viernes, 7 de noviembre de 2014

Anemia Falciforme y Hemocromatosis - Enfermedades Hereditarias

Anemia Falciforme
La anemia falciforme es provocada por un gen que hace que el cuerpo produzca glóbulos rojos anormales. Estos glóbulos deformes suelen durar menos que los glóbulos normales y pueden atascarse en los vasos sanguíneos evitando que el transporte de oxigeno se realice de forma adecuada y provocando dolor en algunos órganos y tejidos. Se recomienda una ingesta alta de hierro para el transporte de oxígeno y una ingesta adecuada de ácido fólico, y vitamina B12 para aumentar la producción de glóbulos rojos.

 

Hemocromatosis
    La hemocromatosis es una enfermedad hereditaria y afecta la manera en la que se metaboliza el hierro. Las personas que padecen de esta enfermedad absorben demasiado hierro y éste se acumula en el cuerpo especialmente en el hígado. Se debe seguir una dieta reducida en hierro y seguir las siguientes recomendaciones:
  • No tomar alcohol
  • No tomar pastillas ni suplementos que contengan hierro
  • No usar utensilios de cocina de hierro
  • No consumir productos de mar crudos
  • No consumir alimentos fortificados con hierro
  • Se recomienda la ingesta de frutas y vegetales y/o suplementación de antioxidantes, ya que el hierro sufre una alta oxidación y esto conduce a la liberación de radicales libres de oxígeno conduciendo a niveles altos de estrés oxidativo lo cual es nocivo para las células.

Ejercicio y sus Beneficios

La actividad física en conjunto a una buena alimentación nos ayuda a mantener nuestro cuerpo saludable.

Podemos obtener muchos beneficios al hacer ejercicios:
  • ·         Levanta el animo
  • ·         Mejora habilidades de aprendizaje
  • ·         Mejora la auto estima
  • ·         Mantiene el cerebro saludable
  • ·         Fortalece los músculos
  • ·         Fortalece el sistema inmune
  • ·         Reduce el stress
  • ·         Mejora el patrón de sueno
  • ·         Mantiene saludable el corazón y otros órganos
  • ·         Mejora el metabolismo
  • ·         Mejora desempeño atlético
  • ·         Ayuda a prevenir enfermedades
  •       Mejora la vida sexual.

Algunos consejos para mantener una buena salud cuando se hace ejercicio
  • ·         Consumir 20-25 gramos de carbohidratos antes del ejercicio intenso
  • ·         Tomar suficiente agua antes, durante y después del ejercicio
  • ·         Consumir alimentos saludables ricos en carbohidratos, proteínas, vitaminas y minerales después del ejercicio para reponer los nutrientes perdidos y mejorar el proceso de recuperación.
  • ·         Dormir de 6 – 8 horas corridas.

miércoles, 22 de octubre de 2014

Sugary soft drinks may be linked to accelerated DNA aging

Consumption of sugary soda drinks such as cola and lemonade may be linked to accelerated DNA ageing, say researchers who have studied the impact of the drinks in more than 5,000 people.
High-sugar fizzy drinks have been under fire from campaigners for contributing to obesity and type-2 diabetes, but this is the first study to suggest a link with ageing. The researchers found that people who reported drinking a 350ml bottle of fizzy drink per day had DNA changes typical of cells 4.6 years older.
“Regular consumption of sugar-sweetened sodas might influence disease development, not only by straining the body’s metabolic control of sugars but also through accelerated cellular ageing of tissues,” said Prof Elissa Epel, of the University of California, San Francisco.
The study, published in the American Journal of Public Health, asked 5,309 healthy adults aged between 20 and 65 about their consumption of fizzy drinks and examined the DNA from each participant’s white blood cells.

The team found that telomeres – protective DNA caps on the end of chromosomes – were shorter in people who reported habitually drinking more fizzy drinks.
Telomeres are repetitive sections at the end of chromosomes that get shorter each time cells divide. They act as a kind of genetic ticking clock and in the past have been associated with human lifespan as well as the development of some forms of cancer, heart disease and diabetes. Other studies have suggested a link between telomere length and lifestyle factors such as smoking and psychological stress.
“It’s really been in the last four years or so that people have started asking if this is something that can start in early age,” said Epel. “This soda study really raises the question: if we’re seeing this apparent soda-induced telomere shortening in a diverse adult sample, what does that mean for our kids? It may be a large part of why we have such a vast epidemic of not only obesity as adults, but early disease onset. Soda may be one of the invisible culprits.”
She stressed that the study only showed an association and did not prove that sugary drink consumption caused cell ageing. If high soda consumption was to blame, it may be due to the huge rush of sugars into the blood after a drink, leading to oxidative stress and inflammation – “the perfect storm for degrading telomeres,” said Epel.
The study has its limitations. Since it looked at survey data from the now decade-old US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, it could only draw associations between DNA samples and what people self-reported about their diet at the time.
David Jacobs, a professor of public health and epidemiology at the University of Minnesota, who was not involved in the study, said: “It’s an interesting suggestion that, by taking these beverages that so emphasise a single molecule, there’s a fundamental relationship between excess sugar in the diet and telomeres. But disease is long-term, and these are small effects. You’re going to need long-term studies with follow-up to really see what happens.”
Epel said her research group planned to address these questions in further studies in which they might use a short-term diet high in sugar to see if they can induce effects associated with telomere shortening.