Diet News for December 18, 2006
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DIET CHOKE (Daily Record) THE diet book has become as integral a part of Christmas as Santa and this year publishers expect to sell almost £20million worth. Whether it's the low GI, the high whole grain, the drink yourself thin or the sleep yourself slim diet, there is an abundance of ways to shed the pounds. |
Diet's Impact On Cancer May Be Major for Some Patients (Washington Post) SAN ANTONIO, Dec. 16 -- The first experiment to show that low-fat diets could help prevent a return of breast cancer now reveals, after a follow-up, that the benefit is almost exclusively for women whose tumor growth was not driven by hormones. |
Low-Fat Diet Helps Prevent Breast Cancer Recurrence (HealthDay via Yahoo! News) MONDAY, Dec. 18 (HealthDay News) -- By reducing the amount of fat in their diet, postmenopausal women who've been treated for early-stage breast cancer may lower their risk for cancer recurrence, U.S. researchers say. |
Low-Fat Diet May Help Breast Cancer (CBS News) Updated results from what researchers call the first study to directly show that lifestyle changes can improve the outlook for people with cancer suggests a low-fat diet can help prevent breast cancer recurrence. |
Low-fat diet can help prevent breast cancer recurrence (Asbury Park Press) By reducing the amount of fat in their diet, postmenopausal women who've been treated for early-stage breast cancer may lower their risk for cancer recurrence, U.S. researchers say. The study of more than 2,400 women, ages 48 to 79, found that the rate of cancer recurrence after five years was 9.8 percent among women who ate a low-fat diet (about 33 grams of fat per day) and 12.4 percent among ... |
Reduced Levels of Fat in the Diet May Decrease the Risk of Breast Cancer Recurrence According to New Clinical Trial (National Cancer Institute) Postmenopausal women who reduce their consumption of dietary fat and have been treated for early-stage breast cancer may reduce their chances for breast cancer recurrence or a second breast cancer, according to results from the Women's Intervention Nutrition Study (WINS). WINS was the first large-scale randomized trial to show that a change in diet can improve breast cancer outcomes in women who ... |
Chemist, author, diet researcher Margaret Keys was 97 (Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune) Research chemist Margaret Keys, who helped her husband, Ancel, in his landmark studies of the diets of thousands of men around the world and who popularized the so-called Mediterranean diet, died at her home in Minneapolis on Dec. 3. Keys, co-author of three books with her husband, including the bestseller "Eat Well and Stay Well," was 97. "She was his chemist as well as wife and partner," said ... |
Report: Less Soda Recommended For A Healthy Diet (News 8 San Diego) Doctors said less soda in your diet may be a good way to cut down on unwanted calories. |
Low-Fat Diet Helps Prevent Breast Cancer Recurrence (KOLD News 13 Tuscon) MONDAY, Dec. 18 (HealthDay News) -- By reducing the amount of fat in their diet, postmenopausal women who've been treated for early-stage breast cancer may lower their risk for cancer... |
Miller Went On Vodka Diet For Factory Girl (ContactMusic) SIENNA MILLER adopted a vodka diet to help her achieve a size zero frame for her role in FACTORY GIRL. The CASANOVA beauty plays ANDY WARHOL muse EDI |
Take the '6 Degrees Challenge' - 'Energy Diet' Resolution Offers Ongoing Payoff of Reduced Energy Bills, Pollution, ... (PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance) As U.S. consumers vow to diet as part of their New Year's resolutions, the Alliance to Save Energy urges them to adopt an easier-to-keep "energy diet" resolution with an ongoing payoff, even if they "fall off the wagon." |
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