Genetics

Genetics, Obesity, Pain

Gout: No Longer the Blue-Blooded Disease

April 17, 2021

King Henry VIII of England offers an excellent example of how too much wine, rich food and obesity trigger the agony of gout. But why did Leonardo da Vinci, Sir Isaac Newton, and Benjamin Franklin, to name a few, develop this excruciating disease? And how can you decrease the risk? More than nine million North Americans suffer from gout, a type of inflammatory arthritis in which the body produces too much uric acid, or the kidneys fail to excrete enough. Genes play an important role. Gout and diseases such as diabetes are more likely to occur if there is a family history. But given the rise from only 3 million cases just over a decade ago, more than genetics is driving the...Read More

Genetics

Damn It, I was born too soon

July 8, 2017

Is it an impossible dream to find Ponce de Leon’s Fountain of Youth? No! I’ve just attended my 67th reunion at The Harvard Medical School (HMS) and, while interviewing Dr. George Church, I discovered it is no longer science fiction. Dr. Church, Professor of Genetics at HMS, one of the world’s great scientists, predicts we are about to end the aging process. In the next five years no less! That’s why I say “Damn it, I was born too soon.” Is Church too optimistic? Maybe, but when you see his 6-foot 5 inch body towering over you, with his white beard, it’s like talking to Charles Darwin or even Jesus Christ. Just walking through his huge laboratory is an awesome experience. Church’s research...Read More

Genetics

If Clinton Becomes President Will Her Hair Turn Gray?

September 17, 2016

What is it that makes our hair turn several shades of gray as we get older? I’m sure many of us recall the first streaks of gray and realize we are older whether we like it or not. It’s a time when we start to wonder, “Is it age that’s causing the gray? Or have we been doing something wrong?” Maybe too much stress or excessive work? Or is the result, according to one 19th century dermatologist, due to overindulgence in sexual appetite? But why will Hilary Clinton never have white hair if she wins the White House? We’ve all heard stories about people going gray overnight due to overwhelming anxiety. For instance, there are historical reports that this happened to...Read More

Alternate Treatments, Genetics, Miscellaneous, Nutrition, Pain, Vitamins

BioSil: A Natural Remedy Fights Arthritis and Osteoporosis

October 4, 2014

What brings millions of North Americans to their knees late in life? Today, with an aging population many people now end their lives in wheelchairs due to brittle bones (osteoporosis) or are crippled by the pain of osteoarthritis, the wear and tear type. Osteoarthritis, a degenerative joint disease, is an inflammatory condition involving the destruction of cartilage. Its gel-like nature normally acts as a shock absorber. Without cartilage, bones rub on bones causing daily pain. Studies show that one in two people will develop osteoarthritis in their latter years, and two in three obese people will suffer from it at some time during their life. Now, studies done at the Netherlands Institute of Rheumatology and other European centers found that a natural remedy,...Read More

Cancer, Cardiovascular, Eyes, Ears, Nose & Throat, Genetics, Lifestyle, Miscellaneous

Tight Collar? It Increases Risk of Glaucoma

May 10, 2014

What's the best way to diagnose disease? Today, as never before, there are many scientific tests such as ultrasound, CT scans, MRIs and more blood and genetics tests available every year. But is it possible to spot a potential disease without using these expensive procedures? Instead, how about the KISS approach (keep it simple, stupid)? Researchers at Britain's Warwick University report in The British Journal of Cancer that prostate cancer kills about 250,000 men every year. But who are the most likely to develop this disease late in life? After studying males with prostate cancer, and those without this disease, researchers discovered an interesting physical finding. Males whose index finger was longer than their ring finger were 33 percent less likely to...Read More

Genetics

Forget Cholesterol Numbers. How’s Your Mitochondria?

