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Food for thought: the smart way to better brain health

The human brain is made of food, so what we eat and drink affects our ability to keep a healthy, alert and active mind
We all intuitively appreciate that the foods we eat shape our thoughts, actions, emotions and behaviour. When you are feeling low, you reach for chocolate; when you are tired, you crave coffee. We all use food to soothe our moods and clear our heads without seeming to think much about it.

Yet the focus of most diets is on the way we look rather than the way we think. This is in part due to western society’s fascination with appearance, and medicine’s bias towards drugs and surgery. In fact, contemporary medicine often disregards the ways that our diet helps shape our cognitive health. Medical students are not trained in nutrition. And, for what it is worth, neither are scientists.

When I was a neuroscience student, I would marvel at how apparently simple substances such as sodium, potassium, magnesium and sugars determine whether our brain cells fire or not, grow or not, form new connections or wilt and die. It only became obvious in retrospect: the sodium, potassium, magnesium and sugars referenced were the same nutrients as in diet books or on food labels. To put it simply, the human brain is made of food.

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4 foods and drinks that could help smokers quit

Certain foods and drinks can be a potential benefit—or burden—when trying to quit smoking.

If you are looking to kick the habit, or know someone who is, here are four foods and drinks that could help smokers quit and stay tobacco-free.

1. Fruits and vegetables
What foods can help you quit smoking?

Cigarettes block the absorption of important nutrients, such as calcium and vitamins C and D. For example, smoking just one cigarette drains the body of 25 mg of vitamin C. Incorporating more fruits and vegetables into your diet will restore these nutrients and, as some research suggests, may help with reducing cravings to smoke.

Bonus: Once you begin to stop smoking, food starts to taste better and flavors are more noticeable, so you may also enjoy these foods more.

2. Ginseng Tea
Can tea help you quit smoking?

Some research suggests that ginseng could be therapeutic for nicotine addiction because it may weaken the effect of dopamine, a neurotransmitter in the brain that is associated with pleasure and is released when smoking tobacco. Drinking ginseng tea could reduce the appeal of smoking and make it less enjoyable.

3. Milk and dairy
Does milk make cigarettes taste bad?

Smokers have reported that drinking milk made cigarettes taste worse; most smokers said that it gave their cigarettes a bitter aftertaste. When facing a craving, consuming milk and other dairy products that make cigarettes taste bad might help deter smokers from cigarettes.

4. Sugar-free gum and mints
What helps with nicotine cravings?

Chewing gum and mints can keep your mouth busy when you have an urge to smoke. Plus, both gum and mints last a long time—typically longer than it does to smoke a cigarette.

Knowing what to avoid consuming when trying to quit smoking will help, too. Foods and drinks that have been shown to enhance the taste of cigarettes and trigger a craving to smoke include alcohol, caffeine, meat and sugary or spicy foods.

While eating and drinking the right things can make the struggle to quit a little easier, programs like BecomeAnEX.org, a digital quit-smoking program by Truth Initiative®, can improve chances of success and quitting for good.

 

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Virginia man who put meth in elderly mother-in-law’s coffee gets prison time

A Virginia man who allegedly attempted to kill his mother-in-law by putting methamphetamine in her coffee has been sentenced to prison.

After reaching a plea deal, Jack David Price, 56, of Pamplin was sentenced to six years in prison earlier this week. Price is accused of putting meth in his 95-year-old mother-in-law’s coffee in December 2017, The News & Advance reported.

Prosecutors say Ester Price was admitted to a hospital last year showing signs of meth in her system. At the time, Ester Price’s granddaughter, who has not been identified, told authorities she suspected Jack Price was trying to kill her grandmother.

Ester Price also told authorities that the day before she became ill, Jack Price brought her coffee — a gesture she said was “not an ordinary event,” The News & Advance reported.

VIRGINIA MAN RUNS WITH AMERICAN FLAG IN HAND TO HONOR SON, OTHERS DEPLOYED

Jack Price was sentenced Thursday after reaching a plea deal. Prosecutors dropped an attempted first-degree murder charge in exchange for him pleading guilty to altering food, drink or drugs and other offenses.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Elderly man arrested for trying to buy girl from mom at Walmart

PORT ORANGE, Fla. — Police say an 81-year-old attempted to buy an 8-year-old girl from her mother for $200,000 at a Florida Walmart.

WKMG-TV reports Port Orange police say Hellmuth Kolb was arrested Saturday and charged with simple battery and false imprisonment. Police say Tracy Nigh was sitting with her daughter on a bench inside the Walmart when Kolb approached, asked if she was married and started bidding on her daughter.

