Ann M. Coulston and Carol J. Boushey See book keywords and concepts | Saad, M. F., charles, M. A., Nelson, R. G., Howard, B. V., Bogardus, C, and Bennett, P. H. (1991). Obesity in the Pima Indians: Its magnitude and relationship with diabetes. Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 53, 1543S-1551S.
20. charles, M. A., Fontbonne, A., Thibult, N., Warnet, J. M., Rosselin, G. E., and Eschwege, E. (1991). Risk factors for NIDDM in white population. Paris prospective study. Diabetes 40, 796-799.
21. Cassano, P. A., Rosner, B., Vokonas, P. S., and Weiss, S. T. (1992). Obesity and body fat distribution in relation to the incidence of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. | Melody Petersen See book keywords and concepts | Since its founding in 1849 by charles Pfizer and his cousin charles Erhart, the drug company had shown a knack for getting people to take more medicine. The cousins had their first breakthrough when they took a bitter treatment for parasitic worms, blended it with a sugar-cream confection and shaped it into a candy cone.
From those early days on, Pfizer proved willing to break the norm. Soon after the antibiotic Terramycin was approved in 1950, Pfizer's chemists tried mixing it with chocolate syrup to make it tastier; they gave up when the bottles started to explode. | Dawson Church See book keywords and concepts | King charles II laying on hands
The woman who touched the hem of his garment evidently believed in direct transmission of healing grace, and apparently the Master did too, because he felt it flow from him. England's King Edward the Confessor touched many subjects who reported healing, and charles II is reported to have bestowed the king's touch on around 4,000 people each year.
It is likely that prayer, intention, and belief strengthen the effect of these Energy Psychology techniques. | Melody Petersen See book keywords and concepts | Since its founding in 1849 by charles Pfizer and his cousin charles Erhart, the drug company had shown a knack for getting people to take more medicine. The cousins had their first breakthrough when they took a bitter treatment for parasitic worms, blended it with a sugar-cream confection and shaped it into a candy cone.
From those early days on, Pfizer proved willing to break the norm. Soon after the antibiotic Terramycin was approved in 1950, Pfizer's chemists tried mixing it with chocolate syrup to make it tastier; they gave up when the bottles started to explode. | John J. Ratey, MD See book keywords and concepts | I think you described me," he said, and launched into a highly intellectual rendition of his own history. charles, I'll call him, was the classic absentminded professor, wearing glasses and unkempt tweed, and he knew a lot more about psychiatry than I did at that point—I'd read several of his books!
The twist to Charles's story is that he had been a marathon runner who had blown out his knee and become depressed when he was forced to set aside his passion. That's also when he noticed the symptoms of what we would agree was ADHD. | Joan Liebmann-Smith, Ph. D., and Jacqueline Nardi Egan See book keywords and concepts | You're most likely experiencing the classic signs of charles Bonnet syndrome. In this condition, mentally healthy people see phantom visions, a form of visual hallucinations. Some have reported seeing such pleasant visions as groups of children, animals, vivid visual patterns, or even
SIGN OF THE TIMES
Charles Bonnet syndrome was named for the 18th-century Swiss naturalist who was the first person to describe this condition. His nearly blind 87-year-old grandfather had been seeing people, birds, carriages, buildings, and patterns that weren't there. | Charles Barber See book keywords and concepts | Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Barber, charles, [date] Comfortably numb : how psychiatry is medicating a nation / charles Barber. p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-375-42399-4 1. Mental illness—Chemotherapy—United States—History. 2. Psychotropic drugs— Marketing—United States—History. 3. Psychotropic drugs industry—Moral and ethical aspects—United States. 4. Biological psychiatry—United States—History. 5. Psychiatry—United States—History. 6. Deceptive advertising—United States. [DNLM: 1. Mental Disorders—drug therapy—United States. 2. | Dr. Edward F. Group III, DC, ND, DACBN See book keywords and concepts | | Charles School of Massage Therapy
St. charles, MO
Sarasota School of Massage Therapy
Sarasota, FL j
Solex Medical Academy
Wheeling, IL
Springfield Technical Community College
Springfield, MA
Massage Therapy Sc hools (contd.)
Synergy Healing Arts Center & Massage School
Virginia School of Massage
Blue Ridge Summit, PA Charlottesville, VA
Naturopathic
Schools
Note—Information provided by NaturopathicSchools.com Available at www.naturopathicschools. | Thomson Healthcare, Inc. See book keywords and concepts | Charles V, charles SX. The use and efficacy of Azadirachta indica ADR ("Neem") and Curcuma longa ("Turmeric") in scabies. A pilot study. In: Trop Geogr Med, 30:178-81, 1992.
Dhar ML. et al Indian J Exp Biol 6:232, 1968.
