Saturday, April 28, 2007

The milk we drink today may not be nature’s perfect food

Gravid Bovines
Modern Milk

http://www.harvardmagazine.com/2007/05/modern-milk.html

The milk we drink today may not be nature's perfect food," says Ganmaa Davaasambuu, a Mongolian physician who is a fellow this year at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. Even as the scientific community has become interested in the effects of the bioactive substances found in pesticides, says Ganmaa, not much attention has been paid to the naturally occurring estrogens found in food, which are both far more abundant and more biologically available than environmental estrogens. In fact, she is concerned that the high levels of hormones found in commercially produced milk may be harmful to human health. Estrogens and other growth factors have been implicated in the development of hormone-dependent cancers: those affecting the prostate, testes, ovaries, breasts, and uterus.

Skeptics note that humans have been drinking milk without apparent harm for millennia, she says. But modern milk is different. Her concern stems not from the use of bovine growth hormone (she excluded BGH-fed cows from her studies), but from the fact that milk-producing cows in commercial dairies, through use of artificial insemination and high-quality winter feed, are kept pregnant and lactating 300 days a year. "Cows are like humans," she explains. "When they get pregnant, the estrogen levels in their blood, milk, and urine increase. [Human pregnancy tests detect similar increases.] This made me wonder—since the cows are pregnant all the time, the hormone levels in their milk should be really high."

While earning her doctorate in environmental health in Japan, Ganmaa began investigating the prevalence and effects of these naturally occurring hormones. In her native Mongolia, traditional patterns of milking—the same as those used in Westernized countries until the 1920s—are still followed: pasture-fed cows are milked only through the first three months of a new pregnancy. Their raw milk had only one-tenth the progesterone that she and her colleagues found in commercially produced milk in Japan.

Mongolian physician Ganmaa Davaasambuu has linked increased tumor formation and growth in laboratory animals with chemically induced cancer to high levels of hormones in commercial milk. Seasonal milking practices among Mongolian nomads ensure that cows produce milk only during the first three months of a new pregnancy, when hormone levels are low. Because modern dairies, on the other hand, milk cows well into their next pregnancy, commercial milk often contains much higher levels of biologically active hormones.
 

In a 2002 study of cancer and diet in 42 countries, Ganmaa and colleagues found that countries with the highest consumption of dairy products suffered the highest rates of prostatic and testicular cancer. (A similar study Ganmaa did in 2005 showed much the same results for breast, ovarian, and uterine cancers.) In 2003, the group focused on the relationship between rising rates of these cancers and increased dairy consumption in Japan. Prior to World War II, the Japanese consumed very little milk, and rates of these cancers were low. But in the 1950s, a school-lunch program that included milk was instituted nationwide. Since that time, the intake of milk has increased twentyfold, and the incidence of prostrate cancer has increased twenty-five-fold.

Still, such epidemiological evidence is circumstantial. But in a 2004 study that used rats in which mammary cancer had been induced, she and her colleagues found that rats fed low-fat milk (1 percent) were more likely to develop tumors, and in greater numbers and of larger size, than rats fed water or artificial milk. In a 2006 study, also in rats, she proved that the hormones in milk are biologically active in animals. Both adult and immature milk-fed rats showed increased uterine weight—the gold standard for measuring the estrogen activity of food and other substances.

During her time at Harvard, which began with a year as a research fellow at the School of Public Health under Stare professor of epidemiology and nutrition Walter Willett, she and her colleagues have conducted two pilot studies. The first compared American milk (whole, whole organic, skim, and "shelf-stable" ultra-high temperature milk) to milk from Mongolia. Levels of hormones and growth factors were low in both American skim milk (hormones are carried in the milk fat) and Mongolian milk. In a subsequent study, Mongolian third-graders were fed U.S. commercial milk for a month. The good news was that a number of the children who had been vitamin D-deficient when the study began saw those deficiencies corrected. "Milk is a complex food that contains many good things, such as vitamin B, vitamin D, and calcium," Ganmaa notes. But the Mongolian schoolchildren's growth- hormone levels shot up 40 percent; and the children grew, on average, one centimeter during the month—a statistically significant increase, according to Ganmaa. "But we don't know if it will be sustained in the long term, whether it will affect their sexual maturation or their age at puberty," she says. "One month is too short." She and her Harvard colleagues are now seeking funding for a two-year study.

