Skip to main content

NUTRITION FOR A HEALTH LIFE

                                           NUTRITION FOR A HEALTH LIFE
From the minute we're born we are aging. Constant exposure to our environment, the things we eat, and stresses from both inside and outside our bodies all cause us to age over time. Aging is highly complex but scientists are starting to understand what happens at the cellular and molecular levels. For example, healthy cells are damaged over time when our immune systems shift from reacting to short-term problems like injuries and infections to gradually producing chronic inflammation throughout the body. Time also gradually shortens the telomeres that act as protective caps for our DNA-containing chromosomes. 


These and other changes make our bodies less and less able to deal with stresses from inside and outside of our body. So when damage reaches a critical level, our cells, tissues, and organs may no longer perform normally and our health starts to decline. The changes associated with aging start to happen on some level at day one. We begin to experience their effects early in life. For example, we lose the ability to hear certain high-frequency sounds as teenagers, and our cognition and memory slowly decline after they peak. 


In our mid twenty s, the strength of our bones starts to decrease. In our 30s, female fertility sharply declines after 35. Age-related nearsightedness begins in our mid forty s and our hair starts to gray and thin as early as our thirty s and forty s. After the age of 50, the changes of aging become increasingly noticeable because aging is the biggest risk factor for most of the diseases that affect us as adults. The older we get, the higher our risk of chronic disease becomes. 
           

While scientists have not yet found a way to stop these processes of aging they are learning more and more about how to maintain health throughout our lives. Some aspects of aging are out of our control like our genetics and our family history but we can educate ourselves about moderate risk factors and do our best to reduce them through healthy lifestyle and diet choices. Most of us can be healthy and active well into our later years if we take care of ourselves. 


It's no surprise that regular physical activity can help maintain a healthy weight, improve moods and sleep habits, and boost overall health. And a well-balanced diet full of nutritious foods is critical to good health. But when it comes to understanding which foods are the best choices, much nutrition research has focused on how certain foods or nutrients may hurt health or even play a role in disease development. More recently, scientists have begun to explore and understand how nutrition may play a role in promoting healthy aging.


Throughout all of life's stages, we are rapidly learning about what foods and nutrients should be emphasized in our diets and how they can enhance our health. Diets full of fruits and veggies, whole grains, legumes, nuts, and lean meats have proven health benefits like lowering blood pressure, improving glucose control in diabetes, weight loss, improving arthritis, and reducing the risk of cancer and cardiovascular events, to name a few. And we are learning more about the specific nutrients that can impact health. 

For example, plant pigments found in bright orange and red fruits and vegetables may prevent and slow the progression of eye diseases, calcium helps to keep bones strong, b vitamins play a role in maintaining brain health, and flavonoids from many plants may improve the health of our cardiovascular systems.


The bottom line is that you have the power to maintain and improve your health, add vitality to your years, and reduce your risk of disease. And it's never too late to make a change. To learn more about the nutrients that are critical to your health and how to safely turn to supplements if you aren't getting enough of these nutrients in your diet, watch Healthy Aging with Nutrition at, uh.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

the importance of fitness

 Exercise is one of the most critical things that we can do to have a healthy lifestyle. And, uh, luckily, there are all kinds that we can choose from. There's aerobic exercise, jogging, uh, brisk walking, jazzer size classes, that type of thing. Uh, we've got weight resistance, uh, we've got stretching. So there are a lot of things that you can choose from to have exercise be part of your daily life. But the most important thing about exercise is regularity . And if you wish to be regular with your exercise, which is where the efficacy comes in, then I'd suggest to you two things. The first is to keep a record of what your exercise is. Just take your calendar and block out when you want to exercise. On my calendar, it says, Appointment with Mr. Nike. That's how I know that that's the time that I'm going to exercise.  And then when I do exercise, I record it on that calendar. Because when we try to keep it in our heads, we give ourselves way too much credit

How to improve your heart and lung functioning with these simple exercises ?

We are Noble Heart Hospital and today we are going to tell you what are the important cardiovascular exercises for the proper functioning of the heart and lungs, which everybody should do every day. The heart and lungs work together to make sure the body has the oxygen rich blood it needs to function properly.  That's why it becomes very important for us to take care of these vital organs. If you are a beginner, the most basic exercise will be walking. Walking should be an important part of your life because it not only increases your stamina, but also helps you in losing fat. If you are already good at walking or jogging, then you must elevate your potential by running on the stairs, doing rope.  Skipping every day for five minutes will also improve your heart and lung functioning. And now is the final exercise. We will suggest you to do burpees every day. This exercise includes a small jump which is followed by a pushup.  And it is one of the best exercises to improve your heart

Exercise, Stress, and the Brain

 Exercise is interesting in terms of its effects on the brain because it works in about four or five different ways. Uh, one of the most obvious ways is blood flow. And so if you, uh, get your heart working, your brain's going to be filled with oxygen-rich blood and nutrients. So that's the main way that we thought it would help. The other way that's sort of interesting, uh, is it's been thought that exercise produces, uh, new neurons.  And so exercise induces the production of growth factors, one called BDNF, and it actually stimulates the production of new brain cells. Now, when I was in school 20 years ago, we were told, you can't get any new brain cells. So when you're born, that's your lot. You're not going to make any more. But more recently, we found that exercise, uh, is a really good way of stimulating brain cell production. And some of these are functional.  And so, um, just this notion that something that you can do can generate new brain cell