Donatus IA, SardJoko, Vermeulen NP. Cytotoxic and cytoprotective activities of curcumin. Effects on paracetamol-induced cytotoxicity lipid peroxidation and glutathione depletion in rat hepatocytes. In: Biochem Pharmacol, 39:1869-75, 1990.
Ferreira LA, Henriques OB, Andreoni AA, Vital GR, Campos MM, Habermehl GG, de Moraes VL. | Sophie D. Coe and Michael D. Coe See book keywords and concepts | As the historian Richard Dunn reminds us,72 this was exactly the period that the two great political parties were forming: the Tories, who were "divine right" royalists, and the Whigs, who were generally anti-Stuart. charles II greatly admired Louis XIV's absolutism (and secretly took a subsidy from the Sun King), but Whitehall was not Versailles—as he found out when he promulgated his "Proclamation for the Suppression of Coffee Houses" on 29 December 1675, which he described as places of licence and seditious libel (probably because they were frequented by Whigs). | | We asked our friend charles Perry, an authority on the cuisines of the Near East and Central Asia, why chocolate has never really been accepted in that part of the world. He writes us:
I've often been puzzled about why this should be. The bittersweetness of chocolate confections ought to appeal in a part of the world where nut-filled pastties are popular. | | But this was relatively democratic England, not absolutist France, and Charles's futile decree was soon forgotten.
Those coffee-house customers who were less than affluent had to think of their purses: chocolate was dearer than coffee, but tea was the most expensive of all. Coffee provided the most stimulation for the least outlay, which is probably why these were "coffeehouses" rather than "chocolate-houses."
England's chocolate-lovers of the late 17th century had access to some very detailed, English-language treatises on their favorite beverage. | Erich Grotewold See book keywords and concepts | In 1960, the natural ectopic expression of phlobaphenes allowed charles Burnham to identify a spontaneous dominant modifier of maize, which later became known as Unstable factor for orangel (Ufol) (Chopra et al, 2003). Ufol modifies the organ-specific expression of the Pl-wr allele and an enhanced pigmentation state of the tissue is correlated with decrease in DNA methylation of the Pl-wr sequence (Figure 6.2). The nature of the Ufol mutation is not known but it has now been mapped to maize chromosome 10S (Chopra et al, 2003). | Charles Barber See book keywords and concepts | The first Percy to arrive in America, charles, tied a sugar kettle to his neck, strolled into a Mississippi creek at the end of January, and drowned himself in 1794. Walker's paternal grandfather committed suicide with a twelve-gauge shotgun in 1917. His father, a brilliant and successful lawyer who suffered from deep depression and insomnia, did the same twelve years later with a twenty-gauge. Two years after his father's suicide, Percy's mother drowned when her car ran off a bridge not far from their home. It may have been intentional. | | In The Voyage of the Beagle, charles Darwin wrote of Aplysia: "This sea-slug is about five inches long; and is of a dirty-yellowish color, veined with purple ... It feeds on the delicate seaweeds . . . This slug, when disturbed, emits a very fine purplish-red fluid, which stains the water for the space of a foot around."
Aplysia have a soft body and no outer shell and are sometimes called sea hares because of their resemblance to rabbits; Aplysia californica, so named because they are found off the coast of California, grow to about a foot long. | Sophie D. Coe and Michael D. Coe See book keywords and concepts | When he ptepated chocolate for charles II, he doubled the usual quantity of cacao kernel in relation to the others. However,
Stubbes recommended that "cold" constitutions should add allspice, cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves to the concoction (the Spanish authorities had already deemed these to be "hot"). He is also aware of those aromatic Tuscan embellishments—musk, ambergris, citron, and lemon peel. Stubbes suggests adding sack (sherry) to chocolate made with milk and eggs, one spoonful to a dish (the English of the day often drank their coffee and chocolate from dishes rather than cups). | | The occasion was the birthday of Elisabetta Ctistina of Austria, wife of charles VI Habsburg, Holy Roman Emperor (this was a union which produced no son and heir, thus leading to decades of armed conflict in Europe over the succession). At the corners of the table were four Japanese porcelain
Table of ices, credted for a festival in Rome on 28 August 1714shells filled with "iced fruits" (these were made of fruit conserves mixed with perfumed water, put in fruit-shaped molds, and frozen with snow and salt; when taken from the molds, stems and leaves were added). | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | Senate Finance Committee Chairman charles Grassley, R-Iowa, recently criticized the Food and Drug Administration for failing to adequately monitor the safety of drugs after they are approved for the market, saying:
"We get press releases listing accomplishments rather than a meaningful revamping of the way things work inside the FDA. My staff investigators continue to hear from FDA employees who believe in their agency and ... want to do the right things, but experience intimidation, suppression and reassignments when they raise concerns about the integrity of the FDA's work. | Steven V. Joyal See book keywords and concepts | Senate, 1936, "Modern Muscle Men," Proper Food Mineral Balances, charles Northen, 74th Cong, 2d sess. Serial set 10016.
