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California Proposed Initiative Enters Circulation: Authorizes Bonds to Continue Funding Stem Cell and Other Medical Research – Sierra Sun Times

Posted: December 19, 2019 at 7:50 pm

December 19, 2019 - SACRAMENTO, CA- Secretary of State Alex Padilla announced that the proponent of a new initiative was cleared to begin collecting petition signatures.

The Attorney General prepares the legal title and summary that is required to appear on initiative petitions. When the official language is complete, the Attorney General forwards it to the proponent and to the Secretary of State, and the initiative may be circulated for signatures. The Secretary of State then provides calendar deadlines to the proponent and to county elections officials. The Attorney Generals official title and summary for the measure is as follows:

AUTHORIZES BONDS TO CONTINUE FUNDING STEM CELL AND OTHER MEDICAL RESEARCH. INITIATIVE STATUTE.Authorizes $5.5 billion in state general obligation bonds to fund grants from the California Institute of Regenerative Medicine to educational, non-profit, and private entities for: (1) stem cell and other medical research, therapy development, and therapy delivery; (2) medical training; and (3) construction of research facilities. Dedicates $1.5 billion to fund research and therapy for Alzheimers, Parkinsons, stroke, epilepsy, and other brain and central nervous system diseases and conditions. Limits bond issuance to $540 million annually. Appropriates money from General Fund to repay bond debt, but postpones repayment for first five years. Summary of estimate by Legislative Analyst and Director of Finance of fiscal impact on state and local governments:State costs of $7.8 billion to pay off principal ($5.5 billion) and interest ($2.3 billion) on the bonds. Associated average annual debt payments of about $310 million for 25 years. The costs could be higher or lower than these estimates depending on factors such as the interest rate and the period of time over which the bonds are repaid. The state General Fund would pay most of the costs, with a relatively small amount of interest repaid by bond proceeds.(19-0022A1.)

The Secretary of States tracking number for this measure is 1880 and the Attorney General's tracking number is 19-0022.

The proponent of the measure, Robert N. Klein, must collect signatures of 623,212 registered voters (five percent of the total votes cast for Governor in the November 2018 general election) in order to qualify it for the ballot. The proponent has 180 days to circulate petitions for the measure, meaning the signatures must be submitted to county elections officials no later than June 15, 2020*. The proponent can be reached c/o James C. Harrison of Remcho, Johansen & Purcell, LLP at (510) 346-6203. The address for Remcho, Johansen & Purcell, LLP is 1901 Harrison Street, Suite 1550, Oakland, CA 94612.

*Date adjusted for official deadline, which falls on a Sunday (Elec. Code 15)Source: CA. SOS

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Efficacy and Safety of Umbilical Cord Mesenchymal Stem Cell Therapy fo | DDDT – Dove Medical Press

Posted: December 19, 2019 at 7:50 pm

Liming Wang,1,* Shigao Huang,2,* Shimei Li,1 Ming Li,1 Jun Shi,1 Wen Bai,1 Qianyun Wang,1 Libo Zheng,3 Yongjun Liu3

1Cell Therapy Center, 986 Hospital of Peoples Liberation Army Air Force, Xian, Shaanxi, Peoples Republic of China; 2Cancer Center, Institute of Translational Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Macau, Taipa, Macao SAR, Peoples Republic of China; 3Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine Institution, Yi-Chuang Institute of Bio-Industry, Beijing, Peoples Republic of China

*These authors contributed equally to this work

Correspondence: Shigao HuangCancer Center, Institute of Translational Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Macau, Room 3013, Building N-22, Taipa, Macau, Peoples Republic of ChinaEmail huangshigao2010@aliyun.comYongjun LiuStem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine Institution, Yi-Chuang Institute of Bio-Industry, No. 35, Jinghai 3 Road Economic-Technological Development Area, Beijing, Peoples Republic of ChinaEmail andyliuliu2001@aliyun.com

