Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Can diet beat depression?

Jan. 3, 2012 ? Research into diet and depression should follow the model of studies into diet and cardiovascular risk. So argue Almudena Sanchez-Villegas and Miguel A Mart?nez-Gonz?lez in an opinion piece, in BioMed Central?s open access journal BMC Medicine this week.

The authors, from the universities of Las Palmas and Navarra, assess the evidence into links between diet and depression and find it lacking. ?Depression is similar in many aspects to heart disease? they explained. ?Both are associated with low-grade inflammation, endothelial dysfunction and worse lipid profiles. This tends to suggest that the underlying causes, such as a diet high in trans fats, are also the same.?

Though there is plenty of evidence that there is an association, and that fast food increases risk of depression (while the Mediterranean diet decreases it), most of these studies do not show causality. Almudena Sanchez-Villegas continued, ?It is difficult to be sure that the diet is responsible for depression ? it could be that depressed people make bad food choices. Other study problems include ?confounders? which may influence dietary habits, such as marital status, exercise, alcohol (or smoking), medical conditions and social networks. Or simply genetics.?

Miguel A Mart?nez-Gonz?lez concluded, ?To address these issues we need long term, randomised clinical studies similar to ones successfully conducted for diet and cardiovascular disease risk. Only then will we really understand the impact of diet of depression.?

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by BioMed Central Limited.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Almudena Sanchez-Villegas and Miguel A Mart?nez-Gonz?lez. Diet, a new target to prevent depression? BMC Medicine, 2013 [link]

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/mind_brain/depression/~3/exPKqfIN6NE/130102205517.htm

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?Teen Mom 2? Star Jenelle Evans & Courtland Rogers Divorcing Already?

“Teen Mom 2″ Star Jenelle Evans & Courtland Rogers Divorcing Already?

Courtland Rogers and Jenelle Evans pics“Teen Mom 2″ personality Jenelle Evans split from her new husband Courtland Rogers after just 26 days of marriage. But why you may ask? Baby mama drama! The couple just married on December 4, 2012 after a two-week engagement, but jealous Jenelle became enraged that Courtland was chatting with the mother of his young daughter ...

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Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/01/teen-mom-2-star-jenelle-evans-courtland-rogers-divorcing-already/

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Review: Timeless Strauss greets new year

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A little bit of Strauss lit up Salle Wilfrid Pelletier on New Year's Day.

Photograph by: Dave Sidaway , The Gazette

MONTREAL ? If most big cities in Canada feel a little like Vienna on New Year?s Day, some credit is owing to the Salute to Vienna organization, which has been promoting reasonable facsimiles of the Neujahrskonzert for the better part of two decades.

The Montreal edition proved characteristically easy to like on Tuesday in Salle Wilfrid Pelletier of Place des Arts.

Our conductor was Matthias Fletzberger, a Viennese who once tried a crossover career, to judge by web images of him seated at a white piano adorned with rose petals. He was in formal tails for this occasion, leading a pickup Strauss Orchestra that sounded both relaxed and rehearsed. String sounds were warm and balances refined. The output was a testament to the musical infrastructure in Montreal and Quebec City (where the concert is repeated on Wednesday) and to the fact that performers love to play this music almost as much as people love to hear it.

All the instrumental numbers were by a Strauss, either Johann Jr. or Josef (Johann Sr. provided the encore). Nevertheless, the selection was relatively original, with a surprising dearth of A-list waltzes, unless we can place the Acceleration in that category.

Our master of ceremonies in both official languages, Fletzberger showed a knack for sustaining soft interludes in the Overtures to The Gypsy Baron and A Night in Venice. Not to worry: polkas nipped along smartly. Extra points to the percussionists for their colourful work in Josef Strauss?s Feuerfest.

We had the standard condiments of a vocal duet and ballet troupe, the latter from the Kiev-Aniko Ballet of Ukraine. Tenor Thomas Sigwald, if not the steadiest singer in the world, approached his numbers in an appealingly open style. Lyne Fortin was in wonderfully lustrous voice and armed as usual with a natural sense of line and rhythm. This is my candidate for Canada?s most unjustly neglected soprano. No points to the conductor for getting her name wrong.