Based on what she has found so far, Ganmaa believes that cows in late pregnancy should not be milked—or, at least, that such milk should be labeled to indicate that it comes from a pregnant cow. In the meantime, it is reassuring to know that skim milk from the United States has low levels of hormones, just like the traditional stuff from Mongolia.

~Jonathan Shaw

Ganmaa Davaasambuu e-mail address: gdavaasa@hsph.harvard.edu

Fwd: canola and rapeseed

Much to my surprise, it seems as though there is a canola plant, different from the rapeseed plant.
--phillip

from http://www.mcgacanola.org/education_kids_plant.html
Canadian scientists developed the canola plant from another Brassica plant called rapeseed. In ancient civilizations, oil from the rapeseed plant was used in lamps and as cooking oil. Following World War 2, Canadian plant breeders started a program to genetically modify rapeseed. They wanted to develop a plant that produced healthier oil by preventing the plants from making and depositing unwanted substances in their seeds. This new plant was called canola.

from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canola
In agriculture, Canola is a trademarked cultivar of genetically engineered rapeseed variants from which rapeseed oil is obtained. Also known as "LEAR" oil (for Low Erucic Acid Rapeseed), Canola oil was initially bred in Canada by Keith Downey and Baldur Stefansson in the 1970s[citation needed]. The word "canola" is derived from "Canadian oil, low acid" in 1978.


A plan takes root: City to plant more than 100,000 trees

A plan takes root: City to plant more than 100,000 trees

Teams up with Forest Service to study benefits for residents

Boston will plant 100,000 trees during the next 13 years, with the bulk of the plantings to take root in the city's least green neighborhoods, Mayor Thomas M. Menino will announce today.

By expanding the urban forest by some 20 percent to cover more than one - third of the city, leaders hope to reap a range of benefits, including cooler temperatures in summer, absorption of carbon dioxide and storm water runoff, and increased psychological well-being among residents.

As part of the initiative, the mayor will also announce a new partnership with the US Forest Service that designates Boston as an urban experimental forest -- one of three such sites in the country -- where scientists and arborists will conduct research to document the effects of trees on people and the environment.

"There's no downside to having more trees," Menino said in an interview. "They bring people together and give people pride in their neighborhood."

The push to increase the tree cover in the city reflects growing national awareness of the value of urban trees, after decades when their potential to help cities address environmental problems was little considered. The project began with a comprehensive inventory of the trees in Boston, conducted by the city and private organizations over three years and completed last fall. Among the inventory's findings: The tree canopy covers 29 percent of Boston, more than several other major East Coast cities.

Tree cover varies widely: West Roxbury, the city's leafiest neighborhood, is almost half-covered by canopy, while South and East Boston each have coverage of less than 10 percent. Officials say the planting of 100,000 trees will bring the proportion citywide to 35 percent by 2020.

The program, expected to cost about $15 million , will be paid for with city, state, federal, and private money, said officials. The goal is for most of the trees to be planted on private property and paid for by private foundations, corporations, and developers.

Menino has proposed spending $500,000 next year to plant street trees. The cost of all the street tree plantings is an estimated $2.5 million. The state Department of Conservation and Recreation has committed $600,000 over the next decade to plant trees on its properties, which make up half the open space in the city, and will pitch in an additional $200,000 to help pay for plantings on private property, said James Hunt, environmental services chief for the city .

The inventory that was completed last fall found that Boston has about 500,000 trees, including those along streets -- trees counted by hand by some 300 volunteers -- and those in open spaces such as parks and college campuses, which were counted using aerial photography. The census includes public and private land.

In Baltimore and New York City , where similar surveys have been done, trees cover 20 percent and 25 percent of the cities, respectively. New York's mayor, Michael R. Bloomberg recently announced a plan to plant a million trees in the next decade; New York City has about 5 million trees .

Environmental benefits are among the biggest reasons for the surging interest in tree-planting, specialists said. Trees remove pollutants from the air and cool urban neighborhoods by absorbing heat and providing shade. They absorb storm water that would otherwise run into city sewers. They have also been linked in some studies to lower rates of health problems among the residents living near them. And because they ab sorb carbon dioxide, believed to be the main culprit in climate change, they are seen as a way to help offset carbon em issions.