Nigh says she got up to leave but Kolb grabbed her daughter and kissed her wrist. An arrest report says Nigh left with her daughter and alerted store security. Authorities say the exchange was caught on camera and Kolb was identified through his credit card transaction and social media, where another woman described a similar experience.

It’s unclear if Kolb has a lawyer.

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Death toll from Indonesian quake, tsunami rises to 832: agency

The death toll from an earthquake and tsunami on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi rose to 832 on Sunday, the national disaster mitigation agency said, adding it assessed the affected area to be bigger than initially thought.

Many people were reported trapped in the rubble of buildings brought down in the 7.5 magnitude earthquake which struck on Friday and triggered tsunami waves as high as six meters (20 feet), agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo

Nugroho told a news conference.

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Playboy who ‘slept with 6,000 women’ dies while having s%x

A famous Italian playboy who slept with thousands of women has died aged 63 while having sex with a 23-year-old tourist, it is reported.

Maurizio Zanfanti, dubbed the ‘Romeo of Rimini’, was getting intimate with the woman when he had a heart attack, according to local media.

Realising something was seriously wrong, the Romanian tourist alerted the emergency services, but the nightclub manager could not be saved.

Also known as ‘Zanza’, he died on Tuesday night “after doing what he did best – loving women”, the Italian newspaper Il Resto Del Carlino reported.

Zanfanti, who is rumoured to have bedded more than 6,000 women in his lifetime, had reportedly known the tourist for a couple of years.

In the moments before he fell ill, he was having sex with the woman in a car in Via Pradella, Rimini, in the country’s Emilia-Romagna region.

Some reports claim the tourist was getting dressed when Zanfanti’s illness became apparent, prompting her to alert the medical services.

Paramedics rushed to the scene, but the playboy passed away.

Zanfanti, who rose to fame promoting the nightclub Blow Up in the 1970s, once claimed to have sex with up to 200 women a summer.

He said he loved each and every one of them. Throughout the years, a number of women have alleged to have had children with him.

Pictures show the playboy ‘king’ – whose final interview was with the German newspaper BILD in 2014 – posing with different women at venues.

He previously claimed to have never been to a gym.

“But I did a lot of gymnastics on beds,” he laughed.

He also described how he would receive visits from former lovers – some married – adding that even their daughters “want to see me”.

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Mother Sued By Nanny After She Accidentally Sent A Racist Text Message And Fired Her

The wife of a Manhattan financier hired a nanny for her baby, but freaked out when she realized the caretaker was African-American and fired off a text message saying, “NOOOOOOOOOOO ANOTHER BLACK PERSON,” a lawsuit alleges.

Lynsey Plasco-Flaxman, a Tribeca mother of two, wrote the message for her spouse, Joel Plasco, upon meeting new nanny Giselle Maurice for her first day at work in 2016.

Only she didn’t send the text to Plasco — she accidentally sent it to Maurice. Twice.

When she realized the gaffe, Plasco-Flaxman immediately fired the experienced caretaker, saying she felt “uncomfortable.”

She said that their outgoing nanny was African-American and had done a bad job — and that they were expecting a Filipino.

Now Maurice, 44, is suing the couple for discrimination and seeking compensation for wages she says she was promised — $350-a-day for a six-month live-in gig.

“[I want] to show them, look, you don’t do stuff like that,” Maurice told The Post Friday, saying they paid her for the single day’s work and sent her home in an Uber.

“I know it’s discrimination.”

But the family says their actions were reasonable, arguing they couldn’t trust Maurice after offending her.

“[My wife] had sent her something that she didn’t mean to say. She’s not a racist. We’re not racist people,” Plasco, co-chairman of the Dalmore Group investment bank, told The Post on Friday.

“But would you put your children in the hands of someone you’ve been rude to, even if it was by mistake? Your newborn baby? Come on.”

Maurice said she never would have treated the child any differently because of her mom’s text.

“This is my reputation. Why would I do something to a baby?” she said.

“I was willing to work with her and prove her wrong, but it was her conscience, and she couldn’t work with me anymore.”

Maurice said she had tried to settle the dispute through mediation and filed the suit after that didn’t work out.

Plasco said that they didn’t owe her any more money because there was no contract, and that the suit is just “extortion.”

“I’m not someone who has millions of dollars lying around to just pay off people that are coming after me for extortion. And now you’re playing straight into her hands,” fumed the banker, who once ran the UK’s biggest brokerage firm.

“My wife was two months off having a baby, suffering from a very difficult situation. You’re going to go after someone like that? That’s not a very nice thing to do.”

