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September 2002
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Most Feared Cancers: What Men Need To Know About Prostate Cancer and Diet
By Adrienne Forman, M.S., R.D. (Part 2 of a two-part series on the most feared cancers.) Prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer deathsafter lung canceramong American males. Those most at risk are over age 65, are African-American or have a family history of prostate cancer. You cant alter those factors. But there is growing evidence that diet may also affect risk, and unlike the above factors, diet is a factor men can control.
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Are You Eating The Right Foods To Live Better, Longer? Take EN’s Quiz
By Densie Webb, Ph.D., R.D. Eating healthfully is about more than just learning the ABCs of vitamins, minerals or even phytonutrients. Its all about making the best food choices possibleand choosing the right supplements, too. In each issue of EN, we try to guide you, the reader, on how to make those choices. Now, its time to test your food and nutrition know-how.
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What Your Doc Doesn’t Know Can Hurt You: Advice to Avoid
By Susan Male Smith, M.A., R.D. Keeping up with nutrition is hard these days. Nutrition is an ever-evolving science, and advice changes all the time. Its not surprising, then, that doctors may find it hard staying up to date on the latest in nutrition. Savvy doctors realize this and refer patients to a professional for nutrition counseling.
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Potassium Promises to Protect Against Stroke
People who dont get enough potassium in their diets and those who are taking diuretics and have low blood levels of the mineral may be at higher risk of a stroke, say researchers from The Queens Medical Center in Honolulu.
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What’s on Your Plate May Help Prevent Alzheimer’s
Alzheimers Disease is thought of as inevitable for the one in 10 over age 65 who get it. But some of the strongest evidence to date surfaced recently that by eating a healthful diet you may be able to significantly reduce your risk of developing this devastating disease.
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Eye News to Use
Too much caffeine may be detrimental for people with glaucoma and ocular hypertension, suggests a Tel Aviv University study. Six people with glaucoma and 22 people with ocular hypertension consumed either regular coffee or decaf daily for a week, then switched.
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For a More Healthful Frozen Dinner, Opt for Organic
By Hillary Wright, M.Ed., R.D. Frozen dinners are no longer just for the "Hungry Man." Everyone can use easy, hurry-up meal preparation now and then, especially if the meals are more nutritionally responsible than typical frozen dinners. Several companies are now serving up organic frozen dinners for busy people who want more "natural"read, hopefully more healthfulconvenience foods. And from what weve sampled, you no longer need to sacrifice taste.
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Summer’s Out, But Smoothies Are Still In
Sure, its September. But smoothies are a perennial treat, so EN checked out whether store-bought ones are as healthful as homemade. They can be, though many are not.
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Research Roundup
A high-sodium diet increases the risk of congestive heart failure in people who are overweight, according to government data. Researchers tracked over 10,000 people, half of whom were overweight, for about 19 years. Overweight participants who consumed more than about 2,500 milligrams of sodium a day were 43% more likely to develop congestive heart failure by studys end than overweight people who got less than about 1,200 milligrams a day.
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