"Trees take in greenhouse gases -- that's what trees do," said Michael T. Raines, director of the Northern Research Station of the US Forest Service, which will oversee Boston's experimental forest. "If we manage the trees carefully, we can probably impact 10 percent of the climate change problem."

Future research will look for links between crime rates and the percentage of tree canopy in Boston neighborhoods; if they find correlations , researchers will then dig deeper to identify possible reasons.

The Boston inventory, conducted by a collection of government agencies and non profit groups known as the Urban Forest Coalition, included some surprises: Researchers expected to find some 50,000 trees along public streets in Boston, but the tally was only 35,000. Three-quarters of the street trees were in good health.

Acknowledging that trees on privately owned land and in large green spaces tend to be healthier than street trees, city officials plan to partner with private institutions and individuals in order to plant many of the trees on private land. The city plans to set up a website where residents can request trees to plant on their properties ; trees will be provided to those who agree to care for them , said Hunt .

As part of the effort, officials are planning a program to award carbon e mission-offset credits to residents and businesses that plant trees or contribute money.

The tree-planting, originally scheduled to kick off on Arbor Day yesterday but delayed by bad weather, will begin today with a ceremony in Geneva Cliffs, a 2-acre green space in Dorchester. Officials expect to plant 2,000 trees this year, including in empty tree pits along city streets. The city hopes to plant more than 10,000 trees annually from 2013 to 2015; the number will then drop back to 2,000 by 2020. 

First: Chinese MTB racer wins a World Cup event

While the road season is in full-swing, the off-road crew had its major international season-opener with a World Cup in Houffalize, Belgium. The race marked the first time a Chinese rider won a World Cup, when Chengyuan Ren beat perennial favorite Gunn-Rita Dahle Flesjaa of Norway in the women's race. Spain's Jose Hermida took the men's race, but Ren's win was the big news as the Chinese women appear ready to make a serious run for the gold medal at next year's Olympic Games in Beijing [More].

http://mail.google.com/mail/?auth=DQAAAHYAAADiw7haeTgCE-43W_pBQqXpqV-xLhiFWaT97C_IVDB7OaJabwU2ANqW5lmYtu2mw1Kx5jKVu_oALkjClMUGhQlCh79CHdhW4N9qhC3T5sezaoIOyh-yikz4aWUhz192fZY7igIre7OHfIGK9AAx4x6BXex8j8sS-EhbBlOC24ePZQ&zx=o3r0thbfc40e

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Chlorine Alternative for Pool or Hot Tub

Chlorine Alternative for Pool or Hot Tub

 from http://v.mercola.com/QA/Chlorine-Alternative-for-Pool-or-Hot-Tub-2880.aspx

Your concern about chlorine is appropriate. There is strong evidence that you should avoid drinking chlorine and also bathing in it. This would include showering with municipal water that is chlorinated.  This is particularly problematic in the shower because the temperature of the water is higher which increases the blood flow in your skin and increases your ability to absorb chlorine from the water.

With respect to pools or spas I would recommend ozone as the safest alternative. Ozone is one of natures most powerful oxidizers and purifier. It destroys bacteria on contact and prolongs and protects equipment life. it will attach and destroy, by oxidation, any offending molecule that gets in its path. Ozone rapidly decomposes leaving no traces, and does not produce any toxic compounds It is also safer for the environment as it is less corrosive in water than chlorine and less damaging to equipment with scale buildup in the heater and lines.

When you use chlorine trhialomethanes are a byrpoduct and have been previously associated with health problems. However, during the ozonation process this does not happen. In all reactions, the main byproduct after oxidation is oxygen. Ozonation does not change the pH, nor does it react with the remaining organics in water to produce carcinogenic compounds.

If the pool is outdoors you will need to shock it occasionally with a rapidly disappearing chlorine after a rain because the ozone isn't particularly good at killing algae spores. But otherwise that seems to be the best option as it should allow you to reduce chlorine use by over 90%.