March 22, 2014

"You're so like your mother, you have so much energy!" friends have said to me. I admit energy-wise they're right. My father preferred to sit in his chair analyzing mathematical problems, while mother was high octane gas. She never stopped running around. But I didn't know why I inherited her energy until I read a report in the Nutrition Action Health Letter about mitochondria. So, here's how you can increase your energy level. It's said that precious things come in small packages, and there's no better example than mitochondria. Each cell in our body contains up to 2,000 mitochondria and, although tiny, they make up to 60 percent of the volume of muscle cells and 40 percent of heart cells. Simon Melov,...Read More

Genetics, Medicine, Miscellaneous, Pain, Vitamins

BioSil : The Natural Way to Prevent and Treat Fragile Bones

September 21, 2013

What causes the holes in Swiss cheese? I'm sure the Swiss know the answer, but I don't. I do know what makes holes in bones, causing osteoporosis. Today millions of North Americans are taking prescription drugs to treat this devastating disease. But there's a safer, natural remedy, BioSil tm, to prevent "holey" bones. The figures are frightening. Studies show that one in four women and one in eight men over age 50 have osteoporosis. And with an aging population we can expect more cases in the years ahead. Who develops this crippling disease depends on several factors. Genetics plays a role in certain families. So does being thin, small boned and of white or Asian ancestry. Smokers, those who take three or...Read More

Genetics

A Diagnosis Missed 98 Percent of the Time

June 6, 2013

What's the diagnosis when a middle-aged man seems to be dying of heart failure, but his coronary arteries and heart valves are normal? I doubt that many have an answer. But don't feel bad as it's also missed by most doctors even though iron overload is the most common genetic disease of white males. I've heard this remark many times from patients."I'm so tired. Could the problem be that my blood is low?" Sometimes the patient is right and iron is needed to treat anemia. But if the diagnosis is hemochromatosis (iron overload), a prescription for iron is a death sentence. Trosseau, a French physician, first described this problem in 1865. At that time hemochromatosis was considered a rare occurrence. Now one...Read More

Cancer, Genetics

How Genetics Affect the Risk of Prostate Cancer

June 1, 2013

It has been said that "Blood is our destiny". Or that, "Bad hens have bad eggs". Or that, "He was not merely a chip off the old block, but the old block itself". Each year studies show that genetics play a huge role in whether or not we develop malignancy. But how big a role does genetics play in prostate cancer? Now, a world-wide study reports a major breakthrough, showing that some males seem to be genetically predisposed to this baffling cancer. Earlier studies reported five to ten percent of prostate cancers were due to genetics. For example, a man with one close relative, such as a father or brother, with prostate cancer is twice as likely to develop this malignancy...Read More

Genetics, Medicine, Miscellaneous

Nature’s “Immunologic Scalpel” For Our Toxic World

November 17, 2012

"Today it's impossible to escape the endless list of toxins and chemicals that enter our environment day after day. Fumes from cars, radiation from computers, the earth's depleted ozone layer, packaged foods that have been over-processed, pesticides sprayed onto crops, to mention a few. It's no wonder that so many North Americans suffer from toxic inflammatory diseases. But there is a natural way to boost the immune system." Fortunately, our own immunity works 24/7 against toxins that enter the body and trigger allergic reactions. Without this natural defense our bodies would decompose in a few days due to microbes, parasites and toxins. "Every year North Americans, on average, suffer six common colds due to weakened immune systems. But infections become more dangerous...Read More

Endocrine, Genetics

Boy Frogs To Girl Frogs; But What About Us?

December 12, 2010

Where is “peace on earth” this holiday season? Problems continue in Iraq and Afghanistan. Senseless killings occur almost daily in our major cities. Women continue to be raped and physically abused all over the world. Daily newspapers and TV news shows repeat the indisputable fact underlying this trend. Most of these crimes are committed by men. So could a frog experiment help to end these senseless acts? Maurice Chevalier used to say “Vive La Difference” when talking about males and females. And the often quoted phrase that “girls are sugar and spice and everything nice” is, with rare exception, true. Like Chevalier, I too, have always been happy with “La Difference”. And pleased that, with some exceptions, females do not possess the...Read More

Genetics

Genetic Family History 101

August 9, 2004

How much should you worry if your father died of a heart attack at age 50? Or your mother developed breast cancer at 40 years of age? Or a brother required surgery for malignancy of the colon at an early age? Or there's a strong family history of diabetes or osteoporosis? In these cases how beneficial is genetic testing? Today, with an aging population, it would be most unusual for a family to say none have died from cancer, heart attack, stroke, diabetes or suffered from mental illness. So there's no need for sleepless nights unless there's an unusual strong family history of one of these diseases. And if the death of a relative occurred at 40 years of age, it...Read More