Background: The traditional anti-inflammation disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs) have limited therapeutic effects in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients. We previously reported the safety and efficacy of umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell (UC-MSC) treatment in RA patients that were observed for up to 8 months after UC-MSC infusion. The aim of this study is to assess the long-term efficacy and safety of UC-MSC along with DMARDs for the treatment of RA.Methods: 64 RA patients aged 1864 years were recruited in the study. During the treatment, patients were treated with 40 mL UC-MSC suspension product (2 107 cells/20 mL) via intravenous injection immediately after the infusion of 100 mL saline. The serological markers tests were used to assess safety and the 28-joint disease activity score (DAS28) and the Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ) to assess efficacy.Results: 1 year and 3 years after UC-MSC cells treatment, the blood routine, liver and kidney function and immunoglobulin examination showed no abnormalities, which were all in the normal range. The ESR, CRP, RF of 1 year and 3 years after treatment and anti-CCP of 3 years after treatment were detected to be lower than that of pretreatment, which showed significant change (P < 0.05). Health index (HAQ) and joint function index (DAS28) decreased 1 year and 3 years after treatment than before treatment (P < 0.05).Conclusion: UC-MSC cells plus DMARDs therapy can be a safe, effective and feasible therapeutic option for RA patients.

Keywords: rheumatoid arthritis, umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell, cell therapy

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Ty Bathurst, Former Navy SEAL Commander and Head of SOCOM Human Performance, Selected to Lead ‘Time for a Hero’ – PR Web

Posted: December 19, 2019 at 7:50 pm

Serving alongside great men has been both an honor and privilege," said Bathurst "This role, the founders faith and passion, and the mission to continue to serve, are why I knew this team was ideal. Im very humbled to be a part of Time For A Hero to continue in service of our warriors."

SAN DIEGO (PRWEB) December 19, 2019

Retiring SEAL Commander and head of SOCOM Human Performance, Ty Bathurst, has been named Executive Director of Time for a Hero, a non-profit veterans organization dedicated to providing cost-free regenerative medicine treatments for Special Operations Forces.

I started Time for a Hero to help our nations greatest warriors get the world-class medical care they deserve, said Gregg Phillips, founder of Time for a Hero. These heroes come home from combat and suffer from wounds you cant see, like traumatic brain injuries and chronic pain. The only options theyre given are surgery, counseling, and a steady diet of pain meds. It shouldnt be that way. Stem cell therapy, hyperbaric oxygen treatments, nutritional and hormonal supplementation- these are regenerative therapies that have the potential to heal, but these treatments arent supported by the VA or covered by insurance. Thats why were doing what were doing. Its a travesty to deny our heroes the medical advancements that could restore their lives.

Ty Bathurst is the perfect fit to reach into the broader Special Operations Community and bring these much needed treatments to a community of warriors in need. His personal experience, passion and drive will continue to serve the Special Operations Community for years to come and we are excited to leverage his talents," remarked Phillips.

Serving alongside great men has been both an honor and privilege," said Bathurst "This role, the founders faith and passion, and the mission to continue to serve, are why I knew this team was ideal. Im very humbled to be a part of Time For A Hero to continue in service of our warriors."

Ty served multiple combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan and worked extensively in South America, Europe and the Pacific. He earned the Bronze Star with V for Valor, a Purple Heart and several other awards and has been held aloft by a faithful bride of 22 years, three great children and all of Gods grace.

Time for a Hero (T4H), is a San Diego based 501c3 non-profit organization. Its mission is to save the lives of Special Operations Forces veterans by providing life-saving regenerative medical therapies to treat traumatic brain injuries sustained in combat, giving veterans and their families hope for a pain-free, drug-free life. For more information, please visit http://www.timeforahero.org.

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Can the axolotl teach us to regenerate? – Big Think

Posted: December 19, 2019 at 7:50 pm

It has long been understood, and by cultures too various to list, that salamanders have something of the supernatural about them.

Their name is thought to derive from an ancient Persian vocable meaning 'fire within', and for at least 2,000 years they were believed to be impervious to flames, or even capable of extinguishing them on contact. Aristotle recorded this exceptional characteristic, as did Leonardo da Vinci. The Talmud advises that smearing salamander blood on your skin will confer inflammability. Not so. But the intuition that salamanders possess fantastical powers is not unfounded.

