dinner with a mixed green salad. Not only will it help reduce your appetite for more caloric foods, but it also will automatically add veggies to your meal.
    To Improve Physical Fitness:
    1. Do a squat every time you pick something up. Instead of bending over in the usual way, which stresses the lower back, bend your knees and squat. This forces you to use your leg muscles and will build strength. 2. Every time you stop at a traffic light (or the bus does), tighten your thighs and butt muscles and release as many times as you can. (Don't worry, no one will see it!) This will firm leg and buttock muscles, improve blood flow -- and keep you mildly amused! 3. Whenever you're standing on a line, lift one foot a half-inch off the ground. The extra stress on your opposite foot, ankle, calf and thigh, plus your buttocks, will help firm and tone muscles. Switch feet every few minutes.

    To Improve Stress Control:
    1. Give your partner a hug every day before work. Studies show this simple act can help you remain calm when chaos ensues during your day, Katz says.2. Have a good cry. It can boost your immune system, reduce levels of stress hormones, eliminate depression, and help you think more clearly.3. Twice a day, breathe deeply for three to five minutes

    To Improve Sleep:
    1. Sprinkle just-washed sheets and pillowcases with lavender water. The scent has been shown in studies to promote relaxation, which can lead to better sleep.2. Buy a new pillow. Katz says that studies show that pillows with an indent in the center can enhance sleep quality and reduce neck pain. Also, try a "cool" pillow -- one containing either all-natural fibers or a combination of sodium sulfate and ceramic fibers that help keep your head cool.3. Eat a handful of walnuts before bed. You'll be giving yourself a boost of fiber and essential fatty acids along with the amino acid tryptophan -- a natural sleep-inducer.