Shared posts

12 Apr 14:55

On Intermittent Fasting

by Reason

Here is a popular science article on intermittent fasting, something that extends life in mice, but which is not as well researched as calorie restriction, the gold standard for science on healthy life extension. There appears to be considerable overlap in the mechanisms involved in calorie restriction and intermittent fasting, but it's not all exactly the same when gene expression patterns are examined, to pick one example.

Many diet and exercise trends have origins in legitimate science, though the facts tend to get distorted by the time they achieve mainstream popularity. Benefits are exaggerated. Risks are downplayed. Science takes a backseat to marketing. One needn't look any further than the emerging trend of intermittent fasting for a prime example.

There is indeed a large body of research to support the health benefits of fasting, though most of it has been conducted on animals, not humans. Still, the results have been promising. Fasting has been shown to improve biomarkers of disease, reduce oxidative stress and preserve learning and memory functioning. [There] are several theories about why fasting provides physiological benefits. "The one that we've studied a lot, and designed experiments to test, is the hypothesis that during the fasting period, cells are under a mild stress. And they respond to the stress adaptively by enhancing their ability to cope with stress and, maybe, to resist disease."

But perhaps it isn't so much the fasting that produces health benefits, per se, as the resulting overall reduction in calorie intake (if, that is, you don't overeat on nonfasting days, which could create a caloric surplus instead of a deficit). That appears, at least, to be the case in slowing diseases such as cancer in mice. "Caloric restriction, undernutrition without malnutrition, is the only experimental approach consistently shown to prolong survival in animal models," In [a] study, mice fasted twice a week for 24 hours, but were otherwise permitted to eat at liberty. During nonfasting days, the mice overate. Overall, they did not lose weight, counteracting whatever benefits they might have seen from fasting. Intermittent fasting with compensatory overeating "did not improve mouse survival nor did it delay prostrate tumor growth," the study concluded.

Equally, there are studies showing that intermittent fasting without calorie restriction does extend life in nematode worms. A lot more research is needed to bring intermittent fasting up to the level of confidence that we can have in calorie restriction.

Link: http://www.cmaj.ca/site/earlyreleases/8apr13_intermittent-fasting-the-science-of-going-without.xhtml

12 Apr 14:54

transform and rollout [video]



transform and rollout

[video]

12 Apr 08:22

Don't know what I expected.

Submitted by: dennis78
Posted at: 2013-04-10 23:05:56
See full post and comment: http://9gag.com/gag/7062758

12 Apr 03:42

Forget

by alex

Forget

12 Apr 03:39

05-03-2013

by Laerte

10 Apr 21:52

Destined

by Doug

Destined

Saddest comic strip character ever! Here’s more destiny.

10 Apr 13:39

April 09, 2013


One last reminder, and I think it'll be too late! We've only got about 50 tickets left for sale for BAH! Looks like it's going to be a packed house, so if you want in, we sincerely encourage you to buy online. We may have some tickets at the door, but I can't promise anything!
10 Apr 08:46

G-G the book - G-G on Facebook - G-G on Twitter

09 Apr 21:46

Obituaries

Okay, it's all over the news; no point in ignoring it.

I'm on vacation and I am not going to waste a valuable tourism day venting a third of a century of bile at a person who is, in any case, no longer present. But I'd like to draw your attention to Hugo Young's epitaph; as Thatcher's biographer and sometime interviewer he gives a fairly balanced appraisal. (And I'd like to remind non-Brits that strong leaders are more popular abroad than in their home land, because foreigners don't get to see the skulls that were smashed in the process of building that reputation for "strength".)

Besides, I'm in a contemplative, listening frame of mind right now. So if you have any particular memories of Thatcher, feel free to tell me about it in the comments.

09 Apr 21:44

Glow sticks into a waterfall (did not break open them). Long Exposure Photography

Submitted by: postninegagcom
Posted at: 2013-04-09 03:56:48
See full post and comment: http://9gag.com/gag/7045687

09 Apr 20:52

NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE

by Mauro A.

salem1 salem2 salem3 salem4 salem5 salem6 salem7 salem8 salem9


08 Apr 04:17

Universe One

by Jon

Universe One

Zach Weiner, creator of SMBC, has caught the SFAM bug. He’s back for Round 2 of SFAM Guest Month! Nothing can stop this man. Not even Daleks. You guys are super lucky.

I printed up about fifty shirts more than I needed for the Bunnies Kickstarter from last year and I need to get rid of them! Perhaps you’d be interested in giving one a good home? Only available while supplies last.

 

07 Apr 02:54

The Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up

by noreply@blogger.com (Michael Gilleland)
[Thomas and] Florence Hardy, The Early Life of Thomas Hardy, 1840-1891 (New York: The Macmillan Co., 1928), pp. 19-20:
Reflecting on his experiences of the world so far as he had got, he came to the conclusion that he did not wish to grow up. Other boys were always talking of when they would be men; he did not want at all to be a man, or to possess things, but to remain as he was, in the same spot, and to know no more people than he already knew (about half a dozen).