Like earthbound immortals, salamanders regenerate. If you cut off a salamander's tail, or its arm, or its leg, or portions of any of these, it will not form a stump or a scar but will instead replace the lost appendage with a perfect new one, an intricacy of muscle, nerve, bone and the rest. It will sprout like a sapling. Science has been chopping up salamanders for more than 200 years with the aim of simply understanding the mechanics of their marvels, but more recently with the additional aim of someday replicating those marvels in ourselves. Might salamanders be the great hope of regenerative medicine?

The salamander in which regeneration is most often studied is an odd and endearingly unattractive Mexican species known as the axolotl. In addition to its limbs and extremities, the axolotl is known to regrow its lower jaw, its retinae, ovaries, kidneys, heart, rudimentary lungs, spinal cord, and large chunks of its brain. It heals all sorts of wounds without scarring. The axolotl also integrates the body parts of its fellows as if they were its own, without the usual immune response, and this peculiar trait has facilitated some of the more grotesque disfigurements it's endured in the name of science. In experiments after the Second World War, East German scientists grafted small axolotls crosswise through the backs of larger ones. The animals' circulatory systems came to be linked, and the researchers hailed the conjoined mutants as triumphs of collectivism. While the axolotl can rebound from almost any bodily humiliation, it seems that humankind is proving too much for it: we have all but destroyed its natural habitat, and, outside of laboratory aquaria, it is nearly extinct.

In its most common form, which scientists call the white mutant, the axolotl resembles what the translucid foetus of a cross between an otter and a shortfin eel might look like. On the internet, it is celebrated for its anthropoid smile; in Mexico, where the Aztecs once hailed as it as a godly incarnation, it is an insult to say that someone looks like one. Behind its blunt and flattened head extends a distended torso resolving into a long, ichthyic tail. The axolotl can grow to nearly a foot in length; four tiny legs dangle off its body like evolutionary afterthoughts. It wears a collar of what seem to be red feathers behind each cheek, and these ciliated gill stalks float and tremble and gently splay in the water, like the plumage in a burlesque fan. They grow back if you cut them off, too. Precisely how the animal accomplishes this, or any of its feats of regrowth, is not well understood.

Like the axolotl, our evolutionary forebears seem to have been regenerators, and human children can in fact still regrow the tips of their fingers above the final joint, but that's the only complex regeneration we're known to do. We are, instead, a species that scars. Why our lineage lost its regenerative birthright is unclear. From our present evolutionary vantage point, however, it might be nice to get back what we lost. Amputees could recover their limbs; paralytics could walk; degeneration and decline of all sorts might be reversed.

Last year, after a long effort by an international consortium, the axolotl genome 10 times the length of the human genome was finally sequenced. In early 2019, it was mapped onto chromosomes by a team at the University of Kentucky. (It is, for the moment, the longest genome ever sequenced by far.) Jessica Whited, who heads an axolotl lab at Harvard Medical School, told me that, for those who hope to someday make regeneration available to human medicine, the axolotl is a perfect instruction manual. Its language simply needs decoding.

Regeneration is not, however, the axolotl's only biological extravagance, or prime mystery. Another puzzle of the axolotl concerned what it was. Most salamanders begin their lives as aquatic larvae, like tadpoles, before metamorphosing into terrestrial adults, but the axolotl seems to be a lifelong adolescent, the so-called 'Peter Pan of salamanders', remaining in its larval stage even as it arrives at sexual maturity. This retention of juvenile traits, a phenomenon known as neoteny, perplexed taxonomists, and for decades they debated whether it ought to be considered a species of its own or merely the larval form of the common tiger salamander. Confoundingly, on occasion the axolotl could be goaded (under what conditions remains unclear) into a final transformation, absorbing its gills and fins, and walking out of the water. In biological terms, the scale of this change is akin to a middle-aged human one day broadening her shoulders, lurching forward on her hands and loping off to the jungle to be a gorilla. In France, the Grand Dictionnaire Universel du XIXe sicle (1866) declared the axolotl 'the most imperfect, the most degraded of all the amphibians': a fallen creature, but also one that could accede, as if by grace, to a higher state of being.