I do NOT recommend using bromine or any other halogen as an alternative to chlorine as there is not much of a difference at all with respect to potential toxicity.

Today Reuters reported a European study that performed a survey of 624 swimming pool employees at six swimming pools. They measured trichloramine levels at all 38 pools included in the study to estimate long-term exposure among employees. Trichloramines are the most volatile type of chloramine, and are known to irritate the eyes and upper respiratory tract. The Dutch researchers found that swimming teachers and other people who spend a lot of time near chlorinated pools face an increased risk of breathing problems,

On the other hand, you could go all natural like some of Europe is doing and was discussed in a NY Times article last week.

Monday, April 09, 2007

Ortiz goes to bat for his friend Sosa

from http://www.boston.com/sports/baseball/redsox/articles/2007/04/09/ortiz_goes_to_bat_for_his_friend_sosa/

Ortiz repeatedly has said he does not use performance-enhancing substances.

The health risks, he said, are not worth it to him.

"People will say they'll get you big, they'll get you strong, they'll make you rich, but personally I think it's a terrible decision," he said, "because life continues after baseball. What if right after you retire, your body breaks down and you have to spend two years in bed and then die? How was everything you did to make money, how was it worth it? So your family could look at you as a superhero, and you left a ton of money for them?

"I was talking to my son [D'Angelo, 2 1/2] this morning. He kept saying, 'Daddy, I love you, I miss you, when are you coming home, Daddy?'

"You know what that tells you? They care more about me being with them than what I can give them. They're not asking me, 'Hey Daddy, are you going to bring me something? No, they're saying, 'Daddy, we love you, we miss you.' That's a quick example to me of why it's not worth it, man."

Ortiz said if he knew a friend was using steroids, "I'd kind of let them know I don't think it's the right thing to do."

Initially he said it wouldn't bother him to know that someone using illegal substances hit more home runs than him or won an MVP award instead of him, then he stopped.

"Let me rewind that," he said. "You ask me about cheating. If I know I'm doing everything natural and someone is cheating, of course it would bother me, because I'm all natural and this person is cheating. Cheating is not fair, OK?

"I'm telling you the competition when I first came up to the big leagues, it was not fair. You're an athlete, you're clean, and you see guys hitting home runs, guys that do not have the power you have."

Ortiz thought of the widespread use of performance-enhancers in his native Dominican Republic, young kids dreaming of becoming the next Sammy Sosa or David Ortiz. Some of those kids have used steroids that are used by veterinarians for horses; some of those kids have died.

"They're putting stuff in their bodies and they're not even 17 or 18 years old," Ortiz said. "They put something in their bodies without knowing what it is. That's [expletive]. It's [expletive]."

 

Millar answers…by Curt Schilling

from http://38pitches.com/

Millar answers…

Well I must say that Curt is right on with the curve ball talk.I have been ragging on his curve ball for a few years and today he called my bluff.

1st ab he shook 3 times and I had a feeling he was shaking to the curve ball but still didnt have the balls to sit 1st pitch curve ball on Schilling. Then, I did call time out, telling Tek "What the hell is Schill doing shaking to the curve ball?", and bam! sure enough here came this hanging curve ball (Curt: I beg to differ, the first one wasn't hanging) I watched for strike 1, and couldnt pull the trigger. Then schill came back with another (Curt: which I did hang) whiched I pulled foul (Curt: into the vendor selling lemonade, which for anyone sitting along the 3rd base dugout knows is no surprise, Kevin hooking a pitch foul) and yes he threw the 3rd one in a row which I layed off.

I then had a feeling he was going to throw all curve balls to me, as pedro martinez did to me the 1st time I faced him last year and i struck out on 4 in a row. But Schill caught me guessing and struck me out with a heater in.

So all the trash talking I did to him and all the text messages I ragged him with, he got me and I couldnt look at him after the AB, even though i wanted to laugh

Kevin (Curt: I can hook a fastball better than anyone but Sheffield) Millar

Altitude training - Astronaut gears for own Marathon

from http://www.boston.com/sports/specials/marathon/articles/2007/04/09/altitude_training/

 

Altitude training

Astronaut gears for own Marathon

After Mission Control in Houston opens audio and video connections between Earth and the International Space Station more than 200 miles away, "the event" can begin. Following protocols provided a day in advance, the transition into a live conversation with Expedition 14 Flight Engineer and official Boston Marathon entrant Suni Williams goes smoothly.

