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Consumer Guide To Red Wine Resveratrol Dietary Supplements
Red wine resveratrol supplements are often mislabeled, provide confusing information or may not exhibit stable shelf life. Consumers should search for resveratrol supplements in airtight capsules. (PRWeb) November 2, 2006 -- Recent positive news reports about the health benefits of red wine molecules has led to an upsurge in interest in dietary supplements that provide resveratrol. Longevinex® is pleased to provide the following information to consumers regarding red wine supplements. .
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Chances are, those odds are on target: prediction markets have proven to be surprisingly accurate. Much more so, in fact, than polls. The oldest political prediction market has forecasted, on average, presidential vote shares within 1.5 percentage points of the actual outcome, besting traditional surveys by a full point. Overall, markets have outperformed polls in recent elections three-quarters of the time. So even though the major national surveys show Allen and opponent Jim Webb stuck in a statistical dead heat, the smart money is on Webb-and the WSX. The driving force behind the WSX-betting on election outcomes-is nothing new. Even though the first organized markets didn't materialize until after Abraham Lincoln took office, Americans have wagered on politics since Washington's day.
Meatless can be healthier
"At one time, I was into corn beef and pastrami sandwiches. You have to hit bottom before you really starting thinking about the foods you eat," said Jeff Nathan, chef/owner of Abigael's on Broadway, a 375-seat kosher restaurant in the heart of Manhattan's Times Square area. Author of "Jeff Nathan's Family Suppers: Bringing the Ones You Love to the Table," Nathan is the host of the long-running public television show, "New Jewish Cuisine," the only international kosher cooking series. "About four years ago when everyone was beginning to go on the health wagon, the words heard continually were cholesterol, trans fat and saturated fat. After listening for awhile, I began to think more about it. "I knew I'd never be a real vegetarian; moderation was the key word," he recalled thinking at the time.
Study: Fat Loss Might Stimulate Anti-Tumor Defense
(AP) WASHINGTON Fatty tissue may decrease the body's ability to kill off cancer, says a study that found making mice leaner -- through exercise or surgery -- seemed to help them fight skin tumors.Scientists have long known that people who are overweight are at increased risk of certain types of cancer. The question is why, and whether slimming down will lower that risk or do any good after a tumor forms.Rutgers University scientists took a closer look at that question using mice engineered to get skin cancer, and reported Monday that fat cells may secrete substances that short-circuit one of the body's main anti-tumor defenses.When cells become genetically damaged -- such as the DNA damage caused by the sun's ultraviolet rays -- they're supposed to self-destruct. It's a process called apoptosis that helps clear out bad cells before they can grow into tumors.The Rutgers' team put running wheels in the cages of some laboratory mice.
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