Humans are attuned to this sort of qualified possibility. In 1920, the British biologist Julian Huxley found that he could cause axolotls to metamorphose by feeding them bits of sheep thyroid. The Daily Mail declared that Huxley had discovered 'The Elixir of Life'. Huxley's younger brother, the writer Aldous, adopted the axolotl as a metaphor for mankind, its peculiar neoteny an emblem of our incompletion, our frustrated potentiality. A number of his literary contemporaries became neoteny-boosters. Gerald Heard, the philosophising scholar, maintained in 1941 that the survival of mankind would depend upon individuals 'who manage to retain, with full mental stature, the radical originality and freshness of a vigorous child'; John Dewey and Timothy Leary held similar views. More recently, the Mexican sociologist Roger Bartra has proposed the axolotl, in its neotenous indeterminacy, as a symbol of his country's national character.

If the axolotl mirrors us so nicely, it's fitting that we, too, are neotenous. Our flat faces, small noses, hairless bodies and upright postures are all features of infancy in our evolutionary cousins and forebears. We also spend more of our lives in a juvenile state than any other primate. Our brains grow rapidly for a longer period, and are consequently larger; our childhoods are greatly extended, providing occasion for the lengthy training of those brains. We also maintain throughout our lives a 'remarkable persistent juvenile characteristic of investigative curiosity', in the words of the zoologist Konrad Lorenz. 'The constitutive character of man,' Lorenz wrote in 1971, 'is a neotenous phenomenon.'

Some affinity seems to have drawn us to the salamander since well before we fantasised in a serious way of regrowing our bodies how the salamander regrows its own. Perhaps this is what spurred the ancients and the Aztecs to ennoble the animals through mythology. Nowhere has the intuition of kinship been rendered more plainly, though, than in the Argentinian surrealist Julio Cortzar's short story 'Axolotl' (1952). Cortzar writes of one man's quiet obsession with the animals, whom he visits every day at an aquarium. 'After the first minute I knew that we were linked,' the man says, 'that something infinitely lost and distant kept pulling us together.' He watches through the glass tank until, one day, almost imperceptibly, he finds himself suspended in the water beside the creatures, transmuted into one of them, peering out at his former human soma peering in. 'Only one thing was strange: to go on thinking as usual,' the erstwhile man says, 'to know.'

This article was originally published at Aeon and has been republished under Creative Commons. Read the original article.

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SmartTRAK Launches New Website that Speaks Directly to Customer Needs – MarTech Series

Posted: December 19, 2019 at 7:50 pm

SmartTRAK recently redesigned SmartTRAK.com to prioritize key information for various functional groups as their customer base continues to expand

BioMedGPS, the developer of SmartTRAK Business Intelligence, is excited to announce the launch of their new website, Smarttrak.com. SmartTRAK offers a suite of advisory services for the life sciences industry including real-time online business intelligence and custom consulting.

The new SmartTRAK.com features a clean uncluttered design, improved functionality and enhanced custom content. It allows for medical device professionals to self-identify and learn how SmartTRAKs services, data, and industry insights help meet their specific professional needs. Visitors can learn how SmartTRAK can help streamline their workflow, saving them time while keeping them ahead of the market.

Marketing Technology News: Users Reveal Top Five SMM Vendors of 2019 for User Satisfaction Through SoftwareReviews

The newly launched site also spotlights our industry analysts all who are experts in their fields with years experience working for some of the biggest players in the industry. Visitors can sample articles, analyses and white papers put out by SmartTRAKs team.

Users can also view SmartTRAKs offering by market coverage including orthopedics, wound care, regenerative medicine and neuro therapies. Visitors can quickly pinpoint what coverage they would need and also quickly assess any future needs.

Marketing Technology News: MindTouch Enhances Salesforce Integration for an Improved Customer and Agent Experience

The new site, content and improved functionality speak directly to the needs of our customers. We believe that this new website will allow our visitors to have a very informative experience as we continue to grow, states Sharon OReilly, CEO, and President of BioMedGPS.

Medical device manufacturers who have business intelligence needs are encouraged to reach out to SmartTRAK to learn how SmartTRAK can support their teams.