Capsule communicator (Capcom): Station, this is Mission Control. Are you ready for the event?

Station: We are ready for the event.

Capcom: Boston Globe, this is Mission Control Houston. Please call Station for a voice check.

Boston Globe: Station, this is the Boston Globe. How do you hear me?

Station: Hello. We have you loud and clear.

From the U.S. Destiny Laboratory aboard the International Space Station (ISS), Williams bobs gently beside Expedition 14 Commander Mike Lopez-Alegria, a microphone floating between them. Williams wears a Red Sox cap, which keeps her long, wavy, black hair from standing on end in all directions. She looks like a typical marathon runner, thin and compact. She sounds like one, too, talking excitedly about her training for the Marathon a week from today and her strategy for completing the race.

It goes without saying, Williams will run anything but the typical Marathon aboard the International Space Station. There will be no crowds jostling Williams at the start, just the five other crew members floating around and jokingly throwing elbows in microgravity. There will be no screaming Wellesley coeds creating a deafening corridor between Miles 12 and 13, just preselected movies and music played on nearby computers and possibly a Red Sox game. There will be no Heartbreak Hill, just the constant pain of the harness that tethers Williams to the space treadmill.

"Thank God, we can't [re-create Heartbreak Hill in space]," said Williams, who is familiar with the course from growing up in Needham, watching the Marathon from the 14-mile mark, and running the race previously. "I remember running that hill on the 100th running and that's a pretty vicious hill. But I have to say the treadmill itself isn't the easiest thing to run on. Not only are we running, but we're held down with a harness and it's a little bit heavy on your shoulders and your hips. So, it's going to be a little bit of a pain as it is. So, I think I'll do just as well [simulating the difficulty of the course] running on the treadmill."

Calling the 41-year-old Williams modest in detailing her attempt to run the first full marathon in space, Lopez-Alegria describes the space treadmill with a vibration isolation and stabilization system as "kind of a torture device." The harness -- a set of bungee-cord cables that function as part of a spring system -- shoots straight up from the treadmill and wraps around runners' hips and shoulders. By tightening or loosening the cable springs, Williams can adjust the amount of force exerted on her body. The goal is for Williams to approximate the effects of gravity with a pull equivalent to her body weight.

Further complicating matters, the treadmill floats inside a service module, preventing the pounding of running astronauts from causing vibrations that could damage the space station. Wires affixed at each corner of the treadmill hold the 800-pound machine in place while a gyroscope keeps it level as astronauts work out.

On Earth, Williams runs slightly better than an eight-minute-per-mile pace. Contending with the awkwardness and discomfort of the space treadmill, Williams completes a mile in 10 minutes, meaning it will take her almost 4 1/2 hours to complete the Marathon if all goes well. Starting her training in earnest after a series of space walks in mid-December, Williams has run as many as 15 miles at a time on the space treadmill.

"Because I came up here on a shuttle flight and it was really busy for about 10 days, I didn't get on the treadmill probably for about two weeks after I got up here," said Williams. "You start to lose some of your physical fitness right away just because you're living in microgravity. There's an issue with bone mass and muscle mass deteriorating rather rapidly because you're not using your legs. So getting on the treadmill was tough right from the beginning, but now I can run 10 miles [consistently], which is not that big of a deal.

"The first time I got on there, I couldn't even do a mile with my legs wobbling back and forth. You're not going to fall off the treadmill. If your legs move [back and forth off track], you just start floating. So, that's no big deal."

Williams laughs alongside Lopez-Alegria before answering most questions about her upcoming marathon and life in space, giving the impression that running 26.2 miles on a floating treadmill aboard the International Space Station is nothing extraordinary. She often utters the phrase "no big deal." While crew members are required to exercise for 2 1/2 hours a day, with at least four days a week on the treadmill to help maintain bone and muscle mass, it doesn't begin to compare with what Williams will experience during the Marathon.

