Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Soy reduces heart disease for women: Japanese study (TODAYonline)

Indonesian women buy tofu at a market in Jakarta in 2006. Older women who eat traditional Japanese soy-based foods on a regular basis face lower risks of heart disease, a doctor from Japan's National Cardiovascular Center who headed a government-sponsored study has said.

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[Source: Yahoo! News Search Results for heart disease]

Holidays could break your heart (The State)

WASHINGTON Those lords-a-leaping and ladies dancing may want to consider the downside of the holidays: Heart attack season has arrived. December and January are the deadliest months for heart disease, and many of the things that make the season merry are culprits: rich meals, more alcohol and extra stress. But what may make the Christmas coronary more deadly than the same-size heart attack ...

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[Source: Yahoo! News Search Results for heart disease]

Heart disease is deadliest in December and January (Akron Beacon Journal)

WASHINGTON: Those lords-a-leaping and ladies dancing may want to consider the downside of the holidays: Heart attack season has arrived.

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[Source: Yahoo! News Search Results for heart disease]

Holidays bring the heart attack season (AP via Yahoo! News)

Those lords-a-leaping and ladies dancing may want to consider the downside of the holidays: Heart attack season has arrived. December and January are the deadliest months for heart disease, and many of the things that make the season merry are culprits: Rich meals, more alcohol and all that extra stress.

Read More...

[Source: Yahoo! News Search Results for heart disease]

Diabetic medicine can cause heart disease (NZPA via Yahoo!Xtra News)

Diabetics are still being prescribed a drug called rosiglitazone, or Avandia, despite New Zealand's medicine regulator Medsafe knowing it increases the risk of heart disease and bone thinning.

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[Source: Yahoo! News Search Results for heart disease]

Soy reduces heart disease for women: Japanese study (AFP via Yahoo! News)

Older women who eat traditional Japanese soy-based foods on a regular basis face lower risks of heart disease, a doctor who headed a government-sponsored study said Monday.

Read More...

[Source: Yahoo! News Search Results for heart disease]

Holiday Heart Attacks (KWWL Iowa)

WASHINGTON - The holiday season brings not only revelry but also more heart attacks. December and January are the deadliest months for heart disease. And many of the characteristics of the season -- rich meals, more alcohol and extra stress -- are culprits.

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[Source: Yahoo! News Search Results for heart disease]