Topic: Luc Djousse
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Commuting to work on your own two feet, or while spinning two wheels, could help stave off heart failure, suggests a new Finnish study.And if your job keeps you active during the day too, even better.Not ...
Several abstracts on health promotion are presented, including " Modifiable Factors Associated With Survival and Function to Age 90 Years," by Laurel B. Yates, Luc Djousse, Tobias Kurth, Julie E. Buring, and Michael Gaziano, "Effect of a Nutrition Intervention During Early Childhood on ...
The article looks at the health benefits of eating a whole-grain breakfast. According to Doctor Luc Djousse, a whole-grain, high-fiber breakfast may lower blood pressure and bad cholesterol and prevent heart attacks. The observational Physicians' Health Study found that physicians who ate ...
A healthy lifestyle is associated with a significantly reduced risk of hypertension in younger women and of heart failure in older men, according to two studies in the July 22/29 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.. In one ...
All that heart-healthy advice about eating the right foods, exercising and losing weight pay off in real life for both men and women, two new studies show.. Simultaneous appearance of the two reports was more or less a coincidence, said Dr. Luc ...
Light to moderate alcohol intake was associated with a lower risk of heart failure in men with hypertension, according to research published in the September issue of the American Journal of Cardiology.. Luc Djousse, M.D., and J. Michael Gaziano, M.D ...
4/10/2008 Print E-mail A new study suggests that consuming more than six eggs a week seems to raise the risk of dying from all causes.. "The more eggs diabetic men consumed, the more they increased their risk for death," said ...
Last updated at 01:22am on . However, Dr Luc Djousse and Dr J Michael Gaziano of Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School have analysed a major 20-year study of 21,327 male doctors and believe there is a cut-off ...
10/22/2007 Print E-mail Diets rich in whole grains, fruits, vegetables and even a little alcohol may help ward off heart woes, new studies show.. That effect is due, in part, to the high levels of magnesium, potassium and fiber in ...