Aside from the challenges presented by the space treadmill, Williams will run in a service module where the temperature hovers around 75 degrees, about 25 degrees warmer than ideal race conditions. While Williams is accustomed to training in the heat and humidity of Houston, where she qualified for Boston running a 3:29:57 marathon in January 2006, sweat does not evaporate normally in space.

"Water just sort of hangs on you until it makes a big enough glob that it floats away," said Williams. "So, it gets pretty sweaty up here when you're working out. That's sort of a pain. I anticipate that at some point during the run I'd like to change my clothes because I think they're going to be pretty wet."

To rehydrate, Williams will sip from water-filled packets suspended near the treadmill. The silver-colored packets with attached straws bear a resemblance to a child's juice box, just bigger, more durable, and round-shaped. As Williams discusses her plans for "water stops," Lopez-Alegria grabs a water packet floating nearby and squeezes out a drop from the straw. The drop floats in the air until Williams leans forward and swallows it.

"We'll be throwing wet sponges at her and trying to keep her occupied," said Lopez-Alegria.

Joking aside, the crew members recognize the difficult task ahead for Williams. During the Marathon, they will take breaks from their official duties to visit Williams, making sure she has the support she needs.

"Honestly, I think it's going to be pretty challenging for her to stay on that thing for such a long time," said Lopez-Alegria. "The crew member that we have assigned to [monitor Williams] is Suni. She's going to be watching herself. Seriously, we'll certainly be keeping an eye on her."

But one of the biggest concerns for Williams is finding time during a typically hectic day at the space station to run the Marathon. Even though crew members constantly adjust their sleep cycles depending on their duties, she hopes to run the race at roughly the same time as the actual Boston Marathon. The first wave of runners will start in Hopkinton at 10 a.m.

Williams's duties may keep her start time from coinciding with that of other Boston runners, including her sister, Dina Pandya. Williams qualified for Boston almost a year before she departed for space on Dec. 9, 2006, to take part in Expeditions 14 and 15 and did not want her qualification window to expire without competing in the race. Williams is serving a six-month stint on the space station, where her duties include walking in space, operating a robotic arm to move equipment outside the station, and conducting science experiments. She holds the women's record for hours spent space walking with 29 and counting.

"Up here, this is a working laboratory, a working spaceship," said Williams. "We've got a new crew coming in, the Expedition 15 guys. They'll be here just a couple days before the actual Marathon day. We're going to have a lot of turnover operations going on. So, hopefully, we'll actually get to do it, at least close enough to the time that the actual Marathon is going on. That's one of the biggest concerns. I don't want to interrupt all that other stuff that's going on, that has to go on."

If the timing cannot be completely synchronized, Williams will have an opportunity to call her sister somewhere between Hopkinton and Boston. Pandya will be running with a cellphone. Normally, calls between Williams and her family are limited to brief windows during weekends. Pandya will be part of a "ground support" crew that includes runners from Delaware, Maryland, and Houston with ties to the space program, such as NASA astronaut Karen Nyberg and Naval Academy alum Ronnie Harris. There also will be a spectator support group between Miles 14 and 15 marking the transition between Expeditions 14 and 15.

"I hope we both finish the race," said Pandya, who plans to wear the official patches of Expedition 14 and 15 on her running top as well as a picture of Williams's beloved Jack Russell terrier, Gorby. "I feel like if she can make the effort up there, I can make the effort down here."

Back in space, Williams will wear bib No. 14,000 in honor of Expedition 14. Marathon officials electronically sent the bib number to NASA, which forwarded it to Williams. She also plans to don a pair of red socks for part of the race for her favorite team. With characteristic modesty and some space humor, Williams figures she will celebrate the completion of the Marathon with a good meal and some rest.

"I think I'm going to have a good lunch, some pasta we have up here, some lasagna and some ravioli," said Williams. "I think I might have two servings of that, a big glass of orange juice and put my legs up." Williams rocks backward and smiles, showing that her legs easily float upward whenever not running on the space treadmill.

Lopez-Alegria quickly adds: "I'm sure peanut butter and fluff will be on her menu."

The astronauts bob up and down even more, laughing at their remarks. Then, a voice from Mission Control comes over the audio line.

Houston ACR (Audio Control Room): Station, this is Houston ACR. That concludes the event.

Now, from Boston to the moon, the real big event takes place a week from today.