Researchers unveil the system of the brain that causes smoking addiction
August 7th, 2008Many take to smoking for making a style statement and getting in the loop of the so called cool people who smoke. Slowly they get addicted to it and no amount of pressure can help them kick the habit. How and why this addiction occurs has always been an intriguing question and worrisome for the smoker’s family members and for the ones who care.
However, researchers now have an answer to the question. A new research by the The University of Western Ontario has revealed how the addictive properties of the nicotine present in cigarette works.
“Nicotine interacts with a variety of neurochemical pathways within the brain to produce its rewarding and addictive effects,” explains Steven Laviolette, the lead researchers, Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology at the Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry. “However, during the early phase of tobacco exposure, many individuals find nicotine highly unpleasant and aversive, whereas others may Read the rest of this story >>
A research conducted by the Mayo Clinic endocrinologist James Levine, M.D., Ph.D., on environment-changing innovations has shown how 18 individuals lost a total of 156 pounds and 143 of body fat. The office goers had lost 8.8 pounds on average out of which 90 percent was fat. The triglycerides had reduced by 37 percent on average. Also, nine participants who had lost an average of 15.4 pounds wanted to lose more weight.
If you think men suffer from just a single type of ED, think again. As unbelievable as it may sound, young men are dangerously affected by a more serious ED-an eating disorder which they find even harder to discuss. Anorexia nervosa, a term associated with loss of appetite commonly called as anorexia is more frequent among teenage girls. The serious disorder however, is widely spreading among young men in search of a perfect body.

Researchers from the Group Health Center for Health Studies in Seattle discovered that pneumonia, a common and sometimes fatal complication of the flu could attack vaccinated seniors just as much as other elderly people who didn’t get vaccinated. They revealed that the ineffectiveness of the flu vaccine to prevent the flu could lead to the development of certain complications due to the flu including pneumonia.
If you aren’t hitched and have been single for a long time, this news may baffle you. A recent survey by Swedish researchers at the Karolinska Institute has revealed that middle aged unmarried individuals or those without a partner are twice as likely to develop dementia as compared to individuals in a relationship.The study suggested that divorcees who remained single had three times more risk of dementia. An even greater problem could lie ahead for young widows who stayed single as they are six times more likely to suffer from dementia.