Marketing Technology News: Ameriprise Financials New Customer Relationship Management System Helps Advisors Deliver Best-in-Class Service

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Orthopaedic Surgeon, Dr. Jeffrey Carlson, first in Central and Eastern Virginia to implant the M6-C Artificial Cervical Disc – OrthoSpineNews

Posted: December 19, 2019 at 7:50 pm

NEWPORT NEWS, Va.,Dec. 18, 2019/PRNewswire/ Orthopaedic and Spine Center announced Dr.Jeffrey Carlson, Orthopaedic Spine Surgeon, became the first surgeon in Central andEastern Virginiaarea to implant the M6-Cartificial cervical disc. The outpatient surgery was performed on a 53 year old female at Bon Secours/Mercy Health Mary Immaculate Hospital inNewport News, VirginiaonNovember 20, 2019.

The patient reported symptoms of severe neck pain which radiated to both shoulders after a motor vehicle accident. After she failed to respond to conservative treatment, an MRI was ordered revealing severe spinal stenosis and spinal cord abutment at level C3-4 caused by a herniated disc. In consultation with Dr. Carlson, the patient made the decision to have cervical disc arthroplasty, using the Orthofix M6-C artificial cervical disc.

Ive been waiting for the right patient with the appropriate diagnosis to employ the M6-C disc, said Carlson. The technology used in this procedure facilitates a speedy recovery with minimal limitations and a great outcome, so that my patient can get back to her active life. She just had her two week post-surgical follow-up appointment her recovery is going very well and she feels much relief from the severe pain she once experienced.

The M6-C disc received U.S. Food and Drug Approval in February 2019.It was designed to closely mimic the anatomic structure of a natural disc as well as provide an effective alternative to a spinal fusion. By allowing the spine to move naturally, the M6-C artificial disc potentially minimizes stress to adjacent discs and other vertebral structures.

AboutJeffrey R. Carlson, M.D.Dr.Jeffrey Carlsonhas been a part of Orthopaedic & Spine Center since 1999 and serves as the President and Managing Partner. He is a board-certified, fellowship-trained orthopaedic surgeon who focuses on the treatment of injuries and disorders of the spine.

About Orthopaedic & Spine CenterOrthopaedic & Spine Center (OSC) is staffed by outstanding medical professionals who strive to provide the very best orthopaedic and interventional pain management care available anywhere. Our Center includes a comfortable, state-of-the-art medical facility, pleasant and well-trained personnel, physicians trained in the most advanced orthopaedic treatments, interventional pain management procedures, regenerative medicine, using stem cell and platelet therapies and a dedication to old-fashioned patient care.

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David Bowie Tribute Band at Metro to Benefit NorthShore Patients – Patch.com

Posted: December 19, 2019 at 2:49 am

Sons of the Silent Age, a David Bowie tribute band, will be performing "The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust" and "Station to Station" on Saturday, January 11, 2020 at Metro Chicago. Funds raised will benefit integrative medicine therapies for NorthShore University HealthSystem (NorthShore) Kellogg Cancer Center adult and pediatric patients.

An opening set will be performed by The Ready Freddies, playing the music of Queen. Tickets are now on sale at https://foundation.northshore.org/IMConcert. Doors open at 6 p.m. and the show begins at 7 p.m. General admission is $25 in advance; $30 day of; VIP Tickets are $122/each, and include reserved balcony access, an exclusive pre-show party with the artists and a signed poster from the artists. VIP Table Tickets, $222/piece and sold only in pairs, include all VIP benefits, plus a reserved table and seats for two.

Sons of the Silent Age is composed of nine Chicago musicians, when Chris Connelly (Revolting Cocks, Ministry) and Matt Walker (Filter, Smashing Pumpkins and Morrissey's band) joined forces in 2012 to pay tribute to their hero David Bowie.

For the third year, the concert is benefitting the NorthShore Integrative Medicine program, as one of the largest and most-well established programs in the country. Each of the parties involved in the benefit concert from the Sons of the Silent Age bandmates, to the owner of Metro, to the NorthShore Integrative Medicine team share a common bond of commitment to the cause, and for some, cancer survivorship.

