Showing posts with label Alzheimer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alzheimer. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 3, 2017

4 Supplements to Question After Age 50


Calcium, iron, and more may not be so good for you. What you should know.

Consumer Reports / December 16, 2016 / Lauren Cooper

Vitamins and minerals are marketed to keep you healthy. But some may carry more risks than benefits, especially as we age.

Supplements are most useful when they’re used to replace dietary deficiencies,” says Marvin M. Lipman, M.D., Consumer Reports’ chief medical adviser. “Therefore, most of us don’t need them. Such needless use can be harmful, especially if you also take prescription medications.”

In addition, the evidence supporting supplements is often flimsy or mixed, and because of lax regulation, you can’t always be sure what they contain. The following four supplements may be especially harmful to your health if you’re over 50.

Folic Acid Supplements
Research has suggested, but not proved, that folic acid (vitamin B9) may help ward off Alzheimer’s disease, depression, and heart disease.

Still, a recent study published by the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition links excess folate (including folic acid) to burning, tingling, or numbness in the extremities of people with a common gene variant.

“The odds were sevenfold higher for those who consumed more than 800 mcg daily,” says co-author Ligi Paul, Ph.D., of the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University.

In addition, taking as little as 300 mcg daily may mask a B12 deficiency, which is relatively common in older adults, says Orly Avitzur, M.D., Consumer Reports’ medical director. “Undiagnosed, that can lead to nerve damage, cognitive trouble, and even psychiatric problems,” she says.
Folic acid can also reduce the effectiveness of the seizure drug fosphenytoin (Cerebyx and generic) and the cancer drug methotrexate (Rheumatrex and generic).

Who might need it? Women who are pregnant or planning to get pregnant, to prevent birth defects.

Calcium Supplements
You might take calcium supplements to strengthen your bones, which can weaken with age. But regular use may increase the risk of kidney stones and possibly heart disease.

A study in the Journal of the American Heart Association in October found that people who took calcium supplements over a 10-year period were more likely to accumulate the artery plaque that can lead to heart attacks.

Supplemental calcium can also negatively interact with some heart and thyroid medications.

Who might need it? People who eat little or no calcium-rich food, such as dairy products and leafy vegetables.

Iron Supplements
Anemia­, or low blood levels of iron­­, is more common with age. But taking too much iron can mask symptoms of anemia, which can be caused by internal bleeding, and lead to a missed diagnosis.

Iron supplements can also inhibit the absorption of certain antibiotics and blood pressure-lowering drugs such as captopril (Capoten and generic).

And if you have hemochromatosis, a common genetic condition, iron pills can lead to an overload of the nutrient in vital organs, potentially causing diabetes symptoms, heart problems, and liver damage.

Who might need it? People with diagnosed iron-deficiency anemia.

Vitamin E Supplements
These supplements are said by some to help prevent cancer, dementia, and heart disease, but there’s little proof—and plenty of reason to avoid them.

Research has linked regular use to a 13 percent higher risk of heart failure in certain populations. A study published in JAMA in 2011 also found that taking 400 IU daily may boost the likelihood of prostate cancer by 17 percent. Vitamin E supplements may also make some chemotherapy drugs
less effective.
Who might need it? Our experts don’t recommend it for anyone.

3 Supplements to Consider
Vitamin D—It might make sense if you’ve been diagnosed with osteoporosis, get little sunlight, or rarely consume D-rich foods such as fatty fish, eggs, and fortified milk.

AREDS2 (a blend of vitamins C and E, copper, lutein, zeaxanthin, and zinc)—It might make sense if you have age-related macular degeneration, a leading cause of vision loss.

Vitamin B12—It might make sense if you’re a strict vegan, or if you regularly take certain kinds of heartburn drugs or metformin, a diabetes medication.

Friday, April 5, 2013

Best Buy Drugs Digital Health Finds

Consumer Reports Best Buy Drugs is now on Twitter and Facebook. PLEASE follow, like, and share! 


INFOGRAPHIC: How are hospitals using social media? [Mediabistro]
One survey has found that 90 percent of hospitals in the Ohio area of the U.S. are using social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook. And they’re investing in these channels, too. Almost half (49 percent) are devoting more staff and time to social media, and more than one-third (36 percent) are spending more money on these tools. Community relationships, sharing news and building reputation are the top priorities for hospitals on social media, and 80 percent have initiated social media campaigns to raise general health awareness.

Balance app: Alzheimer’s care goes digital [Science 2.0]
He says the goal was simple enough, he wanted to create a way to help multiple caregivers communicate and coordinate with each other in real-time and also include family in the information chain. And it certainly does; the entire process can quickly be integrated with everyone in the Alzheimer's patient network. Since debuting a few weeks ago, they say it has been downloaded all over the world, showing that Alzheimer's care solutions are a global need.

Is the era of patient centered care decidedly anti-physician? [KevinMD]
We’ve entered into the era of patient-centered care—an era that champions patient safety, provider communication, avoidance of “medical mistakes.” But this era is also decidedly anti-physician and assumes that we as providers are somehow purposefully unsafe. Look no further than Obamacare’s soon to be established registry of medical mistakes, which asks patients the loaded question: Did a medical mistake happen because a doctor, nurse or other health care provider did not communicate well with the patient or the patient’s family?

Social media use isn’t healthy enough, study finds [Wall Street Journal]
That’s the finding of a new paper based on telephone surveys of 1,745 adults who go online for health information. Nearly a third of those used social networking sites for health-related information, but only 15% posted a comment, question or information to a social networking site (a category that, in the study, included blogs and online discussion forums).

INFOGRAPHIC: Patients are self-diagnosing online [InsuranceQuotes.org]
A few highlights:

59% of internet users say they’ve looked up health information online in the past year

A full 38% decided they could take care of the problem on their own, without consulting a doctor after researching on the Internet.

18% of those who did go to the doctor were told their self-diagnosis was incorrect. This means some of those who didn’t visit a doctor were also probably incorrect.

Women are more likely than men to go online to figure out a possible diagnosis.

Online diagnosers are going mobile, too. 1 in 3 cell phone owners have used their cell phone to look up health information.

Doctors prescribing phone apps to manage health problems [The Columbus Dispatch]
Doctors are beginning to prescribe smart-phone applications and medical devices they work with to help patients manage chronic illnesses, including heart disease, diabetes and asthma. Simple apps that help people with their fitness or remind them to take their pill prescriptions already are widely popular. But new device applications are taking mobile health — or mHealth as practitioners are calling it — to a new level.

WebMD introduces allergy app [Smart Phone Healthcare]
The app features:

Allergy Forecast: Allergy levels specific for your location that are regularly updated. You can also look up the “allergy forecast” for places you are visiting.

Personalized Forecasts and Tips: After indicating which allergies you and/or your family suffer from, the app will give you tips on how to manage those allergies.

Allergies 101: This includes WebMD’s library of allergy related resources — articles, photos, and videos. It focuses on seven categories: Outdoor, indoor, skin, drug, food, insect bites and stinks, and latex.

Timely Alerts: This helps you plan your days, and know if certain triggers will be worse, according to the allergy forecast.

The tweet of the week:

@MOMeo: Failure is simply the opportunity to begin again, this time more intelligently - Henry Ford