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Saturday, July 16, 2011

Chewing Gum Too Has Health Benefits

Chewing Gum Too Has Health Benefits

Chewing Gum


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Haven't you been asked not to chew on that chewing gum? It's indecent, not good for health, will harm you. These are some of the common comments of parents for their children who are addicted to chewing gum. Well, the recent researches have proved them wrong. The researches have come up with some health benefits of Chewing Gum.

Health Benefits Of Chewing Gum


1.Weight Loss –
According to a research published in the New England Journal of Medicine, one of the major health benefits of chewing gum is that it leads to weight loss. A research was done on seven students. The subjects were put on a machine and asked to exhale. The first measurement was taken during 30 minutes rest period. The result said that the subjects burned 50 kilocalories.
The next day the subjects were asked to chew on the gum 12 minutes per minute. The result showed that they burned 70 kilocalories. The reason behind this is that it can enhance your metabolism rate by 20% and it can burn 11 pounds in a year.

2.Digestion – Yet another important health benefit of chewing gum is that it promoted digestion. Chewing increases the saliva flow, which leads to constant swallowing and also makes the food easily digestible. It prevents acid reflux from stomach to throat.

3.Oral Health Sugar free gum is good for oral health. It creates saliva which is a major component to protect oral cavity. It also allows the bacteria's and settled minerals to flush out and neutralises the harmful acid formed inside the mouth. It protects the tooth enamel and has an antimicrobial effect. The gum also protects teeth stains.

4.Tension And Anxiety – According to a study published by the Wrigley Science Institute, health benefits include treating tension and anxiety by releasing nervous energy. This helps the body from handing the stress.

People with dentures soon be able to speak normally

People with dentures soon be able to speak normally

People with dentures may soon be able to speak normally, thanks to researchers who have developed dentures fitted with sensors that record pressure exerted by the tongue and may uncover the tongue's hidden movements in speech production.

This may help the researchers to design better voice synthesisers and also false teeth and braces that interfere less with speech.

"The aim is to try to understand how humans are able to speak by modelling the speech-production apparatus," New Scientist quoted Yohan Payan, a researcher at the TIMC lab near Grenoble, France, and part of the team who worked on this project.

He said that it was very difficult for them to know how much pressure is exerted by the tongue on the teeth while producing some speech, for example when making a "T" sound.

The work may also help in designing dentures and orthodontic braces
"This closure of the vocal tract allows you to pronounce this consonant. To model this, you have to be able to estimate the level of force applied by the tongue," he explained.

Earlier, such measurement required the researchers to stick sensors to people's teeth, or embedding them into an artificial palate, which actually hampered the normal functioning of the tongue.

But, to avert this problem, the French team opted to hide their sensors inside dentures made for 20 volunteers who had already lost their teeth.

They specifically designed individual devices for each patient, having one or two sensors embedded inside. Then they were arranged on the palette for recording tongue pressure while pronouncing particular consonants. The output was transmitted to a computer via a wire running along the inside of the cheek, but away from the tongue. On the other hand, the sounds made by a person were simultaneously recorded using a microphone.

As they did not change the physiology of the mouth, it enabled the volunteers to speak normally at the time of the measurements. They recited tongue twisters for generating the results.

"This is a neat trick; a new twist on a methodology that has been around for some time. The idea of using denture patients in this way is clever," said Joe Perkell, a researcher in MIT's Speech Communication Group in Cambridge, Massachusetts, US.

Till date, the researchers have published results on the production of the sound "T", and now they are planning to do the same for other vocalisations.

In fact, Payan is hopeful that ultimately they will synthesise more realistic human speech than is currently possible.

"When you hear a [voice synthesiser], you can recognise that it's not a human voice, it's a kind of humanoid voice," he said.

Also, with a better understanding of the mechanisms of speech, they will be able to integrate the unique features of human speech into these models. Payan said that the work may also help in designing dentures and orthodontic braces that have less impact on a patient's ability to speak normally.

Laser 'Microscalpel' For Cancer Surgery Developed

Laser 'Microscalpel' For Cancer Surgery Developed

The precision of surgeries for cancer, epilepsy and other diseases could soon improve, thanks to a mechanical engineering Assistant Professor at The University of Texas at Austin, who has developed a laser "microscalpel" that destroys a single cell while leaving nearby cells intact.

Adela Ben-Yakar said that scientists can now remove a cell with high precision in 3-D without damaging the cells above and below it.