"We are again honored to receive proceeds from the fabulous Sons of the Silent Age Benefit Concert at Metro in 2020. Over the past 2 years, concert proceeds and donations have provided free integrative therapies for our patients with limited means to help ease their symptoms from cancer while promoting health and wellness," said Leslie Mendoza Temple, MD, NorthShore Integrative Medicine Medical Director. "We appreciate the dedication of Joe Shanahan, Chris Connolly, Matt and Char Walker, and the band Sons of the Silent Age for their heartfelt contributions to the life and health of our patients."

Integrative medicine programs are designed to relieve pain and neuropathies, reduce fatigue and sleep issues, boost immunity, provide stress relief, improve their appetite and their overall quality of life.

NorthShore cancer patient and stage four cancer survivor, Steve Merola, benefited from the funds raised at last year's benefit concert.

"The integrative medicine services have given me the additional tools and guidance I need to withstand the rigors of chemotherapy and radiation," he explains.

Merola worked with Dr. Mendoza to develop a personalized integrative medicine plan. Through his therapy, Merola noticed the significant impact relaxation had during his fight for recovery. "Thanks to Dr. Mendoza Temple and her team, my stress has been relieved with a program of exercise, meditation, acupuncture, and supplements to help with appetite and stress. With all these services combined I found that I had body, mind, and spirit all aligned to win my fight. It's not over yet, but I am confident I will prevail."

NorthShore's Integrative Medicine Program uses safe, evidence-based complementary therapies and communicating fully with patients' traditional western medicine physicians and specialists optimizes each patient's health and a heightened sense of well-being. Learn more about NorthShore's Integrative Medicine Program or support the cause at foundation.northshore.org/imconcert.

NorthShore University HealthSystem (NorthShore) is an integrated healthcare delivery system consistently ranked as a Top 15 Major Teaching Hospital in the U.S. The NorthShore system, headquartered in Evanston, Illinois, includes four hospitals Evanston, Glenbrook, Highland Park and Skokie. NorthShore also includes a 950+ physician multispecialty group practice, NorthShore Medical Group, with more than 130 practices in the Chicagoland area. NorthShore is a Magnet recognized organization, the first in Illinois to receive this prestigious honor as an entire system that demonstrates nursing excellence and high standards in patient care. The system also includes the NorthShore Research Institute; the NorthShore Foundation; and the NorthShore Home & Hospice Services. As a not-for-profit organization, NorthShore provides $235 million in charitable care and services to the communities it serves, while philanthropic support from individuals and organizations enhances clinical care, research and education programs across the system.

One of the nation's most renowned independent music venues, Metro has hosted thriving local talent and international headliners for 35 years and counting. From industrial champions Ministry and Revolting Cocks to alt-rock pioneers The Smashing Pumpkins and Liz Phair and pop-punk royalty Alkaline Trio and Fall Out Boycountless Chicago artists have laid their roots in Metro as a business, sanctuary, and springboard.

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Do aphrodisiacs actually work? Trying to have better sex over here – Well+Good

Posted: December 19, 2019 at 2:49 am

Ive never understood how sucking down a rock booger is supposed to make you, like, really horny. I get the intent whenever a guy invites me out for red wine and oysters, but the whole presentation (and my general aversion to seafood) is always a turn off. It does make you wonder, do aphrodisiacs work, and if so how do they trick our mind and bodies into peak arousal? Well, in a few different ways, in fact.

Aphrodisiacs have been studied forever, mention of aphrodisiacs has been found in texts from various ancient civilizations, including Hindu, Egyptian, Chinese, and Roman. In modern times, there have been many interesting studies on how aphrodisiacs may make subjects frisky. As Sally Fisher, MD, integrative medicine specialist and medical director atSunrise Springspoints out, searching aphrodisiacs in the virtualNational Library of Medicine returns 830 peer reviewed scientific studies. How plants or herbal products might effect the body or mind really varies based on the aphrodisiac.

Some examples of effects include increasing hormones like testosterone, or certain neurotransmitters in the brain, or dilating blood vessels to increase blood flow, or affecting molecules in the body such as, for example, nitric oxide, the molecule that Viagra affects, says Dr. Fisher.

And sometimes the studies just note that certain herbs make animals want to bang more. Basically, its complicated to deduce what will potently work on a person, although she has one herb in mind.

