Posts Tagged ‘Blood’
How Accumulation of Toxic Effects of Skin
What is the main function of the liver?
The main function of the liver is to detoxify the blood when it comes to the colon, lymphatic system and lungs. After detoxification has been completed that provides oxygen and nutrients to the body. In the environment we live in today, our liver has difficulty keeping up with all the toxins we inhale and ingest. These toxins come from air pollution, cigarette smoke, pesticides, alcohol and processed foods. If you do not detoxify the liver a year, the liver becomes overloaded with toxins and not continue to function properly.
How Accumulation of Toxic Effects of Skin
When the liver toxins accumulate and can not function properly. All the toxins in the body begin to drive through the skin. Most people with acne have a hormonal imbalance. When the liver is not working properly all the hormones accumulate in the liver and this causes an overproduction of sebum (skin oil), which causes clogged pores and acne.
How to detoxify the liver
Before liver detoxification could try to add more fiber to your diet. More fiber helps trap excess hormones being injected into the bloodstream that produces less oil than it produces. That means less acne blemishes and that alone could help you get rid of acne. Read the rest of this entry »
The Relationship of Diabetes with Depression
Presence of diabetes in patients with depression and symptoms of depression more often than in the entire population. This association may be due to increased risk of depression in patients with diabetes, increased risk of diabetes in patients with depression, or both.
Several factors associated with depression symptoms, including obesity, healthy lifestyle (sedentary, high-calorie, etc.). And activation of the neuroendocrine system and inflammatory responses may cause insulin resistance and diabetes onset. Furthermore, the diagnosis of diabetes or suffer the burden of its complications can also cause depression.
One study conducted repeated measurements of fasting blood to assess whether depressive symptoms predict the occurrence of diabetes mellitus type 2 (dm2) and whether participants with T2DM are likely to present significant depressive symptoms and compared with the population without neither of the two at the beginning of the disease. Read the rest of this entry »
Five Stages of Kidney Disease in Diabetes
The deterioration that characterizes kidney disease in diabetic patients occurs in clusters and around them. The glomeruli are the filtering units of blood from the kidneys. At the beginning of the disease, the filtration efficiency decreases and important proteins are lost from the blood in the urine. Medical professionals judge the presence and extent of incipient renal disease by measuring the protein content of urine. Later in the course of the disease, the kidneys lose the ability to remove blood waste products, such as creatinine and urea. By determining these blood products is not known how much has advanced kidney disease.
Symptoms related to kidney failure usually occur only in the later stages of the disease, when kidney function has decreased to less than 10 to 25 percent of normal capacity. For many years before it reaches that point, kidney disease in diabetes is a silent process.
The five stages of the disease
Scientists have described five stages of evolution of renal failure in diabetics.
Stage I. Increases the flow of blood through the kidneys, and therefore, clusters. This is called hyperfiltration. The kidneys are larger than normal. Some people stay indefinitely in stage I, others go to Stage II after many years. Read the rest of this entry »