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Harvard study: Avoid nutritional supplements with higenamine

Consumers should avoid all nutritional supplements containing the natural stimulant higenamine, according to a new study from Harvard University.

“If it lists higenamine on the label, don’t purchase it,” said Pieter Cohen, an associate professor at Harvard Medical School in Boston, who led the new research, published in the journal Clinical Toxicology. Norcoclaurine and demethylcoclaurine are different names for the same botanical ingredient.

Cohen and his colleagues found higenamine in 24 readily-available supplements, mostly marketed for weight loss and energy boost. In some cases, doses were a dozen times larger than has ever been tested in people.

The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) banned higenamine last year as a performance-enhancing substance.

Sales of dietary supplements and multivitamins reached $20.7 billion last year in the United States, according to Euromonitor International, which tracks the industry but not sales of specific ingredients.

There hasn’t been much research into higenamine, but what there has been shows it can powerfully speed up the heart, much like the supplement ephedra that was taken off the market by the U.S. government in 2004 for causing strokes and heart attacks.

In China, where most of the research has taken place, scientists use higenamine in heart stress tests, because it puts extra strain on the heart to pump blood, said Cohen, also an internist with the Cambridge Health Alliance.

Higenamine has been mainly delivered directly into the blood stream at doses of around 2.5 to 5 milligrams, he said.

But over-the-counter products are sold without any dosage information, so consumers don’t know how much they’re getting. And Cohen’s analysis reveals that some supplements contain as much as 60 mg of higenamine per serving – and over 100 mg per day.

Swallowing higenamine rather than having it injected into the bloodstream probably cuts down on the amount that reaches the heart, Cohen said, but there are no reputable studies showing the safety of taking higenamine by mouth at doses above 5 mg.

Although most competitive athletes stopped using higenamine after it was banned, it’s still on the shelves. Kamal Patel, co-founder of Examine.com, an independent database of nutrition and supplement evidence, said he thinks non-athletes may still be using it as an alternative cough and asthma treatment, and he’s heard of people “stacking” higenamine with caffeine and other ingredients to promote fat loss.

Endurance athletes looking for a quick boost might take it too, he said, “although the half-life is really short, which limits its usefulness for many endurance activities.”

The supplement has never been studied for weight loss, and Cohen said he can’t see how it would help someone lose weight, although a faster heart rate might make someone think it is doing something. “It seems like a crazy way to try to lose some weight,” Cohen said.

Federal regulations require that manufacturers understand the safety of ingredients as directed for use on a product label, said Duffy MacKay with the Council for Responsible Nutrition, a Washington, D.C.-based trade and lobbying group. His organization maintains a database called Supplement OWL for companies to voluntarily make their ingredient lists available to the public and to provide confidential information to government regulators.

Higenamine may be a case, he said, where government regulators should step in and explore the data.

But everyone bears some responsibility for the appropriate use of supplements, he said.

“Consumers have a part to not be gullible, in the area of weight loss in particular,” MacKay said. “And make sure they do buy from brands they know and trust and talk to their doctors – and just not get pulled into one of these products that makes us all look bad.”

Cohen said people should avoid supplements that suggest they’ll boost workout performance, particularly if they contain higenamine. “Because this is only one of dozens of ingredients that will likely have real effects, but you don’t know how much you’ll get,” he said. Plus, there’s likely no research on how the ingredients interact. “These aren’t just benign placebos, they’re often potent drugs,” he said.

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Deadly earthquake and tsunami kill hundreds in Sulawesi, Indonesia

At least 384 people were killed and many swept away as giant waves crashed onto beaches, when a major earthquake and tsunami hit the Indonesian island of Sulawesi, authorities said on Saturday.

Hundreds had gathered for a festival on the beach in the city of Palu on Friday when waves as high as six meters (18 feet) smashed onshore at dusk, sweeping many to their death and destroying anything in their path, following a 7.5 magnitude earthquake. (Reuters)

Donations pour in for man holding yard sales to fund funeral

BROWNSTOWN, Pa. — Two friends who set up a GoFundMe page for a Pennsylvania man who’d been holding yard sales to pay for his own funeral expenses say they’ve received so many donations they’re planning to help other veterans in similar situations.

David Dunkleberger and his friend Ed Sheets pulled into a yard sale in Brownstown last month. The man running it, 66-year-old Willie Davis, was selling his belongings to pay for his funeral.

Davis, who served in the Navy in the 1970s, has stage 4 squamous cell carcinoma, a type of skin cancer.

Dunkleberger initially set a $6,000 goal then raised it to $40,000. By Friday morning, nearly $50,000 had been donated .

GoFundMe says they’ll work with the campaign organizers to make sure excess funds are managed appropriately.

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