I tend to recommend Tribulus terrestris, used in folk medicine for hundreds of years, because of modern research on sexual function improvement in both women and men, but Id emphasize that Id approach this integratively, and if there is room for improvement, put lifestyle changes foremost, says Dr. Fisher.

Sexual health is complex and involves cognitive, neurochemical, hormonal, and genetic factors, she says. That means that, in part, shifting your overall diet might be what helps amp up your sexual wellness. Embracing a healthy diet might decrease the risk of sexual dysfunction in women, defined generally as more fruits and vegetables, and less refined grains, meat, sugar, fried food.

There is, as then might be expected, promising data on theMediterranean diet alleviating sexual dysfunction in women, says Dr. Fisher. Its helpful to think of the Mediterranean diet as a plant-based diet; other whole foods plant-based diets have not been formally researched but may be expected to have the same beneficial effect.

Opa! Okay but if you cant prioritize a full diet upheaval right now, are there good mood foods thatll make you like, really horny in one slurp? Yes and no. According to Brigitte Zeitlin, RD, and owner of BZ Nutrition in New York City, its hard to directly link food and sex drive. However, there are particular compounds within [certain] foods that can have a connection to certain hormones and sexual reactions, she says.

Among Zeitlins top picks are foods with red ginseng, fatty fish that increases your feel good dopamine hormones for a stronger orgasm, cayenne pepper, and maca.

[Maca] root has been linked to boosting those frisky feelings and has shown to be a helpful fertility food as well by multiple studies, says Zeitlin. One study actually found that maca improved sex driveon people taking certain medications where the side effect was decrease of sex drive; think anti-depressants, hair-loss meds, anti-anxiety meds.

If youre truly about to make a quick bodega run before a potential boink fest (weve all been there) Zeitlin has a good power combo in mind.

Dark chocolate, 70 percent or higher, contains compounds that actually boost the release of feel-good hormones getting you more in the mood for some togetherness and even more feel-good hormones, says Zeitlin. Pair it with some dried apricots for extra pro-longed sexy energy, as the amino acids in apricots can trigger more stamina.

As for oysters, well, theyre rich in zinc, which supposedly to help with erectile dysfunction, so that means Im off the hook forever. Like anything, utilizing a so-called aphrodisiac feels like a personal journey with room to experiment. Our recommendation? Grab a hottie or your favorite vibratorand conduct some research yourself.

If youre looking for other ways to boost your sex drive naturally, we have a few recommendations. And learning about spontaneous and responsive desire might help you get turned on.

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Dandelion Supplement Market Find New Opportunities And Log A Healthy Cagr During The Report’s Forecast Period – Market Research Sheets

Posted: December 19, 2019 at 2:49 am

Once thought as an ancient remedy and traditional medicine, the herbal medicines have now emerged as a potential health supplement, and as complementary and alternative medicine in the modern-day world. Increasing consumer inclination towards the maintenance of a healthy lifestyle through a nutritious diet and physical activities, coupled with an influx of integrative medicine, and complementary and alternative medicine is the major trend in the herbal supplements market. The fuelling herbal supplement demand is giving rise to dandelion supplement over the forecast period. Dandelion is an herb, whose roots and stems are used to formulate herbal dietary supplements.

Dandelion supplements are used to aid digestion and stimulate appetite in the consumers, besides, dandelion supplements are used in the treatment for upset stomach, gallstones, muscle aches, joint pains, bruises, and eczema. The dandelion supplement is used as a purgative to increase bowel movement in the body and is also used to increase the frequency of urination. Furthermore, dandelion supplement is used as a blood tonic, skin toner, and digestive tonic, making it a popular health supplement among the consumers.

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Increasing trends for preventive healthcare and aging baby boomers demographics is anticipated to drive the growth for dandelion supplement over the forecast period. Todays consumers are becoming more and more aware of the necessity of preventive healthcare in day to day lives.

The consumers have started spending more on pharmaceuticals and nutraceuticals to prevent the onset of health risk and diseases. According to a survey conducted by the Council for Responsible Nutrition (CRN) in 2014, around 68% of adults in the U.S. consumed dietary supplements; of these, approximately 50% were regular users. About 83% of adults in the U.S. communicated overall confidence in the effectiveness, safety, and quality of dietary supplements. Increasing healthcare expenditure by consumers is pushing them to opt for herbal supplements like the dandelion supplement, which tend to benefit health and prevent health adversities in the consumers. Hence, increasing consumer consciousness concerning health is expected to be primarily growth driver for dandelion supplement market.