"And you can see, with the same precision, what you are doing to guide your microsurgery," he said.

Femtosecond lasers produce extremely brief, high-energy light pulses that sear a targeted cell so quickly and accurately the lasers' heat has no time to escape and damage nearby healthy cells.

Femtosecond lasers produce extremely brief, high-energy light pulses
As a result, the medical community envisions the lasers' use for more accurate destruction of many types of unhealthy material. These include small tumors of the vocal cords, cancer cells left behind after the removal of solid tumors, individual cancer cells scattered throughout brain or other tissue and plaque in arteries.

A commercially available femtosecond laser system and microscope was developed recently for LASIK and other eye surgeries, but the system's bulk limits its usefulness. Ben-Yakar's laboratory has overcome technological challenges to create a microscope system that can deliver femtosecond laser pulses up to 250 microns deep inside tissue. The system includes a tiny, flexible probe that focuses light pulses to a spot size smaller than human cells.

Ben-Yakar's experimental system and its use to destroy a single cell within layers of breast cancer cells grown in the laboratory is described in the June 23 issue of Optics Express.

Within a few years, Ben-Yakar expects to shrink the probe's 15-millimeter diameter three-fold, so it would match endoscopes used today for laparoscopic surgery. The probe tip she has developed also could be made disposable, for use operating on people who have infectious diseases or destroying deadly viruses and other biomaterials.

To develop the miniature laser-surgery system, Ben-Yakar worked with co-author Olav Solgaard at Stanford University's Electrical Engineering Department to incorporate a miniaturized scanning mirror.

Ben-Yakar and her graduate student Chris Hoy, another co-author, also used a novel fiber optic cable that can withstand intense light pulses traveling from an infrared, femtosecond laser. To make the intensity more manageable, they stretched the light pulses into longer, weaker pulses for traveling through the fiber. Then they used the fiber's unique properties to reconstruct the light into more intense, short light pulses before entering the tissue.

For the study, she directed laser light at breast cancer cells in three-dimensional biostructures that mimic the optical properties of breast tissue. She has since studied laboratory-grown, layered cell structures that mimic skin tissue and other tissues.

Ben-Yakar is also investigating the use of nanoparticles to focus the light energy on targeted cells. In research published last year, she demonstrated that gold nanoparticles can function as nano-scale magnifying lenses, increasing the laser light reaching cells by at least an order of magnitude, or 10-fold.

"If we can consistently deliver nanoparticles to cancer cells or other tissue that we want to target, we would be able to remove hundreds of unwanted cells at once using a single femtosecond laser pulse," Ben-Yakar said.

"But we would still be keeping the healthy cells alive while photo-damaging just the cells we want, basically creating nanoscale holes in a tissue."

Here's The Formula For The Perfect Voice

Want to have the perfect good voice? Well, then all you need to do is follow a mathematical formula that consists of a voice mixture of Mariella Frostrup, Dame Judi Dench and Honor Blackman.

The study, commissioned by Post Office Telecoms, found that the best female voice to be a mixture of Frostrup, Dench and Blackman while Alan Rickman and Jeremy Irons and Michael Gambon did best for the men.

The study was conducted by linguist Andrew Linn, of Sheffield University and sound engineer Shannon Harris, reports the Daily Express.

The pair worked out their formula based on the combination of tone, speed, frequency, words per minute and intonation.

Here's The Formula For The Perfect Voice

Analysing the highest scoring voices, researchers hatched a mathematical conclusion on elements that the ideal voice should contain.

They concluded the ideal voice should utter no more than 164 words per minute and pause for 0.48 seconds between sentences. Sentences themselves should fall rather than rise in intonation.

Vocal traits associated with positive characteristics, such as confidence and trust, scored highly with listeners.

Researchers found that Frostrup speaks an average of 180 wpm and pauses for 0.5 seconds between sentences, Dame Judi talks at 160 wpm breaking off for just 0.5 seconds and Blackman articulates herself at a more considered pace of 120 wpm.cccccccccccccccccccccccccccc

New Laser Treatment For Vocal-Cord Cancer Developed

Washington : Researchers at the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) have reported the successful development of an innovative laser treatment for early vocal-cord cancer.


"We had previously adapted lasers that target blood vessels to treat precancerous vocal-cord dysplasia and a variety of benign vascular lesions. We have now applied that experience to treat vocal-cord cancer, which is diagnosed in several thousand American patients each year," said Steven Zeitels, MD, director of the MGH Voice Center.