The Radetzky March was the encore. I had a feeling that the persistent applause at the end was an appeal for the Blue Danube and the attendant rituals. When did these go out of style?

akaptainis@sympatico.ca

? Copyright (c) The Montreal Gazette

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Source: http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/music/Classical+music+review+Strauss+concert+greets+year/7762989/story.html

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CNBC's Fast Money: Stocks, Investing, Market Analysis - CNBC

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Afghan negotiator welcomes prisoner release

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) ? A top Afghan negotiator said Tuesday he hopes eight Taliban members freed by Pakistan will serve as peace mediators, describing Islamabad's move as a major step forward for Kabul's effort to enlist its neighbor's help in negotiating an end to its 11-year war.

The eight released Monday include the Taliban's justice minister when the militants ruled Afghanistan before their 2001 overthrow, as well as a onetime guard of Taliban leader Mullah Omar. It was the second group of prisoners released by Pakistan.

Although both sides describe the deal as a step toward peace, much about the release remains unclear. Kabul has lobbied hard for Pakistan to release some Taliban prisoners as a step toward talks, but simultaneously presses Islamabad to crack down on militants using its territory. It has not said what, if anything, this particular group might bring to the table.

Islamabad for its part has never said why it arrested the eight in the first place. Neither side has said where this batch of freed prisoners and a previous group of 18 released in November have gone, nor what they will be doing. Another 100 prisoners are believed to remain in Pakistani custody.

In Kabul, the spokesman for President Hamid Karzai said the Afghan leader would discuss the peace negotiations with U.S. President Barack Obama. Karzai departs for Washington early next week.

Karzai will also bring up the ongoing handover of security from NATO to Afghan forces, training and equipment the forces and the shape of a U.S.-Afghan agreement after Washington withdraws most of its troops, spokesman Aimal Faizi told a news conference. NATO plans to hand security responsibility over to Afghan forces by the end of 2014.

The spokesman welcomed the prisoner release, but gave no details.

Ismail Qasemyar, a senior member of the Afghan High Peace Council, called their freeing a positive step in the peace process and hoped more releases would follow. It was not known whether the eight actually favored negotiations, but Qasemyar said it was hoped they would act as intermediaries between the Taliban leadership and the Kabul government.

"This is a big victory from our trip to Pakistan for peace negotiations. This is a good, practical step toward peace from Pakistan," said Qasemyar, the council's international affairs adviser and a key member of a delegation that travelled to Pakistan in November.

Pakistan is seen as key in ending the conflict. Kabul hopes the Taliban can be brought to the negotiating table before the 2014 foreign troop withdrawal.

But Pakistan's role is mixed. While Pakistan has arrested Afghan Taliban members, usually under pressure from Washington, its powerful military intelligence service has also afforded sanctuary and support for the militants.

Recently, Pakistan appears to have an interest in promoting a negotiated solution to the war across the border, as a post-2014 upheaval could bring harsh consequences, including another surge of refugees into the country.

Pakistan has longstanding ties to the Taliban, in part for geopolitical reasons. It fears that not having some control of who is or might one day be in power in Afghanistan could leave a vacuum which its arch-enemy, India, could fill.

Pakistan's Foreign Ministry said the eight detainees were released to aid the peace process and included ex-Justice Minister Nooruddin Turabi and guard Mohammad Azeem. It was not known what role they might play in bringing the Taliban leaders to the negotiating table, what links they have to the group's current leadership or their stance on negotiations.

During Taliban rule, the one-legged, one-eyed Turabi was considered among the hard-liners in the regime, charged with dispensing harsh justice for even minor offenses against the group's draconian policies.

Today, Taliban leaders are believed to be split on the question of talks, with some favoring negotiations and others opting for continuing the war.

Waheed Mazhda, a political analyst and former Taliban member, said that Pakistan is playing a double game with Kabul, pretending to support negotiations but releasing the Taliban prisoners to please the Pakistan's branch of the Taliban. not Kabul. The Pakistan government, he says, does not want its homegrown militants to disrupt upcoming elections.

"Where are they? What are they doing right now?" he said, referring to the 18 already released. He said that he did not believe those released favored negotiations.

The Afghan peace process has made little headway since it began several years ago, riddled by mistrust among the major players, including the United States.

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Associated Press writers Kathy Gannon, Rebecca Santana and Zarar Khan in Islamabad and Rahim Faiez in Kabul contributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/afghan-negotiator-welcomes-prisoner-release-075025035.html

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