Vlassara H et al. Inflammatory mediators are induced by dietary glycotoxins, a major risk factor for diabetic angiopathy. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2002 Nov 26; 99(24): 15596-601.
Williams CM. Beneficial nutritional properties of olive oil: Implications for postprandial lipoproteins and factor VII. Nutr Metab Cardiovasc Dis 2001 Aug; 11 Suppl 4:51-56.
CHAPTER 6
Jiang R et al. Nut and peanut butter consumption and risk of type 2 diabetes in women. | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | The amendments that need your support are the Grassley Amendments, proposed by Sen. charles Grassley, a long-time critic of the FDA and a lawmaker who wants to demand new accountability from the FDA over drug safety. There are eleven amendments proposed by Sen. Grassley, and the health freedom community is calling for your support in helping us get those amendments included in the bill.
ACTION ITEM: If you are an American citizens, please call your Senator's office right now and tell them you support the "Grassley Amendments" to S. | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | One of the most comprehensive sources of EDT information is "Muscle Logic : Escalating Density Training" by charles Staley, available in bookstores and at Amazon.com. It gives you a solid introduction to escalating density training, simple rules for following EDT, and then provides photos depicting exactly what to do.
To explain where this comes from and how it works, I first have to give you a brief history of Power Factor Training. Peter Sisco and John Little, who wrote the book of the same title, developed power factor training. | Luca Turin See book keywords and concepts | Interestingly, the author turned out to be charles Jennings, founding editor of Nature Neuroscience, who at the time of my submission to Nature in 1995 was junior editor in charge of accepting or rejecting neuroscience manuscripts. The effect of this editorial was perhaps not what Nature and charles Jennings had intended. I began to get e-mails from graduate students and postdocs all over the world who, having read it, immediately suspected something was amiss and went to the primary literature to check what was going on, and came out interested. | John J. Ratey, MD See book keywords and concepts | Research from kinesiolo-gists to epidemiologists shows again and again that the better your fitness level, the better your brain works. charles Hillman proved that fit children score better than unfit children on cognitive tests of executive function; Arthur Kramer showed that getting in shape increases brain volume of older adults; and population studies including tens of thousands of people of every age show that higher fitness levels relate directly to positive mood and lower levels of anxiety and stress. | | FOCUS ON EXERCISE
Around the time charles came in, I began to see a number of other intelligent, high-functioning professionals who had ADHD and were able to compensate for it. They didn't fit the stereotype in the literature. Nobody had ever talked about successful adults with attention disorders until Ned and I included their case studies in Driven to Distraction. Several of these patients had discovered on their own that they could use exercise as a way of self-medicating to allow them to be more productive. | | As he closed in on his old fitness level, he became convinced that the ADHD medication was holding back his performance. charles knew his mile times down to the second, and he was ten seconds slower than he used to be.
He decided to try a few days without the ADHD medication, and he found that as long as he was training, he could focus. Looking back on it, we recognized that his attention hadn't hampered him before because he'd always been a serious runner. Without a steady diet of exercise during his injury, he'd been unable to control his attention the way he needed to. | | The twist to Charles's story is that he had been a marathon runner who had blown out his knee and become depressed when he was forced to set aside his passion. That's also when he noticed the symptoms of what we would agree was ADHD. He explained that he would have a tantrum if hi s girlfriend interrupted his writing, or yank the phone out of the wall if it rang while he was trying to concentrate. He was slipping out of touch with his friends. He fit the profile, and we decided to put him on ADHD medication, which helped. | | GOOD FOR THE BODY, GOOD FOR THE BRAIN
About 135 miles south of Naperville, at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, a psychophysiologist named charles Hillman conducted his own version of the CDE study with a group of 216 third and fifth graders and found the same correlation between fitness and academics. He and his coauthor, Darla Castelli, noticed something interesting. Of the six areas that the FitnessGram measures, two seem to be particularly important in relation to academic performance. | Joan Liebmann-Smith, Ph. D., and Jacqueline Nardi Egan See book keywords and concepts | It's believed that persistent and intractable hiccups are caused by runaway electrical impulses in the vagus nerve, which runs from the brain stem to the abdomen and controls heart rate,
SIGN OF THE TIMES
The record for the longest lasting fit of hiccups goes to charles Osborne of Iowa, who died in 1990 at the age of 96. His hiccups started after he slaughtered a hog, according to the Guinness Book of World Records, and they continued for 69 years.
. 1 stomach acid production, intestines, and throat muscles, among other key functions. | | Others, however, find them embarrassing and frightening,
SIGN OF THE TIMES fearing they may be losing their mind. But charles Bonnet syndrome sufferers—unlike many psychotic individuals—are aware their visions are not real. And their visions are never accompanied by auditory hallucinations, a common sign of psychosis.
Rather than losing their mind, people with phantom visions are likely to be losing their eyesight. |
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