Zeitels' team began applying pulsed lasers to the treatment of early vocal-cord cancer more than five years ago. After successfully treating the first eight patients with the pulsed-dye laser, Zeitels' group switched to the more precise pulsed Potassium-Titanyl-Phosphate (KTP) laser, which is even less likely to damage delicate vocal-cord tissue.




Zeitels' team began applying pulsed lasers to the treatment of early vocal-cord cancer more than five years ago
The use of specific wavelengths of laser light to target blood vessels was originally applied to the removal of vascular skin lesions like port-wine stains by Rox Anderson, MD, now director of the MGH Wellman Center of Photomedicine. In a close collaboration with Anderson, Zeitels previously developed application of these angiolytic lasers to benign and precancerous vocal-cord lesions.

Zeitels reported that the first 22 patients receiving pulsed laser treatment for vocal-cord cancer are cancer-free up to 5 years after treatment, without removal of vocal-cord tissue or loss of voice quality. Some have required second or third laser treatments to remove residual disease, but another benefit of the therapy is that it does not rule out future therapeutic options.

Zeitels notes that this treatment has become a standard management approach at MGH and should soon spread to other institutions in the US and abroad. He estimates that 90 percent of patients with early vocal-cord cancer would be candidates for pulsed-KTP laser treatment.

"Currently the optimal angiolytic laser for vocal-cord problems, the pulsed-KTP laser is a critical innovation in the instrumentation arsenal of the laryngeal surgeon," he said.

"It has greatly enhanced the precision by which we can perform many procedures for chronic laryngeal diseases, both in the operating room, accompanied by the surgical microscope, and in the office," he added.

The new option for patients was reported on May 1 at the annual meeting of the American Broncho-Esophagological Association, and the data will soon be published as a supplement to the Annals of Otology, Rhinology

Tonsillitis Symptoms And Remedies

Tonsillitis Symptoms And Remedies

Tonsillitis
throat caused due to cold may also lead to tonsil stone.

2.Bad Breath – Your bad breath problem may actually be a symptom of Tonsillitis. When one does not drink water after meals or does not maintain oral health, the bacteria, then affect the tonsils and leads to bad breath for a start and them the problem grows.

3.Loss of Appetite – Another basic symptom of Tonsillitis is loss of appetite. Sore throat, slight fever and throat pain, lead to loss of appetite. One finds it difficult to swallow and the food also becomes tasteless.

Remedies of Tonsillitis

1.Crush a small piece of turmeric stick and extract the juice from it. Drink one spoon of it and don't drink water for the next 30 minutes. Do it twice a day and soon it will get cures. This is one of the most effective remedies for Tonsillitis.

2.Crush some garlic with neem leaves and make in into small balls, Take these frequently in a day. It cure the throat inflammation.

3.Put 20 basil leaves in two glass of water and bring it to a boil. Boil it till the water is half its quantity. Gargling with this water is one of the remedies for quick cure. Gargling with salt water is also a good option.

4.Water boiled with basil leaves can also to be taken as a vapour to cure sore throat.

Follow these remedies for Tonsillitis for quick natural cure. In some cases the problem may go to an extent in which operating is the only solution. Consulting a doctor for serious problems is advised.

Fight Common Cold With Zinc

Fight Common Cold With Zinc

Common Cold


Now!
Whether Zinc can cure common cold symptoms has been a debatable issue since generations but a recent study based on a experiment have now proved that Zinc can actually treat common cold symptoms.

According to a study done by Dr. Meenu Singh and Rashmi Ranjan Das, consumption of Zinc on the onset of common cold can be reduced in one day and regular consumption can prevent it. The study on zinc can cure common cold dates back to 1984. Since then several trial based on this topic has been going on.


According to the recent experiments done on 1,300 subjects, zinc syrup, lozenges or tablets taken on the onset of cold reduced severity and length of illness. For patients who took zinc on the seventh day of the illness, cleared symptoms earlier than people who took other medicines. Children who were given regular dosage of zinc, were less likely to get affected and needed less antibiotics to treat cold. Thus, reducing dependency on antibiotic.

"This review strengthens the evidence for zinc as a treatment for the common cold. However, at the moment, it is still difficult to make a general recommendation, because we do not know very much about the optimum dose, formulation or length of treatment.Our review only looked at zinc supplementation in healthy people but it would be interesting to find out whether zinc supplementation could help asthmatics, whose asthma symptoms tend to get worse when they catch a cold " said lead researcher Meenu Singh.