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Besides, there is a sudden rise in self-directed consumers who are increasingly relying on different channels to self-diagnose and self-treat health problems before even consulting doctors. This is again boosting the sales of dandelion supplement that is potential in treating indigestion and related symptoms in the body. Also, with the growth of online retailing and development of retail channels and pharmacies, consumers now have greater accessibility towards a wide band of herbal and dietary supplements which is providing strong market opportunity for the dandelion supplement manufacturers.

This post was originally published on Market Research Sheets

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Dandelion Supplement Market Find New Opportunities And Log A Healthy Cagr During The Report's Forecast Period - Market Research Sheets

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Need2Know: Casa Perez Furnishings to open soon on First Street in Prescott Valley; Rickety Cricket pub in downtown Prescott closes; veteran pain…

Posted: December 19, 2019 at 2:49 am

Casa Perez Furnishings to open on First Street in Prescott Valley

You may know Juan Perez as the owner of the popular Casa Perez Family Mexican Restaurant at 3088 N. Glassford Hill Road in the Frys grocery store shopping center in Prescott Valley.

Early next year, youll know him for Casa Perez Fine Family Furnishings, which will be located toward the back of the former AAMCO auto repair building at 6871 E. First St.

Two signs currently hang on the tan stucco building in Prescott Valley. They read Casa Perez Fine Family Furnishings and Coming Soon! on the metal paneling that stretches across the top of the building facing Highway 69 from the south side.

Perez said he grew up in a town near Guadalajara, Mexico. In a community nearby, a group of families makes furniture, as well as chandeliers and flower pots, among other furnishings.

When Perez bought some of the families furniture for his Prescott Valley restaurant, which he opened two years ago, he found that customers were asking him how they could buy the furnishings, too.

We have 2,500 square feet, Perez said of the space he will have for furniture at Casa Perez Fine Family Furnishings, but our goal is to expand.

Rickety Cricket in downtown Prescott closes

The Rickety Cricket Brewing Tap Room at 214 S. Montezuma St. in Prescott closed nearly a month ago, but it doesnt appear that the space will be vacant for long.

Ive heard the owner of the building has bought the liquor license and will be reopening, possibly by Dec. 31, local musician Don Cheek stated in an email to the Courier on Dec. 6.

Rickety Cricket still operates two locations in Arizona, including its main brewery, restaurant and swag shop in Kingman, and its tap room in Flagstaff.

Dr. Stout joins Harmony Integrative Medicine in return to Prescott

Harmony Integrative Medicine, 518 E. Gurley St. Suite 101, and Dr. Jean Painter have announced veteran Dr. Reggie Stout as a new member of their staff.

Stout brings 30 years of clinical experience from Tucson to Prescott, where he had lived previously.

Dr. Stouts broad experience and training include a doctorate in Pain Management, training in homeopathy and 17 years teaching acupuncture medical students for the residency program of Integrative Medicine at the University of Arizonas School of Health Sciences in Tucson.

Stouts experienced in handling patients who suffer from chronic ailments related to pain syndromes, internal medicine, digestive disorders, geriatric, genitourinary/prostate problems, stroke-related hemiplegia, fibromyalgia and neurological conditions.

Harmony Integrative Medicine and Dr. Painter have been a mainstay in the Quad Cities for advanced Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine for nearly 16 years.

For more information, call 928-776-4895 or visit harmonyintegrativemedicine.com.

To submit items for the Couriers Need2Know, email editors@prescottaz.com; for legal advertisements, email ssialega@prescottaz.com.

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Need2Know: Casa Perez Furnishings to open soon on First Street in Prescott Valley; Rickety Cricket pub in downtown Prescott closes; veteran pain...

Posted in Integrative Medicine | Comments Off on Need2Know: Casa Perez Furnishings to open soon on First Street in Prescott Valley; Rickety Cricket pub in downtown Prescott closes; veteran pain…

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